1771 lines
79 KiB
Plaintext
1771 lines
79 KiB
Plaintext
|
|
REGINALD by SAKI (H. H. MUNRO)
|
|
|
|
[obi/H.H.Munro/Reginald]
|
|
This text is in the Public Domain.
|
|
|
|
Text prepared in May 1993 by
|
|
|
|
Anders Thulin
|
|
ath@linkoping.trab.se
|
|
|
|
Reginald
|
|
Reginald on Christmas Presents
|
|
Reginald on the Academy
|
|
Reginald at the Theatre
|
|
Reginald's Peace Poem
|
|
Reginald's Choir Treat
|
|
Reginald on Worries
|
|
Reginald on House-Parties
|
|
Reginald at the Carlton
|
|
Reginald on Besetting Sins
|
|
Reginald's Drama
|
|
Reginald on Tariffs
|
|
Reginald's Christmas revel
|
|
Reginald's Rubaiyat
|
|
The Innocence of Reginald
|
|
|
|
REGINALD
|
|
|
|
I did it---I should have known better. I persuaded
|
|
Reginald to go to the McKillops' garden-party against his
|
|
will.
|
|
|
|
We all make mistakes occasionally. ``They know you're
|
|
here, and they'll think it so funny if you don't go. And I
|
|
want particularly to be in with Mrs. McKillop just now.''
|
|
|
|
``I know, you want one of her smoke Persian kittens as a
|
|
prospective wife for Wumples---or a husband, is it?''
|
|
(Reginald has a magnificent scorn for details, other than
|
|
sartorial.) ``And I am expected to undergo social martyrdom
|
|
to suit the connubial exigencies---''
|
|
|
|
``Reginald! It's nothing of the kind, only I'm sure Mrs.
|
|
McKillop would be pleased if I brought you. Young men of
|
|
your brilliant attractions are rather at a premium at her
|
|
garden-parties.''
|
|
|
|
``Should be at a premium in heaven,'' remarked Reginald
|
|
complacently.
|
|
|
|
``There will be very few of you there, if that is what you
|
|
mean. But seriously, there won't be any great strain upon
|
|
your powers of endurance; I promise you that you shan't have
|
|
to play croquet, or talk to the Archdeacon's wife, or do
|
|
anything that is likely to bring on physical prostration.
|
|
You can just wear your sweetest clothes and a moderately
|
|
amiable expression, and eat chocolate-creams with the
|
|
appetite of a _blas<e'>_ parrot. Nothing more is demanded
|
|
of you.''
|
|
|
|
Reginald shut his eyes. ``There will be the exhaustingly
|
|
up-to-date young women who will ask me if I have seen _San
|
|
Toy_; a less progressive grade who will yearn to hear about
|
|
the Diamond jubilee---the historic event, not the horse.
|
|
With a little encouragement, they will inquire if I saw the
|
|
Allies march into Paris. Why are women so fond of raking up
|
|
the past? They're as bad as tailors, who invariably remember
|
|
what you owe them for a suit long after you've ceased to
|
|
wear it.''
|
|
|
|
``I'll order lunch for one o'clock; that will give you two
|
|
and a half hours to dress in.''
|
|
|
|
Reginald puckered his brow into a tortured frown, and I
|
|
knew that my point was gained. He was debating what tie
|
|
would go with which waistcoat.
|
|
|
|
Even then I had my misgivings.
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
During the drive to the McKillops' Reginald was possessed
|
|
with a great peace, which was not wholly to be accounted for
|
|
by the fact that he had inveigled his feet into shoes a size
|
|
too small for them. I misgave more than ever, and having
|
|
once launched Reginald on to the McKillops' lawn, I
|
|
established him near a seductive dish of _marrons
|
|
glac<e'>s_, and as far from the Archdeacon's wife as
|
|
possible; as I drifted away to a diplomatic distance I heard
|
|
with painful distinctness the eldest Mawkby girl asking him
|
|
if he had seen _San Toy_.
|
|
|
|
It must have been ten minutes later, not more, and I had
|
|
been having _quite_ an enjoyable chat with my hostess, and
|
|
had promised to lend her _The Eternal City_ and my recipe
|
|
for rabbit mayonnaise, and was just about to offer a kind
|
|
home for her third Persian kitten, when I perceived, out of
|
|
the corner of my eye, that Reginald was not where I had left
|
|
him, and that the _marrons glac<e'>s_ were untasted. At the
|
|
same moment I became aware that old Colonel Mendoza was
|
|
essaying to tell his classic story of how he introduced golf
|
|
into India, and that Reginald was in dangerous proximity.
|
|
There are occasions when Reginald is caviare to the Colonel.
|
|
|
|
``When I was at Poona in '76---''
|
|
|
|
``My dear Colonel,'' purred Reginald, ``fancy admitting
|
|
such a thing! Such a give-away for one's age! I wouldn't
|
|
admit being on this planet in '76.'' (Reginald in his
|
|
wildest lapses into veracity never admits to being more than
|
|
twenty-two.)
|
|
|
|
The Colonel went to the colour of a fig that has attained
|
|
great ripeness, and Reginald, ignoring my efforts to
|
|
intercept him glided away to another part of the lawn. I
|
|
found him a few minutes later happily engaged in teaching
|
|
the youngest Rampage boy the approved theory of mixing
|
|
absinthe, within full earshot of his mother. Mrs. Rampage
|
|
occupies a prominent place in local Temperance movements.
|
|
|
|
As soon as I had broken up this unpromising
|
|
_t<e^>te-<a`>-t<e^>te_ and settled Reginald where he could
|
|
watch the croquet players losing their tempers, I wandered
|
|
off to find my hostess and renew the kitten negotiations at
|
|
the point where they had been interrupted. I did not
|
|
succeed in running her down at once, and eventually it was
|
|
Mrs. McKillop who sought me out, and her conversation was
|
|
not of kittens.
|
|
|
|
``Your cousin is discussing _Zaza_ with the Archdeacon's
|
|
wife; at least, he is discussing, she is ordering her
|
|
carriage.''
|
|
|
|
She spoke in the dry, staccato tone of one who repeats a
|
|
French exercise, and I knew that as far as Millie McKillop
|
|
was concerned, Wumples was devoted to a lifelong celibacy.
|
|
|
|
``If you don't mind,'' I said hurriedly, ``I think we'd
|
|
like our carriage ordered too,'' and I made a forced march
|
|
in the direction of the croquet ground.
|
|
|
|
I found every one talking nervously and feverishly of the
|
|
weather and the war in South Africa, except Reginald, who
|
|
was reclining in a comfortable chair with the dreamy,
|
|
far-away look that a volcano might wear just after it had
|
|
desolated entire villages. The Archdeacon's wife was
|
|
buttoning up her gloves with a concentrated deliberation
|
|
that was fearful to behold. I shall have to treble my
|
|
subscription to her Cheerful Sunday Evenings Fund before I
|
|
dare set foot in her house again.
|
|
|
|
At that particular moment the croquet players finished
|
|
their game, which had been going on without a symptom of
|
|
finality during the whole afternoon. Why, I ask, should it
|
|
have stopped precisely when a counter-attraction was so
|
|
necessary? Every one seemed to drift towards the area of
|
|
disturbance, of which the chairs of the Archdeacon's wife
|
|
and Reginald formed the storm-centre. Conversation flagged,
|
|
and there settled upon the company that expectant hush that
|
|
precedes the dawn---when your neighbours don't happen to
|
|
keep poultry.
|
|
|
|
``What did the Caspian Sea?'' asked Reginald, with
|
|
appalling suddenness.
|
|
|
|
There were symptoms of a stampede. The Archdeacon's wife
|
|
looked at me. Kipling or some one has described somewhere
|
|
the look a foundered camel gives when the caravan moves on
|
|
and leaves it to its fate. The peptonized reproach in the
|
|
good lady's eyes brought the passage vividly to my mind.
|
|
|
|
I played my last card.
|
|
|
|
``Reginald, it's getting late, and a sea-mist is coming
|
|
on.'' I knew that the elaborate curl over his right eyebrow
|
|
was not guaranteed to survive a sea-mist.
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
``Never, never again, will I take you to a garden-party.
|
|
Never.... You behaved abominably.... What did the Caspian
|
|
see?''
|
|
|
|
A shade of genuine regret for misused opportunities passed
|
|
over Reginald's face.
|
|
|
|
``After all,'' he said, ``I believe an apricot tie would
|
|
have gone better with the lilac waistcoat.''
|
|
|
|
REGINALD ON CHRISTMAS PRESENTS
|
|
|
|
I wish it to be distinctly understood (said Reginald) that
|
|
I don't want a ``George, Prince of Wales'' Prayer-book as a
|
|
Christmas present. The fact cannot be too widely known.
|
|
|
|
There ought (he continued) to be technical education
|
|
classes on the science of present-giving. No one seems to
|
|
have the faintest notion of what any one else wants, and the
|
|
prevalent ideas on the subject are not creditable to a
|
|
civilized community.
|
|
|
|
There is, for instance, the female relative in the country
|
|
who ``knows a tie is always useful,'' and sends you some
|
|
spotted horror that you could only wear in secret or in
|
|
Tottenham Court Road. It _might_ have been useful had she
|
|
kept it to tie up currant bushes with, when it would have
|
|
served the double purpose of supporting the branches and
|
|
frightening away the birds---for it is an admitted fact that
|
|
the ordinary tomtit of commerce has a sounder <ae>sthetic
|
|
taste than the average female relative in the country.
|
|
|
|
Then there are aunts. They are always a difficult class
|
|
to deal with in the matter of presents. The trouble is that
|
|
one never catches them really young enough. By the time one
|
|
has educated them to an appreciation of the fact that one
|
|
does not wear red woollen mittens in the West End, they die,
|
|
or quarrel with the family, or do something equally
|
|
inconsiderate. That is why the supply of trained aunts is
|
|
always so precarious.
|
|
|
|
There is my Aunt Agatha, _par exemple_, who sent me a pair
|
|
of gloves last Christmas, and even got so far as to choose a
|
|
kind that was being worn and had the correct number of
|
|
buttons. But---_they were nines!_ I sent them to a boy whom
|
|
I hated intimately: he didn't wear them, of course, but he
|
|
could have---that was where the bitterness of death came in.
|
|
It was nearly as consoling as sending white flowers to his
|
|
funeral. Of course I wrote and told my aunt that they were
|
|
the one thing that had been wanting to make existence
|
|
blossom like a rose; I am afraid she thought me
|
|
frivolous---she comes from the North, where they live in the
|
|
fear of Heaven and the Earl of Durham. (Reginald affects an
|
|
exhaustive knowledge of things political, which furnishes an
|
|
excellent excuse for not discussing them.) Aunts with a dash
|
|
of foreign extraction in them are the most satisfactory in
|
|
the way of understanding these things; but if you can't
|
|
choose your aunt, it is wisest in the long run to choose the
|
|
present and send her the bill.
|
|
|
|
Even friends of one's own set, who might be expected to
|
|
know better, have curious delusions on the subject. I am
|
|
not collecting copies of the cheaper editions of Omar
|
|
Khayy<a'>m. I gave the last four that I received to the
|
|
lift-boy, and I like to think of him reading them, with
|
|
FitzGerald's notes, to his aged mother. Lift-boys always
|
|
have aged mothers; shows such nice feeling on their part, I
|
|
think.
|
|
|
|
Personally, I can't see where the difficulty in choosing
|
|
suitable presents lies. No boy who had brought himself up
|
|
properly could fail to appreciate one of those decorative
|
|
bottles of liqueurs that are so reverently staged in Morel's
|
|
window---and it wouldn't in the least matter if one did get
|
|
duplicates. And there would always be the supreme moment of
|
|
dreadful uncertainty whether it was _cr<e^>me de menthe_ or
|
|
Chartreuse---like the expectant thrill on seeing your
|
|
partner's hand turned up at bridge. People may say what
|
|
they like about the decay of Christianity; the religious
|
|
system that produced green Chartreuse can never really die.
|
|
|
|
And then, of course, there are liqueur glasses, and
|
|
crystallized fruits, and tapestry curtains, and heaps of
|
|
other necessaries of life that make really sensible
|
|
presents---not to speak of luxuries, such as having one's
|
|
bills paid, or getting something quite sweet in the way of
|
|
jewellery. Unlike the alleged Good Woman of the Bible, I'm
|
|
not above rubies. When found, by the way, she must have
|
|
been rather a problem at Christmas-time; nothing short of a
|
|
blank cheque would have fitted the situation. Perhaps it's
|
|
as well that she's died out.
|
|
|
|
The great charm about me (concluded Reginald) is that I am
|
|
so easily pleased. But I draw the line at a ``Prince of
|
|
Wales'' Prayer-book.
|
|
|
|
REGINALD ON THE ACADEMY
|
|
|
|
``One goes to the Academy in self-defence,'' said
|
|
Reginald. ``It is the one topic one has in common with the
|
|
Country Cousins.''
|
|
|
|
``It is almost a religious observance with them,'' said
|
|
the Other. ``A kind of artistic Mecca, and when the good
|
|
ones die they go---''
|
|
|
|
``To the Chantrey Bequest. The mystery is _what_ they
|
|
find to talk about in the country.''
|
|
|
|
``There are two subjects of conversation in the country:
|
|
Servants, and Can fowls be made to pay? The first, I
|
|
believe, is compulsory, the second optional.''
|
|
|
|
``As a function,'' resumed Reginald, ``the Academy is a
|
|
failure.''
|
|
|
|
``You think it would be tolerable without the pictures?''
|
|
|
|
``The pictures are all right, in their way; after all, one
|
|
can always _look_ at them if one is bored with one's
|
|
surroundings, or wants to avoid an imminent acquaintance.''
|
|
|
|
``Even that doesn't always save one. There is the
|
|
inevitable female whom you met once in Devonshire, or the
|
|
Matoppo Hills, or somewhere, who charges up to you with the
|
|
remark that it's funny how one always meets people one knows
|
|
at the Academy. Personally, I _don't_ think it funny.''
|
|
|
|
``I suffered in that way just now,'' said Reginald
|
|
plaintively, ``from a woman whose word I had to take that
|
|
she had met me last summer in Brittany.''
|
|
|
|
``I hope you were not too brutal?''
|
|
|
|
``I merely told her with engaging simplicity that the art
|
|
of life was the avoidance of the unattainable.''
|
|
|
|
``Did she try and work it out on the back of her catalogue?''
|
|
|
|
``Not there and then. She murmured something about being
|
|
`so clever.' Fancy coming to the Academy to be clever!''
|
|
|
|
``To be clever in the afternoon argues that one is dining
|
|
nowhere in the evening.''
|
|
|
|
``Which reminds me that I can't remember whether I
|
|
accepted an invitation from you to dine at Kettner's
|
|
tonight.''
|
|
|
|
``On the other hand, I can remember with startling
|
|
distinctness not having asked you to.''
|
|
|
|
``So much certainty is unbecoming in the young; so we'll
|
|
consider that settled. What were you talking about? Oh,
|
|
pictures. Personally, I rather like them; they are so
|
|
refreshingly real and probable, they take one away from the
|
|
unrealities of life.''
|
|
|
|
``One likes to escape from oneself occasionally.''
|
|
|
|
``That is the disadvantage of a portrait; as a rule, one's
|
|
bitterest friends can find nothing more to ask than the
|
|
faithful unlikeness that goes down to posterity as oneself.
|
|
I hate posterity---it's so fond of having the last word. Of
|
|
course, as regards portraits, there are exceptions.''
|
|
|
|
``For instance?''
|
|
|
|
``To die before being painted by Sargent is to go to
|
|
heaven prematurely.''
|
|
|
|
``With the necessary care and impatience, you may avoid
|
|
that catastrophe.''
|
|
|
|
``If you're going to be rude,'' said Reginald, ``I shall
|
|
dine with you tomorrow night as well. The chief vice of the
|
|
Academy,'' he continued, ``is its nomenclature. Why, for
|
|
instance, should an obvious trout-stream with a palpable
|
|
rabbit sitting in the foreground be called `an evening dream
|
|
of unbeclouded peace,' or something of that sort?''
|
|
|
|
``You think,'' said the Other, ``that a name should
|
|
economize description rather than stimulate imagination?''
|
|
|
|
``Properly chosen, it should do both. There is my lady
|
|
kitten at home, for instance; I've called it Derry.''
|
|
|
|
``Suggests nothing to my imagination but protracted sieges
|
|
and religious animosities. of course, I don't know your
|
|
kitten---''
|
|
|
|
``Oh, you're silly. It's a sweet name, and it answers to
|
|
it---when it wants to. Then, if there are any unseemly
|
|
noises in the night, they can be explained succinctly: Derry
|
|
and Toms.''
|
|
|
|
``You might almost charge for the advertisement. But as
|
|
applied to pictures, don't you think your system would be
|
|
too subtle, say, for the Country Cousins?''
|
|
|
|
``Every reformation must have its victims. You can't
|
|
expect the fatted calf to share the enthusiasm of the angels
|
|
over the prodigals return. Another darling weakness of the
|
|
Academy is that none of its luminaries must `arrive' in a
|
|
hurry. You can see them coming for years, like a Balkan
|
|
trouble or a street improvement, and by the time they have
|
|
painted a thousand or so square yards of canvas, their work
|
|
begins to be recognized.''
|
|
|
|
``Some one who Must Not be Contradicted said that a man
|
|
must be a success by the time he's thirty, or never.''
|
|
|
|
``To have reached thirty,'' said Reginald, ``is to have
|
|
failed in life.''
|
|
|
|
REGINALD AT THE THEATRE
|
|
|
|
``After all,'' said the Duchess vaguely, ``there are
|
|
certain things you can't get away from. Right and wrong,
|
|
good conduct and moral rectitude, have certain well-defined
|
|
limits.''
|
|
|
|
``So, for the matter of that,'' replied Reginald, ``has
|
|
the Russian Empire. The trouble is that the limits are not
|
|
always in the same place.''
|
|
|
|
Reginald and the Duchess regarded each other with mutual
|
|
distrust, tempered by a scientific interest. Reginald
|
|
considered that the Duchess had much to learn; in
|
|
particular, not to hurry out of the Carlton as though afraid
|
|
of losing one's last 'bus. A woman, he said, who is
|
|
careless of disappearances is capable of leaving town before
|
|
Goodwood, and dying at the wrong moment of an unfashionable
|
|
disease.
|
|
|
|
The Duchess thought that Reginald did not exceed the
|
|
ethical standard which circumstances demanded.
|
|
|
|
``Of course,'' she resumed combatively, ``it's the
|
|
prevailing fashion to believe in perpetual change and
|
|
mutability, and all that sort of thing, and to say we are
|
|
all merely an improved form of primeval ape---of course you
|
|
subscribe to that doctrine?''
|
|
|
|
``I think it decidedly premature; in most people I know
|
|
the process is far from complete.''
|
|
|
|
``And equally of course you are quite irreligious?''
|
|
|
|
``Oh, by no means. The fashion just now is a Roman
|
|
Catholic frame of mind with an Agnostic conscience: you get
|
|
the medi<ae>val picturesqueness of the one with the modern
|
|
conveniences of the other.''
|
|
|
|
The Duchess suppressed a sniff. She was one of those
|
|
people who regard the Church of England with patronizing
|
|
affection, as if it were something that had grown up in
|
|
their kitchen garden.
|
|
|
|
``But there are other things,'' she continued, ``which I
|
|
suppose are to a certain extent sacred even to you.
|
|
Patriotism, for instance, and Empire, and Imperial
|
|
responsibility, and blood-is-thicker-than-water, and all
|
|
that sort of thing.''
|
|
|
|
Reginald waited for a couple of minutes before replying,
|
|
while the Lord of Rimini temporarily monopolized the
|
|
acoustic possibilities of the theatre.
|
|
|
|
``That is the worst of a tragedy,'' he observed, ``one
|
|
can't always hear oneself talk. Of course I accept the
|
|
Imperial idea and the responsibility. After all, I would
|
|
just as soon think in Continents as anywhere else. And some
|
|
day, when the season is over and we have the time, you shall
|
|
explain to me the exact blood-brotherhood and all that sort
|
|
of thing that exists between a French Canadian and a mild
|
|
Hindoo and a Yorkshireman, for instance.''
|
|
|
|
``Oh, well, `dominion over palm and pine,' you know,''
|
|
quoted the Duchess hopefully; ``of course we mustn't forget
|
|
that we're all part of the great Anglo-Saxon Empire.''
|
|
|
|
``Which for its part is rapidly becoming a suburb of
|
|
Jerusalem. A very pleasant suburb, I admit, and quite a
|
|
charming Jerusalem. But still a suburb.''
|
|
|
|
``Really, to be told one's living in a suburb when one is
|
|
conscious of spreading the benefits of civilization all over
|
|
the world! Philanthropy---I suppose you will say _that_ is
|
|
a comfortable delusion; and yet even you must admit that
|
|
whenever want or misery or starvation is known to exist,
|
|
however distant or difficult of access, we instantly
|
|
organize relief on the most generous scale, and distribute
|
|
it, if need be, to the uttermost ends of the earth.''
|
|
|
|
The Duchess paused, with a sense of ultimate triumph. She
|
|
had made the same observation at a drawing-room meeting, and
|
|
it had been extremely well received.
|
|
|
|
``I wonder,'' said Reginald, ``if you have ever walked
|
|
down the Embankment on a winter night?''
|
|
|
|
``Gracious, no, child! Why do you ask?''
|
|
|
|
``I didn't; I only wondered. And even your philanthropy,
|
|
practised in a world where everything is based on
|
|
competition, must have a debit as well as a credit account.
|
|
The young ravens cry for food.''
|
|
|
|
``And are fed.''
|
|
|
|
``Exactly. Which presupposes that something else is fed
|
|
upon.''
|
|
|
|
``Oh, you're simply exasperating. You've been reading
|
|
Nietzsche till you haven't got any sense of moral proportion
|
|
left. May I ask if you are governed by _any_ laws of
|
|
conduct whatever?''
|
|
|
|
``There are certain fixed rules that one observes for
|
|
one's own comfort. For instance, never be flippantly rude
|
|
to any inoffensive, grey-bearded stranger that you may meet
|
|
in pine forests or hotel smoking-rooms on the Continent. It
|
|
always turns out to be the King of Sweden.''
|
|
|
|
``The restraint must be dreadfully irksome to you. When I
|
|
was younger, boys of your age used to be nice and
|
|
innocent.''
|
|
|
|
``Now we are only nice. One must specialize in these days. Which
|
|
reminds me of the man I read of in some sacred book who was given a
|
|
choice of what he most desired. And because he didn't ask for titles
|
|
and honours and dignities, but only for immense wealth, these other
|
|
things came to him also.''
|
|
|
|
``I am sure you didn't read about him in any sacred
|
|
hook.''
|
|
|
|
``Yes; I fancy you will find him in Debrett.''
|
|
|
|
REGINALD'S PEACE POEM
|
|
|
|
``I'm writing a poem on Peace,'' said Reginald, emerging
|
|
from a sweeping operation through a tin of mixed biscuits,
|
|
in whose depths a macaroon or two might yet be lurking.
|
|
|
|
``Something of the kind seems to have been attempted
|
|
already,'' said the Other.
|
|
|
|
``Oh, I know; but I may never have the chance again.
|
|
Besides, I've got a new fountain pen. I don't pretend to
|
|
have gone on any very original lines; in writing about Peace
|
|
the thing is to say what everybody else is saying, only to
|
|
say it better. It begins with the usual ornithological
|
|
emotion:
|
|
|
|
`When the widgeon westward winging
|
|
Heard the folk Vereeniginging,
|
|
Heard the shouting and the singing---' ''
|
|
|
|
``Vereeniginging is good, but why widgeon?''
|
|
|
|
``Why not? Anything that winged westward would naturally
|
|
begin with a _w_.''
|
|
|
|
``Need it wing westward?''
|
|
|
|
``The bird must go somewhere. You wouldn't have it hang
|
|
around and look foolish. Then I've brought in something
|
|
about the heedless hartebeest galloping over the deserted
|
|
veldt.''
|
|
|
|
``Of course you know it's practically extinct in those
|
|
regions?''
|
|
|
|
``I can't help that, it gallops so nicely. I make it have
|
|
all sorts of unexpected yearnings:
|
|
|
|
'Mother, may I go and maffick,
|
|
Tear around and hinder traffic?'
|
|
|
|
Of course you'll say there would be no traffic worth
|
|
bothering about on the bare and sun-scorched veldt, but
|
|
there's no other word that rhymes with maffick.''
|
|
|
|
``Seraphic?''
|
|
|
|
Reginald considered. ``It might do, but I've got a lot
|
|
about angels later on. You must have angels in a Peace
|
|
poem; I know dreadfully little about their habits.''
|
|
|
|
``They can do unexpected things, like the hartebeest.''
|
|
|
|
``Of course. Then I turn on London, the City of Dreadful
|
|
Nocturnes, resonant with hymns of joy and thanksgiving:
|
|
|
|
'And the sleeper, eye unlidding,
|
|
Heard a voice for ever bidding
|
|
Much farewell to Dolly Gray;
|
|
Turning weary on his truckle-
|
|
Bed he heard the honeysuckle
|
|
Lauded in apiarian lay.'
|
|
|
|
Longfellow at his best wrote nothing like that.''
|
|
|
|
``I agree with you.''
|
|
|
|
``I wish you wouldn't. I've a sweet temper, but I can't
|
|
stand being agreed with. And I'm so worried about the
|
|
aasvogel.''
|
|
|
|
Reginald stared dismally at the biscuit-tin, which now
|
|
presented an unattractive array of rejected cracknels.
|
|
|
|
``I believe,`` he murmured , ''if I could find a woman
|
|
with an unsatisfied craving for cracknels, I should marry
|
|
her.''
|
|
|
|
``What is the tragedy of the aasvogel?'' asked the Other
|
|
sympathetically.
|
|
|
|
``Oh, simply that there's no rhyme for it. I thought
|
|
about it all the time I was dressing---it's dreadfully bad
|
|
for one to think whilst one's dressing---and all lunch-time,
|
|
and I'm still hung up over it. I feel like those
|
|
unfortunate automobilists who achieve an unenviable
|
|
notoriety by coming to a hopeless stop with their cars in
|
|
the most crowded thoroughfares. I'm afraid I shall have to
|
|
drop the aasvogel, and it did give such lovely local colour
|
|
to the thing.''
|
|
|
|
``Still you've got the heedless hartebeest.''
|
|
|
|
``And quite a decorative bit of moral admonition---when
|
|
you've worried the meaning out---
|
|
|
|
'Cease, War, thy bubbling madness that the wine shares,
|
|
And bid thy legions turn their swords to mine shares.'
|
|
|
|
Mine shares seems to fit the case better than ploughshares.
|
|
There's lots more about the blessings of Peace, shall I go
|
|
on reading it?''
|
|
|
|
``If I must make a choice, I think I would rather they
|
|
went on with the war.''
|
|
|
|
REGINALD'S CHOIR TREAT
|
|
|
|
``Never,'' wrote Reginald to his most darling friend, ``be
|
|
a pioneer. It's the Early Christian that gets the fattest
|
|
lion.''
|
|
|
|
Reginald, in his way, was a pioneer.
|
|
|
|
None of the rest of his family had anything approaching
|
|
Titian hair or a sense of humour, and they used primroses as
|
|
a table decoration.
|
|
|
|
It follows that they never understood Reginald, who came
|
|
down late to breakfast, and nibbled toast, and said
|
|
disrespectful things about the universe. The family ate
|
|
porridge, and believed in everything, even the weather
|
|
forecast.
|
|
|
|
Therefore the family was relieved when the vicar's
|
|
daughter undertook the reformation of Reginald. Her name
|
|
was Amabel; it was the vicar's one extravagance. Amabel was
|
|
accounted a beauty and intellectually gifted; she never
|
|
played tennis, and was reputed to have read Maeterlinck's
|
|
_Life of the Bee_. If you abstain from tennis and read
|
|
Maeterlinck in a small country village, you are of necessity
|
|
intellectual. Also she had been twice to F<e'>camp to pick
|
|
up a good French accent from the Americans staying there;
|
|
consequently she had a knowledge of the world which might be
|
|
considered useful in dealings with a worldling.
|
|
|
|
Hence the congratulations in the family when Amabel
|
|
undertook the reformation of its wayward member.
|
|
|
|
Amabel commenced operations by asking her unsuspecting
|
|
pupil to tea in the vicarage garden; she believed in the
|
|
healthy influence of natural surroundings, never having been
|
|
in Sicily, where things are different.
|
|
|
|
And like every woman who has ever preached repentance to
|
|
unregenerate youth, she dwelt on the sin of an empty life,
|
|
which always seems so much more scandalous in the country,
|
|
where people rise early to see if a new strawberry has
|
|
happened during the night.
|
|
|
|
Reginald recalled the lilies of the field, ``which simply
|
|
sat and looked beautiful, and defied competition.''
|
|
|
|
``But that is not an example for us to follow,'' gasped
|
|
Amabel.
|
|
|
|
``Unfortunately, we can't afford to. You don't know what
|
|
a world of trouble I take in trying to rival the lilies in
|
|
their artistic simplicity.''
|
|
|
|
``You are really indecently vain of your appearance. A
|
|
good life is infinitely preferable to good looks.''
|
|
|
|
``You agree with me that the two are incompatible. I
|
|
always say beauty is only sin deep.''
|
|
|
|
Amabel began to realize that the battle is not always to
|
|
the strong-minded. With the immemorial resource of her sex,
|
|
she abandoned the frontal attack and laid stress on her
|
|
unassisted labours in parish work, her mental loneliness,
|
|
her discouragements---and at the right moment she produced
|
|
strawberries and cream. Reginald was obviously affected by
|
|
the latter, and when his preceptress suggested that he might
|
|
begin the strenuous life by helping her to supervise the
|
|
annual outing of the bucolic infants who composed the local
|
|
choir, his eyes shone with the dangerous enthusiasm of a
|
|
convert.
|
|
|
|
Reginald entered on the strenuous life alone, as far as
|
|
Amabel was concerned. The most virtuous women are not proof
|
|
against damp grass, and Amabel kept her bed with a cold.
|
|
Reginald called it a dispensation; it had been the dream of
|
|
his life to stage-manage a choir outing. With strategic
|
|
insight, he led his shy, bullet-headed charges to the
|
|
nearest woodland stream and allowed them to bathe; then he
|
|
seated himself on their discarded garments and discoursed on
|
|
their immediate future, which, he decreed, was to embrace a
|
|
Bacchanalian procession through the village. Forethought
|
|
had provided the occasion with a supply of tin whistles, but
|
|
the introduction of a he-goat from a neighbouring orchard
|
|
was a brilliant afterthought. Properly, Reginald explained,
|
|
there should have been an outfit of panther skins; as it
|
|
was, those who had spotted handkerchiefs were allowed to
|
|
wear them, which they did with thankfulness. Reginald
|
|
recognized the impossibility, in the time at his disposal,
|
|
of teaching his shivering neophytes a chant in honour of
|
|
Bacchus, so he started them off with a more familiar, if
|
|
less appropriate, temperance hymn. After all, he said, it
|
|
is the spirit of the thing that counts. Following the
|
|
etiquette of dramatic authors on first nights, he remained
|
|
discreetly in the background while the procession, with
|
|
extreme diffidence and the goat, wound its way lugubriously
|
|
towards the village. The singing had died down long before
|
|
the main street was reached, but the miserable wailing of
|
|
pipes brought the inhabitants to their doors. Reginald said
|
|
he had seen something like it in pictures; the villagers had
|
|
seen nothing like it in their lives, and remarked as much
|
|
freely.
|
|
|
|
Reginald's family never forgave him. They had no sense of
|
|
humour.
|
|
|
|
REGINALD ON WORRIES
|
|
|
|
I have (said Reginald) an aunt who worries. She's not
|
|
really an aunt---a sort of amateur one, and they aren't
|
|
really worries. She is a social success, and has no
|
|
domestic tragedies worth speaking of, so she adopts any
|
|
decorative sorrows that are going, myself included. In that
|
|
way she's the antithesis, or whatever you call it, to those
|
|
sweet, uncomplaining women one knows who have seen trouble,
|
|
and worn blinkers ever since. Of course, one just loves
|
|
them for it, but I must confess they make me uncomfy; they
|
|
remind one so of a duck that goes flapping about with forced
|
|
cheerfulness long after its head's been cut off. Ducks have
|
|
no repose. Now, my aunt has a shade of hair that suits her,
|
|
and a cook who quarrels with the other servants, which is
|
|
always a hopeful sign, and a conscience that's absentee for
|
|
about eleven months of the year, and only turns up at Lent
|
|
to annoy her husband's people, who are considerably Lower
|
|
than the angels, so to speak: with all these natural
|
|
advantages---she says her particular tint of bronze is a
|
|
natural advantage, and there can be no two opinions as to
|
|
the advantage---of course she has to send out for her
|
|
afflictions, like those restaurants where they haven't got a
|
|
licence. The system has this advantage, that you can fit
|
|
your unhappinesses in with your other engagements, whereas
|
|
real worries have a way of arriving at meal-times, and when
|
|
you're dressing, or other solemn moments. I knew a canary
|
|
once that had been trying for months and years to hatch out
|
|
a family, and every one looked upon it as a blameless
|
|
infatuation, like the sale of Delagoa Bay, which would be an
|
|
annual loss to the Press agencies if it ever came to pass;
|
|
and one day the bird really did bring it off, in the middle
|
|
of family prayers. I say the middle, but it was also the
|
|
end: you can't go on being thankful for daily bread when you
|
|
are wondering what on earth very new canaries expect to be
|
|
fed on.
|
|
|
|
At present she's rather in a Balkan state of mind about
|
|
the treatment of the Jews in Roumania. Personally, I think
|
|
the Jews have estimable qualities; they're so kind to their
|
|
poor---and to our rich. I daresay in Roumania the cost of
|
|
living beyond one's income isn't so great. Over here the
|
|
trouble is that so many people who have money to throw about
|
|
seem to have such vague ideas where to throw it. That fund,
|
|
for instance, to relieve the victims of sudden
|
|
disasters---what is a sudden disaster? There's Marion
|
|
Mulciber, who _would_ think she could play bridge, just as
|
|
she would think she could ride down a hill on a bicycle; on
|
|
that occasion she went to a hospital, now shes gone into a
|
|
Sisterhood---lost all she had, you know, and gave the rest
|
|
to Heaven. Still, you can't call it a sudden calamity;
|
|
_that_ occurred when poor dear Marion was born. The doctors
|
|
said at the time that she couldn't live more than a
|
|
fortnight, and she's been trying ever since to see if she
|
|
could. Women are so opinionated.
|
|
|
|
And then there's the Education Question---not that I can
|
|
see that there's anything to worry about in that direction.
|
|
To my mind, education is an absurdly overrated affair. At
|
|
least, one never took it very seriously at school, where
|
|
everything was done to bring it prominently under one's
|
|
notice. Anything that is worth knowing one practically
|
|
teaches oneself, and the rest obtrudes itself sooner or
|
|
later. The reason one's elders know so comparatively little
|
|
is because they have to unlearn so much that they acquired
|
|
by way of education before we were born. Of course I'm a
|
|
believer in Nature-study; as I said to Lady Beauwhistle, if
|
|
you want a lesson in elaborate artificiality, just watch the
|
|
studied unconcern of a Persian cat entering a crowded salon,
|
|
and then go and practise it for a fortnight. The
|
|
Beauwhistles weren't born in the Purple, you know, but
|
|
they're getting there on the instalment system---so much
|
|
down, and the rest when you feel like it. They have kind
|
|
hearts, and they never forget birthdays. I forget what he
|
|
was, something in the City, where the patriotism comes from;
|
|
and she---oh, well, her frocks are built in Paris, but she
|
|
wears them with a strong English accent. So public-spirited
|
|
of her. I think she must have been very strictly brought
|
|
up, she's so desperately anxious to do the wrong thing
|
|
correctly. Not that it really matters nowadays, as I told
|
|
her: I know some perfectly virtuous people who are received
|
|
everywhere.
|
|
|
|
REGINALD ON HOUSE-PARTIES
|
|
|
|
The drawback is, one never really _knows_ one's hosts and
|
|
hostesses. One gets to know their fox-terriers and their
|
|
chrysanthemums, and whether the story about the go-cart can
|
|
be turned loose in the drawing-room, or must be told
|
|
privately to each member of the party, for fear of shocking
|
|
public opinion; but one's host and hostess are a sort of
|
|
human hinterland that one never has the time to explore.
|
|
|
|
There was a fellow I stayed with once in Warwickshire who
|
|
farmed his own land, but was otherwise quite steady. Should
|
|
never have suspected him of having a soul, yet not very long
|
|
afterwards he eloped with a lion-tamer's widow and set up as
|
|
a golf-instructor somewhere on the Persian Gulf; dreadfully
|
|
immoral of course, because he was only an indifferent
|
|
player, but still, it showed imagination. His wife was
|
|
really to be pitied, because he had been the only person in
|
|
the house who understood how to manage the cooks temper, and
|
|
now she has to put ``D.V.'' on her dinner invitations.
|
|
Still, that's better than a domestic scandal; a woman who
|
|
leaves her cook never wholly recovers her position in
|
|
Society.
|
|
|
|
I suppose the same thing holds good with the hosts; they
|
|
seldom have more than a superficial acquaintance with their
|
|
guests, and so often just when they do get to know you a bit
|
|
better, they leave off knowing you altogether. There was
|
|
_rather_ a breath of winter in the air when I left those
|
|
Dorsetshire people. You see, they had asked me down to
|
|
shoot, and I'm not particularly immense at that sort of
|
|
thing. There's such a deadly sameness about partridges;
|
|
when you've missed one, you've missed the lot---at least,
|
|
that's been my experience. And they tried to rag me in the
|
|
smoking-room about not being able to hit a bird at five
|
|
yards, a sort of bovine ragging that suggested cows buzzing
|
|
round a gadfly and thinking they were teasing it. So I got
|
|
up the next morning at early dawn---I know it was dawn,
|
|
because there were lark-noises in the sky, and the grass
|
|
looked as if it had been left out all night---and hunted up
|
|
the most conspicuous thing in the bird line that I could
|
|
find, and measured the distance, as nearly as it would let
|
|
me, and shot away all I knew. They said afterwards that it
|
|
was a tame bird; that's simply _silly_, because it was
|
|
awfully wild at the first few shots. Afterwards it quieted
|
|
down a bit, and when its legs had stopped waving farewells
|
|
to the landscape I got a gardener-boy to drag it into the
|
|
hall, where everybody must see it on their way to the
|
|
breakfast-room. I breakfasted upstairs myself. I gathered
|
|
afterwards that the meal was tinged with a very unchristian
|
|
spirit. I suppose it's unlucky to bring peacock's feathers
|
|
into a house; anyway, there was a blue-pencilly look in my
|
|
hostess's eye when I took my departure.
|
|
|
|
Some hostesses, of course, will forgive anything, even
|
|
unto pavonicide (is there such a word?), as long as one is
|
|
nice-looking and sufficiently unusual to counterbalance some
|
|
of the others; and there _are_ others---the girl, for
|
|
instance, who reads Meredith, and appears at meals with
|
|
unnatural punctuality in a frock that's made at home and
|
|
repented at leisure. She eventually finds her way to India
|
|
and gets married, and comes home to admire the Royal
|
|
Academy, and to imagine that an indifferent prawn curry is
|
|
for ever an effective substitute for all that we have been
|
|
taught to believe is luncheon. It's then that she is really
|
|
dangerous; but at her worst she is never quite so bad as the
|
|
woman who fires Exchange and Mart questions at you without
|
|
the least provocation. Imagine the other day, just when I
|
|
was doing my best to understand half the things I was
|
|
saying, being asked by one of those seekers after country
|
|
home truths how many fowls she could keep in a run ten feet
|
|
by six, or whatever it was! I told her whole crowds, as long
|
|
as she kept the door shut, and the idea didn't seem to have
|
|
struck her before; at least, she brooded over it for the
|
|
rest of dinner.
|
|
|
|
Of course, as I say, one never really _knows_ one's
|
|
ground, and one may make mistakes occasionally. But then
|
|
one's mistakes sometimes turn out assets in the long-run: if
|
|
we had never bungled away our American colonies we might
|
|
never have had the boy from the States to teach us how to
|
|
wear our hair and cut our clothes, and we must get our ideas
|
|
from somewhere, I suppose. Even the Hooligan was probably
|
|
invented in China centuries before we thought of him.
|
|
England must wake up, as the Duke of Devonshire said the
|
|
other day, wasn't it? Oh, well, it was some one else. Not
|
|
that I ever indulge in despair about the Future; there
|
|
always have been men who have gone about despairing of the
|
|
Future, and when the Future arrives it says nice, superior
|
|
things about their having acted according to their lights.
|
|
It is dreadful to think that other people's grandchildren
|
|
may one day rise up and call one amiable.
|
|
|
|
There are moments when one sympathizes with Herod.
|
|
|
|
REGINALD AT THE CARLTON
|
|
|
|
``A most variable climate,'' said the Duchess; ``and how
|
|
unfortunate that we should have had that very cold weather
|
|
at a time when coal was so dear! So distressing for the
|
|
poor.''
|
|
|
|
``Some one has observed that Providence is always on the
|
|
side of the big dividends,'' remarked Reginald.
|
|
|
|
The Duchess ate an anchovy in a shocked manner; she was
|
|
sufficiently old-fashioned to dislike irreverence towards
|
|
dividends.
|
|
|
|
Reginald had left the selection of a feeding-ground to her
|
|
womanly intuition, but he chose the wine himself, knowing
|
|
that womanly intuition stops short at claret. A woman will
|
|
cheerfully choose husbands for her less attractive friends,
|
|
or take sides in a political controversy without the least
|
|
knowledge of the issues involved---but no woman ever
|
|
cheerfully chose a claret.
|
|
|
|
``Hors d'<oe>uvres have always a pathetic interest for
|
|
me,'' said Reginald: ``they remind me of one's childhood
|
|
that one goes through, wondering what the next course is
|
|
going to be like---and during the rest of the menu one
|
|
wishes one had eaten more of the hors d'<oe>vres. Don't you
|
|
love watching the different ways people have of entering a
|
|
restaurant? There is the woman who races in as though her
|
|
whole scheme of life were held together by a one-pin
|
|
despotism which might abdicate its functions at any moment;
|
|
it's really a relief to see her reach her chair in safety.
|
|
Then there are the people who troop in with
|
|
an-unpleasant-duty-to-perform air, as if they were angels of
|
|
Death entering a plague city. You see that type of Briton
|
|
very much in hotels abroad. And nowadays there are always
|
|
the Johannes-bourgeois, who bring a Cape-to-Cairo atmosphere
|
|
with them---what may be called the Rand Manner, I suppose.''
|
|
|
|
``Talking about hotels abroad,'' said the Duchess, ``I am
|
|
preparing notes for a lecture at the Club on the educational
|
|
effects of modern travel, dealing chiefly with the moral
|
|
side of the question. I was talking to Lady Beauwhistle's
|
|
aunt the other day---she's just come back from Paris, you
|
|
know. Such a sweet woman---''
|
|
|
|
``And so silly. In these days of the overeducation of
|
|
women she's quite refreshing. They say some people went
|
|
through the siege of Paris without knowing that France and
|
|
Germany were at war; but the Beauwhistle aunt is credited
|
|
with having passed the whole winter in Paris under the
|
|
impression that the Humberts were a kind of bicycle....
|
|
Isn't there a bishop or somebody who believes we shall meet
|
|
all the animals we have known on earth in another world? How
|
|
frightfully embarrassing to meet a whole shoal of whitebait
|
|
you had last known at Prince's! I'm sure in my nervousness I
|
|
should talk of nothing but lemons. Still, I daresay they
|
|
would be quite as offended if one hadn't eaten them. I know
|
|
if I were served up at a cannibal feast I should be
|
|
dreadfully annoyed if any one found fault with me for not
|
|
being tender enough, or having been kept too long.''
|
|
|
|
``My idea about the lecture,'' resumed the Duchess
|
|
hurriedly, ``is to inquire whether promiscuous Continental
|
|
travel doesn't tend to weaken the moral fibre of the social
|
|
conscience. There are people one knows, quite nice people
|
|
when they are in England, who are so _different_ when they
|
|
are anywhere the other side of the Channel.''
|
|
|
|
``The people with what I call Tauchnitz morals,'' observed
|
|
Reginald. ``On the whole, I think they get the best of two
|
|
very desirable worlds. And, after all, they charge so much
|
|
for excess luggage on some of those foreign lines that it's
|
|
really an economy to leave one's reputation behind one
|
|
occasionally.''
|
|
|
|
``A scandal, my dear Reginald, is as much to be avoided at
|
|
Monaco or any of those places as at Exeter, let us say.''
|
|
|
|
``Scandal, my dear Irene---I may call you Irene, mayn't
|
|
I?''
|
|
|
|
``I don't know that you have known me long enough for
|
|
that.''
|
|
|
|
``I've known you longer than your god-parents had when
|
|
they took the liberty of calling you that name. Scandal is
|
|
merely the compassionate allowance which the gay make to the
|
|
humdrum. Think how many blameless lives are brightened by
|
|
the blazing indiscretions of other people. Tell me, who is
|
|
the woman with the old lace at the table on our left? Oh,
|
|
that doesn't matter; it's quite the thing nowadays to stare
|
|
at people as if they were yearlings at Tattersall's.''
|
|
|
|
``Mrs. Spelvexit? Quite a charming woman; separated from
|
|
her husband---''
|
|
|
|
``Incompatibility of income?''
|
|
|
|
``Oh, nothing of that sort. By miles of frozen ocean, I
|
|
was going to say. He explores ice-floes and studies the
|
|
movements of herrings, and has written a most interesting
|
|
book on the home-life of the Esquimaux; but naturally he has
|
|
very little home-life of his own.''
|
|
|
|
``A husband who comes home with the Gulf Stream would be
|
|
rather a tied-up asset.''
|
|
|
|
``His wife is exceedingly sensible about it. She collects
|
|
postage-stamps. Such a resource. Those people with her are
|
|
the Whimples, very old acquaintances of mine; they're always
|
|
having trouble, poor things.'
|
|
|
|
``Trouble is not one of those fancies you can take up and
|
|
drop at any moment; it's like a grouse-moor or the
|
|
opium-habit---once you start it you've got to keep it up.''
|
|
|
|
``Their eldest son was such a disappointment to them; they
|
|
wanted him to be a linguist, and spent no end of money on
|
|
having him taught to speak---oh, dozens of languages!---and
|
|
then he became a Trappist monk. And the youngest, who was
|
|
intended for the American marriage market, has developed
|
|
political tendencies, and writes pamphlets about the housing
|
|
of the poor. Of course it's a most important question, and
|
|
I devote a good deal of time to it myself in the mornings;
|
|
but, as Laura Whimple says, it's as well to have an
|
|
establishment of one's own before agitating about other
|
|
people's. She feels it very keenly, but she always
|
|
maintains a cheerful appetite, which I think is so unselfish
|
|
of her.''
|
|
|
|
``There are different ways of taking disappointment.
|
|
There was a girl I knew who nursed a wealthy uncle through a
|
|
long illness, borne by her with Christian fortitude, and
|
|
then he died and left his money to a swine-fever hospital.
|
|
She found she'd about cleared stock in fortitude by that
|
|
time, and now she gives drawing-room recitations. That's
|
|
what I call being vindictive.''
|
|
|
|
``Life is full of its disappointments,'' observed the
|
|
Duchess, ``and I suppose the art of being happy is to
|
|
disguise them as illusions. But that, my dear Reginald,
|
|
becomes more difficult as one grows older.''
|
|
|
|
``I think it's more generally practised than you imagine.
|
|
The young have aspirations that never come to pass, the old
|
|
have reminiscences of what never happened. It's only the
|
|
middle-aged who are really conscious of their
|
|
limitations---that is why one should be so patient with
|
|
them. But one never is.''
|
|
|
|
``After all,'' said the Duchess, ``the disillusions of
|
|
life may depend on our way of assessing it. In the minds of
|
|
those who come after us we may be remembered for qualities
|
|
and successes which we quite left out of the reckoning.''
|
|
|
|
``It's not always safe to depend on the commemorative
|
|
tendencies of those who come after us. There may have been
|
|
disillusionments in the lives of the medi<ae>val saints, but
|
|
they would scarcely have been better pleased if they could
|
|
have foreseen that their names would be associated nowadays
|
|
chiefly with racehorses and the cheaper clarets. And now,
|
|
if you can tear yourself away from the salted almonds, we'll
|
|
go and have coffee under the palms that are so necessary for
|
|
our discomfort.''
|
|
|
|
REGINALD ON BESETTING SINS
|
|
|
|
The Woman who Told the Truth
|
|
|
|
There was once (said Reginald) a woman who told the truth.
|
|
Not all at once, of course, but the habit grew upon her
|
|
gradually, like lichen on an apparently healthy tree. She
|
|
had no children---otherwise it might have been different.
|
|
It began with little things, for no particular reason except
|
|
that her life was a rather empty one, and it is so easy to
|
|
slip into the habit of telling the truth in little matters.
|
|
And then it became difficult to draw the line at more
|
|
important things, until at last she took to telling the
|
|
truth about her age; she said she was forty-two and five
|
|
months---by that time, you see, she was veracious even to
|
|
months. It may have been pleasing to the angels, but her
|
|
elder sister was not gratified. On the Woman's birthday,
|
|
instead of the opera-tickets which she had hoped for, her
|
|
sister gave her a view of Jerusalem from the Mount of
|
|
Olives, which is not quite the same thing. The revenge of
|
|
an elder sister may be long in coming, but, like a
|
|
South-Eastern express, it arrives in its own good time.
|
|
|
|
The friends of the Woman tried to dissuade her from
|
|
over-indulgence in the practice, but she said she was wedded
|
|
to the truth; whereupon it was remarked that it was scarcely
|
|
logical to be so much together in public. (No really
|
|
provident woman lunches regularly with her husband if she
|
|
wishes to burst upon him as a revelation at dinner. He must
|
|
have time to forget; an afternoon is not enough.) And after
|
|
a while her friends began to thin out in patches. Her
|
|
passion for the truth was not compatible with a large
|
|
visiting-list. For instance, she told Miriam Klopstock
|
|
_exactly_ how she looked at the Ilexes' ball. Certainly
|
|
Miriam had asked for her candid opinion, but the Woman
|
|
prayed in church every Sunday for peace in our time, and it
|
|
was not consistent.
|
|
|
|
It was unfortunate, every one agreed, that she had no
|
|
family; with a child or two in the house, there is an
|
|
unconscious check upon too free an indulgence in the truth.
|
|
Children are given us to discourage our better emotions.
|
|
That is why the stage, with all its efforts, can never be as
|
|
artificial as life; even in an Ibsen drama one must reveal
|
|
to the audience things that one would suppress before the
|
|
children or servants.
|
|
|
|
Fate may have ordained the truth-telling from the
|
|
commencement and should justly bear some of the blame; but
|
|
in having no children the Woman was guilty, at least, of
|
|
contributory negligence.
|
|
|
|
Little by little she felt she was becoming a slave to what
|
|
had once been merely an idle propensity; and one day she
|
|
knew. Every woman tells ninety per cent of the truth to her
|
|
dressmaker; the other ten per cent is the irreducible
|
|
minimum of deception beyond which no self-respecting client
|
|
trespasses. Madame Draga's establishment was a
|
|
meeting-ground for naked truths and overdressed fictions,
|
|
and it was here, the Woman felt, that she might make a final
|
|
effort to recall the artless mendacity of past days. Madame
|
|
herself was in an inspiring mood, with the air of a sphinx
|
|
who knew all things and preferred to forget most of them.
|
|
As a War Minister she might have been celebrated, but she
|
|
was content to be merely rich.
|
|
|
|
``If I take it in here, and---Miss Howard, one moment, if
|
|
you please---and there, and round like this---so---I really
|
|
think you will find it quite easy.''
|
|
|
|
The Woman hesitated; it seemed to require such a small
|
|
effort to simply acquiesce in Madame's views. But habit had
|
|
become too strong. ``I'm afraid,'' she faltered, ``it's
|
|
just the least little bit in the world too---''
|
|
|
|
And by that least little bit she measured the deeps and
|
|
eternities of her thraldom to fact. Madame was not best
|
|
pleased at being contradicted on a professional matter, and
|
|
when Madame lost her temper you usually found it afterwards
|
|
in the bill.
|
|
|
|
And at last the dreadful thing came, as the Woman had
|
|
foreseen all along that it must; it was one of those paltry
|
|
little truths with which she harried her waking hours. On a
|
|
raw Wednesday morning, in a few ill-chosen words, she told
|
|
the cook that she drank. She remembered the scene
|
|
afterwards as vividly as though it had been painted in her
|
|
mind by Abbey. The cook was a good cook, as cooks go; and
|
|
as cooks go she went.
|
|
|
|
Miriam Klopstock came to lunch the next day. Women and
|
|
elephants never forget an injury.
|
|
|
|
REGINALD'S DRAMA
|
|
|
|
Reginald closed his eyes with the elaborate weariness of
|
|
one who has rather nice eyelashes and thinks it useless to
|
|
conceal the fact.
|
|
|
|
``One of these days,'' he said, ``I shall write a really
|
|
great drama. No one will understand the drift of it, but
|
|
every one wiII go back to their homes with a vague feeling
|
|
of dissatisfaction with their lives and surroundings. Then
|
|
they will put up new wall-papers and forget.''
|
|
|
|
``But how about those that have oak panelling all over the
|
|
house?'' said the Other.
|
|
|
|
``They can always put down new stair-carpets,'' pursued
|
|
Reginald, ``and, anyhow, I'm not responsible for the
|
|
audience having a happy ending. The play would be quite
|
|
sufficient strain on one's energies. I should get a bishop
|
|
to say it was immoral and beautiful---no dramatist has
|
|
thought of that before, and every one would come to condemn
|
|
the bishop, and they would stay on out of sheer nervousness.
|
|
After all, it requires a great deal of moral courage to
|
|
leave in a marked manner in the middle of the second act,
|
|
when your carriage isn't ordered till twelve. And it would
|
|
commence with wolves worrying something on a lonely
|
|
waste---you wouldn't see them, of course; but you would hear
|
|
them snarling and scrunching, and I should arrange to have a
|
|
wolfy fragrance suggested across the footlights. It would
|
|
look so well on the programmes, `Wolves in the first act, by
|
|
Jamrach.' And old Lady Whortleberry, who never misses a
|
|
first night, would scream. She's always been nervous since
|
|
she lost her first husband. He died quite abruptly while
|
|
watching a county cricket match; two and a half inches of
|
|
rain had fallen for seven runs, and it was supposed that the
|
|
excitement killed him. Anyhow, it gave her quite a shock;
|
|
it was the first husband she'd lost, you know, and now she
|
|
always screams if anything thrilling happens too soon after
|
|
dinner. And after the audience had heard the Whortleberry
|
|
scream the thing would be fairly launched.''
|
|
|
|
``And the plot?''
|
|
|
|
``The plot,'' said Reginald, ``would be one of those
|
|
little everyday tragedies that one sees going on all round
|
|
one. In my mind's eye there is the case of the
|
|
Mudge-Jervises, which in an unpretentious way has quite an
|
|
Enoch Arden intensity underlying it. They'd only been
|
|
married some eighteen months or so, and circumstances had
|
|
prevented their seeing much of each other. With him there
|
|
was always a foursome or something that had to be played and
|
|
replayed in different parts of the country, and she went in
|
|
for slumming quite as seriously as if it was a sport. With
|
|
her, I suppose, it was. She belonged to the Guild of the
|
|
Poor Dear Souls, and they hold the record for having nearly
|
|
reformed a washerwoman. No one has ever really reformed a
|
|
washerwoman, and that is why the competition is so keen.
|
|
You can rescue charwomen by fifties with a little tea and
|
|
personal magnetism, but with washerwomen it's different;
|
|
wages are too high. This particular laundress, who came
|
|
from Bermondsey or some such place, was really rather a
|
|
hopeful venture, and they thought at last that she might be
|
|
safely put in the window as a specimen of successful work.
|
|
So they had her paraded at a drawing-room ``At Home'' at
|
|
Agatha Camelford's; it was sheer bad luck that some liqueur
|
|
chocolates had been turned loose by mistake among the
|
|
refreshments---really liqueur chocolates, with very little
|
|
chocolate. And of course the old soul found them out, and
|
|
cornered the entire stock. It was like finding a
|
|
whelk-stall in a desert, as she afterwards partially
|
|
expressed herself. When the liqueurs began to take effect,
|
|
she started to give them imitations of farmyard animals as
|
|
they know them in Bermondsey. She began with a dancing
|
|
bear, and you know Agatha doesn't approve of dancing, except
|
|
at Buckingham Palace under proper supervision. And then she
|
|
got up on the piano and gave them an organ monkey; I gather
|
|
she went in for realism rather than a Maeterlinckian
|
|
treatment of the subject. Finally, she fell into the piano
|
|
and said she was a parrot in a cage, and for an impromptu
|
|
performance I believe she was very word-perfect; no one had
|
|
heard anything like it, except Baroness Boobelstein who has
|
|
attended sittings of the Austrian Reichsrath. Agatha is
|
|
trying the Rest-cure at Buxton.''
|
|
|
|
``But the tragedy?''
|
|
|
|
``Oh, the Mudge-Jervises. Well, they were getting along
|
|
quite happily, and their married life was one continuous
|
|
exchange of picture-postcards; and then one day they were
|
|
thrown together on some neutral ground where foursomes and
|
|
washerwomen overlapped, and discovered that they were
|
|
hopelessly divided on the Fiscal Question. They have
|
|
thought it best to separate, and she is to have the custody
|
|
of the Persian kittens for nine months in the year---they go
|
|
back to him for the winter, when she is abroad. There you
|
|
have the material for a tragedy drawn straight from
|
|
life---and the piece could be called `The Price They Paid
|
|
for Empire.' And of course one would have to work in studies
|
|
of the struggle of hereditary tendency against environment
|
|
and all that sort of thing. The woman's father could have
|
|
been an Envoy to some of the smaller German Courts; that's
|
|
where she'd get her passion for visiting the poor, in spite
|
|
of the most careful upbringing. _C'est le premier pa qui
|
|
compte_, as the cuckoo said when it swallowed its
|
|
foster-parent. That, I think, is quite clever.''
|
|
|
|
``And the wolves?''
|
|
|
|
``Oh, the wolves would be a sort of elusive undercurrent
|
|
in the background that would never be satisfactorily
|
|
explained. After all, life teems with things that have no
|
|
earthly reason. And whenever the characters could think of
|
|
nothing brilliant to say about marriage or the War Office,
|
|
they could open a window and listen to the howling of the
|
|
wolves. But that would be very seldom.''
|
|
|
|
REGINALD ON TARIFFS
|
|
|
|
I'm not going to discuss the Fiscal Question (said
|
|
Reginald); I wish to be original. At the same time, I think
|
|
one suffers more than one realizes from the system of free
|
|
imports. I should like, for instance, a really prohibitive
|
|
duty put upon the partner who declares on a weak red suit
|
|
and hopes for the best. Even a free outlet for compressed
|
|
verbiage doesn't balance matters. And I think there should
|
|
be a sort of bounty-fed export (is that the right
|
|
expression?) of the people who impress on you that you ought
|
|
to take life seriously. There are only two classes that
|
|
really can't help taking life seriously---schoolgirls of
|
|
thirteen and Hohenzollerns; they might be exempt. Albanians
|
|
come under another heading; they take life whenever they get
|
|
the opportunity. The one Albanian that I was ever on
|
|
speaking terms with was rather a decadent example. He was a
|
|
Christian and a grocer, and I don't fancy he had ever killed
|
|
anybody. I didn't like to question him on the subject---
|
|
that showed my delicacy. Mrs. Nicorax says I have no
|
|
delicacy; she hasn't forgiven me about the mice. You see,
|
|
when I was staying down there, a mouse used to cake-walk
|
|
about my room half the night, and none of their silly patent
|
|
traps seemed to take its fancy as a bijou residence, so I
|
|
determined to appeal to the better side of it---which with
|
|
mice is the inside. So I called it Percy, and put little
|
|
delicacies down near its hole every night, and that kept it
|
|
quiet while I read Max Nordau's _Degeneration_ and other
|
|
reproving literature, and went to sleep. And now she says
|
|
there is a whole colony of mice in that room.
|
|
|
|
That isn't where the indelicacy comes in. She went out
|
|
riding with me, which was entirely her own suggestion, and
|
|
as we were coming home through some meadows she made a quite
|
|
unnecessary attempt to see if her pony would jump a rather
|
|
messy sort of brook that was there. It wouldn't. It went
|
|
with her as far as the water's edge, and from that point
|
|
Mrs. Nicorax went on alone. Of course I had to fish her out
|
|
from the bank, and my riding-breeches are not cut with a
|
|
view to salmon-fishing---it's rather an art even to ride in
|
|
them. Her habit-skirt was one of those open questions that
|
|
need not be adhered to in emergencies, and on this occasion
|
|
it remained behind in some water-weeds. She wanted me to
|
|
fish about for that too, but I felt I had done enough
|
|
Pharaoh's daughter business for an October afternoon, and I
|
|
was beginning to want my tea. So I bundled her up on to her
|
|
pony, and gave her a lead towards home as fast as I cared to
|
|
go. What with the wet and the unusual responsibility, her
|
|
abridged costume did not stand the pace particularly well,
|
|
and she got quite querulous when I shouted back that I had
|
|
no pins with me---and no string. Some women expect so much
|
|
from a fellow. When we got into the drive she wanted to go
|
|
up the back way to the stables, but the ponies know they
|
|
always get sugar at the front door, and I never attempt to
|
|
hold a pulling pony; as for Mrs. Nicorax it took her all she
|
|
knew to keep a firm hand on her seceding garments, which, as
|
|
her maid remarked afterwards, were more _tout_ than
|
|
_ensemble_. Of course nearly the whole house-party were out
|
|
on the lawn watching the sunset---the only day this month
|
|
that it's occurred to the sun to show itself, as Mrs. Nic.
|
|
viciously observed---and I shall never forget the expression
|
|
on her husband's face as we pulled up. ``My darling, this is
|
|
too much!'' was his first spoken comment; taking into
|
|
consideration the state of her toilet, it was the most
|
|
brilliant thing I had ever heard him say, and I went into
|
|
the library to be alone and scream. Mrs. Nicorax says I
|
|
have no delicacy.
|
|
|
|
Talking about tariffs, the lift-boy, who reads extensively
|
|
between the landings, says it won't do to tax raw
|
|
commodities. What, exactly, is a raw commodity? Mrs. Van
|
|
Challaby says men are raw commodities till you marry them;
|
|
after they've struck Mrs. Van C., I can fancy they pretty
|
|
soon become a finished article. Certainly she's had a good
|
|
deal of experience to support her opinion. She lost one
|
|
husband in a railway accident, and mislaid another in the
|
|
Divorce Court, and the current one has just got himself
|
|
squeezed in a Beef Trust. ``What was he doing in a Beef
|
|
Trust, anyway?'' she asked tearfully, and I suggested that
|
|
perhaps he had an unhappy home. I only said it for the sake
|
|
of making conversation; which it did. Mrs. Van Challaby
|
|
said things about me which in her calmer moments she would
|
|
have hesitated to spell. It's a pity people can't discuss
|
|
fiscal matters without getting wild. However, she wrote
|
|
next day to ask if I could get her a Yorkshire terrier of
|
|
the size and shade that's being worn now, and that's as near
|
|
as a woman can be expected to get to owning herself in the
|
|
wrong. And she will tie a salmon-pink bow to its collar,
|
|
and call it ``Reggie,'' and take it with her
|
|
everywhere---like poor Miriam Klopstock, who _would_ take
|
|
her Chow with her to the bathroom, and while she was bathing
|
|
it was playing at she-bears with her garments. Miriam is
|
|
always late for breakfast, and she wasn't really missed till
|
|
the middle of lunch.
|
|
|
|
However, I'm not going any further into the Fiscal
|
|
Question. Only I should like to be protected from the
|
|
partner with a weak red tendency.
|
|
|
|
REGINALD'S CHRISTMAS REVEL
|
|
|
|
They say (said Reginald) that there's nothing sadder than
|
|
victory except defeat. If you've ever stayed with dull
|
|
people during what is alleged to be the festive season, you
|
|
can probably revise that saying. I shall never forget
|
|
putting in a Christmas at the Babwolds'. Mrs. Babwold is
|
|
some relation of my father's---a sort of
|
|
to-be-left-till-called-for cousin---and that was considered
|
|
sufficient reason for my having to accept her invitation at
|
|
about the sixth time of asking; though why the sins of the
|
|
father should be visited by the children---you won't find
|
|
any notepaper in that drawer; that's where I keep old menus
|
|
and first-night programmes.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Babwold wears a rather solemn personality, and has
|
|
never been known to smile, even when saying disagreeable
|
|
things to her friends or making out the Stores list. She
|
|
takes her pleasures sadly. A state elephant at a Durbar
|
|
gives one a very similar impression. Her husband gardens in
|
|
all weathers. When a man goes out in the pouring rain to
|
|
brush caterpillars off rose trees, I generally imagine his
|
|
life indoors leaves something to be desired; anyway, it must
|
|
be very unsettling for the caterpillars.
|
|
|
|
Of course there were other people there. There was a
|
|
Major Somebody who had shot things in Lapland, or somewhere
|
|
of that sort; I forget what they were, but it wasn't for
|
|
want of reminding. We had them cold with every meal almost,
|
|
and he was continually giving us details of what they
|
|
measured from tip to tip, as though he thought we were going
|
|
to make them warm under-things for the winter. I used to
|
|
listen to him with a rapt attention that I thought rather
|
|
suited me, and then one day I quite modestly gave the
|
|
dimensions of an okapi I had shot in the Lincolnshire fens.
|
|
The Major turned a beautiful Tyrian scarlet (I remember
|
|
thinking at the time that I should like my bathroom hung in
|
|
that colour), and I think that at that moment he almost
|
|
found it in his heart to dislike me. Mrs. Babwold put on a
|
|
first-aid-to-the-injured expression, and asked him why he
|
|
didn't publish a book of his sporting reminiscences; it
|
|
would be so interesting. She didn't remember till
|
|
afterwards that he had given her two fat volumes on the
|
|
subject, with his portrait and autograph as a frontispiece
|
|
and an appendix on the habits of the Arctic mussel.
|
|
|
|
It was in the evening that we cast aside the cares and
|
|
distractions of the day and really lived. Cards were
|
|
thought to be too frivolous and empty a way of passing the
|
|
time, so most of them played what they called a book game.
|
|
You went out into the hall---to get an inspiration, I
|
|
suppose---then you came in again with a muffler tied round
|
|
your neck and looked silly, and the others were supposed to
|
|
guess that you were _Wee MacGreegor_. I held out against
|
|
the inanity as long as I decently could, but at last, in a
|
|
lapse of good-nature, I consented to masquerade as a book,
|
|
only I warned them that it would take some time to carry
|
|
out. They waited for the best part of forty minutes while I
|
|
went and played wineglass skittles with the page-boy in the
|
|
pantry; you play it with a champagne cork, you know, and the
|
|
one who knocks down the most glasses without breaking them
|
|
wins. I won, with four unbroken out of seven; I think
|
|
William suffered from over-anxiousness. They were rather
|
|
mad in the drawing-room at my not having come back, and they
|
|
weren't a bit pacified when I told them afterwards that I
|
|
was _At the end of the passage_.
|
|
|
|
``I never did like Kipling,'' was Mrs. Babwold's comment,
|
|
when the situation dawned upon her. ``I couldn't see
|
|
anything clever in _Earthworms out of Tuscany_---or is that
|
|
by Darwin?''
|
|
|
|
Of course these games are very educational, but,
|
|
personally, I prefer bridge.
|
|
|
|
On Christmas evening we were supposed to be specially
|
|
festive in the Old English fashion. The hall was horribly
|
|
draughty, but it seemed to be the proper place to revel in,
|
|
and it was decorated with Japanese fans and Chinese
|
|
lanterns, which gave it a very Old English effect. A young
|
|
lady with a confidential voice favoured us with a long
|
|
recitation about a little girl who died or did something
|
|
equally hackneyed, and then the Major gave us a graphic
|
|
account of a struggle he had with a wounded bear. I
|
|
privately wished that the bears would win sometimes on these
|
|
occasions; at least they wouldn't go vapouring about it
|
|
afterwards. Before we had time to recover our spirits, we
|
|
were indulged with some thought-reading by a young man whom
|
|
one knew instinctively had a good mother and an indifferent
|
|
tailor---the sort of young man who talks unflaggingly
|
|
through the thickest soup, and smooths his hair dubiously as
|
|
though he thought it might hit back. The thought-reading
|
|
was rather a success; he announced that the hostess was
|
|
thinking about poetry, and she admitted that her mind was
|
|
dwelling on one of Austin's odes. Which was near enough. I
|
|
fancy she had been really wondering whether a scrag-end of
|
|
mutton and some cold plum-pudding would do for the kitchen
|
|
dinner next day. As a crowning dissipation, they all sat
|
|
down to play progressive halma, with milk-chocolate for
|
|
prizes. I've been carefully brought up, and I don't like to
|
|
play games of skill for milk-chocolate, so I invented a
|
|
headache and retired from the scene. I had been preceded a
|
|
few minutes earlier by Miss Langshan-Smith, a rather
|
|
formidable lady, who always got up at some uncomfortable
|
|
hour in the morning, and gave you the impression that she
|
|
had been in communication with most of the European
|
|
Governments before breakfast. There was a paper pinned on
|
|
her door with a signed request that she might be called
|
|
particularly early on the morrow. Such an opportunity does
|
|
not come twice in a lifetime. I covered up everything
|
|
except the signature with another notice, to the effect that
|
|
before these words should meet the eye she would have ended
|
|
a misspent life, was sorry for the trouble she was giving,
|
|
and would like a military funeral. A few minutes later I
|
|
violently exploded an air-filled paper bag on the landing,
|
|
and gave a stage moan that could have been heard in the
|
|
cellars. Then I pursued my original intention and went to
|
|
bed. The noise those people made in forcing open the good
|
|
lady's door was positively indecorous; she resisted
|
|
gallantly, but I believe they searched her for bullets for
|
|
about a quarter of an hour, as if she had been a historic
|
|
battlefield.
|
|
|
|
I hate travelling on Boxing Day, but one must occasionally
|
|
do things that one dislikes.
|
|
|
|
REGINALD'S RUBAIYAT
|
|
|
|
The other day (confided Reginald), when I was killing time
|
|
in the bathroom and making bad resolutions for the New Year,
|
|
it occurred to qme that I would like to be a poet. The chief
|
|
qualification, I understand, is that you must be born.
|
|
Well, I hunted up my birth certificate, and found that I was
|
|
all right on that score, and then I got to work on a Hymn to
|
|
the New Year, which struck me as having possibilities. It
|
|
suggested extremely unusual things to absolutely unlikely
|
|
people, which I believe is the art of first-class catering
|
|
in any department. Quite the best verse in it went
|
|
something like this:
|
|
|
|
``Have you heard the groan of a gravelled grouse,
|
|
Or the snarl of a snaffled snail
|
|
(Husband or mother, like me, or spouse),
|
|
Have you lain a-creep in the darkened house
|
|
Where the wounded wombats wail?''
|
|
|
|
It was quite improbable that any one had, you know, and
|
|
that's where it stimulated the imagination and took people
|
|
out of their narrow, humdrum selves. No one has ever called
|
|
me narrow or humdrum, but even I felt worked up now and then
|
|
at the thought of that house with the stricken wombats in
|
|
it. It simply wasn't nice. But the editors were unanimous
|
|
in leaving it alone; they said the thing had been done
|
|
before and done worse, and that the market for that sort of
|
|
work was extremely limited.
|
|
|
|
It was just on the top of that discouragement that the
|
|
Duchess wanted me to write something in her
|
|
album---something Persian, you know, and just a little bit
|
|
decadent---and I thought a quatrain on an unwholesome egg
|
|
would meet the requirements of the case. So I started in
|
|
with:
|
|
|
|
``Cackle, cackle, little hen,
|
|
How I wonder if and when
|
|
Once you laid the egg that I
|
|
Met, alas! too late. Amen.''
|
|
|
|
The Duchess objected to the Amen, which I thought gave an
|
|
air of forgiveness and _chose jug<e'>e_ to the whole thing;
|
|
also she said it wasn't Persian enough, as though I were
|
|
trying to sell her a kitten whose mother had married for
|
|
love rather than pedigree. So I recast it entirely, and the
|
|
new version read:
|
|
|
|
``The hen that laid three moons ago, who knows
|
|
In what Dead Yesterday her shades repose;
|
|
To some election turn thy waning span
|
|
And rain thy rottenness on fiscal foes.''
|
|
|
|
I thought there was enough suggestion of decay in that to
|
|
satisfy a jackal, and to me there was something infinitely
|
|
pathetic and appealing in the idea of the egg having a sort
|
|
of St. Luke's summer of commercial usefulness. But the
|
|
Duchess begged me to leave out any political allusions;
|
|
she's the president of a Women's Something or other, and she
|
|
said it might be taken as an endorsement of deplorable
|
|
methods. I never can remember which Party Irene discourages
|
|
with her support, but I shan't forget an occasion when I was
|
|
staying at her place and she gave me a pamphlet to leave at
|
|
the house of a doubtful voter, and some grapes and things
|
|
for a woman who was suffering from a chill on the top of a
|
|
patent medicine. I thought it much cleverer to give the
|
|
grapes to the former and the political literature to the
|
|
sick woman, and the Duchess was quite absurdly annoyed about
|
|
it afterwards. It seems the leaflet was addressed ``To
|
|
those about to wobble''---l wasn't responsible for the silly
|
|
title of the thing---and the woman never recovered; anyway,
|
|
the voter was completely won over by the grapes and jellies,
|
|
and I think that should have balanced matters. The Duchess
|
|
called it bribery, and said it might have compromised the
|
|
candidate she was supporting; he was expected to subscribe
|
|
to church funds and chapel funds, and football and cricket
|
|
clubs and regattas, and bazaars and beanfeasts and
|
|
bell-ringers, and poultry shows and ploughing matches, and
|
|
reading-rooms and choir outings, and shooting trophies and
|
|
testimonials, and anything of that sort; but bribery would
|
|
not have been tolerated.
|
|
|
|
I fancy I have perhaps more talent for electioneering than
|
|
for poetry, and I was really getting extended over this
|
|
quatrain business. The egg began to be unmanageable, and
|
|
the Duchess suggested something with a French literary ring
|
|
about it. I hunted back in my mind for the most familiar
|
|
French classic that I could take liberties with, and after a
|
|
little exercise of memory I turned out the following:
|
|
|
|
``Hast thou the pen that once the gardener had?
|
|
I have it not; and know, these pears are bad.
|
|
Oh, larger than the horses of the Prince
|
|
Are those the general drives in Kaikobad.''
|
|
|
|
Even that didn't altogether satisfy Irene; I fancy the
|
|
geography of it puzzled her. She probably thought Kaikobad
|
|
was an unfashionable German spa, where you'd meet
|
|
matrimonial bargain-hunters and emergency Servian kings. My
|
|
temper was beginning to slip its moorings by that time. I
|
|
look rather nice when I lose my temper. (I hoped you would
|
|
say I lose it very often. I mustn't monopolize the
|
|
conversation.)
|
|
|
|
``Of course, if you want something really Persian and
|
|
passionate, with red wine and bulbuls in it,'' I went on to
|
|
suggest; but she grabbed the book from me.
|
|
|
|
``Not for worlds. Nothing with red wine or passion in it.
|
|
Dear Agatha gave me the album, and she would be mortified to
|
|
the quick---''
|
|
|
|
I said I didn't believe Agatha had a quick, and we got
|
|
quite heated in arguing the matter. Finally, the Duchess
|
|
declared I shouldn't write anything nasty in her book, and I
|
|
said I shouldn't write anything in her nasty book, so there
|
|
wasn't a very wide point of difference between us. For the
|
|
rest of the afternoon I pretended to be sulking, but I was
|
|
really working back to that quatrain, like a fox-terrier
|
|
that's buried a deferred lunch in a private flower-bed.
|
|
When I got an opportunity I hunted up Agatha's autograph,
|
|
which had the front page all to itself, and, copying her
|
|
prim handwriting as well as I could, I inserted above it the
|
|
following Thibetan fragment:
|
|
|
|
``With Thee, oh, my Beloved, to do a d<a^>k
|
|
(a d<a^>k I believe is a sort of uncomfortable post-journey)
|
|
On the pack-saddle of a grunting yak,
|
|
With never room for chilling chaperon,
|
|
'Twere better than a Panhard in the Park.''
|
|
|
|
That Agatha would get on to a yak in company with a lover
|
|
even in the comparative seclusion of Thibet is unthinkable.
|
|
I very much doubt if she'd do it with her own husband in the
|
|
privacy of the Simplon tunnel. But poetry, as I've remarked
|
|
before, should always stimulate the imagination.
|
|
|
|
By the way, when you asked me the other day to dine with
|
|
you on the 14th, I said I was dining with the Duchess.
|
|
Well, I'm not. I'm dining with you.
|
|
|
|
THE INNOCENCE OF REGINALD
|
|
|
|
Reginald slid a carnation of the newest shade into the
|
|
buttonhole of his latest lounge coat, and surveyed the
|
|
result with approval. ``I am just in the mood,'' he
|
|
observed, ``to have my portrait painted by some one with an
|
|
unmistakable future. So comforting to go down to posterity
|
|
as `Youth with a Pink Carnation' in catalogue-company with
|
|
`Child with Bunch of Primroses,' and all that crowd.''
|
|
|
|
``Youth,'' said the Other, ``should suggest innocence.''
|
|
|
|
``But never act on the suggestion. I don't believe the
|
|
two ever really go together. People talk vaguely about the
|
|
innocence of a little child, but they take mighty good care
|
|
not to let it out of their sight for twenty minutes. The
|
|
watched pot never boils over. I knew a boy once who really
|
|
was innocent; his parents were in Society, but they never
|
|
gave him a moment's anxiety from his infancy. He believed
|
|
in company prospectuses, and in the purity of elections, and
|
|
in women marrying for love, and even in a system for winning
|
|
at roulette. He never quite lost his faith in it, but he
|
|
dropped more money than his employers could afford to lose.
|
|
When last I heard of him, he was believing in his innocence;
|
|
the jury weren't. All the same, I really am innocent just
|
|
now of something every one accuses me of having done, and so
|
|
far as I can see, their accusations will remain unfounded.''
|
|
|
|
``Rather an unexpected attitude for you.''
|
|
|
|
``I love people who do unexpected things. Didn't you
|
|
always adore the man who slew a lion in a pit on a snowy
|
|
day? But about this unfortunate innocence. Well, quite long
|
|
ago, when I'd been quarrelling with more people than usual,
|
|
you among the number---it must have been in November, I
|
|
never quarrel with you too near Christmas---I had an idea
|
|
that I'd like to write a book. It was to be a book of
|
|
personal reminiscences, and was to leave out nothing.''
|
|
|
|
``Reginald!''
|
|
|
|
``Exactly what the Duchess said when I mentioned it to
|
|
her. I was provoking and said nothing, and the next thing,
|
|
of course, was that every one heard that I'd written the
|
|
book and got it in the press. After that, I might have been
|
|
a goldfish in a glass bowl for all the privacy I got.
|
|
People attacked me about it in the most unexpected places,
|
|
and implored or commanded me to leave out things that I'd
|
|
forgotten had ever happened. I sat behind Miriam Klopstock
|
|
one night in the dress-circle at His Majestys, and she began
|
|
at once about the incident of the Chow dog in the bathroom,
|
|
which she insisted must be struck out. We had to argue it in
|
|
a disjointed fashion, because some of the people wanted to
|
|
listen to the play, and Miriam takes nine in voices. They
|
|
had to stop her playing in the `Macaws' Hockey Club because
|
|
you could hear what she thought when her shins got mixed up
|
|
in a scrimmage for half a mile on a still day. They are
|
|
called the Macaws because of their blue-and-yellow costumes,
|
|
but I understand there was nothing yellow about Miriam's
|
|
language. I agreed to make one alteration, as I pretended I
|
|
had got it a Spitz instead of a Chow, but beyond that I was
|
|
firm. She megaphoned back two minutes later, `You promised
|
|
you would never mention it; don't you ever keep a promise?'
|
|
When people had stopped glaring in our direction, I replied
|
|
that I'd as soon think of keeping white mice. I saw her
|
|
tearing little bits out of her programme for a minute or
|
|
two, and then she leaned back and snorted, `You're not the
|
|
boy I took you for,' as though she were an eagle arriving at
|
|
Olympus with the wrong Ganymede. That was her last audible
|
|
remark, but she went on tearing up her programme and
|
|
scattering the pieces around her, till one of her neighbours
|
|
asked with immense dignity whether she should send for a
|
|
wastepaper-basket. I didn't stay for the last act.
|
|
|
|
``Then there is Mrs.---oh, I never can remember her name;
|
|
she lives in a street that the cabmen have never heard of,
|
|
and is at home on Wednesdays. She frightened me horribly
|
|
once at a private view by saying mysteriously, `I oughtn't
|
|
to be here, you know; this is one of my days.' I thought she
|
|
meant that she was subject to periodical outbreaks and was
|
|
expecting an attack at any moment. So embarrassing if she
|
|
had suddenly taken it into her head that she was Cesare
|
|
Borgia or St. Elizabeth of Hungary. That sort of thing
|
|
would make one unpleasantly conspicuous even at a private
|
|
view. However, she merely meant to say that it was
|
|
Wednesday, which at the moment was incontrovertible. Well,
|
|
she's on quite a different tack to the Klopstock. She
|
|
doesn't visit anywhere very extensively, and, of course,
|
|
she's awfully keen for me to drag in an incident that
|
|
occurred at one of the Beauwhistle garden-parties, when she
|
|
says she accidentally hit the shins of a Serene Somebody or
|
|
other with a croquet mallet and that he swore at her in
|
|
German. As a matter of fact, he went on discoursing on the
|
|
Gordon-Bennett affair in French. (I never can remember if
|
|
it's a new submarine or a divorce. Of course, how stupid of
|
|
me!) To be disagreeably exact, I fancy she missed him by
|
|
about two inches---overanxiousness, probably---but she likes
|
|
to think she hit him. I've felt that way with a partridge
|
|
which I always imagine keeps on flying strong, out of false
|
|
pride, till it's the other side of the hedge. She said she
|
|
could tell me everything she was wearing on the occasion. I
|
|
said I didn't want my book to read like a laundry list, but
|
|
she explained that she didn't mean those sort of things.
|
|
|
|
``And there's the Chilworth boy, who can be charming as
|
|
long as he's content to be stupid and wear what he's told
|
|
to; but he gets the idea now and then that he'd like to be
|
|
epigrammatic, and the result is like watching a rook trying
|
|
to build a nest in a gale. Since he got wind of the book,
|
|
he's been persecuting me to work in something of his about
|
|
the Russians and the Yalu Peril, and is quite sulky because
|
|
I won't do it.
|
|
|
|
``Altogether, I think it would be rather a brilliant
|
|
inspiration if you were to suggest a fortnight in Paris.''
|
|
|
|
[End of REGINALD by H.H.Munro]
|
|
.
|