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<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold xx-large">THE ROMANCE OF
<br/>THE COMMONPLACE</span></p>
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<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">Gelett Burgess</span></p>
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<div class="line"><em class="italics">Now things there are that, upon him who sees,</em></div>
<div class="line"><em class="italics">A strong vocation lay; and strains there are</em></div>
<div class="line"><em class="italics">That whoso hears shall hear for evermore.</em></div>
<div class="inner line-block">
<div class="line"><span>ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON</span></div>
</div></div>
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<p class="center pfirst"><span class="medium">Paul Elder and Morgan Shepard : : : San Francisco</span></p>
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<p class="center pfirst"><em class="italics small">Copyright</em><span class="small">, 1902
<br/>by GELETT BURGESS</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><em class="italics small">Entered at</em><span class="small"> Stationer's Hall
<br/></span><em class="italics small">London</em></p>
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<p class="center pfirst"><span class="small">PRINTED BY THE STANLEY-TAYLOR COMPANY, SAN FRANCISCO</span></p>
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<div class="container dedication">
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="medium">To
<br/>My Sisters, Ella and Ann:
<br/>with whom
<br/>This Philosophy was Proven</span></p>
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</div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold x-large">THE ROMANCE OF
<br/>THE COMMONPLACE</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">Contents</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#introduction">Introduction</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#april-essays">April Essays</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#getting-acquainted">Getting Acquainted</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#dining-out">Dining Out</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-uncharted-sea">The Uncharted Sea</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-art-of-playing">The Art of Playing</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-use-of-fools">The Use of Fools</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#absolute-age">Absolute Age</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-manual-blessing">The Manual Blessing</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-deserted-island">The Deserted Island</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-sense-of-humour">The Sense of Humour</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-game-of-correspondence">The Game of Correspondence</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-caste-of-the-articulate">The Caste of the Articulate</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-tyranny-of-the-lares">The Tyranny of the Lares</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#costume-and-custom">Costume and Custom</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#old-friends-and-new">Old Friends and New</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#a-defense-of-slang">A Defense of Slang</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-charms-of-imperfection">The Charms of Imperfection</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-play-s-the-thing">"The Play's the Thing"</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#living-alone">Living Alone</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#cartomania">Cartomania</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-science-of-flattery">The Science of Flattery</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#romance-en-route">Romance *en Route*</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#at-the-edge-of-the-world">At the Edge of the World</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-diary-habit">The Diary Habit</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-perfect-go-between">The Perfect Go-between</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#growing-up">Growing Up</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#a-pauper-s-monologue">A Pauper's Monologue</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#a-young-man-s-fancy">A Young Man's Fancy</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#where-is-bohemia">Where is Bohemia?</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-bachelor-s-advantage">The Bachelor's Advantage</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-confessions-of-an-ignoramus">The Confessions of an Ignoramus</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#a-music-box-recital">A Music-Box Recital</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#a-plea-for-the-precious">A Plea for the Precious</SPAN><span>
<br/></span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#sub-rosa">Sub Rosa</SPAN></p>
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<p class="center pfirst" id="introduction"><span class="bold large">Introduction</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>To let this book go from my hands without some one
more personal note than the didactic paragraphs of these
essays contained, has been, I must confess, a temptation
too strong for me to resist. The observing reader will
note that I have so re-written my theses that none of them begins
with an "I" in big type, and though this preliminary chapter
conforms to the rule also, it is for typographic rather than for any
more modest reasons. Frankly, this page is by way of a flourish
to my signature, and is the very impertinence of vanity.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But this little course of philosophy lays my character and
temperament, not to speak of my intellect, so bare that, finished and
summed up for the printer, I am all of a shiver with shame. My
nonsense gave, I conceit myself, no clue by which my real self might
be discovered. My fiction I have been held somewhat responsible
for, but escape for the story-teller is always easy. Even in poetry a
man may so cloak himself in metaphor that he may hope to be well
enough disguised. But the essay is the most compromising form of
literature possible, and even such filmy confidences and trivial gaieties
as these write me down for what I am. Were they even critical in
character, I would have that best of excuses, a difference of taste, but
here I have had the audacity to attempt a discussion of life itself,
upon which every reader will believe himself to be a competent critic.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>By a queer sequence of circumstances, the essays, begun in the
</span><em class="italics">Lark</em><span>, were continued in the </span><em class="italics">Queen</em><span>, and, if you have read these
two papers, you will know that one magazine is as
remote in character from the other as San Francisco
is from London. But each has happened to fare far
afield in search of readers, and between them I may
have converted some few to my optimistic view of
every-day incident. To educate the British Matron and Young
Person was, perhaps, no more difficult an undertaking than to open
the eyes of the California Native Son. The fogs that fall over the
Thames are not very different to the mists that drive in through the
Golden Gate, after all!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Still, I would not have you think that these lessons were
written with my tongue in my cheek. I have made believe so
long that now I am quite sincere in my conviction that we can
see pretty much whatever we look for; which should prove the
desirability of searching for amusement and profit rather than for
boredom and disillusion.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We are in the day of homespun philosophy and hand-made
dogma. A kind of mental atavism has made science preposterous;
modern astrologers and palmists put old wine into new bottles, and
the discussion of Psychomachy bids fair to revolutionize the Eternal
Feminine. And so I, too, strike my attitude and apostrophize the
Universe. As being, in part, a wholesome reaction from the prevailing
cult, I might call my doctrine Pagan Science, for the type of my
proselyte is the Bornese war chief peripatetic on Broadway--the
amused wonderer. But I shall not begin all my nouns with capitals,
for it is my aim to write of romance with a small "r." Also my
philosophy must not be thought a mere </span><em class="italics">laissez faire</em><span>; it is an active,
not a passive creed. We are here not to be entertained, but to
entertain ourselves.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I might have called this book </span><em class="italics">A Guide Through
Middle Age</em><span>, for it is then that one needs enthusiasm
the most. We stagger gaily through Youth, and by
the time Old Age has come we have usually found a
practicable working philosophy, but at forty one is
likely to have a bitter hour at times, especially if one is still single.
Or, so they tell me; I shall never confess to that status, and shall
leap boldly into a white beard. A kindly euphemism calls this
horrid, half-way stage one's Prime. I have here endeavoured to
justify the usage, though I am opposed by a thousand poets.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>If some of these essays seem but vaguely correlated to my
major theme, you must think of them as being mere illustrations or
practical solutions of the commonplace, solved by means of the
theory I have developed and iterated. It was hard, indeed, to know
when to stop, but, ragged as are my hints, I hope that in all
essentials I have covered the ground and formulated
the main rules of the Game of Living. One
does not even have to be an expert
to be able to do that!</span></p>
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<p class="center pfirst" id="april-essays"><span class="bold x-large">THE ROMANCE OF
<br/>THE COMMONPLACE</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">April Essays</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>They were begun in the April of my life, and though it
is now well into mid-June, some of the glamour of the
Spring yet inspires me, and I am still a-wondering. I
have tried every charm to preserve my youth, and a drop
of wine and a girl or two into the bargain, but the game is near
played out.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But what boots marbles and tops when one is initiated into the
mysteries of billiards and chess? It has taken me all these years to
find that there is sport for every season, and the rules vary. To
make a bold play at life, then, without cheating (which is due only
to a false conception of the reward), and with the progress, rather
than the particular stage reached, in mind, is my aim. So I have
tossed overboard all my fears and regrets, and gone in for the higher
problems of maturity.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Still, a few of the maxims I drew from my joys and sorrows in
the few calmer moments of reverie persist; and these all strengthen
me in the romantic view of life. A man must take his work or his
art seriously, and pursue it with a single intent; he must fix upon
the realities first of all, but there is room for imagination as well, and
with this I have savoured my duties, as one puts sauce to pudding.
Enough has been written upon the earnestness of motive, of sobriety
and all the catalogue of virtues usually dignified with capital initials.
I own allegiance to an empire beside all
that--another Forest of Arden--the tinkle of whose
laughter is a permanent sustained accompaniment to
the more significant notes of man's sober industries.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Must I be dubbed trifler then, because I make a
game of life? Every man of spirit and imagination must, I
think, be a true sportsman. It is in the blood of genius to
love play for its own sake, and whether one uses one's skill on
thrones or women, swords or pens, gold or fame, the game's the
thing! Surely, it is not only the reward that makes it worth
while, it is the problem--the study of each step on the way,
the disentangling of the knotted cord of fate, the sequence and
climax of move after move, the logical grasp of what is to come
upon the chess-board. As it is in the great, then, may it not be in
the small? To one of fancy and poetic vision, mere size is an
accident, a personal element, a relative, not an absolute quality of
things. The microscope reveals wonders to the scientist, as great
and as important as does the telescope. To the poet, "a primrose
by the river's brim" has the beauty of the Infinite. And so nothing
is commonplace, or to be taken for granted. One needs only the
fresh eye, the eagerness of interest, and this Universe of workaday
things which, with the animals, we get "for a penny, plain," may be
coloured with the twopence worth of mind by which we are richer
than they.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We have all passed through that phase of art-appreciation in
which familiar objects are endowed with an extrinsic æsthetic value.
The realist discovers a new sensation in a heap of refuse, the
impressionist in the purple shadows of the hills. In weaker intellects the
craving for this dignifying of the obvious leads to the gilding of the
rolling-pin or the decalcomanie decoration of the
bean-pot. With something of each of these methods,
I would practice upon every-day affairs, and make
them picturesque.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This is, perhaps, a characteristically Oriental
point of view of life. Undoubtedly it is the Japanese pose,
and it is well illustrated in their art. What by Korin would
be thought too insignificant for portrayal? He had but to
separate an object, or a group of objects, from its environment and
he beheld a design, with line, mass, colour and </span><em class="italics">notan</em><span>. Art
was to him not a question of subject, but of composition. He
held his frame before a tiny fragment of the visible world, any
fragment, indeed, and, placing that in its true position, not in
regard to its surroundings, but in regard to the frame, it became
a pattern. May we not, for our diversion, do thus with Life? If
we hold up our frame, disregarding the accidental shadows of
tradition and establishment, we may see bits of a new world.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It is thus that the man from Mars would view our life and
manners. Unsophisticated, he would hold his frame in front of a
man, and, cutting him off from his family, his neighbours, his position
in Society, he would see a personage as real and as individual as
"the Man with the Glove," or "the Unknown Woman" is to us.
He would bring an uncorrupted eye and see strange pictures in the
facts of our jaded routine. He would see in accustomed meetings
and actions hidden possibilities and secret charms. He would
witness this drab life of ours as a bewilderingly endless romance.
Nothing would be presupposed, nothing foreseen, and each turn of
the kaleidoscope would exhibit another of the infinitely various
permutations of human relationship.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Such is the philosophy of youth. It denies the
conventional postulates of the Philistine. It will
not accept the axioms of the unimaginative; two
and two may prove to make five, upon due investigation,
seemingly parallel cases may widely diverge,
and the greater may not always include the less, in this
non-Euclidean Geometry of Life. It transmutes the prose of living into
the poetry of idealization, as love transmutes the physical fact of
osculation into the beatitude of a kiss. It makes mysteries of
well-known occurrences, and it turns accepted marvels into simple truths,
comprehensible and self-evident.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Civilization refines and analyzes. It seeks the invisible rays of
the spectrum and delights in overtones, subtle vibrations and delicate
nuances of thought. So this neglected philosophy of enthusiasm
also gleans the neglected and forgotten mysteries of humanity. Its
virtue is in its economy; it wrings the last drop of sensation from
experience. Like modern processes of manufacture it produces good
from what was considered but waste and tailings. By a positive
contribution to happiness it refutes the charge of trifling, for in the
practice of this art one does but pick up what has been thrown away.
All's fish that comes to its net.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But it is more than a science; it has more than an economic
value for happiness--it is a religion. The creed of hope bids one
wonder and hope and rejoice, it teaches us to listen for the whispered
voice, to see the spirit instead of the body of the facts of life. But
it does more; it is illuminating, and reveals a new conception of
beauty. There is an apocryphal legend of the Christ that tells how
He with His disciples were passing along a road, when they came
upon the body of a dead dog. Those with Him shrank from
the pitiful sight with loathing, and drew away.
But Jesus went calmly up to the decaying flesh and
leaning over it, said gently, "How beautifully white
are his teeth!" The customary moral drawn from
the story is one of gentleness and pity, the kindness
and charity of looking at the good, rather than the evil that is
present. But it has a more literal meaning, and teaches clearly
the lesson of beauty.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>For it has come to this: that even in our pleasures we
are influenced by prejudice and tradition. Some things are as
empirically branded beautiful or ugly, as others are declared
right or wrong, and to this dogma we conform. Korin, when he
held his frame before a clothes-line fluttering with damp garments,
saw not only an interesting design, but a beautiful one; yet the
Monday's wash might be taken as something typically vulgar and
ugly to the common mind.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We Anglo-Saxons have debased many facts of life, once rightly
thought of as exquisitely beautiful, into the category of the beast.
Sexual passion is the great example, but there are myriads of lesser
things which, viewed calmly, purely, as some strange god able to
see clearly without passion or prejudice, might view them, would
take on lovely aspects. When such situations approach the pathetic,
as the sight of some forlorn half-naked mother nursing her child on
a doorstep, or the housemaid, denied of the chance of seclusion,
embracing her lover in the publicity of the park, this diviner phase
of common human nature is patent to the casual observer. When
they approach the comic, also, it is easier to believe that every scene
may have its complimentary phase, and the most careless may read
the joke between the lines. But much of the more subtle delight
of life escapes us, like the tree-toad in the oak,
because it is so much a part of its surroundings; its
charm is of so intrinsic a value that we do not notice
it. We are used to finding our beauty within gilt
rectangles, set off from other things not so denominated
as especially worthy of regard; we expect it to be labelled
and highly coloured.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Two things alone remain safe from this bias of custom--Love
and Youth. To the lover, the tying of a shoe-lace on
his mistress's foot may be as sacred a rite and may contain as
much sentiment as the most impassioned caress. To the child,
the mud-pile has possibilities of infinite bliss. To the one
comes eternal beauty, to the other eternal mystery. And so, to
touch these forever, and to lose no intermediary sensation
of charm, whether it be humour, romance, pathos
or inspiration, to be bound by every link
that connects Youth to Love,
that was my April essay!</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="getting-acquainted"><span class="bold large">Getting Acquainted</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Two lives moving in mysterious orbits are drawn
together, and for an instant, or maybe for ever after, whirl
side by side. We call the encounter an introduction,
and we usually proceed to stifle the wonder of it by impersonal
talk of art, books or the drama. It is an every-day affair
and does not commonly stir the imagination. And yet to the
connoisseur in living the meeting may be an event as well as an
episode. He is a discoverer come to an unknown shore--it may be
the margent of a boundless sea or not, but of a certain it is swung
by new tides and currents to be adventured and plumbed.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>How can we, supercivilized out of almost all real emotion, develop
the potential charm of this first glimpse of a new personality?
It is guarded by conventionality; the shutters are down, the door is
barricaded; you may knock in vain with polite interrogations, and
no one appears at the window. Must we perforce set the house afire,
smite or shriek aloud to bring this stranger's soul to his eyes for one
searching gaze, face to face? The time is so short--we must greet,
and pass on to the next; we exchange easy commonplaces, and so
the chance vanishes. Why not defy custom and boldly snatch in
that magic moment some satisfactory taste of warm human
intercourse?</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Curiously enough, this strangeness--this lack of background in
new acquaintances--is one of the freshest charms of meeting. Who
would not throw off all restraint and talk frankly with a man from
the planet Mars or Venus? Could we resurrect an
inhabitant of Atlantis we could give him our whole
confidence--and even a South Sea Islander, were he
intelligent, might be our confessor. Where then shall
we draw the line of convention? Mars is some
140,000,000 miles away--San Francisco is but 9,000--the ratio is
inadequate but there is a guarantee of candour in mere distance.
May we not apply the same rule to nearer neighbours and look upon
them in this interesting light?</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There is no such stimulating instant possible for old friends
for they are bound by preconceived ideals of personality--they are
pigeon-holed as this or that--circumscribed by mutual duty and
sacrifice; they must reconcile present whims to past vagaries; they are
held to strict account of consistency with previous moods; but on
our first meeting with another we are free of all this constraint, and
if we have courage may meet soul to soul without reserves. We
may confess unreliable things in that moment, for there is no
perspective of formulated opinion into which the confidence must be
fitted--the little secret is safe alone in the new mind, and will not be
held to intolerable account. We may even for this once state a
brutal truth, for we are unpledged to distressing considerations. We
may be in some few sacred thoughts more intimate with a stranger
than with an old friend. Such is the divine franchise of this first
sudden opportunity. No compact is yet sealed; you must take me
as you find me, like me or not, it matters little, since it is for us to
say whether or not we shall meet again.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This play is, as Dickens says of melancholy, "one of the cheapest
and most accessible of luxuries," for the scene is always ready,
set in the nearest drawing-room. Every stranger has a possible
fascination and comes like a prince incognito. It is
probably your own fault, not his, if the disguise is not
dropped during the first impetuous flurry of talk.
Children do these things better, making friends not
inch by inch, but by bold advances of genuine confidence,
yet approaching each new mystery with respect. So we, too,
like the child, must dress these our dolls, and put them into their
first mental attitudes with sincerity and trust before they will come
to life. We must put much feeling into the relation--giving and
taking--so much that we cannot only confide our tenderest spiritual
aspirations, but invest trifles with unaccustomed worth and significance.
These are not impossible sensations even for such accidental
fellowship, for nothing is too unimportant to reveal personality and
orient one's point of view. But we must proceed from the inside,
outward--beginning with truths and thence to fancy. It is the </span><em class="italics">apriori</em><span>
method; not deducing the character of your neighbour from his
visible idiosyncracies of taste and habit, but boldly inducing a new
conception, making him what you will, and varying the picture by
successive approximations as his words and actions modify your
theory.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>No one is too dull for the experiment, as no mummy is too
common to be unwrapped. Granted only that he is newly found, so that
you have imagination, romance and sentiment on your palette, you
may paint him as you will. The colours may wash, but for the
while he is your puppet and must dance to your piping, if, indeed,
you do not become his.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There are those, of course, who will but cry "Oh!" and "Ah!"
to your essays--dolts with neither wits nor words nor worth, who
take all and give nothing; no one can set such damp stuff afire.
Well, after all, though you have unmasked, retreat is
still possible. With how many duller friends have
you given your parole and cannot escape with honour!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Indeed, it is not so desirable that we should
always win, as that the game itself be worth the playing.
One must not expect to make a friend at each introduction. To
make the most of the minute in this way, then, to strike while the
iron is hot (and, better, to heat it yourself)--this is the art of
getting acquainted. It is the higher flirtation, not dependent upon sex
or temperament, but of many subtler dimensions, and though it
soon turns into the old familiar ruts, the first steps, made
picturesque by a common fancy, shall never lose their glamour, and one
shall remember to the very last how the first shots went home.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But do not confound playing with playing a part. One may
do all this sincerely, honestly giving good coin, and that is the only
game worth while; for of a sudden it may wake into new beauty like
a dream come true, and you will find yourself in Arcady. No
more fooling then, for the real you is walking by my side, hand
in hand. We shall not be sorry either, shall we, that we
hurried round the first corner into the open--that we
jumped a few hedges? Surely we have an infinite
friendship for our inaccessible goal, and though
the first rush was exhilarating, there are
more inspiring heights beyond!</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="dining-out"><span class="bold large">Dining Out</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Why human beings are so fond of eating together and
making a ceremonial of the business it is hard to
say. Man is almost the only animal who prefers to
consume his food in company with his kind, for even
sheep and cattle wander apart as they graze, seeking private delicacies.
Early in the morning, it is true, most cultivated persons are
savages, preferring to breakfast in seclusion and </span><em class="italics">dishabille</em><span>; lunch
time finds them in a slightly barbarous state, and they tolerate
company; but by evening we all become gregarious and social, and we
resent the absence of an expected companion at the table as of a
course omitted.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And so, whether we dine at home or abroad we call it a poor
dinner where we have good things only to eat. The dullest, most
provincial hostess has come to understand this, and each does what
she can, in inviting guests, to form partnerships or combinations
sympathetic and enlivening. There are, of course, always those
impossibles, poor relations or what-not, whom policy or politeness
imperatively demands, and every dinner-table is, in attempt at least, a
conversational constellation of stars of the first magnitude separated
by lesser lights.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>From these fixed stars radiate flashes of talk, and supplementing
this, the laughter of the connecting circle should follow as punctually
as thunder upon lightning. The hostess, like a beneficent sun,
kindles and warms and sways her little system, while the servants
revolve about the table in their courses, like orderly
planets.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But we might push the allegory a step farther.
Though the round of a score of dinners may exhibit
no more unusual a cosmogony than this, yet at every
thirty-third event, perhaps, we may encounter a comet! There is no
prognosticating his eccentric course; he comes and goes according to
a mysterious law, but wherever he appears, blazing with a new light,
foreign to all our conventions, he is a compelling attraction, drawing
the regular and steady orbs of fashion this way and that out of
their orbits, shifting their axes, and upsetting social tides and seasons.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>To such an innovator a dinner is given not for food but for
pastime, and it is a game of which he may change the rules as soon
and as often as they hamper his enjoyment. It matters little to him
that he is dressed for a feast of propriety. To him alone it is not
a livery; he is not the servant of custom. If it pleases him to settle
a dispute out of hand, he will send the butler for the dictionary
while the discussion is hot, or more likely go himself forthright. If
he wishes to see a red rose in the hair of his host's daughter over
against him, he will whip round two corners to her place, and adjust
the decoration. And if it is necessary to his thesis that you, his
shocked or amused partner, help him illustrate a Spanish </span><em class="italics">jerabe</em><span>, you
too must up and help him in the pantomime if you would not have
such fine enthusiasm wasted for a scruple.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I knew one such once who retrieved an almost hopelessly
misarranged dinner by his generalship, usurping the power of the
hostess herself. The guests were distributed in a way to give the
greatest possible discomfort to the greatest number, though from
stupidity rather than from malice. Mr. Comet solved the problem
at a glance. He rose before the fish was served, with
a wine-glass in one hand and his serviette in the other.
"The gentlemen," he announced, "will all kindly
move to the left four places." It was before the day
of "progressive dinner parties," and the scheme was
new. The ladies gasped at his audacity, but after this change of
partners the function began to succeed.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Your comet, then, must not only be a social anarchist but he
must convert the whole company, or he presents merely the sorry
spectacle of a man making a fool of himself, never a sight conducive
to appetite or to refined amusement, except perhaps to the cynic.
He must be able to swing the situation. He must believe, and
convince others, that the true object of a dinner is to amuse, and if it
should take all of the time devoted to the </span><em class="italics">entrée</em><span> for him to show
the pretty sculptress at his right how to model an angel out of bread,
his observing hostess should feel no pang that he has neglected his
brochette. After all, the elaborate supervision of the </span><em class="italics">ménu</em><span> was
undertaken, any modern hostess will acknowledge, only that, in the dire
case her guests did not succeed in amusing each other, they might
at least have good things to eat. Every dish untasted in the excitement
of conversation, then, should be a tribute to her higher skill in
experiments with human chemistry.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>If she can catch no comet, however, she must be contented with
lesser meteoric wits who make up for real brilliancy by saying what
they do say quickly and spontaneously; with the punsters, in short,
and such hair-trigger intellects. Failing these, the last class above
the bores-positive are those well-meaning diners-out who load
themselves with stories for a dinner as a soldier goes into an engagement
with a belt full of cartridges. They may not get a chance for
a shot very often, but, given an opening, their fire is
accurate and deadly till the last round is gone, when
they are at the mercy of a more inventive wit. Yet
even these welter-weights have their place at the table,
for we must have bread as well as wine.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It was one of Lewis Carroll's pet fancies to have a dinner-table
in the shape of a ring, and half the guests seated inside upon a
platform which revolved slowly round the circle till each one had
circumnavigated the orbit and passed opposite every guest seated on the
outside of the table. But this would break up many of the little
secret schemes for which the modern dinner is planned, and many a
young man would suddenly find himself flirting with the wrong lady
across the board.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And this last hint carries me from the exoteric to the esoteric
charms of the dinner. Here, however, you must guess your own
way; I dare not tell you precisely what it means when Celestine
shifts her glass from left to right of her plate, nor what I answer
when I raise my serviette by one corner, for Celestine and I may
dine with you some day, and you may remember our little code.
You would better not invite me anyway, for, though I
am no comet, yet I admit I would be mad
enough to upset the claret purposely
rather than have nothing
exciting happen!</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-uncharted-sea"><span class="bold large">The Uncharted Sea</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Ay, there's the rub! If we could but forecast our
dreams, who would care to keep awake? In that, we are
no further advanced than in the times of Pythagoras;
still clumsy, ignorant amateurs in this most fascinating
and mysterious game, played by every race and condition of men
under the moon. There are some, maybe, who do not dream, poor
half-made men and women, to whom a waking, literal prosaic life is
the whole of existence. They stay idly at home, while you and I
take ship upon the Unknown Sea and navigate uncharted waters
every night. Then we are poets, dunces, philosophers, clowns or
madcaps of sorts in a secret carnival, changing not only our costumes,
but often our very selves, doffing conscience, habit and taste,
to play a new part at each performance.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>If we could but manage this raree-show, and not be mere
marionettes, wired to the finger of the Magician, what tremendous
adventures might we not undertake! We have rare glimpses of the
Lesser Mysteries, but the inner secrets of that inconsequential empire
are still undiscovered. The revels confound us; we are whirled,
intoxicated or drugged, into a realm of confusion, and, out of touch
with senses, reason and will, we cannot quite keep our heads clear.
How many of us have tried to "dream true," like Peter Ibbetson,
even to obeying the foolish formula he described, lying, hands under
head, foot upon foot, murmuring his magic words?</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Try as we may, those of us who are true dreamers can never
quite accept the psychologist's explanation of dreams.
Some cases may be easily understood, perhaps, such as
the pathological influence of a Welsh rarebit, a
superabundance of bed covers, or suggestive noises. We
may account, too, for those absurd visions that appear
so often on awakening, when one sense after another comes breaking
into our consciousness, and when the mind, summoned suddenly to
construct some reasonable relation between incongruous floating
pictures, seizes upon any explanation, however ridiculous. But of
deeper dreams, dreams logical or meaningful, dreams that recur or
are shared by others, modern science does not give any satisfactory
theory, and we are forced, willingly enough no doubt, to apply the
hypotheses of mysticism.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There are dreams, too, so progressive and educational that they
seem to involve a new science unknown in this workaday world.
So many of us have had experiences with levitation in our dream
life that we are, so to speak, a cult. I myself began by jumping,
timing each spring with the precise moment of alighting from a
previous leap, profiting by the rebound, and, after many experiments I
am now able to float freely, even accomplishing that most difficult
of all feats, rising in the air by a deliberate concentrated effort
of will, even while lying on my back. Yet all of us, jumpers,
flyers or floaters, must wait till that wonderful dream comes to us,
after months maybe, to indulge in that most exhilarating pastime.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Children's dreams are (until they are cruelly undeceived) quite
as real as their waking moments, and it may be that we shall, in time,
learn the forgotten art from them. It is dependent, no doubt,
upon their power of visualizing imagined objects while their eyes are
shut, but while still awake; but this ability to call up the images of
anything at will is as soon lost as their belief in
dreams. Though this habit fades and is forgotten in
the growing reality of our outward life, it may not be
impossible with practice to regain the proficiency, for
at times of great physical fatigue and mental exaltation
the power comes back, often intensified almost to the point of
hallucination. If we could train our imagination then, and learn to
see pictures when our eyes are shut, these might become more accurate
and real, so that at the moment of sinking into unconsciousness,
as we lose hold on tangible things, the vision would become one with
the reality, and, still imagining and creating, we might pass over the
footlights and dream true. To most of us there comes a recognizable
moment when we know we are just at the border of sleep; if
we could then with our last effort of will keep control of the
moving pictures we might go wherever we wished.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We might learn, too, to remember more of what happens in the
night. We usually give what has passed in dream no more than an
indulgent smile, and forget the strangeness of it all as soon as we
are well awake. It is as if we had hurriedly turned the pages of an
illustrated book. We recall, here and there, a few striking pictures,
beautiful or comic, and the volume is replaced upon the shelves not
to be taken down till the next evening. It is a book from which
we learn little; its contents are not even amusing to anyone else, who
has as fanciful tales in his own dreamland library. If we could, upon
first awakening, impress our minds with the reality of our dreams,
we might be able to recall more and more, and find that in spite of
their incongruity there was some law which governed their visitation
and some meaning in their grotesque patterns.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>To one who dreams frequently, bedtime cannot fail to be
something to look forward to, to hope and to prepare for
with efforts to capture in the net of sleep some
beautiful dream. May we not, sometime, find the proper
bait, and lie down confident that we shall be duly
enchanted in some delightful way, according to our
desires? Till then we must each buy our nightly ticket in Sleep's
lottery, and draw a blank or a prize, as Morpheus wills. Some say
that the most refreshing sleep is absolute unconsciousness of
time--that one should shut one's eyes, only to open them in the morning,
with the night all unaccounted for. But no true dreamer will assent
to this; he knows it is not so. I was told in my youth, that if
I turned the toes of my boots toward the bed, I should
have a nightmare. I confess I have never dared
try it. But, rather than not dream at all, I
believe I should be tempted to
hazard the experiment.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-art-of-playing"><span class="bold large">The Art of Playing</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Time was when we made our own toys; when a piece of
twine, a spool, a few nails and a bit of imagination could
keep us busy and happy all day long. There were no
new-fangled iron toys "made in Germany," so tiresome
in their inevitable little routine of performance, so easily got out of
order, and so hard, metallic and realistic as to be hardly worth the
purchase. A penny would, indeed, buy some funny carved wooden
thing that aroused a half-hour's excitement, but it was never quite
so alluring as when in the front window of the toy-shop. Such
queer animals never became thoroughly acclimated to the nursery,
and they lost their lustre in a half-holiday. The things that gave
permanent satisfaction were home-made, crude and capable of
transformation. A railway train might, with a small effort of the fancy,
become a ship or a dragon. Are there such amateur toy-builders
now, in this age when everything is perfect and literal, when even a
box of building-blocks contains a book of plans to supply imaginative
design to the modern child? Indeed, many children are nowayears
too lazy even to do their own playing. I have heard of one
who was used to sit on a chair and order his nurse to align his
ninepins and bowl them down for him!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Perhaps one notices the lack of creative ability in children more
in the city where ready-made toys are cheap and accessible, than in
the country where the whole world is full of wonderful possibilities
for entrancing pastime. Nature is the universal playmate,
perpetually parodying herself in miniature for the benefit of
those who love to amuse themselves with her toys.
Every brook is a little river, every pond an unfathomable
sea. She plants tiny forests of fern and raises
microscopic mountains in every sand-bank. Flowers
and plants furnish provender for Lilliputian groceries, the oak showers
acorn cups; what wonder we believe, as long as we can, in fairies?</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And yet, strange to say, it is the city more often than the country
child who feels the charm of these marvels. The freshness and
the strangeness breed a fascinated wonder; it is, after flagged
pavements and brick walls, almost too good to be true. The juvenile
rustic is more familiar with Nature. It is his business to know when
the flowers come, where berries ripen and birds nest. It is scarcely
play to him, it is a science to be applied to his personal profit. The
woods and rivulets are his familiar domain, to be forayed and hunted
specifically for gain. And this, though it is delightful, is not play.
For him, there is no glamour over the fields until long after, when
his native countryside has become inaccessible.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Perhaps the art of playing is, after all, a matter more of
temperament than environment, for one sees, at times, good sport even
in the city streets, though it is rare nowadays. I had my own full
share of it, for my youth was an age of pure romance. My clan had
its own code and its own traditions. Every man of us had his suit
of wooden armour, his well-wrought weapons and his fiery steed.
We were all for Scott. We had our Order, small, but well up in
the technique of feudal ways, facile in sword-play, both with the thin,
sinewy hard-pine rapier, and the huge, two-handed, double-hiked
battle-sword that should stand just as high as one's head. On the brick
sidewalks we tilted on velocipedes, full in the view of the anxious
passers-by. </span><em class="italics">Cap-à-pie</em><span> in pine sheathed with tin, with
a shield blazoned with a tiger couchant, and inscribed
with a Latin motto out of the back of the dictionary,
many a long red lance I shivered, and many a wheel I
broke. On Warren Avenue I did it, opposite the
church. What would I not give, now, to see such sights in
town!--instead, I watch little boys smoking cigarettes upon the street
corners, waiting for their girls.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I knew a youngster, too, who organized in his town a postoffice
department, established letter-boxes and a regular service of boy
carriers. He drew and coloured the stamps himself--you will find them
in few collections, though they should have enormous value from
their rarity. Such games are consummate play, even though the
sport goes awry all too soon; it is too great to last!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It is the older brother who should give finesse to such sport.
Without him, complications arise which accomplish at last the ruin of
the game. Many of us do not truly learn to play until it is too
late to do so with dignity, and to these, the appreciation of the young
gives a fine excuse for prolonging the diversion. We fancy we
cannot, when grown up, play imaginative games for the pure joy of it,
as does the child; we think we must have an ulterior motive. Yet
the father, who whittles out a boat for his son, often gets more delight
than the child, who would far rather do it himself, no matter how
much more crudely accomplished.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The theater is the typical play for grown-ups; the name itself,
"play," is significant of the unquenchable tendency of youth. And
this reminds me of a most amusing case where two grown-ups dared
to be absolutely ingenuous. It was upon a honeymoon, when if
ever, adults have the right to yield to juvenile impulses. As the
groom was titled and the bride fair, society took it ill
that the two should retire to their country house and
deny access to all neighbours. One at last called, too
important to be denied admittance by the servants, and
the astonished visitor discovered the happy pair
stretched over the dining-room table, training flies whose wings had
been clipped, to pull, in a harness of threads, little paper wagons!
This had been their absorbing occupation for ten blissful days!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>An important element of play seems to be the doing of things
in miniature. See Stevenson, for instance, prone upon the floor,
involved in romantic campaigns, massing his troops of tin soldiers,
occupying strategic positions in hall and passage, skirmishing over the
upstairs "roads of the Third Class, impassable for artillery,"
intercepting commissary trains labouring up from the Base of Operations
in the kitchen, deploying cavalry-screens upon the rug, and
out-manoeuvering the wily foe that defends the verandah, both
being bound by the strict treaties of the play. There is your
ideal big brother, and the game of toy soldiers is glorified into
weeks of excitement!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The Japanese, immortal children, carry the game of diminution
to its extreme. The dwarfed trees and the excruciating carved
ivories are not the only symptoms of this delightful disease; for the
perfection of the spirit of play one must see their miniature gardens,
often the life-employment of the owners. No matter how small the
patch of ground employed, every inch is perfect. Pebble by pebble,
almost grain by grain, the area is arranged, the tiny rivulet is guided
between carefully curved banks, wee bridges span the shores, little
lanterns and pagodas are artfully placed, plants and flowers are sown,
trees planted, fishes are domiciled, till the garden is a replica of
Nature at her best. Each view is a toy landscape, and
without a scale, as seen in a photograph, for instance, one
might think it a garden of the gods. And yet, there
is a sort of play where one may use infinite distances,
macrocosms for microcosms, if one has the courage
and the power of visualization. These games are purely mental,
feats of the imagination, though not nearly so difficult as
might be thought. I know a sober, workaday lawyer, for
instance, who combines the two methods with extraordinary
cleverness. His income is not derived solely from his practice, I
need hardly say. You will not catch him at his fascinating
diversion, for his table is strewn with books and papers, and
his playthings are not noticeable amongst the professional litter.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I have known him to sit for hours gazing at the table,
and, once in his confidence--for there is a fraternity of
players, and one must give the grip and prove fellowship--he will
tell you that he has shrunk to but an inch in height, so that, to
him, his desk seems to be some three hundred feet long by a
hundred feet wide, and its plateau is elevated some two hundred
feet above the floor; as high, that is, as a church. Assuming that he
has, by some miraculous means shrunk to one-fiftieth of his stature,
the size of everything visible is, of course, increased in a like
proportion. His diverting occupation, under this queer state of things,
is to explore his little domain, and exist as well as is possible.
What adventures has he not had! There was the terrific
combat with a cockroach as big as a dragon, which he finally slew
with a broken needle! There was the dust storm, when the
care-taker swept, and the huge snow crystals like white pie-plates,
that came in when the window was opened. He had an enormous
difficulty in getting water from a glass tumbler, and
he broke his teeth upon the crystals of sugar that,
as a lawyer, he had been thoughtful enough to
strew upon the table for the benefit of himself as an
Inchling. I believe he is now attempting to escape
to the floor by means of a spool of thread, if he cannot make up
his mind to risk a descent by means of a paper parachute. It is
a world of his own, as real to him as the child's toy paradise,
a retreat immune from the cares of his daily life, a
never-tiring playground, with perpetual discoveries
possible. He, if any one, has discovered not
only the art of playing, but has
applied the science as well!</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-use-of-fools"><span class="bold large">The Use of Fools</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>What a dull world it would be if everyone were modest,
discreet and loyal to that conformity which is called
good taste! if, in short, there were no fools to keep us
amused. What would divert us from the deadly
routine of seriousness? What toy scandal would we have to discuss
at dinner? What would leaven this workaday world of common-places,
if everyone were gifted with common sense? Is it not,
when you stop to think of it, a bit inconsiderate to discountenance
buffoonery and to resent innocently interesting impropriety? Should
we not rather encourage eccentricity with what flattering hypocrisies
we may, so that we shall never be at a loss for things to smile at and
talk about?</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>A fair sprinkling of fools in the world is as enlivening as a
pinch of salt in a loaf of bread. They give a relish to life, and flavour
with a brisk spicery of nonsense what would otherwise be oppressively
flat. Civilized existence, if it were always cooked up and
served to us by Mrs. Grundy herself, would be unpalatable enough;
but luckily her infallible recipes are not always carried out, and a
few plums and cloves get into her pudding.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We may not care to play the part of public jesters ourselves,
but the least we can do is to be grateful to those who are willing to
become absurd for our benefit. Patronize them daintily, therefore,
lest they backslide into propriety; remember that there is such a
thing as enjoyment without ridicule. To make fun of a person
to his face is a brutal way of amusing one's self; be
delicate and cunning, and keep your laugh in your
sleeve, lest you frighten away your game.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But there will doubtless always be enough who
are willing to play the guy, whether we encourage
or condemn. The fool is a persistent factor in society, and yet the
common misconception of his status and economic function is silly
and unfair. With the prig and the crank, the fool has been
reviled from time immemorial, and persecuted out of all reason.
He is protected by no legislation; your fool is always in season,
and is the target for universal contempt. Instead of this perpetual
fusillade of wits, there should be a "close season" for fools to allow
them to propagate and grow fearless, after which we could make
game of them in safety of a full supply. Since he is, in a way,
the lubricator of the wheels of life, a coiner of smiles, he should
be carefully bred to give the greatest possible amount of diversion.
He should be trained like an actor that his best points may be
brought out; he should be paid a salary or kept in livery to amuse
the public, with no need or excuse for sobriety.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But, until the fool is properly appreciated and his place assured,
we must put up with the amateurs that haunt the street and drawing-room.
It is too much to hope for the sight of a zany every time we
go out doors, but, when we do encounter one, what a ray of sunshine
gleams athwart our strict fashions--poor sober dun slaves to style
and custom! If we chance upon a woman who dares perpetrate her
own radical theories of dress, who combines pink with red, or
commits a gay indiscretion in millinery, how superbly she is
distinguished, for the moment, from the ruck and swarm of victims to
good taste! She is at once an event and a portent. The afternoon
is quaintly illuminated with a phenomenon, and we
scan with new interest and expectation the dull and
sombre throng.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>How small a deviation from the mode, indeed,
is necessary to provoke a revivifying smile! Every
such unconscious laughing-stock is a true benefactor, ministering
to our sense of superiority. Were we never to see the freaks, we
would not know how glorious is our own uncompromising regularity.
Truly, if we have sufficient conceit, every one in the world,
in a way of thinking, may be considered foolish relatively to our own
criterion. "All the world is queer except thee and me," said the
Quaker, "and even thee is a little queer!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Such praise of fools may seem extravagant or illogical, but if it
is so, it must be not because the fool is not helpful and stimulating
in society, but because, after all, he is not so easily identified as one
might suppose. Celestine tells me she never calls a man a fool, but
instead asks him why he does so,--and in this way she often learns
something. That is the most disagreeable trait of fools; often, upon
investigation, what appears to be genuine nonsense is but the consistent
carrying out of a clever and original idea, whose novelty alone
excites amusement. The fool thus cheats us of our due enjoyment
by being in the right. It seems dishonest of a fool to instruct; it is
beside the mark, and outside his proper sphere, and yet even
Confucius is said to have learned politeness from the impolite. To
see one's own faults and weaknesses caricatured spoils the laugh that
should testify to the folly.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We cannot be sure, either, that the ass who amuses us by
his eccentric absurdities may not eventually cheat us of the final
victory by proving to be but the vanguard of a new custom
to which we or our children must, perforce, in time
succumb, and fall into line with him far behind, only
then to count our present attitude foolish and
old-fashioned. Let us therefore laugh while we may, for
your fool is but a chameleon who refuses to change
colour. What today is arrant silliness may tomorrow be good
horse-sense, wherefore it is wise to watch fools carefully when you find
them, lest the sport spoil overnight, and you yourself become
ridiculous, while the fool takes your place as the amused philosopher.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The word "fad," they say, was derived from the initial letters
of the phrase "for a day." So we, the followers of the latest mode
and mood, are, it would seem, the true ephemera, and the fools who
defy the local custom are immortal. The fool is merely an
anachronism. All inventors, most poets, and some statesmen have been
honoured with the title, since we laugh chiefly at what we do not
understand. There are more synonyms for "fool" than for any
other word in the language!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So we must take our chances and smile at all and sundry, at
men of one idea, hobby riders, cranks, </span><em class="italics">poseurs</em><span>, managing mammas
and antic youths, blushing brides and fond parents, bounders,
pedants, bigots and hens with their heads cut off. Laugh at them,
the character parts in the comedy of life, for the show is
amusing, but be not resentful if you find the privilege of laughing
is a common right, and you in your turn become
a victim. For, strange as it may seem,
many of these actors may be so
foolish as to think you
the fool yourself!</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="absolute-age"><span class="bold large">Absolute Age</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>When I was a child, I invented a game so simple and
so passive, that its enjoyment was permitted even on
the rigorous Sundays of my youth. Upon a slate I
ruled vertical columns, and at the head of these I
wrote: "Men, women, boys, girls, babies, horses, dogs." Then,
seated at a window commanding the street, I made note of the
passers-by, and as fast as they appeared in sight I made a mark for
each in the appropriate column. The compilation of this petty
census was a pleasing pastime, and, moreover, it seemed to me that
my categories were obviously complete. There were, in my world,
but men and women, boys, girls and babies--what else, indeed?</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But this primary classification of sex and years did not satisfy
me long, and I discovered that my system must be amended if I
would segregate--mentally now--the various types I encountered.
There were, for instance, good persons and bad ones, men educated
and ignorant, rich and poor, and I superimposed upon my first list
one after another of these modifying conditions. But with a larger
view of life these crude distinctions overlapped and became confused,
and I saw that the whole system was but a rude makeshift.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Yet until I could pigeon-hole a new acquaintance in my own
mind and put him with others of his kind I was never quite satisfied.
Up to a certain stage in development, what we are most struck with
is the difference between persons, but after the first intellectual
climacteric we begin to see resemblances, invisible before, that knit men
of different aspect together; and, that game of
synthesis once begun, we must play it till we die.
Every new acquaintance is an element of our
experience--a new fact refuting or corroborating our
theory of life, and, though we often may put the case
into a separate compartment and label the specimen "unique,"
before long we shall probably have to reconsider the whole collection
and devise a new system of arrangement for the complex
characteristics of human nature.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But what analysis can we adopt which shall prove universally
satisfactory? If we rank men according to mental, moral or
spiritual attributes, one quality is sure to contradict or affect the
other, and it is hard to decide which trait is paramount. Friendship
is dependent upon none of these things, and yet in our affections we
recognize, almost unconsciously, grades and qualities of attraction
and kinship. Of a bunch of letters at our breakfast plate, we are
sure to open a special one first or last, as the expectation of pleasure
may decide. We accept this nearness, this intimate relationship,
without reasoning; it is manifested in the first flash of recognition of
the handwriting, at sight of a photograph, at the sound of a voice or
a name. Some are indubitably of our own clan, and others, however
their charm, or a temporary passion, may blind us for a time, are
foreigners, and speak another language of the emotions. There are
invisible groups of souls, mysteriously related, and the tie is
indissoluble.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So I have come to adopt as the final classification what, for want
of a better term, I must call Absolute Age--age or condition, that
is, not relative, not dependent upon the year of one's birth. No
one, surely, has failed to observe children who seem to be older than
their parents in possibility of development. One
knows that in a few years this child will have caught
up to and passed his father or mother in soundness
of judgment, in a sense of the relative importance of
things, in the power to distinguish sham, convention
and prejudice from things of vital import. This child is older in
point of Absolute Age. When his soul has served its juvenile
apprenticeship in the world of the senses he shall understand truths
his parents never knew.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This capacity for comprehending life does not seem to be
dependent upon actual definite experience with the world. The
villager may have this hidden wisdom as clearly as the man who
has seen and done, who has fought, loved and travelled far and
well. The mystics hold that we have all lived before, and that
some have profited by their experiences in former lives and have
attained a fairer conception of the very truth. But, though this
illustrates what is meant by the term Absolute Age, it is by no
means necessary to accept such an explanation of the effects we
perceive. It is enough that we can definitely classify our friends by
their emotions and desires, and by their point of view on life. In
other words, some are philosophers and some are not. And even
the philosophers are of varying sects. Some have a keen, childlike
enthusiasm for the more obvious forms of excitement, for all that is
new and strange and marvellous, while others are incapable of being
shocked, surprised or embarrassed--they have poise, and prefer the
part of observer to that of actor in the game of life.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And yet, too, there is a simplicity which comes from a greater
Absolute Age, a relish for real things that persists with enthusiasm.
It is by this simplicity one may distinguish the cult from those that
are merely </span><em class="italics">blasé</em><span> or worldly wise. The joy in the
taste of the fresh apple under the tongue, or in the
abandon of the child at play, in the strength of youth
and the grace of women,--this is a joy that does not
fade; no, not even for those who would not trouble
to go to the window if the king rode by! As a man can learn
much by travel without losing his capacity for enjoying his native
town, so one can enjoy life intellectually to the utmost without ever
losing one's grasp on one's self, without being intoxicated by excitement
or blinded by egoism, and yet feel still the clean, sane joys of
youth to the last.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We have come to our Absolute Age by different paths. If we
are of the same status, you and I, you may have learned one lesson
and I another, yet the sum of our experience is the same. We
are akin spiritually, although we have not had the same process of
development. You, perhaps, have fought down hate and I have
conquered dishonesty, but we are calmer and wiser, we think,
than those whom we smile at quietly when we view their eagerness
for things that no longer concern us. We recognize, too,
that there are others to whose attainments our own powers
are infantile. But in either case the superiority is
neither mental nor moral nor spiritual--it
is that mysterious inherent
quality we call "caste."</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-manual-blessing"><span class="bold large">The Manual Blessing</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Surely if there is one sharp, active sensation that, in this
changeful life of ours, we never tire of, never outgrow, it is
in the satisfaction of creative manual work. There is a
conservation of pleasure as there is a conservation of energy,
and our taste is being continually transmuted and evolved. One by
one we outlive the joys of youth, the delights of physical exercise,
the zest of travel, the beatitude of emotion, the singing raptures of
love, passing from each to a more mature appeal, a more refined
appetite, a subtler demand of the intellect or of the spirit. The
familiar games lose their savour, the dance gives way to the drama, travel
to the calmer investigation of homely miracles. We tire of seeing
and begin to read, feasting peacefully at the banquet of the arts that
other men have spread. This is, for many of us, what age means--a
giving up of active for passive pleasures when the old games lose
their charm.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But the joy of creation does not fade, for in that lies our
divinity and our claim to eternity. Each new product arouses the same
thrill, the same spiritual excitement, the same pride of victory, and
yet, strangely enough, though we think we work only for the final
notch of accomplishment, it is not the completion but the construction
that holds us entranced. Not the last stroke, but every stroke
brings victory! It is like the climbing of a mountain. Do we
endure the toil merely for the sake of the view at the summit? No,
but for the primitive passion of conflict, the inch-by-inch fight
against odds, the heaping of endeavour on endeavour,
the continual measuring of what has been done with
what remains to do. The finishing climax is but
the exclamation point at the end of the sentence--most
of the sensation has been used up before we
come to the full stop, and that point serves but to sum up our
emotion in a visible emblem of success.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Many of us believe we are debarred from the exercise of this
divine birthright, the joy of creation. We have neither talent nor
genius--not even that variety which consists in the ability to take
infinite pains. Are we not mistaken in this? I think we may each
have our share of the immortal stimulus.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>To understand this, we must go back and back in the history
of the race, and there we shall find that this satisfaction, this sane
and virile delight in construction, was possible to the meanest
member of the tribe. Its enjoyment came chiefly in the exercise of a
laborious persistency in little things. The combination or addition of
the simplest elements achieved a positive pleasurable result. The
neolithic man chipped and chipped at his flint until the arrow-head
was perfected, and his joy, had he been able to analyze it, was not
so much in the last stroke as in every stroke. Not so much that
he had himself with his own hands made something, as that he had
been making something of use and beauty, and the possibility of that
joy abiding with him as long as he lived. The makers of ancient
pottery repeated the same shapes and designs, or, if their fancy soared,
dared new inventions, but the satisfaction was in the doing. The
carvers and joiners of the Middle Ages worked as amateurs in cottage
and hovel, and in their work lay their content; no tyranny could
wrest from them this well-spring of pleasure. Old age could but
weaken the hand; I doubt if it could tame the
immemorial joy of creation.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We cannot all be professional mechanics, for the
division of labour has cast our lot more and more with
the workers in intellectual pursuits. But we might
make handicraft an avocation, if not a vocation, and that regimen
would help our digestion, perhaps, more than pepsin or a course of
the German baths. Were I a physician I should often recommend
the craft cure--a panacea for dyspepsia, ennui and nostalgia.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Here is my modern health resort, my sanitorium for these most
desperate of diseases; a little hamlet of shops and tents on the
foothills of the Coast Range in California, where as you work you can
look across a green valley to the blue Pacific. Here in this new
land nature calls fondly to your soul, and you may turn to the primitive
delights of living and taste the tang of the dawn of civilization,
fresh and wholesome as a wild berry.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Here, squatting on the bare sun-parched ground, with an Indian
blanket over his shoulders, is a corpulent banker with a flint
hammer battering a water-worn boulder. Thus, less than a hundred
years ago, the Temecula Indians hollowed out their stone mortars on
this very mesa. Thus they spent happy days, slept like bears, and
were up with the birds, each morn a day younger than yesterday. In
this lodge of deerskins, where the ground is spread with yellow
poppies, sits an ex-secretary of legation, who has known everything, seen
everything, done everything but this--to cut with a knife of shell
strange patterns upon a circular horn gorget. Finished, his wife
might wear it with pride at the Court of St. James, yet it is but the
reproduction of a prehistoric ornament, its figures smeared with
ochre, cobalt and vermilion, and inlaid with lumps of virgin copper
by the mound-builders of the Mississippi Valley.
In this open shelter of bamboo, a trysting-place
for meadow-larks and song-sparrows, lies stretched
upon the ground an East India warehouseman, all his
gout and lumbago forgotten in the rapturous delight
of printing a pattern of checquered stripes with a carved wooden
block upon a sheet of tapa which he himself--unaided, mind
you--has pounded from the fibrous bark of the paper mulberry. His
strenuous daughter, once world-worn and frozen, has left Nietsche,
Brahms, and the cult of the symbolists, to sit cross-legged and
weave the woolly zigzags of a Navajo blanket. It is the first thing
she has made with her ten fingers since she baked mud pies in the
sun! Had she a scrap of mirror in her bungalow she could now
face it without mortification. An open-air hand-loom is good for
the complexion.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But you need not journey to California. Rather make a pilgrimage
to your own south attic. If you do but construct cardboard
model houses with isinglass windows in your breakfast-room, you
will perhaps find that more diverting than collecting cameos or first
editions. If you can only compile a concordance to </span><em class="italics">Alice in
Wonderland</em><span> you may achieve a hygienic and rejuvenative distraction.
Can you cut, stamp, gild, paint, lacquer and emboss a leather belt?
Can you hammer jewelry out of soft virgin silver? No? But
you could, though, if you tried! Can you forget the
impositions of convention in the rapt glow of pride in sawing
and nailing together a wooden box? No matter
how small it might be, how leaky of joint
or loose of cover, it would hold
all your worries!</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-deserted-island"><span class="bold large">The Deserted Island</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>A friend of mine is curiously hampered by a limitation
precluding him from association with any one conversant
with the details of the manufacture of cold-drawn wire.
To show that this self-imposed abstinence may indicate
a most charming devotion to an ideal, rarely shown by the commonplace,
is the object of this thesis, and that, too, despite the fact
that an indiscriminating extension of the same principle would lead
the radical to eschew the society of most of his acquaintances, as
well as bar out the whole domain of didactic literature.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>When the day is done, and that entrancing hour is come for
which some spend many of their waking hours in anticipation,
to those blessed with fancy, the curtain of the dark arises, and within
the theatre of the Night are played strange comedies. To a select
performance I invite all uninitiated who have never enjoyed the
drama of the Deserted Island--the perfect and satisfactory employment
for the minutes that elapse after retiring and before the anchor
is weighed and the voyage begun upon the Sea of Dreams.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There are undoubtedly more than I am aware of who are happy
enough to maintain deserted islands of their own--many more,
perhaps, than would confess to the possession. To some the history
may be well under way; they have long since discovered their island,
and many improvements have already been successfully completed.
Others, more adventurous, handicapped by stricter limitations and
more meagre outfit, are still struggling with the primal demands of
food and shelter. But to those whose imaginations
have never put so far out to sea, and would welcome
this modest diversion, I advise an expedition of
discovery and exploration this very night. You have
but to go to bed, close your eyes, and after a few
preliminaries you are there!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Authorities differ as to the allowable equipment for the
occupancy of the sequestered territory. I myself hold that it is
manifestly unfair to be provided with tools of any kind; to have a
knife, now, I would call cheating. Surely the only legitimate
beginning is to be vomited upon the beach stark naked from the sea,
after some fearsome shipwreck in mid-ocean. Then, after years of
occupancy, a man might taste the pride of his own resources,
unfettered by any legacy inherited from civilization. Settle this point
as you may, when the conditions of the game are once understood,
the whole history of Science is to be re-enacted.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I have a friend who arrived upon the scene in an open boat
containing a keg of water, a crowbar, a pruning-knife, a red silk
handkerchief and a woman's petticoat; and with these promiscuous
accessories has, in the course of years, transformed the place, which
now boasts a stone castle, entirely inhabitable. His island is about
two miles long and a half-mile wide--much too narrow for comfort,
I assert; the proportions should be about five miles by three, with
one dominant hill from which the whole territory may be surveyed.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But the owner of the other island--he of the cold-drawn
wire--boldly asserts his right to a half-dozen labourers, presumably
natives, and with this force at his disposal he has done wonders with
his fief. Glass has been manufactured, fabrics woven, ore smelted
and fine roads constructed, so that there now remains nothing to be
desired but bicycles upon which he and his slaves
may traverse the highways. But in vain his unskilled
assistants look to him for advice; rack his wits as he
may, he can devise no adequate system of making
cold-drawn wire, and he is beginning to lose caste
with his followers.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Now at first sight one might think it necessary for him only to
consult an encyclopedia, or to visit on iron mill, yet this course is
strictly barred out by the rules of the game, which compels one to use
only such information as comes naturally to hand--for one is likely to
be cast ashore upon a desert island at any moment, and it is then too
late for the research and education that has been before neglected.
With any ingenious fellow who has his own amateur ideas on the
subject, one may, of course, talk freely; for he may represent one of
the more intelligent of the natives; but all they who really know
whereof they speak are to be avoided. So the problem of the
cold-drawn wire is still unsolved.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I know of an artist, who, free on this enchanted spot, has
turned his energies to those diverting pursuits for which his studio
leaves no time, and he builds gigantic rock mosaics on the cliffs,
selecting from the many coloured boulders on the beach. Luxuries
are his only necessities even in his daily life, and the enormity of his
trifling on this holiday playground is a thing to wonder at. His art,
so used to a censorship of Nature, in his professional mimicries, here
goes boldly forth and so mends, prunes and patches the aspect of
his island, that the place is now, he says, absolutely perfect; a
consummation not altogether discreditable to a nude, near-sighted man,
whose eye-glasses were washed off before he arrived on the spot!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But, taking the situation seriously, what will he be in the years
to come? By what gradations shall the lonely artist
sink to low and lower levels, abandoned by the stimulus
of the outer world, the need for advance, and the struggle
for recognition? How soon would he lose the
desire to render, in the medium at hand, the lovely
forms of nature about him, the subtle tones of the earth and air,
lapsing by stages into ever cruder forms of expression, till the whole
history of his development had been reversed, and he became content
with rude squares, triangles and circles for his patterns, the barbarous
effigies of the human form, and the primary colours that satisfy the
savage?</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And the sense of humour, too--that universal solvent of all our
miseries, the oil that lubricates the cumbrous machinery of life--how
soon would that go? Is it not, in the last analysis, dependent upon
the by-play of the social relationship of men? The inconsistencies
of our fellows must be first noticed before we can get the reflected
light of ridicule upon our own grotesque actions. It would soon be
lost in such a sojourn, our impatience would have no foil, we would
take ourselves more and more seriously until the end came upon
that day when we had at last forgotten how to laugh.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But, after all, as this text of the hypothetical deserted island is
better fitted for a romance than for a sermon, we may leave such
forebodings and trace out only the rising curve of improvement.
And so, too, interesting as it might be to experience, we may leave
aside the moral speculations incident to the discussion of the case
where the place becomes occupied by a man and a woman. The
possibilities of a shipwreck in company are not for such a brief memoir
as this; they offer consideration too intimate for these discreet pages,
and are best left to the exclusion of a private audience.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But choose your company carefully, I entreat you,
if you are not soberly minded to be shipwrecked alone.
I know of persons with whom, were I cast ashore, there
could be no end not tragic, albeit these are highly
respectable and praiseworthy individuals, who never
did any harm except in that trick of manner by which we recognize
the bore. I am often inclined to test the merits of others by
mentally permitting them a short visit to my island, but the hazard
is too great, and the thought of the possibility of their footprints
upon the sand unnerves me.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Yet, to a distant islet of this fantastic archipelago I seriously
consider consigning certain impossible acquaintances, absolutely
intolerable personalities, whose probable fate, forced to endure each
other's society, interests me beyond words. Upon one side of this
far-away retreat rises a steep cliff overhanging the sea, and here I
behold in imagination one after another of these marooned unfortunates
pushed headlong over the slope, as, unable to support the
society of his companions, each has in turn, by some stratagem, lured
his hated accomplice in misery to the summit of the bluff.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But of one island I have not yet spoken. I can get no description
of it save that it lies sleeping in the summer sun, washed by
the sapphire tides and fanned by the cool south winds, its olive
slopes rising softly from the beach, marked by a grove of fruit trees
at the crest. More the owner will not tell, for Celestine says there
is no use for a deserted island after it is charted; but by
these signs I shall know the place, and my trees
are felled and my sails are plaited
that shall yet bear me over
towards the southwest!</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-sense-of-humour"><span class="bold large">The Sense of Humour</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Much as one may look through the small end of a
telescope and find an unique and intrinsic charm in the
spectacle there offered, so to certain eyes the whole
visible universe is humorous. From the apparition of this
dignified little ball, rolling soberly through the starry field of the
firmament, to the unwarrantable gravity of a neighbour's straw hat,
macrocosm and microcosm may minister to the merriment of man.
There is more in heaven and earth than is dreamed of in the
philosophy of the Realist.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It is one attribute of a man of parts that he shall have, in his
mental vision, what corresponds to the "accommodation" of his eye,
a flexibility of observation that enables him to adapt his mind to the
focus of humour. Myopia and strabismus we know; the dullard
can point their analogies in the mental optics, but for this other
misunderstood function we have no name; and yet, failing that, we
have dignified it as a sense apart--the sense of humour. But no
form of lens has been discovered to correct its aberration and transfer
the message in pleasurable terms to the lagging brain; and, unless
we attempt hypnotism as a last resort, the prosiest must go purblind
for life, missing all but the baldest jokes of existence.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Is it not significant, that from the ancient terminology of
leechcraft, this word "humour" has survived in modern medicine, to be
applied only to the vitreous fluid of the eye? For humour is the
medium through which all the phenomena of human intercourse may
be witnessed, and for those normal minds that possess
it, tints this world with a rare colour--like that of the
mysterious ultra-violet rays of the spectrum. And
indeed, to push further into modern science and
speculation, perhaps this ray does not undulate, but shoots
forth undeviating as Truth itself, like that from the Cathode Pole.
Or, does it not strike our mental retina from some secret Fourth
Direction?</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But this is mere verbiage; similes, flattering to the elect, but
unconvincing to the uninitiate. Yet, as I am resolved that humour
is essentially a point of view, I would have a try at proselytizing for
the doctrine. For here is a religion ready made to my hand; I have
but to raise my voice and become its prophet. The seeds are all
sown, the Fraternity broods, hidden in hidden Chapters, guarding
the Grand Hailing Sign; who knows but that a spark might not
touch off this seasoned fuel, and the flame carry everything before it.
O my readers, I give you the Philosophy of Mirth, the Cult of
Laughter! Yet it is an esoteric faith, mind you, unattainable by
the multitude. Not of the "Te-he! Papa's dead!" school, nor of
the giggling punster's are its devotees. No comic weekly shall be its
organ. It must be hymned not by the hoarse guffaw, but in the
quiet inward smile--and for its ritual, I submit the invisible humour
of the Commonplace. O Paradox!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Brethren, from this flimsy pulpit, I assert with sincerity, that
everything on two legs (and most on four) sleeping or awake,
bow-legged or knock-kneed, has its humorous aspect. The curtain never
falls on the diversion. You will tell me, no doubt, that here I ride
too hard. Adam, you will say with reason, set aside in the beginning
certain animals for our perpetual amusement--to wit: the goose, the
monkey, the ostrich, the kangaroo, and, as a sublime
afterthought--symbol of the Eternal Feminine--the
hen. Civilization, you may admit, has added to these
the goat--but, save in rare moods of insanity, as when
the puppy pursues the mad orbit of his tail, the sight
of only the aforesaid beasts makes for risibility. The cat, you will
say, is never ridiculous. But here again we must hark back to the
major premise, unrecognized though it be by the science of Æsthetic,
that humour lies in the point of view. If I could prove it by mere
iteration it would go without further saying that it is essentially
subjective rather than objective. Surely there is no humour in insensate
nature, as there is little enough in Art and Music. The bees, the
trees, the fountains and the mountains take themselves seriously
enough, and though, according to the minor poets, the fields and the
brooks are at times moved to laughter, it is from a vegetable, pointless
joy of life. Through the human wit alone, and that too rarely,
the rays of thought are refracted in the angle of mirth, and split into
whimsical rays of complementary sensations and contrasts.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>When we lay off the mantle of seriousness and relax the flexors
and extensors, if we are well fed, healthy, and of a peaceful mood
and capable of indolence, men and women, and even we ourselves,
should become to our view players on the stage of life. And what
then is comedy but tragedy seen backward or downside-up? It is
the negative or corollary of what is vital in this great game of life.
The custom has been, however, to give it a place apart and unrelated
to the higher unities, as the newspapers assign their witticisms to
isolated columns. Rather is it the subtle polarity induced by graver
thought, the reading between the lines of the page. And as, to the
vigorous intellect, rest does not come through inactivity so much as
by a change of occupation, the happy humourist is
refreshed by the solace of impersonality.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>For, to the initiate, his own inconsistencies and
indiscretions are no less diverting than those of his
associates, and should frequently give rise to emotions
that impel him to hurry into a corner and scream aloud with mirth.
It is ever the situation that is absurd, and never the victim; and in
this lies the secret of his ability to appreciate a farce of which he
himself is the hero. He must disincarnate himself as the whim blows,
and hang in the air, a god for the time, gazing with amusement at the
play of his own ridiculous failures. In some such way, perhaps, do
the curious turn over the patterned fabric, to discover, on the reverse,
the threads and stitches that explain the construction of the design.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This faculty, then, gives one the stamp of caste by which one
may know his brethren the world over, an Order of whose very existence
many shall never be aware, till, in some after life, some grinning
god conducts them to the verge of the heavens, and, leaning over a
cloud, bids them behold the spectacle of this little planet swarming
with its absurdly near-sighted denizens.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><em class="italics">Ohé la Renaissance!</em><span> for this is to be the Age of Humour. We
travail for the blithe rebirth of joy into the world. The Decadence,
with its morbid personalities and accursed analysis of exotic emotion,
is over, please God; yet we may adopt its methods and refine the
simplicity of primary impulse, thus increasing the whole sum of
pleasure with the delicate nuances that amplify the waves
of feeling. Hark, O my reader! Do you
not hear them, rising like overtones
and turning the melody into
a divine harmony?</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-game-of-correspondence"><span class="bold large">The Game of Correspondence</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>The receipt of a letter is no longer the event it was in
the old stage-coach days; railways and the penny postage
have robbed it of all excitement. One expects now
one's little pile of white, blue and green envelopes
beside one's plate at breakfast, along with one's toast and coffee,
and one tastes its contents as one opens the matutinal egg. We
have forgotten how to write interesting letters as we have forgotten
how to fold and wafer a sheet of foolscap or sharpen a quill.
Some of our missives are not even worth a cursory glance, many
by no means deserve an answer, and most are speedily forgotten
in the columns of the morning journal.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Yet, at times, on red-letter days, we find one amongst the
number which demands epicurean perusal; it is not to be ripped
open and devoured in haste, it insists on privacy and attention.
This has a flavour which the salt of silence alone can bring out;
a dash of interruption destroys its exquisite delicacy. More than
this, it must be answered while it is still fresh and sparkling, after
which, if it be of the true vintage, it can afford still another sip
to inspire your postscript.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>To your room then with this, and lock the door, or else save
it for a more impregnable leisure. Open it daintily and entertain
it with distinction and respect; efface any previous mood and hold
yourself passive to its enchantment. It is no love message, and
need depend upon no excited interest in the writer for its reception,
for it has an intrinsic merit; it is the work of an artist;
it is a fascinating move on the chess-board of the
most alluring, most accessible game in the world.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Though the fire of such a letter need have
neither the artificiality of flirtation nor the intensity
of love, yet it must both light and warm the reader. It is not
valuable for the news it brings, for if it be a work of art the tidings
it bears are not so important as the telling of them. It must be
sincere and alive, revealing and confessing, a letter more from the
writer than to the reader, as if it were written in face of a mirror
rather than before the photograph of the receiver; and yet the
communication must be spelled in the cypher of your friendship, to
which only you have the key. We have our separate languages,
each with the other, and there are emotions we cannot duplicate.
This missive is for you, and for you only, or it ranks with a business
communication. It is minted thought, invested, put out at loan for
a time, bringing back interest to stimulate new speculations. There
are no superfluous words, for the master strikes a clean sharp blow,
forging his mood all of a single piece, welding your whim to his, and,
fusing his sentences, there glows a spirit, a quality of style that bears
no affectation; it must not, of all things, become literary, it must be
direct, not showing signs of operose polish. It must be writ in the
native dialect of the heart.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>If it be a risk to write frankly, it is one that gains interest in
the same proportion; it makes the game the better sport. But after
all, how many letters, so fearfully burned, so carefully hid away, but
what, in after years, would seem innocuous? You are seduced by
the moment, and your mood seems, and impulses seem, dangerous,
incendiary. You grow perfervid in your indiscretion, not knowing
that the whole world is stirred by the same recklessness,
and that each one is profoundly bored by
all save his own yearnings. Not many of our epistles
will bear the test of print on their own merit,
expurgate them as you will; you need only fear, rather,
that the letter will grow dull even before it reaches its destination.
The best of them, moreover, are written in sympathetic ink, and
unless your correspondent has the proper reagent at hand, the sheets
will be empty or incomprehensible even to him. Answer speedily
as you may, too, it will be hard to overtake your correspondent's
mood; he has overburdened his mind, precipitated the solution, and
is off to another experiment by the time his stamp is affixed. But
you must do your best in return; reflect enough of his ray to show
him he has shot straight, and then flash your own colour back.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There are virtues of omission and commission. It is not
enough to answer questions; one must not add the active annoyance
of apology to the passive offense of neglect. One must not
hint at things untellable; one must give the crisp satisfaction of
confidences wholly shared. Who has not received that dash of
feminine inconsequence in the sentence, "I have just written you two
long letters, and have torn them both up"? What letter could
make up for such an exasperation? Your master letter-writer
does not fear to stop when he is done, either, and a blank page
at the end of the folio does not threaten his conscience.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>If one has not the commonplace view of things, and escapes
the obvious, it matters little whether one uses the telescope or the
microscope. One may deal with the abstract or concrete, discuss
philosophy and systems, or gild homely little common things till
they shine and twinkle with joy. Indeed, the perfect letter-writer
must do both, and change from the intensely
subjective to the intensely objective point of view. He
must, as it were, look you in the eye and hold you
by the hand. Two masters whose letters have recently
been printed may illustrate these two different phases of
expression, though each could do both as well. And this first, from
Browning's love letters, describes what the perfect letter should be:</span></p>
<blockquote>
<div>
<p class="pfirst"><span class="small">"I persisted in not reading my letter in the presence of my friend....
I kept the letter in my hand, and only read it with those sapient ends of the
fingers which the mesmerists make so much ado about, and which really did
seem to touch a little of what was inside. Not </span><em class="italics small">all</em><span class="small">, however, happily for me!
or my friend would have seen in my eyes what </span><em class="italics small">they</em><span class="small"> did not see."</span></p>
</div>
</blockquote>
<p class="pfirst"><span>To this, the twittering, delightful familiarities of Stevenson:</span></p>
<blockquote>
<div>
<p class="pfirst"><span class="small">"Two Sundays ago the sad word was brought that the sow was out
again; this time she had brought another in her flight. Moors and I and
Fanny were strolling up to the garden, and there by the waterside we saw
the black sow looking guilty. It seemed to me beyond words; but Fanny's
</span><em class="italics small">cri du coeur</em><span class="small"> was delicious. 'G-r-r!' she cried; 'nobody loves you!'"</span></p>
</div>
</blockquote>
<p class="pfirst"><span>It was the same art in big and little, for each stripped off
pretense and boldly revealed his moment's personality.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And yet, and yet, a letter does not depend upon any artistic
quality or glib facility with words, for its interest. The one test of
a letter is that it must bring the writer close to your side. You
must fasten your mood on me, so that I shall be you for hours
afterward. It sounds easy enough, but it is the most difficult
thing in the world, to be one's self. "I long for you, I long for
you so much that I thank God upon my knees that you
are not here!" There, now, is a letter that
promises well, but I dare not quote more of
it, for the subject must be seen
from another side.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-caste-of-the-articulate"><span class="bold large">The Caste of the Articulate</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Fair or unfair though it be, I have come to accept a letter
as the final test of the personality of a new acquaintance.
Not of his or her intellect or moral worth, perhaps, but
the register of that rare power which dominates all attributes--that
peculiar aroma, flavour, </span><em class="italics">timbre</em><span>, or colour which makes
some of our friends eternally exceptional. "Who dares classify
him and label him, sins against the Holy Ghost; I, for one, think
I know him only inasmuch as I refuse to sum him up. I cannot
find his name in the dictionary; I cannot make a map of him; I
cannot write his epitaph." So writes Sonia of a friend with such
a personality, and you will see by this that Sonia herself is of the
caste of the Articulate.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We are influenced first by sight, then by sound, and, lastly, by
the written word. "She spoke, and lo! her loveliness methought
she damaged with her tongue!" is the description of many a woman
who appeals to the eye alone. And in something the same way
many who fascinate us with their glamour while face to face, shock
us by the dreary commonplaceness of their letters.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It would seem that an interesting person must inevitably write
an interesting letter,--indeed, that should be a part of the definition
of the term interesting. But many decent folk are gagged with
constraint and self-consciousness, and never seem to get free.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I wonder," says Little Sister, "whether these wordless folk
may not, after all, really feel much more deeply than we who
write?" That is a troublesome question, and in its very nature
unanswerable, since the witnesses are dumb. No
doubt they feel more simply and unquestioningly, for
as soon as a thing is once said its opposite and
contradictory side, as true and as necessary, reacts upon us.
But it seems to me that expression does not so much depend upon
any spiritual insight, or even upon especial training, as it does upon
the capacity for being one's self frankly and simply. That is the
only thing necessary to make the humblest person interesting, and
yet nothing is so difficult as to be one's self in this wild, whirling
world.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Expression is but another name for revelation. Unless one is
willing to expose one's self like Lady Godiva, or protected only by
such beauty and sincerity as hers, one can go but a little way in the
direction of individuality. We must sacrifice ourselves at every
turn, show good and bad alike, and laugh at ourselves too. "Would
that mine enemy might write a book!" is no insignificant curse, and
yet there are tepid, colourless authors who might hazard it with safety;
no one would ever discover the element of personality.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"After our quarrel I felt as if I had a pebble in my shoe all
day," Little Sister once wrote me. Let that be an example of the
articulate manner, for by such vivid and homely metaphors she
strews her pages. Did she reserve such phrases for her written
words, I would feel bound to claim for letter-writing the distinction
of being an art of itself, unrelated to any other faculty; but no, she
talks in the same way--she is herself every moment. "My temper
is violent and sudden, but it soon evaporates," she tells me; "it is
like milk spilt on a hot stove."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The inspiration which impels one so to illustrate an abstract
statement with a concrete example, illuminating and
convincing, is a spark of the divine fire of personality.
This is the </span><em class="italics">crux</em><span> of the articulate caste. An ounce of
illustration is worth a pound of proof. Rob poetry
of metaphor and it would be but prose; a simile, in
verse, is usually merely ornament. The true purpose of tropes,
however, is more virile and sustaining; they should reinforce logic,
not decorate it. See how agilely Perilla can compress the whole
history of a flirtation into six lines, defying the old saying that "there
is nothing so difficult to relight as a dead love."</span></p>
<blockquote>
<div>
<div class="line-block outermost">
<div class="line"><span>I thought I saw a stiffened form</span></div>
<div class="inner line-block">
<div class="line"><span>A-lying in its shroud;</span></div>
</div>
<div class="line"><span>I looked again and saw it was</span></div>
<div class="inner line-block">
<div class="line"><span>The love we once avowed.</span></div>
</div>
<div class="line"><span>"They told me you were dead!" I cried.</span></div>
<div class="inner line-block">
<div class="line"><span>The corpse sat up and bowed!</span></div>
<div class="line"> </div>
</div></div>
</div>
</blockquote>
<p class="pfirst"><span>When one has a few such acquaintances as these, books are
superfluous. Who would read a dead romance when one can have
it warm and living, vibrant, human, coming like instalments of a
serial story, a perpetual revelation of character! Many pride
themselves upon their proficiency in matter and many in manner,--there
are those, even, who boast of mere quantity, but your professional
writer is usually cool and calm, if not affected and pretentious. A
letter, though, should be impregnate with living fire--it should boil.
It is a treat of exceptional human nature. If the sentences be not
spontaneous and unstudied the pleasure is lost. One may write fiery
nonsense, but one must mean it at the time. One's mind must, as
Sonia says, be hospitable, keep open house, and have the knack of
making one's friends at home, to throb with one's own delights and
despairs. One must give every mood open-handed,
and mention nothing one may not say outright with
gusto. But it is not everyone who can "bathe in
rich, young feeling, and steep at day-dawning in green
bedewed grasses" like my little Sonia. If I were
dead she could still strike sparks out of me with her letters.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, if you could only see my new hat! I've been sitting
in fetish worship half the evening, and I'll never dare tell how
much I paid for it. You never need be good-looking under such a
hat as that, for no one will ever see you!" Does not this quotation
bring Little Sister very near to you, and make her very human and
real? Ah, Little Sister is not afraid to be herself! She knows that
she can do nothing better. "It's a terrible handy thing to have a
smashing adjective in your pocket," she confesses. Little Sister has
a good aim, too; she always hits my heart. And yet she acknowledges
that "there are days when letters are blankly impossible."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Such friends write the kind of letters that one keeps always,
the kind that can be re-read without skipping. It is their own talk,
their own lives, their own selves put up like fruit preserves of various
flavours, moods and colours, warranted not to turn or spoil.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And as for the gagged, wordless folk, it is my opinion that too
much sensibility has been accredited to them. To any rich exotic
nature expression must come as a demand not to be refused. It is
feeling bubbling over into words. Other souls are compressed and
silent; they have the possibilities of the bud--something warm
and inspiring may at any time make them expand
and free them from the constraint--but there
is not much perfume until
the flower blooms.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-tyranny-of-the-lares"><span class="bold large">The Tyranny of the Lares</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>No, I have never been tainted with a mania for collecting.
It has never particularly interested me, because I already
happened to have two of a kind, to possess a third. I
prefer things to be different rather than alike, and the few
things I really care for I like for themselves alone, and not because
they are one of a family, set or series.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But there are so few things to be envious of, even then! After
one's necessities are provided for, there are not many things worth
possessing, and fewer still worth the struggle of collecting. Acquisition
seems to rob most things of their intrinsic value, of the extreme
desirability they seemed to possess, and yet it does not follow that
the practice of collecting is not worth while. It is worth while for
itself, but not for the things collected. It is like hunting. The
enjoyment, to your true sportsman, does not depend entirely upon the
game that is bagged. If the hunter went out solely for the purpose
of obtaining food he would better go to the nearest poulterer.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We have a habit of associating the idea of pleasure with the
possession of certain objects, and we fancy such pleasure is
permanent. But in nine cases out of ten the enjoyment is effervescent,
and the thing must be gazed at, touched and admired while the
charm is new. Then only can one feel the sharp joy of possession,
and, even though its value remain as an object of art, we must after
that enjoy it impersonally; its delight must be shared with other
spectators. As far as the satisfaction of ownership is concerned the
thing is dead for us, and though we would not give it
up, our greed gilds it but cheaply, after all.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Of all things, pictures are most commonly regarded
as giving pleasure. A painting is universally
regarded as a desirable possession of more or less
value, according to personal appreciation. In fact, most men would
say that a poor picture is better than none, since one of its
recognized functions is to fill a space on the wall. And yet how few
pictures are looked at once a day, or once a week. How many
persons accept them only as decoration, as spots on the wall, and pass
them by, in their familiarity, as unworthy of especial notice!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But the collection of a multitude of things is no great oppression
if one is permanently installed; they pad out the comforts of
life, they create "atmosphere"; they fill up spaces in the house as
small talk fills up spaces in conversation. The first prospect of
moving, however, brings this horde of stupid, useless, dead things to life,
and they appear in their proper guise to strike terror into the heart
of the owner. Pictures that have never been regarded, curiosities
that are only curious, books that no longer feed the brain, and the
thousand little knickknacks that accumulate in one's domicile and
multiply like parasites--all the flotsam and jetsam of housekeeping
must be individually attended to, and rejected or preserved piecemeal.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But that exciting decision! It is not till one has actually had
the courage to destroy some once prized possession that one feels the
first inspiring thrill of emancipation. Before, the Thing owned you;
it had to be protected in its useless life, kept intact with care and
attention. You were pledged to forestall dust, rust and pillage. If
you yourself selected it, it stood as a tangible evidence of your
culture, an ornament endorsed as art. The Thing
forbade growth of taste or judgment, it became a
changeless reproach. If it were a gift, it ruled you
with a subtle tyranny, compelling your hypocrisy,
enslaving you by chains of your very good nature. But
if you do not falter, in one exquisite pang you are freed. The
Thing is destroyed! Not given away, not hidden or disguised,
but murdered outright. It is your sublime duty to yourself that
demands the sacrifice.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>These horrid monsters once put out of your life, and all necessity
for their care annulled, you have so much more space for the few
things whose quality remains permanent. You will guard the
entrance to your domicile and jealously examine the qualifications of
every article admitted. You will ask, "Is it absolutely necessary?" If
so, then let it be as beautiful as possible, putting into its perfection
of design the expense and care formerly bestowed on a dozen trifles.
You will use gold instead of silver, linen instead of cotton, ivory in
the place of celluloid; in short, whatever you use intimately and
continually, whatever has a definite plausible excuse for existence,
should be so beautiful that there is no need for objects which are
merely ornamental.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It was so before machinery made everything possible, common
and cheap; it has been so with every primitive civilization. To the
unspoiled peasant, to all of sane and simple mind, ornaments have,
in themselves, no reason for being. Pictures are unnecessary, because
the true craftsman so elaborates and develops the constructive lines
of his architecture that the decoration is organic and inherent. The
many household utensils, vessels and implements of daily use were
so appropriately formed, so graceful and elegant in their simplicity,
so cunning of line, so quaint of form and pleasant of
colour, that they were objects of art, and there was no
need for the extraneous display of meaningless adornment.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Once you are possessed with this idea you will
suddenly become aware of the tyranny of Things, and you will begin
to dread becoming a slave to mere possessions. You may still enjoy
and admire the possessions of others, but the ineffable bore of ownership
will keep you content. The responsibility of proprietorship will
strike you with terror, gifts will appal you, the opportunity of
ridding yourself of one more unnecessary thing will be welcomed as
another stroke for freedom. Your friends' houses will become your
museums, and they the altruistic custodians, allowing you the
unalloyed sweets of appreciation with none of the bitter responsibilities
of possession.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>For you, if you are of my kind, and would be free to fly light,
flitting, gipsy fashion, wherever and whenever the whim calls, must
not be anchored to an establishment. We must know and love our
few possessions as a father knows his children. We must be able to
pack them all in one box and follow them foot-loose. This is the
new order of Friars Minor, modern Paulists who have renounced
the possession of things, and by that vow of
disinheritance, parting with the paltry delights
of monopoly, have been given the
roving privilege of the
whole world!</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="costume-and-custom"><span class="bold large">Costume and Custom</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>A friend of mine has reduced his habit of dress to a
system. Dressing has long been known to be a fine art,
but this enthusiast's endeavour has been to make it a
science as well--to give his theories practical application
to the routine of daily life. To do this, he has given his coats and
jackets all Anglo-Saxon names. His frock is called Albert, for
instance, his morning coat Cedric, a grey tweed jacket, Arthur, and
so on. His waistcoats masquerade under more poetic pseudonyms.
A white piqué is known as Reginald, a spotted cashmere is
Montmorency, and I have seen this eccentric in a wonderful plaid vest
hight Roulhac. His trousers and pantaloons are distinguished by
family names; I need only mention such remarkable </span><em class="italics">aliases</em><span> as
Braghampton, a striped cheviot garment, and a pair of tennis flannels
denominated Smithers. His terminology includes also appellations
by which he describes his neckwear--simple prefixes, such as "de"
or "von" or "Mac" or "Fitz," modifying the name of the waistcoat,
and titles for his hats, varying from a simple "Sir" for a brown
bowler to "Prince" for a silk topper of the season's block.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Now, my mythical friend is not such a fool as you might think
by this description of his mania, for he is moved to this fantastic
procedure by a psychological theory. The gentleman is a private,
if not a public, benefactor, the joy of his friends and delight of his
whole acquaintance, for, never in the course of their experience, has
he ever appeared twice in exactly the same costume. It may differ
from some previous habilitation only by the tint of his
gloves, but the change is there with its subtile
suggestion of newness. Indeed, this sartorial dilettante
prides himself, not so much upon the fact that his
raiment is never duplicated in combination, as that the
changes are so slight as not to be noticed without careful analysis.
His maxim is that clothes should not call attention to themselves
either by their splendour or their variety, but that the effect should
be upon the emotions rather than upon the eye. He holds that it
should never be particularly noticed whether a man dresses much or
dresses well, but that the impression should be of an immortal freshness,
sustaining the confidence of his friends that his garb shall have
a pleasing note of composition.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It is to accomplish this that he has adopted the mnemonic system
by which to remember his changing combinations. He has but to
say to his valet: "Muggins, this morning you may introduce Earl
Edgar von Courtenay Blenkinsopp," and his man, familiar with the
nomenclature of the wardrobe, will, after his master has been bathed,
shaved and breakfasted, clothe the artist accordingly in Panama hat,
sack coat, cheerful fawn waistcoat, a tender heliotrope scarf and
pin-check trousers. Or perhaps, looking over the calendar, the man
may announce that this fantastic Earl has already appeared at the
club, in which case a manipulation of the tie or waistcoat changes
von Courtenay to O'Anstruther. The Earl must not, according to
the rules, appear twice in his full complement of costume. His
existence is but for a day, but Anstruther, the merry corduroy vest,
may become a part of many personalities.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So much for my friend Rigamarole, who does, if you like, carry
his principles to an extreme; but surely we owe it to our friends that
our clothes shall please. It is as necessary as that
we should have clean faces and proper nails. But,
more than this, we owe it to ourselves that we shall
not be known by any hackneyed, unvarying garb. It
need not be taken for granted that we shall wear
brown or blue, we should not become identified with a special
shape of collar. Servants must wear a prescribed livery, priests
must always appear clad in the cloth of their office, and the soldier
must be content with and proud of his uniform, but free men are not
forced to inflict a permanent visual impression upon their fellows.
He must follow the habit and style of the day, be of his own
class and period, and yet, besides, if he can, be himself always
characteristic, while always presenting a novel aspect. It is as
necessary for a man as for a woman, and, though the elements
which he may combine are fewer, they are capable of a certain
kaleidoscopic effect.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Our time is cursed more than any other has been, perhaps, with
hard and fast rules for men's costume; and of all clothing, evening
dress, in which, in the old days, was granted the greatest freedom of
choice, is now subject to the most rigid prescription. We must all
appear like waiters at dinner, but daylight allows tiny licences.
Perhaps our garments are always darkest just before dawn, and the
new century may emancipate men's personal taste. So far, at least,
we may go: a frock coat does not compel a tie of any particular colour,
and a morning coat does not invariably forbid a certain subdued
animation in the way of waistcoats. We may already choose between
at least three styles of collar and yet be received at five o'clock, and
coloured shirts are making a hard fight to oust the white linen which
has reigned for more than half a hundred years. It takes no great
wealth to take advantage of these minor opportunities,
nor need one be pronounced a fop if one uses one's
chances well. He is safest who wears only what the
best tailor has advised every other of his customers,
but who cares for a tailor's model? Who cares, I
might add, to be safe? There is safety in numbers, but who ever
remembers or cares for the victims of such commonplace discretion?
We are men, not mice; why should our coats be all of the same
fashionable hue and of the same length of tail?</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But the times are changing, and we may look forward with
confident hope to the renascence of colour. Already we may see the
signs of the change that is approaching. God forbid that men should
become the dandies of the Regency, that we should ever ape the
incredible or go without pockets, but we may pray heartily for the
wedding of Art and Reason. Let us pray we shall no more wear
cylinders or cap our skulls with tight-fitting boxes! Meanwhile,
I fear I must buy another necktie, for my only one
is well worn out. And Celestine swears
she can recognize that blue
serge suit of mine, clear
across the Park!</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="old-friends-and-new"><span class="bold large">Old Friends and New</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Old Friends, we say, are best, when some sudden
disillusionment shakes our faith in a new comrade. So
indeed they are, yet I count many newly made ties as
stronger than those of my youth. "Keep close and
hold my hand; I am afraid, for an old friend is coming!" Celestine
once whispered to me while our love was young. How well I
understood her panic! She was swung by the conflicting emotions
of loyalty and oppression; her old friend had rights, but her new
friend had privileges. With me, a stranger, she was frankly herself;
with him, a familiar, she must be what he expected of her.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>How shall we arrange the order of precedence for the late and
early comers into our hearts? How shall we adjudicate their
conflicting claims? That is the problem to be answered by everyone
who lives widely, and who would not have writ upon his gravestone:
"He made more friends than he could keep!" Were one content
to pass from flower to flower it would be easy enough, but I would
gather a full, fragrant and harmonious bouquet for my delight.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>To one sensitively loyal, each new friend must at first sight
seem to come as a robber to steal a fragment of his heart from its
rightful owner. We say, "Make many acquaintances but few
friends," we swear undying devotion, and we promise to write every
week; but, if we practice this reserve, this fastidious partiality and
this exclusive attention, how shall we grow and increase in worth, and
how shall the Brotherhood of Man be brought about?</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We may think that each friend has his own place
and is unique, satisfying some especial part of our
nature; each to be kept separate in his niche, the
saint to whom we turn for sympathy in those matters
wherein we have vowed him our confidences. We
may satisfy our consciences by giving to each the same number of
candles, and by a religious celebration of each Saint's day, keeping
the calendar of our devotions independent and exclusive, but this
method does not make for growth. It is our duty to help knit
Society together, to modify extremes, to transmit and transform
affection. Surely there is love enough for all, and the more we give the
more we shall have to give to our friends, whether they be old
or new.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Friendship is, however, a matter of caste. With just as many
as share our point of view or can understand it, who laugh at
the things we laugh at, who are tempted by our temptations and sin
our sins, can we have a divine fellowship. Through these to others
outside of our ken, through friend to friend's friend the tie passes
that shall bind the whole world together at last.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Our set of friends is a solar system, a cluster of planets, that,
revolving about us, moves with the same trend through space and
time. Each member of the fraternity has its own aphelion and
perihelion, occultation and transit. Whether they are visible or
invisible, we must be sure that each in due season will return to the
same relative position and exert the same attraction, answering the
law of gravity that in true friendship keeps them in their orbits about
us. But the circles interlace, and in that is the possibility of
keeping the unity of our constellation of friends. Were the same
comrades to accompany us unceasingly we could not develop. There
must be an intricate complication of actions and
reactions, and we must be affected by each in turn and
in combination.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>What is a parting from a friend but a departure
in quest of new experience? Each fresh meeting,
therefore, should be the sharing of the fruits that both have gathered,
that each may profit by the contribution. If you tell me of a book
you have read, I am amused and profited by the knowledge you
bring me; shall I not be grateful to you for what you bring from an
interesting person? If every new friend contributes to our development
and enriches us by his personality, not only are we the better
for it ourselves, but more worth while to our friends. It is not you
as you are whom I love best, but you as you shall be when, in due
time, you have come to your perfect stature; wherefore I shall not
begrudge the loan of you to those who have set you on the way.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Though we may hold one friend paramount over all others,
and admit him to every phase of intimacy, there are minor confidences
that are often most possible with an entire stranger. Were
we to meet a man of the Sixteenth Century, what could we not tell
such an impersonal questioner! What would we care for the little
mortifications that come between even the best of friends? We
could confess faults and embarrassments without shame, we could
share every hope and doubt without fear, for he would regard us
without bias or prejudice. He could scourge us with no whip of
conventional morality, and he would be able to judge any action of
itself, hampered by no code or creed.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We had a game once, my sister and I, in which we agreed to
look at each other suddenly, newly, as if we had never met
before. Frequently we were able to catch a novel phase of character,
and our sub-conscious self, freed from the servitude
of custom, bounded in a new emotion. Could we, in
this way, at times regard our friends, how much we
might learn! We fall into the habit of seeing what we
look for, and we compel old friends to live up to the
preconception. Why not look at them, occasionally, as strangers to
be studied and learned? There are two variable quantities in the
equation of friendship, Yourself and Myself. Nor is our relation
itself fixed; it is alive and changing from hour to hour. There is no
such thing as an unalterable friendship, for both parties to the affair
are moving at different speeds, first one and then the other ahead,
giving a hand to be helped on and reaching back to assist. Might
we not, indeed, reverse the previous experiment and regard any
stranger as a blood relative, assuming a fraternity of interest? We
need only to be honest and kind.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>By these two processes we may keep old friends and make new
ones; and our conscience shall acquit us of disloyalty. When one
enlarges one's establishment, one does not decrease either the wages
or the duties of the servants before employed. The new members
of the household have new functions. More is given and more is
received. But it is not so much that one must give more as that
one should give wisely and economically, we must be generous in
quality rather than in quantity; for, though there is love enough
to go round for all, there is not time enough for most of
us. We must clasp hands, give the message and
pass on, trusting to meet again on the
journey, and come to the same
inn at nightfall.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="a-defense-of-slang"><span class="bold large">A Defense of Slang</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Could Shakespeare come to Chicago and listen curiously
to "the man in the street," he would find himself more
at home than in London. In the mouths of messenger
boys and clerks he would find the English language used
with all the freedom of unexpected metaphor and the plastic,
suggestive diction that was the privilege of the Elizabethan dramatists;
he would say, no doubt, that he had found a nation of poets. There
was hardly any such thing as slang in his day, for no graphic trope
was too virile or uncommon for acceptance, if its meaning were
patent. His own heroes (and heroines, too, for Rosalind's talk was as
forcible in figures of speech as any modern American's) often spoke
what corresponds to the slang of today.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The word, indeed, needs precise definition, before we condemn
all unconventional talk with opprobrium. Slang has been called
"poetry in the rough," and it is not all coarse or vulgar. There is
a prosaic as well as a poetic license. The man in the street calls a
charming girl, for instance, a "daisy." Surely this is not inelegant,
and such a reference will be understood a century hence without a
foot-note. Slang, to prove adjuvant to our speech, which is growing
more and more rigid and conventional, should be terse; it should
make for force and clarity, without any sacrifice of beauty. Still,
manner should befit matter; the American "dude" is, perhaps, no
more unpleasant a word than the emasculated fop it described. The
English "bounder" is too useful an appellation to do without in
London, and, were that meretricious creature of
pretence and fancy waistcoat more common in the United
States, the term would be welcomed to American
slang with enthusiasm. New York, alas, has already
produced "cads," but no Yankee school would ever
tolerate a "fag."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The mere substitution of a single synonymous term, however,
is not characteristic of American slang. Your Chicago messenger
boy coins metaphorical phrases with the facility of a primitive savage.
A figure of speech once started and come into popular acceptance
changes from day to day by paraphrase, and, so long as a trace of
the original significance is apparent, the personal variation is
comprehensible, not only to the masses, but generally to those whose purism
eschews the use of the common talk. Thus, to give "the glassy
eye" became the colloquial equivalent of receiving a cool reception.
The man on the street, inventive and jocose, does not stop at this.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>At his caprice it becomes giving "the frozen face" or even "the
marble heart." In the same way one may hear a garrulous person
spoken of as "talking to beat the band," an obvious metaphor; or,
later, "to beat the cars."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The only parallel to this in England is the "rhyming slang"
of the costers, and the thieves' "patter." There a railway guard
may be facetiously termed a "Christmas card," and then abbreviated
to "card" alone, thence to permutations not easily traced. But
English slang is, for the most part, confined to the "masses," and is an
incomprehensible jargon to all else save those who make an especial
study of the subject. One may sit behind a bus driver from the
Bank to Fulham, and understand hardly a sentence of his colloquies
and gibes at the passing fraternity, but though the language of the
trolley conductor of Chicago is as racy and spirited,
it needs less translation. The American will, it is
true, be enigmatic at times; you must put two and
two together. You must reduce his trope to its
lowest terms, but common sense will simplify it.
It is not an empirical, arbitrary wit depending upon a music-hall
song for its origin. I was riding on a Broadway car one day when a
semi-intoxicated individual got on, and muttered unintelligibly, "Put
me off at Brphclwknd Street, please." I turned to the conductor
and asked, "What did he want?" The official smiled. "You can
search me!" he said, in denial of any possession of apprehension.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Slang in America, then, is expression on trial; if it fits a
hitherto unfurnished want it achieves a certain acceptance. But it is
a frothy compound, and the bubbles break when the necessity of the
hour is past, so that much of it is evanescent. Some of the older
inventions remain, such as "bunco" and "lynch" and "chestnut,"
but whole phrases lose their snap like uncorked champagne, though
they give their stimulant at the proper timely moment. Like
the eggs of the codfish, one survives and matures, while a million
perish. The "observed of all observers" (Ophelia's delicate slang,
observe) was, yesterday, in New York "the main Guy," a term
whose appositeness would be easily understood in London, where
the fall of the Gunpowder Plot is still celebrated. Later, in
Chicago, according to George Ade, a modern authority, it
became the "main squeeze," and another permutation rendered the
phrase useless. It is this facility of change that makes most slang
spoil in crossing the Atlantic. On the other side, English slang
is of so esoteric an origin and reference, that no Yankee can
translate or adopt it. It is drop-forged and rigid, an empiric use of
words to express humour. What Englishman, indeed,
could trace the derivation of "balmy on the crumpet"
as meaning what the American would term "dotty" or
"bug-house," unless he was actually present at the
music hall where it was first invented?</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We have at least three native languages to learn--the colloquial,
the literary prose, and the separate vocabulary of poetry. In America
slang makes a fourth, and it has come to be that we feel it as
incongruous to use slang on the printed page as it is to use "said he" or
"she replied with a smile" in conversation, and, except for a few
poets, such words as "haply," "welkin," or "beauteous" in prose.
Yet Stevenson himself, the purist who avoids foreign words, uses
Scotch which nearly approaches slang, for there is little difference
between words of an unwritten dialect and slang, such as "scrannel"
and "widdershins"; while Wilkie Collins writes "wyte," "wanion,"
"kittle," "gar," and "collop" in with English sentences, as
doubtless many questionable words of today will be honoured in the
future.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Slang, the illegitimate sister of Poetry, makes with her a common
cause against the utilitarian economy of Prose. Both stand for
lavish luxuriance in trope and involution, for floriation and
adornment of thought. It is their boast to make two words grow where
but one grew before. Both garb themselves in metaphor, and the
only complaint of the captious can be that whereas Poetry follows
the accepted style, Slang dresses her thought to suit herself in
fantastic and bizarre caprices--that her whims are unstable and too
often in bad taste.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But this odium given to slang by superficial minds is undeserved.
In other days, before the language was crystallized into
the verbiage and idiom of the doctrinaire, prose, too,
was untrammelled. A cursory glance at the
Elizabethan poets discloses a kinship with the rebellious
fancies of our modern common colloquial talk. For
gargarism, scarab, quodling, puckfist, scroyle, foist,
pumpion, trindle-tale, comrogue, pigsbones, and ding-dong, we may
now read chump, scab, chaw, yap, fake, bloke, pal, bad-actor, and so
on. "She's a delicate dab-chick!" says Ben Jonson; "she had all
the component parts of a peach," says George Ade.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It will be seen that slang has two characteristics--humour and
force. Brevity is not always the soul of wit, for today we find
amusement in the euphuisms that, in the sixteenth century were
taken in all seriousness. The circumlocutions will drop speedily out
of use, but the more apt and adequate neologisms tend to improve
literary style. For every hundred times slang attributes a new
meaning to an old word, it creates once or twice a new word for an
old meaning. Many hybrids will grow, some flower and a few seed.
So it is with slang.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There is a "gentleman's slang," as Thackeray said, and there
is the impossible kind; but of the bulk of the American product, the
worst to be said of it usually is that it is homely and extravagant.
None the less is it a picturesque element that spices the language
with enthusiasm. It is antiseptic and prevents the decay of virility.
Literary style is but an individual, glorified slang. It is not
impossible for the artist; it went to its extreme in the abandon
of Ben Jonson, Webster, and Beaumont and
Fletcher, but, as your Cockney would
say, "It does take a bit of
doin'" nowadays.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-charms-of-imperfection"><span class="bold large">The Charms of Imperfection</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>For a long time I have held a stubborn belief that I should
admire and aim at perfection. I admitted its impossibility,
of course; I attributed my friends' failure to achieve it
as a charming evidence of their humanity, but it seemed
to me to be a thing most properly to be desired. And yet, upon
thinking it over, I was often astonished by the discovery that most
of my delights were caused by a divergence from this ideal.
"A sweete disorder in the dress kindleth in cloathes a wantonness!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Now, is this because I am naturally perverse, and enjoy the
bizarre, the unique and the grotesque? Is it because of my frailty
that I take a dear delight in signs of our common humanity, in the
petty faults and foibles of the world? Or is it because I have
misinterpreted this ideal of perfection, and have thought it necessary or
proper to worship a conventional criterion? Celestine and I have
been puckering our brows for a week over the problem!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We have learned, after a quarter of a century's experience with
the turning lathe and fret saw, to turn back for lasting joy to
handmade work. We delight in the minor irregularities of a carving, for
instance, recognizing that behind that slip of the tool there was a
man at work; a man with a soul, striving for expression. The
dreary, methodical uniformity of machine-made decoration and
furniture wearies our new enlightened taste. Mathematical accuracy and
"spirit" seem to be mutually exclusive, and we have been taught by
the modern Æsthetic almost to regard amateurishness as a sure proof
of sincerity. We cannot associate the abandon and
naïve enthusiasm of the pre-Raphaelites with the
technical proficiency of the later Renascence, and Botticelli
stands, not only for the spirit dominating and shining
through the substance but, in a way, for the incompatibility
of perfect idealization with perfect execution. And yet this
conflict troubles us. We feel that the two should be wedded, so that
the legitimate offspring might be perfection; but when perfect
technique is attained, as in a Japanese carving, the result is almost as
devoid of human feeling and warmth as a machine-made product.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We feel this instinctive choice of irregularity wherever we
turn--wherever, that is, we have to do with humanity or human achievement.
We do not, it is true, delight in the flaw in the diamond, but
elsewhere we are in perpetual conflict with nature, whose sole object
seems to be the obliteration of extremes and the ultimate establishment
of a happy medium of uniformity. We find perfection cold
and lifeless in the human face. I doubt if a woman has ever been
loved for an absolute regularity of feature; but how many, like little
Celestine, who acknowledges herself that her nose is too crooked,
her eyes too hazel, and her mouth too large, are bewilderingly charming
on that very account! These features go to make up an expression,
which, if it is not perfect, is certainly not to be accounted for
by merely adding up the items. It is a case where the whole is
greater than the sum of all its parts. We admire the anatomy and
poise of the Greek statues, but they are not humanly interesting.
Indeed, they were never meant to be, for they are divinities, and the
symbols of an inaccessible perfection.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Still, while we speak of certain faults as being adorable (notably
feminine weaknesses), while we make the trite remark anent a man's
"one redeeming vice," while we shrink from natures
too chaste, too aloof from human temptation, too
uncompromising, yet we must feel a pang of
conscience. We are not living up to our ideals. Is it the
mere reaction from the impositions of conventional
morality? I think not. It is a miscomprehension of the term
perfection.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The Buddhist believes in a process of spiritual evolution that,
tending ever toward perfection, finally reaches the state of Nirvana,
where the individual soul is merged into the Infinite. How can it
be differentiated from the universal spirit if it has attained all the
attributes of divinity? And that idea seems to be the basis of our
mistaken worship of perfection--a Nirvana where each thing, being
absolutely perfect, loses every distinguishing mark of character. But
is not our Christian, or even the Pagan, ideal higher than this? For
even the Greek gods, cold and exquisite as they were, had each his
individuality, his character, his separate function. Our conception of
Heaven, if it is ever formulated nowadays, has this differentiation of
individuality strongly accented; though the most orthodox may insist
that the spirits of the blessed are sanctified with perfection, yet he
does not hold it as a necessary dogma that they are therefore all alike,
and recast in a common mould. He still dares believe in that infinite
variety which Nature has taught us persists throughout the universe.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This is the fundamental difference between the Oriental and the
Occidental point of view. We moderns stand for the supremacy of
character, an ineradicable distinction between human beings which
evolution and growth does not diminish, but develops. We believe,
you and I, that in a million æons we shall be as different one from
the other as we are now; that faults may be eradicated, weaknesses
lose their hold, but that our best parts will increase in
virtue, not approaching some theoretical standard, but
always and forever nearing that standard which is set
for ourselves.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We have grown out of our admiration for the
"copper-plate hand" in penmanship; we recognize the fact now,
that we need not so much follow the specimens in the copy-book as
to make the best of what is distinctive in our own style of writing.
And this is a type of what our conception of perfection, perhaps,
should be. Everything should be significant of character, should
supplement it, translate it, explain it. In the Japanese prints you
will find almost every face with the same meaningless expression,
every feature calm, disguising every symptom of individuality. It
is the Oriental pose, the Oriental ideal just mentioned. It is not
considered proper to express either joy or sorrow, and the perfection
of poise is a sublime indifference.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And I have a final idea that may, to a more subtile student of
Æsthetic, seem suggestive. In the beautiful parabola described by the
mounting and descending sky-rocket the upward and downward path are
not quite parallel. The stick does not drop vertically, although it
continually approaches that direction. In other words, the curve,
constantly approaching a straight line, is beautiful despite, and, indeed,
perhaps </span><em class="italics">because</em><span> it never quite attains that rectilinear
perfection and keeps its distinctive character to the end.
It is beautiful in its whole progress,
for that path defines the curve
of the parabola.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-play-s-the-thing"><span class="bold large">"The Play's the Thing"</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>"Would you rather see a good play performed by poor
actors, or a poor play done by good actors?" asked
Celestine.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>As a professor of the romantic view of life and a
"ghost-seer," there is but one answer to the question. "The play's
the thing!" Acting is at best a secondary art--an art, that is, of
interpretation, though we as critics judge it of itself alone. But, to
an idealist, no play ever is, or can be, perfectly performed. As we
accept the conventions of stage carpentry, impossible cottages, flat
trees, "property" rocks, misfit costumes and tinsel ornament, so we
must gloss over the imperfections of the players, and accept their
struttings and mouthings as the fantastic accessories of stage-land.
No actor that ever lived ever acted throughout a whole drama as a
sane human being would act. We are used to thinking the contrary,
but the compression of time and space prevents verisimilitude.
A play is not supposed to simulate life except by an established
convention. Every art has its medium and its limitation. It is
indeed a limitation that makes art possible. In the drama the
limitation is the use of the time element.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The play's the thing--we may read it from the book or have
it recited before the footlights, but the lasting delight is the charm of
plot that, with the frail assistance of the actor, finds its way to our
emotions. A good play done by poor actors, then, for me, if I must
choose between the two evils.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Fancy creates; imagination constructs. The child,
sporting ingenuously with both these powers, dwells in
a world of his own, either induced by his mastering
fiat, or remodelled nearer to his heart's desire from the
rags and fragments at hand. In his toy theatre alone
is the perfect play produced, for there imagination is stage manager,
and has the hosts of Wonderland in his cast. The child is the only
perfect romanticist. He has the keen, fresh eye upon nature; all is
play, and the critical faculty is not yet aroused. So in a way, too,
was all primitive drama. The audience at Shakespearean plays heard
but noble poesies, saw but a virile dream made partly visible, like a
ghost beckoning away their thoughts. So, even today, is the Chinese
theatre, with its hundreds of arbitrary conventions, its lack of scenery,
and its artificial eloquence. The veriest coolie knows that a painted
face (a white nose, stripes and crosses on the cheeks) does but
portray a masked intention, as if the actor bore a placard writ with the
word "Villain." Forthwith, all the rest is faery. The player does
but lightly guide the rein, and Pegasus soars free.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So no play can be perfectly performed. We have created an
artificial standard of realism, and we say that Bernhardt, Duse and
Coquelin portray emotion with consummate art. It has been agreed
by authorities on Æsthetic that simulated passion surpasses in
suggestive power real emotion. The actor must not "lose himself in
his part"--he must maintain the objective relation. None the less,
however, must we, as audience, supply imagination to extend the
play from art to life. From a romantic point of view, such devotion
to realism is unnecessary. We are swayed by the wildest absurdities
of melodrama, alike false to life and false to art, and we accept the
operas of Wagner, with all their pasteboard dragons and bull-necked
heroes belching forth technique, as impressive stimuli
to the imagination. Even through such crude means,
uplifted either by passionate brotherhood or upon the
wings of song, we are wafted far and fast. The play,
oh! the play's the thing!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>For see! If you prefer the bad play performed by the good
actors, why not go to life itself? What else, indeed, </span><em class="italics">is</em><span> life? It was
the old Duke in Lewis Carroll's "Sylvie and Bruno" who first
pointed this out. All the world's a stage where are performed the
worst of badly constructed plays--plays with neither unity nor
sequence nor climax, but performed with absolute perfection. Why
waste your time cursing the Adelphi, when, like the Duke, you can
see the perfect art of the street? The railway porter's dialect is still
convincing. The fat woman with her screaming children may enter
at any minute, with her touches of wonderful realism. If you go to
the theatre for acting you go to the wrong place! Watch the Font
Neuf for the despairing suicide, lurk in Whitechapel, visit in
Mayfair, coquette with a Spaniard's sweetheart, or rob a Jew, strike an
Englishman, love an American girl, flirt with a French countess, or
watch a Samoan beauty at the salt pools catching fish; but try not to
find perfect acting behind a row of footlights!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But if, after all, the play's the thing, it is as much a mistake to
look for real drama upon the street. There everything is incomplete
and, for the satisfaction of our æsthetic sense, we require the
threads to be brought together, and the pattern developed, the knots
tied. Our contemplation of life is usually analytic; we delight in
discovering motives, elementary passions, traits of character and
human nature. Our joy in art, on the other hand, arises from
synthesis; we love to see effect follow cause, and events march logically,
passions work themselves out, the triumph of virtue
and justice. Life, as we see it, is a series of
photographs. The drama presents these successively as in
a biograph, with all the insignificant intermediary
glimpses removed. We hunger for the finished story,
the poem with the envoy. For this reason we have the drama
and the novel.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And now Celestine asks me, "Would you rather read a good
story poorly written than a poor story well written?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The question is as fair as the other, though not quite in the
same case. We may agree that acting is a secondary art, but literature
has more dignified claims to considerations. Here we are
contemplating a wedding of two arts, not the employment of one by
another. One might as well say, then, "Would you rather see a
good man married to a bad woman or the reverse?" It is the critic
who attempts always to divorce the two.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Yet, as in almost all marriage, where two arts work together one
is usually the more important. One may have one's preferences,
but the selection of that art which embodies an idea, rather than the
one which aims at an interpretation, marks the romanticist's point of
view. One art must be masculine, creative, and the other feminine
and adorning. The glory of the one is strength, of the other beauty.
For me, then, the manly choice. Give me the good story badly
told, the fine song poorly sung, the virile design clumsily carved,
rather than the opposite cases. The necessity of such a choice is
not a mere whim of Celestine's; it is a problem we are forced to
confront every day. We must take sides. It is not often, even
from the Philistine's point of view, that we have the good thing well
done, while the poor thing badly done we have everywhere. Between
these limits of perfection and hopelessness, then, lies
our every-day world of art, and there continually we
must make our choice.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>If we could deal with abstractions, there would
be no question at all, and undoubtedly we would all
prefer to enjoy the disincarnate ideal rather than any incomplete
embodiment, no matter how praiseworthy the presentment. But few
of us are good enough musicians to hear the music in our mind's ear
when we look over the score of an opera; few of us can dream whole
romances like Dumas, without putting pen to paper; few, even, can
long remember the blended glories of a sunset. We must have some
tangible sign to lure back memory and imagination, and if we
recognize the fact that such symbols are symbols merely, conventions
without intrinsic value as art, then we have the eyes of the child and
the romantic view of life.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And lastly, Celestine leaned to me in her green kimono and
said, "Would you rather see a pretty girl in an ugly
gown, or an ugly girl in a pretty gown?" Ah,
one does not need to hold the
romantic view of life to
answer that question!</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="living-alone"><span class="bold large">Living Alone</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>I have lived so long alone now, that it seems almost as if there
were two of me--one who goes out to see friends, transacts
business and buys things, and one who returns, dons more
comfortable raiment, lights a pipe, and dreams. One the world
knows, the other no one knows but the flies on the wall.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I keep no pets, since these would enforce my keeping regular
hours; the only familiars I have, therefore, are my clock, my fire and
my candles, and how companionable these may become one does not
know who does not live alone. They owe me the debt of life, and
repay it each in its own way, faithfully and apparently willingly. I
have a lamp, too; but a lamp is a dull thing, especially when
half-filled, and this one bores me. I might count my typewriter, also,
but she is too strenuous, and she makes me too impatient by her
inability to spell. Besides, the clock, fire and candles may, with no
great stretch of the imagination, be readily conceived to have volition,
and, once started, they contribute not a little to relieving the
tedium of living alone.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>My clock is always the same; it has no surprises. It may go a
bit fast or slow, but it has a maddeningly accurate conscience, and its
fidelity in ringing the eight-o'clock alarm proves it inhuman. Still,
it lives and moves, beating a sober accompaniment to my thoughts.
Altogether, it is not unlike a faithful, conscientious servant, never
obtrusive, always punctual and obedient, but with an unremitting
devotion to orders that is at times exasperating. Many a man
has stood in fear and shame of his valet, and so I look
askance furtively with a suppressed curse when the
hands point to my bath, my luncheon, or my sortie
into town. It would be a relief, sometimes, if my clock
stopped, were I not sure that it would be my fault.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But my fire is more feminine, full of moods and whims, ardent,
domestic and inspiring. Now, a fire, like a woman, should be
something besides beautiful, though in many houses the hearth is a mere
accessory. It should have other uses than to provide mere warmth,
though this is often its sole reason for being. Nor should it be a
mere culinary necessity, though I have known open fires to be kindled
for that alone, and treated as domestic servants. In my house the
fire has all these functions and more, for it is my friend and has
consoled many lonely moments. It is a mistress, full of unexpected
fancies and vagaries. It has, too, a more sacred quality, for it is an
altar where I burn the incense of memory and sacrifice to the gods
of the future. It is both human and divine, a tool and symbol at once.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>No one, I think, can know how much of all this a fire can be,
who has not himself laid, lighted and kindled and coaxed it, who
has not utilized its services and accepted its consolations. My fire
is, however, often a jealous mistress. She warms me and makes my
heart glad, but I dare not leave her side on a wintry day. I must
keep well within bounds, hold her hand or be chilled. I need but
little urging! I pull up my couch, take pencil and paper, and
she twinkles and purrs by my side, casting flickering glances at
me as I work.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Not till the flames die down and the coals glow soberly red do
I find the more practical pleasures of friendship and housewifely
service. Now my fire plays the part of cook, and, in her proper sphere,
outdoes every stove or range ever lighted. A little
duck laid gently across the grate, the kettle whistling
with steam, and the coffee-pot ready--what bachelor
was ever attended by more charming handmaiden than
I by my little open fire? She will heat an iron or
shaving-water as gracefully, too, waiting upon me with a jocund
willingness. No servant could be so companionable. Still, she must
be humoured as one must always humour a woman. Try to drive
her, or make her feel that she is but a slave, and you shall see how
quickly she resents it. There is a psychological moment for broiling
on an open fire, and postponement is fatal. It takes a world of
petting and poking to sooth her caprice when she is in a blazing
temper, but remember her sex, and she melts in a glow like a
mollified child.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Kindling and lighting my fire is a ritual. I cannot go about it
thoughtlessly or without excitement. The birth of the first curling
flame inspires me, for the heart becomes an altar sacred to the household
gods. If the day offers the least plausible pretext for a fire, I
light one and sit down in worship. I resent a warm morning, when
economy struggles with desire. Luckily my studio is at the north
of the house, and, no matter if the sun is warm abroad, there is
a cool corner waiting where a fire needs no apology. The sun
creeps in toward noon and puts out the flames, but all the morning
I enjoy the blaze.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>In the evening the fire becomes absolutely necessary, and
provides both heat and light, giving a new life of its own to the
darkness of the room. Then I become a Parsee, put on my sacerdotal
robes (for such lonely priestcraft requires costume), and fall into a
reverie. For my sacrifices, old letters feed the flames. They say that
coal, in burning, gives back the stored sunlight of
past ages. What lost fires burn, then, when love-letters
go up in smoke to illumine for one brief, last
instant the shadows of memory!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>My candles partake of the nature of both clock
and fire. They are to be depended upon, when let alone, to burn
just six hours, marking the time like the ticking pendulum, but
they give light and warmth, too, in their own way, in gentle imitation
of the fire. They also have moods--less petulant than the fire's--but
they require as little attention as the clock. The fire seems
immortal; though the coals fade into ashes, the morning's resurrection
seems to continue the same personality, and the same flames
seem to be incarnated--living again the same old life. But the life
of a candle seems visibly limited to a definite space of time, and its
end is clearly to be seen. In that aspect it seems more human and
lovable than the fire--a candle is more like a petted animal, whose
short life seems to lead to nothing beyond. We may put more
coals on the fire, and continue its existence indefinitely, but the
candle is doomed. Putting another one in the socket does not
renew a previous existence. But, if it is a short life, it is a merry
one, and its service is glad and generous. My little army of candles
is constantly being replenished. Like brave and loyal soldiers, they
lay down their lives gallantly in my cause, and new ones fill up the
vacant ranks, fighting the powers of darkness.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This is my bachelor reverie. But high noon approaches, and
my metamorphosis is at hand. Now the sun has struck
the fire-place with a lance of light, and I, that
other I, must rise, dress and out
into the world!</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="cartomania"><span class="bold large">Cartomania</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>With something of the excitement Alice felt when she
crawled through the looking-glass, I used to pore over
my atlas. Geography was for me a pastime rather than
a study. There was one page in the book where the
huge bulging expanse of the United States lay, and there, on the
extreme left hand of the vari-coloured patchwork of States and
territories, was the abode of romance and adventure--a long and narrow
patch tinted pink, curving with the Pacific Ocean, and ribbed with
the fuzzy haschures of the Sierra Nevada Mountains. This was the
Ultima Thule of my dreams, beyond which my sober-minded hopes
dared not stray.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Further on in the book I saw Europe, irregular with ragged
peninsulas and bays, Asia, vast and shapeless, with the great blue
stretch of Siberia atop, and the clumsy barren yellow triangle of
Africa. But these foreign countries were, to my young imagination,
as inaccessible as Fairyland; they did not properly come into the
world of possibility. They were as unreal as ghosts, remote as the
Feudal Ages, and I put them by with a sigh as hopeless. The world
is a big place to the eyes of a child, and all beyond his ken but
names. How could I know that the end of the century was even
then whirling me toward wonders that even my Arabian Magi
would not have thought possible? But today, in this far Western
town, then but a semi-barbarous camp of gold miners, I have seen
an airship half-completed upon the stocks, and this morning, in my
own room, I rang up Celestine and talked with her
over the wire a hundred miles away!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Maps were my favourite playgrounds, and so real
were they that it almost seemed that, with a
sufficiently powerful microscope, I might see the very
inhabitants living their strangely costumed customs. There was a
black dot on my fascinating pink patch marked San Francisco, and
now, that dream come true, I try to see this city with the eyes of
my childhood, and wonder that I am really here. To get the
strangeness of the chance I have to think back and back till I see
that map stretched out before the boy, and follow his finger across
the tiers of States that run from the Atlantic to the Pacific.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Everyone who has not travelled much must feel the excitement
that maps give when intently studied. No one has been everywhere,
and for each some unvisited spot must charm him with its romantic
possibilities. But there are certain cities almost universally enticing
to the imagination--the world's great meeting-places, where, if one
but waits long enough, one can find anybody. London, Cairo,
Bombay, Hongkong, San Francisco, New York--these are the jewels
upon the girdle that surrounds the globe. To know these places is
to have lived to the full limit of Anglo-Saxon privilege.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But the true cartomaniac is not content with ready-made
countries; he must build his own lands. How many kingdoms and
empires have I not drawn from the tip of my pencil! Now, the
achievement of a plausible state is not so easy as it might appear.
There is nothing so difficult as to create, out of hand, an interesting
coast line. Try and invent an irregular shore that shall be convincing,
and you will see how much more cleverly Nature works than you.
Here is where accident surpasses design. Spill a puddle of coloured
water on a sheet of paper and pound it with your fist,
and lo, an outline is produced which you could not
excel in a day's hard work with your pencil!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The establishment of a boundary line, too,
requires much thought in order that your frontier
interlocks well with your neighbours'. Your rivers must be well
studied, your mountains planned, and your cities located according to
the requirements of the game. You must name your places, you
must calculate your distances, and you must erase and correct many
times before you can rival the picturesque possibilities of such a land
as India, for instance, which, from the point of view of the sentimental
cartographer, is one of the most interesting of states.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>If such an effort is too difficult for the beginner, one might
begin with a country of which something is known, yet which never
has been charted. "Gulliver's Travels," for instance, contains
information of many lands that should be drawn to scale. Lilliput,
Brobdingnag, Laputa, and the land of horses would alone make a
very interesting atlas. The geography of Fairyland affords charming
opportunities for the draughtsman. For myself, I prefer the magical
territory of the Arthurian legends, and I have platted Sir Launcelot's
Isle, with Joyous Gard at the northern end, high over the sea.
There is a pleasaunce, a wood, a maze, and a wharf jutting out into
a shallow, smiling water, while the lists occupy a promontory to the
south.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Oh, the opportunities are many for the cartomaniac! Who
has mapped Utopia, Atlantis, Alice's Wonderland, or the countries
of the Faerie Queene? Who has reconstructed the plans of Troy?
And there are other allegorical lands, too, that should be mapped.
I have had a try myself at the modern "Bohemia," and have taken
the liberty of shewing within its much-maligned
borders Arcady and the Forest of Arden. I have
even planned Millamours, the city of a thousand
loves, and I am now attempting to draw a map of the
State of Literature in the year 1902.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There are many celebrated edifices, too, that might be trifled
with. I have a friend, an architect, who has completed the Castle of
Zenda, and he is now occupied with Circe's palace, with a fine eye to
the decorative effect of the pig-pens. Think of laying out the
gardens, grottoes, and palaces of the Arabian Nights! Why has the
Castle of Otranto been neglected--and Udolpho, and Castle
Dangerous, and the Moated Grange?</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Many novelists, and, I think, most writers of pure romance,
have played this game. Stevenson, dreaming in his father's office,
drew the map of Treasure Island, and from that chart came forth,
hint by hint, the suggestions for his masterpiece. Maurice Hewlett
drew a plat of the ancient marches and forests where the Forest
Lovers wandered, and it is a pity he did not publish it in more
detail. This is one of the graphical solutions of story writing, a
queer, anomalous method whereby the symbol suggests the concept.
The cheaper magazines often use old cuts, and request some hack to
write a story to fit the illustration. But the map is an
abstraction; its revelations are cabalistic, not definite.
A good map is a stage set for romantic fiction,
ready for anybody who can write
or dream the play.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-science-of-flattery"><span class="bold large">The Science of Flattery</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Time was when people were less sophisticated and almost
everybody could be flattered. A compliment was the
pinch of salt that could be placed upon any bird's tail.
But such game is scarcer now, and to capture one's quarry
one has to practice all the arts of modern social warfare. We have,
for instance, been taught to believe, time out of mind, that women
are especially susceptible to this saccharine process; that one had but
to make a pretty speech, and her conquest was assured. But what
lady nowadays can take a compliment without bridling? It is as
much as a man's reputation is worth to make a plain, straightforward
statement of approbation. He must veil his meaning so that it can
be discovered only by a roundabout reflection. Whether it be true
or not, he is held offensively responsible for the blush with which it
is received.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So, to be successful, one must be politic and tactful; one must
adopt the indirect method, and, above all, one must escape the
obvious. To say what has been said many times before defeats the very
purpose, whether it be good or evil, for which we flatter. The artist
discards the hackneyed compliment, and endeavours to place his
arrow in a spot that has never been hit before. He will compliment
a poet upon his drawings and a painter upon his verses. If a woman
ordinarily plainly dressed, has a single effective garment, does he
compliment her upon that particular costume? By no means.
Subtilty demands that he flatter her by pointing out some interesting
feature in one of her common frocks, without hinting
that it is surprising to see her particularly well clad.
Such compliments have the flavour of novelty, and are
treasured up by the recipient, to be quoted long after
the donor has forgotten them.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The tribute of unexpected praise is more grateful to a person
than the reward for which he works hardest and is most confident.
It discovers to him new and pleasing attributes. It has all the zest
and relish that the particular always has more than the general. And,
besides, for the person who happens to light upon some little favourite
trick of individuality, and to notice and to comment upon it, the
reward is great. Such a flatterer is, in the heart of the flattered one,
throned with the authority of discernment; he is considered forever
after as a critic of the first importance. Everyone has a hobby,
an idiosyncrasy, visible or invisible; it is the art of the flatterer to
discover it, and his science to use it to his own ends.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Flattery is, however, an edged tool, and must be used with care.
It is not everyone who has the tact to decide at a glance just how
much his victim will stand. He may know enough, perhaps, to
praise the author of a successful book for some other one of his
works which has not attained a popular vogue; he may have the
discretion to banter men about their success with the opposite sex,
and to accuse women of cleverness; but for all that he may often
misjudge his object, and give embarrassment if not actual affront.
For all such the safest weapon is the written word.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This is the ambush from which your prey cannot escape. If a
letter of praise, of compliment, or even of deliberate flattery, is made
decently interesting, if it is not too grossly cloying even for private
perusal, it cannot fail to count. It has to be paid for by no blush,
no awkward moment, no painful conspicuous self-consciousness,
no hypocritical denial. It strikes an undefending
victim, and brings him down without a struggle.
Such tributes of praise can be read and reread without
mortification. It is a sweet-smelling incense that
burns perpetually before the shrine of vanity. One compliment
written down in black and white is worth any number of spoken words,
and the trouble that has been taken to commit such praise to paper
gives the offering an added interest and importance. Anything that
can be said can be written, from the eulogy of a lady's slipper to the
appreciation of a solo on the harp. You may be sure that any
unconventionality of manner will be atoned for by the seduction of
a honeyed manner. Stevenson, in his playful "Decalogue for
Gentlemen," set down as his first canon, "Thou shalt not write an
anonymous letter," but it cannot be doubted that he would have
excepted an unsigned note of admiration.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The element of time, in flattery, too, is often disregarded. Few
would-be flatterers understand the increased influence of a compliment
deferred. It is again the same case of the misuse of the obvious.
When your friend's book appears, or his picture is displayed, there
are enough to compliment him on the spot, but your own sympathetic
endorsement, delayed a few months, or even iterated, comes to
him when he is least expecting the compliment. He is off his guard,
and the shot goes home. When I give Celestine a present she
thanks me immediately, of course, but that is not the last of it. In
every third letter or so I am reminded of her gratitude and my
kindness.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There is, however, a flattery of manner as well as one of matter.
Celestine, to whose wise counsels I am indebted for many a short cut
in the making of friends, once laid down for me the
following rules for dealing with women:</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>First, be intellectual with pretty women.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Second, be frivolous with intellectual women.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Third, be serious and </span><em class="italics">empressé</em><span> with young girls.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Fourth, be saucy and impudent with old ladies. Call them by
their first names, if necessary.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It goes without saying that such audacious methods require
boldness and sureness of touch, especially in the application of the
fourth rule. But even that, when attempted with spirit and assurance,
has given miraculous results. In a case where a woman's age
is in question, action speaks far louder than words.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Perhaps the most successful method of flattery is that of the
person who makes the fewest compliments. To gain a name for
brusqueness and frankness is, in a way, to attain a reputation for
sincerity. Whether this is just or not, it is undoubtedly true that
the occasional unlooked for praise of such a person acquires an
exaggerated importance and worth. This system is similar to that of the
billiard-player who goes through the first half of his game wretchedly
in order to surprise his opponent with the dexterity of his shots later
on. But it is an amateurish ruse, and is soon discovered and discounted
at its true value. Yet in a way, too, it is justifiable, since
unpleasant comments are usually accepted as candid, while pleasant
ones alone are suspected.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There is a kind of conscious vanity to which flattery comes
welcomely, however patent the hyperboles may appear. To such
persons, and there are many, a certain amount of adulation oils the
mental machine. They do not believe all that is said, but prefer, on
the whole, to be surrounded by pleasant fictions rather than by
unpleasant facts. They prefer harmony to honesty,
and, though the oil on the troubled waters of life does
not dispel the storm, it makes easier sailing. To
others, especially if they be creators in any art,
compliments stimulate and impel to their best endeavour.
Many a man has achieved a masterpiece chiefly because a woman
declared him capable of it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The question of the object for which flattery is employed is here
beside the mark. It may be used or misused; it may be true or
false of itself, although, to be sure, the word flattery has attained an
evil significance and has come to stand for counterfeit approval. All
that has been said, however, applies to one as well as to the other.
Even when praise has the least foundation in fact, it may prove
beneficial to the person flattered, arousing a pride which creates the
admired quality that was wholly lacking. Thus I have known a
man notorious for his vulgarity stimulated to a very creditable politeness
by the most undeserved and insincere compliment upon his table
manners.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I have used the three testimonials of admiration as
synonymous, but Celestine says that praise is
a rightful fee, a compliment is
a tip, and that flattery
is bribery.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="romance-en-route"><span class="bold large">Romance En Route</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>How tired I am of the question, "How do you like
London?" and "How do you like New York?" "Would
you rather live in San Francisco or Paris?" Why,
indeed, should I not like London, Kalamazoo, Patagonia,
Bombay, or any other place where live men and women walk the
streets, eat, drink, and are merry? How can I say whether El Dorado
is better than Arcady, or a square room more convenient than an
oblong one? Every living place has its own fascination, its mysteries,
its characteristic delights. Ask me, rather, if I can understand
London, if I can catch the point of view of the French </span><em class="italics">concierge</em><span>, if I
comprehend the slang and bustle of Chicago? Like them? Show
me the town I cannot like! Know them? Ah, that is different!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This is the charm of travel--to keep up the feeling of strangeness
to the end, never to take things for granted or let them grow
stale, to see them always as though one had never seen them before.
Then, and only then, can we see things as they really are. When I
become cosmopolitan, world-old, </span><em class="italics">blasé</em><span>, when I think and speak in
all languages, I shall fly to some deserted island to study the last,
most impenetrable enigma--myself.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But meanwhile, I can purchase romance retail, at the mere cost
of a railway ticket. I can close my eyes in one city, and wake next
morning in its mental antipode. Romance requires only a new point
of view; it is the art of getting fresh glimpses of the commonplace.
One need not be transported to the days of chivalry, one need not
even travel; one need only begin life anew every
morning, and look out upon the world unfamiliarly as
the child does. One must be born a discoverer.
Thus one may keep youth, for the sport never loses
colour. One game won or lost, the next has an equal
interest, though we use the same counters and the same board. The
combinations are always fresh.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Still, though one may find this fountain of perpetual youth in
one's breakfast glass, the obvious conventional method is to go forth
for the adventure, and get this famed elixir at some foreign and
well-advertised spring. For this purpose tourists travel, taking part in
a pilgrimage of whose meaning and proper method they are wholly
ignorant. In their boxes and portmanteaus they pack, not hopes of
mystery, faith in the compelling marvels of the world, nor the
wonder of strange sights; but instead, fault-finding comparisons, and
prejudice against all manners not their own. They do not see, in
the omnibus of London, the automobile of Paris, the electric trolley
of New York and the cable car of San Francisco, the pregnant
evidence of several points of view on life, art and commerce, but they
perceive only grotesque contrasts with their own particular means of
locomotion. They do not delight in the incomprehensible hurly-burly
of civilization that has produced the City Man, the Bounder,
the Coster, the Hoodlum, Hooligan and Sundowner, nor do they
attempt to solve the mystery or get the meat from such strange shells.
Instead, they see only the clerk at the lunch-counter bolting his chops
and half-pint, the incredible waistcoat of the pretentious </span><em class="italics">blagueur</em><span>, or
the buttons and "moke" of the ruffling D'Artagnan of the Old
Kent-road.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So the tourist travels with his eyes shut, while the true traveller
has a lookout on life, keen for new sensations. To do
things in Rome as the Romans do, that is his motto.
He must eat spaghetti with his fingers, his rice and
chopped suey with chop-sticks, or he fails of their subtle
relish. He calls no Western town crude or uncivilized,
but he tries to cultivate a taste for cocktails, that he may imbibe
the native fire of occidental enthusiasm. In the East he is an
Oriental; he changes his mind, his costume and his spectacles
wherever he goes, and underneath the little peculiarities of custom
and environment, he finds the essential realities of life.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>To taste all this fine, crisp flavour of living--not to write about
it or fit it to sociological theories, but to live it, understand it, be
it--this is the art of travel, the art of romance, the art of youth. But
there is no Baedeker to guide such a sentimental tourist through
such experiences as these. It takes a lively glance to recognize a
man disguised in a frock coat, and to find him blood brother to the
Esquimau!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Well, there is a place in Utah on the Central Pacific Railroad
called Monotony. The settlement consists of a station, a water-tank,
and a corrugated iron bunk-house. The level horizon swings
round a full circle, enclosing a flat, arid waste, bisected by an unfenced
line of rails, straight as a stretched string. The population consists
of a telegraph operator, a foreman, and six section hands. Yet I
dare say I would like to stay there awhile, on the way, and perhaps I
would taste some charm that London never gave. I am
not so sure that but that before I took wing
again I might not like it, in some
respects, better even
than Paris.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="at-the-edge-of-the-world"><span class="bold large">The Edge of the World</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>To find the colonial or the provincial more cultured,
better educated in life and keenlier cognizant of the
world's progress than the ordinary metropolitan, is a
common enough paradox. Class for class, the outlander
has more energy, greater sapience and a truer zest of intellect than
the citizen at the capital. By the outlander is not meant, however,
the mere suburban or rural inhabitant, but the dweller at the outpost
of civilization, the picket on the edge of the world.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Let us grant that, in the gross, every new community must be
crude--it takes time to grow ivy over the walls, to soften the
primary colours into harmonious tones, to smooth off the rough
edges,--but let us also grant that, at all the back doorways of
empire, in far-away corners of the earth, are assembled little coteries
of men and women who, by reason of their very isolation, rather
than despite it, have made themselves cosmopolitan, catholic,
eclectic, and stand ever ready to welcome, each in his own polite
dialect and idiom, the astonished traveller who thinks he has left
all that is great and good behind.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This compensation is, indeed, a natural law. If we cut back
half the shoots of a shrub, the surviving sprouts will be more
vigorous. The deprivation of one sense renders the others more
acute. Make it hard for an ambitious lad to obtain an education,
and, working alone by candle-light, he will outstrip the student
with greater advantages. So it is with the colonial who realizes
his poverty of artistic and intellectual resources. He
must, in self-defense and to compensate for his
isolation, make friends with the world at large, and
his mental vision, accustomed to long ranges of
sight, becomes sharp and subtile. To avoid the
reproach of provincialism he studies the great centers of thought
and watches eagerly for the first signs of new growths in fads,
fashions, art and politics. It is for this reason that the British
colonial is more British than the Englishman at home.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Plunged in the midst of the turmoil of every-day excitements,
the dwellers in great cities lose much of the true and fine significance
of things. A thousand enterprises are beginning, and amidst
a myriad essays the headway of yesterday's novelty is lost in the
struggle of today's agonists. The little, temporary, local success
seems big with import, and the slower development of more serious
and permanent virtues is ignored. Things are seen so closely
that they are out of true proportion, and they are seen through
media of personality that diffract and magnify.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But the provincial, far from this complicated aspect of intellectual
life, gains greatly in perspective. Separated by great space,
he is, in a way, separated by time also, and he sees what another
generation will perhaps see in the history of today. For he watches
not only literary London, that tiniest and most garrulous of
gossiping villages, but a dozen other hives of thought as well, and
from his very distance can the more easily discern the first signs
of pre-eminence. His ears are not ringing with a myriad petty
clamours, but he can hear, rising above the multitudinous hum, the
voice of those who sing clearest. The connoisseur in art views a
painting from across the hall--the lover of music does not sit too
close to the orchestra--and so the intelligent looker-on
at life does not come too often in familiar touch
with the aspirants for fame. Living, as one might
say, upon a hill, the stranger thus gets the range,
volume and trend of human activities, and sees their
movements, like those of armies marching below him, though
they seem as ants, so far away. He can trace the direction of
waves of emotion that follow round the earth like tides of the sea.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>In every community, however small or remote, there are a
few who delight in this comprehensive view of things, who keep
up with the times, and, so far as their immediate neighbours are
concerned, are ahead of the prevailing mode. As the meteorologist,
studying the reports from North, South, East and West, can trace
the progress of storm and wind, so these intelligent observers can
predict what will be talked about next, and how soon the first
murmurs will reach their shores. Their cosmic laboratory is the
club library table, with its journals and periodicals from all over
the world.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The first hint of a new success in literature comes from the
London weeklies, and then, if the British opinion is corroborated
by American favour, the New York papers take up the note of
praise, and one may follow the progress of a novel's triumph
across three thousand five hundred miles of continent, or see
the word pass from colony to colony, over the whole empire.
The Londoner sees but the bubbles at the spring--the pioneer by
the Pacific watches the course of a mighty stream increasing in
depth and width. Tomorrow, or in three months, the vogue will
reach his own town, and he will smile to see all tongues wag of the
latest literary success.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So it is with art, so it is with fashions, with the
drama and with every fad and foible, from golf and
Babism to the last song and catchword of the music
halls. The colonial is behind the times? What
does it matter! Are we not all behind the times of
tomorrow? So long as we cannot travel faster than the news, it
makes little difference; and it is wise, when we are in San Francisco,
to do as the Franciscans do. It is as bad to be ahead of the times
as to be behind, and it is best to follow the style of one's own
locality, with a shrewd eye to one's purchases for the future, buying
what we can see must come into popular favour.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But does your metropolitan enjoy this complexity, this living
in the future? Not he! He cares nothing for the </span><em class="italics">vieux jeu</em><span>.
For him, ping-pong is dead or dying--he neither knows nor cares
that it still lives in the Occident, marching in glory ever towards
the West, along the old trail to fame. Of the last six successful
books discussed over his muffins, does he know which have been
virile enough to survive transplanting to other shores--which have
emigrated and become naturalized in the colonies? No! He is
for the next little victory at the tea tables of the elect!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And yet, this afterglow, this subsequent invasion of new territory
is what brings enduring fame. Before the city election is
substantiated, the country must be heard from. The urban hears
the solo voices of adulation, the worship of those near and dear to
celebrity, but the great chorus that sweeps the hero up to Parnassus
comes from a wider stage. The army of invasion never comes home
again to be hailed as victor until it has encircled the globe. But
it is the greater conquest that the dweller at the outpost sees, at first
like a cloud no bigger than a man's hand, and it is his game to watch
and await it. It is better so. Waste no pity upon him
at the edge of the world. For the big game needs big
men, and it is the boldest and most strenuous spirits who
push to Ultima Thule. The anæmic and neurotic do
not emigrate; the reddest blood has flowed in the veins
of the pioneer ever since the first migration. He does things, rather
than talks of things others have done--he knows life, even if he knows
not Ibsen. Meet him in his far-away home, and he holds your
interest with an unlooked-for charm; take him to the Elgin marbles
and he will have and hold his own idea of art unborrowed from
text-books. He knows more of your city's history than you do
yourself; panic or the furor of a fashion cannot hypnotize him.
The importance of a celebrated name cannot embarrass him, for he
has met men unknown to fame who have lived as uncrowned kings.
He has seen cities rise from the plain. He has made the wilderness
to blossom like the rose; he has lived, not written epics.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And in addition to gaining all this experience that trained the
pioneers of old, he has, while living at the confines of civilization,
kept in touch with the world, and has tasted the exhilarating flavour
of the old and new in one mouthful. For, in this century,
distance is swept away and no land is really isolate.
The pioneer lives like a god above distinctions
of time, at once in the past,
the present and the future.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-diary-habit"><span class="bold large">The Diary Habit</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>For seven years I have kept my diary scrupulously,
without missing a day, and now, at the beginning of a
new twelvemonth, I am wondering whether I should
maintain or renounce it. There are certain good habits,
it would seem, as hard to break as bad ones, and if the practice of
keeping a daily journal is a praiseworthy one, it derives no little of its
virtue from sheer inertia. The half-filled book tempts one on;
there is a pleasure in seeing the progress of the volume, leaf by leaf;
like sentimental misers, we hoard our store of memories. We end
each day with a definite statement of fact or fancy, and it grows
harder and harder to abstain from the self-enforced duty. Yet it is
seldom a pleasure, when one is fatigued with excitement or work, to
transmit our affairs to writing. Some, it is true, love it for its own
sake, or as a relief for pent-up emotions, but, in one way or another,
most autobiographical journalists consider the occupation as a
prudent depositor regards his frugal savings in the bank. Some time,
somehow, they think, these coined memories will prove useful.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Does this time ever come, I wonder? For me it has not come
yet, though I still picture a late reflective age when I shall enjoy
recalling the past, and live again my old sensations. But life is more
strenuous than of yore, and even at seventy or eighty, nowadays, no
one need consider himself too old for a fresh, active interest in the
world about him. Your old gentleman of today does not sit in his
own corner of the fireplace and dote over the lost years; he reads
the morning papers, and insists upon going to the
theatre with his nieces on wet evenings. Have I,
then, been laying up honey for a winter of discontent
that shall never come?</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Besides this distrust of my diaries, I am awakening
after seven years to the fact that, as autobiography, the books are
strangely lacking in interest. They are not convincing. I thought,
as I did my clerkly task, that I should always be I, but a cursory
glance at these naïve pages shows that they were written by a
thousand different persons, no one of whom speaks the language of the
emotions as I know it today. It is true, then, my diary has
convinced me, that we do become different persons every seven years.
Here is written down rage, hate, delight, affection and yearning, no
word of which is comprehensible to me now; they leave me quite
cold. I am reading the adventures of some one else, not my own.
Who was it? I have forgotten the dialect of my youth. Ah,
indeed, the boy is father of the man! I will be indulgent, as a son
should, to paternal indiscretions!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And yet, for the bare skeleton of my history, these volumes are
useful enough. The pages which, while still wet with ink and tears
I considered lyric essays, have fallen to a merely utilitarian value.
I am thankful, on that account, for them, and for the fact that my
bookkeeping was well systematized and indexed. As outward form
goes, my diaries are models of manner. So for those still under
the old-fashioned spell, who would adopt a plan of entry, let me
describe them.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The especial event of each day, if the day held anything worthy
of remark or remembrance, was boldly noted at the top of the page
over the date. Whirring the leaves I catch many suggestive phrases:
"</span><em class="italics">Dinner at Mme. Qui Vive's</em><span>" (it was there I first
tasted champagne), "</span><em class="italics">Henry Irving</em><span> in '</span><em class="italics">Macbeth</em><span>'" (but
it was not the actor that made that night famous--I
took Kitty Carmine home in a hansom!), "Broke my
arm" (or else I would never have read Marlowe, I
fear), and "Met Sally Reynard" (this was an event, it seemed at
that time, worthy of being chronicled in red ink). So they go.
They are the chapter headings in the book of my life.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>In the lower left-hand corner of each page I noted the receipt
of letters, the initials of the writers inscribed in little squares, and in
the opposite right-hand corner a complementary hieroglyph kept
account of every reply sent. So, by running over the pages I can
note the fury of my correspondence. (What an industrious scribbler
"S.R." was to be sure! I had not thought we went it quite so
hard--and "K.C."--how often she appears in the lower left, and
how seldom in the lower right! I was a brute, no doubt, and small
wonder she married Flemingway!)</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Perpendicularly, along the inner margin, I wrote the names of
those to whom I had been introduced that day, and on a back page
I kept a chronological list of the same. (I met Kitty, it seems, on
a Friday--perhaps that accounts for our not hitting it off!) Most of
these are names, and nothing more, now, and it gives my heart a leap
to come across Sally in that list of nonentities. (To think that there
was ever a time when I did not know her!)</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Besides all this, the books are extra-illustrated in the most
significant manner. There is hardly a page that does not contain some
trifling memento; here, a theatre coupon pasted in, or a clipping
from the programme, an engraved card or a pencilled note; there a
scrap of a photograph worn out in my pocket-book, somebody's
sketched profile, or, at rare intervals, a wisp of some
one's hair! (This reddish curl--was it Kitty's or
from Dora's brow? Oh, I remember, it was Myrtle
gave it me! No, I am wrong; I stole it from
Nettie!) I pasted them in with eager trembling
fingers, but I regard them now without a tremour. There are other
pages being filled which interest me more.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Occasionally I open a book, 1895 perhaps, and consult a date
to be sure that Millicent's birthday is on November 12th, or to
determine just who was at Kitty's coming-out dinner. Here is a
diagram of the table with the places of all the guests named. (So I
sat beside Nora, did I? And who was Nora? I have forgotten her
name! </span><em class="italics">Now</em><span> she is Mrs. Alfred Fortunatus!)</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Sometimes I think it would be better to write up my diary in
advance, to fill in the year's pages with what I would like to do, and
attempt to live up to the prophecy. And yet I have had too many
unforeseen pleasures in my life for that. I would rather trust fate
than imagination. So, chiefly because I have kept the book for
seven years, I shall probably keep it seven years more. It gratifies
my conceit to chronicle my small happenings, and somehow, written
down in fair script, they seem important. And besides I am a bit
anxious to see just how many times a certain name, which
has lately begun to make itself prominent, will
appear at the top of the pages. I promise
to tell you some time, if
Celestine is willing!</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-perfect-go-between"><span class="bold large">The Perfect Go-between</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Surely the modern invention that has done most to
perpetuate Romance is the telephone. The man that, however
used to this machine, can take up its ear-piece without a
thrill of wonder has no soul. The locomotive, the steamship,
the automobile have but made travel a bit more rapid, they have
added no new element of mystery. Even the telegraph fails to give
any true feeling of surprise. It is no whit more wonderful than that
one, after writing a letter and slipping it into a red mail-box, should
be handed a reply by a strange, blue-clad gentleman, after many
days. A telegraphic despatch does not even hold the handwriting of
the sender; it is cold, colourless, metallic.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But a machine that can bring your friend into the same room
with you, at a moment's notice, who can deny the poetry of such a
victory over space and time! Not until some genius invents a
thought-transmitter shall a more stupendous aid to Romance be
discovered. For see! It is not only one's friends that are caught in
the net of telephone wires, one can drag up a whole city full! I have
but to sit down at my desk and call up a number, and he or she must
reply. True, I cannot force any one to answer, but if I have the
audacity and persistency, it will go hard if I do not find some one who
is willing to while away a leisure, inquisitive moment in inconsequent
conversation.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It is my privilege to live in a telephone city where the habit is
extraordinarily developed. One out of every sixteen of the
population is connected to that most amiable of go-betweens,
the Central Office. I have the opportunity of
investigating some thirty thousand souls at the ridiculously
cheap price of five cents per soul! Not only every
counting-house and shop, doctor's office and corner
grocery has its wire, but every residence with any claims to
acquaintance. What Romance gone to waste! For few, it seems, have
imagination enough to embrace such unlimited opportunities!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This morning Sonia called me at 8:25, apologizing for her
kind-heartedness in letting me sleep when she knew I wished to
work. Think of that for an alarm clock--Sonia's voice, ten miles
away! So I am awakened by the telephone, I call by telephone,
flirt by telephone, shop, market and speculate over the same wire.
We do not take long in utilizing the latest invention here in this
hurried land--the city is ravaged by Telephonitis. One invites
friends to dinner, one makes appointments, one breaks the news of
the death of a friend, one proposes marriage--all by means of this
little instrument. I know one lady who has her machine connected
by flexible wires so that she may talk in bed. She need not be too
strict in regard to dress for her interviews--no one ever knows! I
know two old men who while away long evenings together playing
chess, when the weather is too harsh to leave home. Beside each
board stands the faithful receiver; one has but to whisper "K.B. to
Q.3" or some such rigamarole into the nickel-plated "extension" and
he has checkmated his opponent across the Bay!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>With such common intercourse as this, many are the comedies
of the telephone. I have myself entertained a visitor with a
diversion he will not soon forget. The day he came I took him to my
telephone and introduced him in turn to a half-dozen ladies of my
acquaintance, who plied him with badinage. We set
forth then on a tour of calls, and I enjoyed his several
attempts at identifying the voices he had heard over the
wire. It is not always easy to recognize a voice and
remember it. I remember an unfortunate experience of
my own with two sisters which brought a week's embarrassment, for the
voices of members of one family do have a marvellous similarity in
the telephone, and if one is anxious to call upon Fanny when
Elizabeth is out, one must be very sure just which sister one is speaking
to when making an appointment.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The necessity for such precaution has led some of my friends to
adopt telephone methods which must be extremely amusing to one
who could hear both sides of the conversation. In many houses the
telephone is situated in the hall, altogether too near the dining-room
for any confidential communication. If the questioner is careful he
may so word his inquiries that they may be answered by a mere
"yes" or "no"; and papa, smoking after dinner, is none the wiser.
If the girl finds it impossible to reply in unguarded terms, she has
been known to say, somewhat vaguely, "</span><em class="italics">Of course</em><span>," which conveys
to the man at the other end of the wire the fact that she is not alone.
Some, too, have more definite codes. Celestine has arranged with
me that when she mentions the "</span><em class="italics">Call</em><span>" it means the forenoon; the
"</span><em class="italics">Chronicle</em><span>" stands for afternoon, while by the "</span><em class="italics">Examiner</em><span>" I
understand that she refers to the evening. If, then, I ring her up
and say, "When can you go walking today? I want to be sure not
to meet that fool Clubberly." Clubberly, who is at her elbow,
hears her reply sweetly, "Really! Yes, I saw it in the "</span><em class="italics">Chronicle</em><span>";
and how is he to know what it is all about? Oh, he could have his
revenge easily enough, were he not an ass, for he might be kissing
Celestine (horrid thought) even as she is speaking,
for all I could know.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>With this romantic battery opposed to her, what
chance has poor Mrs. Grundy? What hard-hearted
parent can successfully immure his daughter while the
copper wire strings out toward her proscribed lover? Here is where
love laughs at locksmiths. Were a dozen ineligibles forbidden the
house, the moment mamma's back is turned and she has gone out
for her round of calls, little daughter takes the telephone off the
hook and, presto! she has her room full of clandestine company!
Does any rash young man dare ring her up while her parents are
near, she has but to say, sweetly, "Oh, you have the wrong number!"
and hang up. It is too wonderful. You may lie by telephone, with
a straight face, or you may call a man a liar with impunity. If you
have no answer ready to an ardent impertinence, you need only say
nothing and listen--he is helpless; you need not speak unless you
want to. Who made the first telephone made mischief for a
thousand years to come!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><em class="italics">Rrrrrrrrrrng!!!!</em><span> There is Celestine ringing me up now!
Pardon me if I leave you for a moment, for I think she
is going to give me her answer to a very
important question. Tremendously important for
me! Wish me good luck! I
hope no one will
be listening!</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="growing-up"><span class="bold large">Growing Up</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>When I asked Perilla how she first came to realize that
she was growing up, she said, "When I began of my
own accord to wash my sticky fingers, without waiting to
be told." I believe she meant it literally, with no moral
significance that should make a parable of the statement. I hope so,
at least, for then by that test I cannot hope to have yet attained the
years of discretion. Little Sister says that she felt "growing pains,"
but here is a figure of speech, surely. I suppose she means the
wonder of the passage from a great, wistful ignorance to a limited
knowledge; for the first part of the path of life is a very steep
up-grade.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I myself can point to no one circumstance that revealed to me
the vision of the great march of time that is sweeping us on towards
the goal. I was for long like one who looks from the window of a
railway carriage, too busily engaged in watching the world fly past
him to realize his own motion. Neither long trousers nor razors
awoke me from the child-trance; I saw scorned infants master me by
their inches; I heard rumours of love and death and duty, but I was
unmoved. It was a part of the game of existence, and it seemed
natural that persons should be classified and remain in categories of
old and young. I was a spectator outside the merry-go-round. I
was to be rich, of course; I had the mind to dare and the will to do.
I should be wise, too--why not? Sometimes I should have memories,
I thought, not knowing that I was even then living away my
life, and that this was an era to which I should look
back and deem important.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>All my reading, too, went to show that I was an
amateur at living. Things seemed really to happen in
books, but not to me; there men were swung in
unknown furies, sensations were keen and impelling, and life had the
sharp sting of reality. My own emotions seemed insipid and
inadequate for a citizen of the world. Surely such minor escapades and
trivialities as mine were not worth considering. And so, when the
storm and stress came, I was ill-prepared, and at the first blow my
pride went down. Some devil, as in a dream, whispered in my ear
that perhaps I might not succeed after all, and it came to me as
a summons that the time had come to be out and doing. And I
saw that the conquest of my ambition would be achieved, not by
the impetuous onslaught that should carry all before it, but by the
slow and tedious siege, laid with years of waiting and working and
watching. It was then, perhaps, though I did not know it, that I
began to grow up, and became a man. I opened my eyes and looked
about me; it was as if I had been landed fresh from the country in
the busy town, like the Sleeper Awakened. No more field-faring
and trapesing holidays under the blue sky; I must choose my street
and fight my way for it against the throng.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It struck me with a sense of my inferiority that there was an
absolute quality of knowledge I had not mastered. Some of my
classmates seemed to know things, while I had but acquired
information. They could swim; I dared not go in over my head. They
had convictions, I had only opinions; it was the difference between
the language of Frenchmen and they who learn French. Here, I
thought, was the final classification, and I wrote myself down a witless
neophyte in the world's mysteries. For my whole
education had been founded upon the value of the
verity of the straight line, and wisdom was my
highest ideal. By this standard I measured myself and
my experience. I delighted in the beauty of science,
but of that other beauty which is its own excuse for being, I did
not know. I was as one who saw form without colour, or the outline
without the mass. I had not yet come to myself; I was a child
yet, and the result of my immediate environment--a mental
chameleon. A few generations of my austere ancestors impregnated my
blood with their stern virtues, and it still ran cold and tranquil in
my veins. But there were more remote and subtle influences behind
me that must work themselves out, and in some sub-stratum of
consciousness the pure Greek in me survived.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And so it was Dianeme who brought me at last to the door of
the temple, and I saw with her eyes and heard with her ears, and the
world grew beautiful, an altogether fitting setting for her charms.
And then I knew in very truth that I had grown up; but yet, by a
sublime miracle I had in the same revelation recovered my youth--if,
indeed, I had ever really been young before! Now, succeed or
fail as I might, life would always be fair and interesting, for Dianeme
was but one of a divine sisterhood, and there were many degrees to be
taken. So a kind of passion seized me to know Life's different
phases and find the secret of the whole; and that mood, God willing,
shall preserve my virginity to the end.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So here I am, by the grace of Dianeme, on the true road to
youth again, not to that absolute unconcern of all but the present,
that I once felt, nor to the fool's paradise, where, Maida would have
it, is the true happiness--"the ability to fool one's self"--but to a
kind of childlike wonder at things (ah, Little Sister,
may you never wander from it as I did!) and the
knowledge of what is really the most worth while.
(And you, Perilla, you need not pretend that you
don't know, for the truth flashes from your jest!)</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>For this is the very blossom of my youth, the era of knowing,
as that was the era of being, and though there may come other dark
days, as there were before the bud burst into bloom, I have seen the
beginning and I know the law now, and I trust that the fruit of my
life, the doing, may be even more worth the while. And I shall
perhaps find that wisdom and beauty and goodness are
but one thing, as the poets say--that living is
a continual growing up, and that age
is only a youth that knows
why it is happy!</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="a-pauper-s-monologue"><span class="bold large">A Pauper's Monologue</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Understand, I am not one of those who are always
longing to be rich. I do very well, ordinarily, in the
shadow of prosperity, though there comes upon me
periodically the lust for gold, at which times the desire to
rush down-town and spend money indiscreetly must be obeyed. It
is a common symptom, paupers tell me, and carries with it its own
remedy, giving much the same relief that blood-letting did of old, if
so be the practice does not lead to a dangerous hemorrhage. I have
my ups and downs, like most unsalaried Bohemians, thin purse, thick
purse, at erratic intervals, but my spendthrift appetite is curiously
independent of these financial fluctuations. In fact, a miserly restraint
is most likely to seize me when my pocket is full, and I usually grow
reckless when it has no silver lining.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There are few paupers among us who do not conceit themselves
to be artists at spending money, and believe the fit intelligence is
most wanting in those who have the means. I confess that I share
their convictions, having wasted much time in a study of the
situation. Like those planning a foreign tour, I have mapped out the
golden road of Opportunity, and know the itinerary by heart. And,
without trespassing the science of Economy, of which I am criminally
ignorant (having been somewhat prepossessed during my Sophomore
courses), I submit there are active and passive categories into which
coupon-cutters may be relegated. The symbol of your monied man
is the cigar, involving a destructive process, whether applied to food,
raiment or ministry to the senses. The greed of the
collector is of the same flavour. It is the difference
between spending the money to see and to stage the
play that I mean.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>For why should an access of wealth so dull the
brain that the battle between the kings of hearts and spades seems more
interesting than the game with human knights and pawns? I have
often been minded to write an "Open Letter to Millionaires," and offer
myself as a Master of their Sports, to guide them through fields of
untried sensation and novel enterprises. I have my offers tabulated
from an hundred dollars upward, each involving the inception of
activities whose ramifications would provide diversion for years.
There are twenty young men I know of in this town who are waiting
for such a chance. Why should I not be elected to captain them?
I promise you the rise and fall of stocks shall not be more exciting
than our rivalries. Indeed, brains are for sale at absurd bargains
today. Why not play them off against each other in a game of Life?</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But these are dreams never to be realized. I am no promoter,
and must play the beggar's part. Yet I have often wondered how I
would be affected if these hopes came true, and if some capitalist,
touched by my appeal, seeing this good seed cast upon barren
ground, opening his heart and purse-strings, should present me with
a modest fortune without conditions. Could I assume the responsibility
of gratitude and fly with the load of obligation that I myself
would assume? By all rules of fiction, no! Yet if my conscience
were seduced I might frame my mind to accept debonairly and do
my best. Tempt me not, millionaires, for this is my week of
longing, and my brain boils with adventurous desires.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Yet, had I the ear of the benefactor, another mood would impel
my renunciation; for, against my will and interest, I am
forced to acknowledge that others are better fitted to be
rich than I, who have been a pauper all my life, and am
not so unhappy in my misery. I know some to whom
wealth should come as a right, as has their beauty,
and who play an inconsistent part upon the stage of poverty. There
is Dianeme, who knows the names of all the roses, and can tell one
etching from another. She is so instinct with tact and taste that I
feel quite unworthy of affluence until she has been served. And
there, too, is Little Sister, who is in worse case, having once ridden
on high wheels and nestled against the padded comforts of life, now
charioted by street cars, with a motorman for a driver and a
conductor for a footman. And though it was her reverses that gave me
chance to be her friend and discover her worth, yet I fear I would
put back my opportunity ten years to give her the little luxuries she
craves. She has acquired a relish for the flesh-pots, poor Little
Sister, and somehow the weakness becomes her, as the habit of weeping
fitted the eighteenth century ideals of women. Two more pairs of
silk stockings would reinstate her as a lady complete. Not that
anybody but Little Sister and her laundress would ever see them, but
they would give her a nourishing satisfaction that is of itself worth
while.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Yet, again I wonder--if Little Sister grew rich, what would
become of me? I am told that the first pangs of the birth of Fortune
are felt in the unpleasant acquisition of new claimants to friendship,
but I do not believe this is so. I should myself fear to intrude,
I am sure. There would be so many new relations and obligations
that I could not take the friendship simply and naturally. I could
make love to her by letter, perhaps, but not in her carriage. I would
miss the ungloved hand of familiarity and enclose
myself in starched formality, though I know the pain
in so doing would be mutual. For the pride of riches
is as nothing to the pride of poverty, and I am very,
very poor! But surely Little Sister must be rich
again, even if I have to wait for the second table.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And so I gracefully resign my claims to fortune, where I am so
outclassed, and make off into the open fields towards the Hills of
Fame, where the brougham of Opulence may not follow me, though
I fare afoot. For we do not get rich in my family; there is no uncle
in Patagonia whose death could benefit us, and the bag of diamonds,
the hope of whose discovery sustained my immature youth, no longer
haunts my dreams. For a long time yet I must deny myself the
title of gentleman, forced as I am to carry parcels "over three inches
square," which I hear is the test of fashionable caste. This is my last
gasp. I shall be a man again tomorrow, and if any millionaire is
tempted by this appeal, he must make haste. But I shall
not be rung up from sleep tonight. It is the
law of society that Spend helps Save,
and Save helps Scrimp, and
Scrimp helps Starve.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="a-young-man-s-fancy"><span class="bold large">A Young Man's Fancy</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Undoubtedly the most logical, though perhaps the
least interesting, method of opening the discussion of a
thesis, is that employed by the skillful carver who
dissects his duck according to the natural divisions of the
subject and proceeds therewith analytically. This is the system
encouraged in academic courses and is said to enable any one to write
upon any subject. But such an essay is mighty hard reading; unless
a writer is so hungry for his theme that he forgets his manners and
falls to without ceremony the chances are that his efforts will receive
scant attention. And so I shyly speak of love.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So few essayists write with a good appetite! And yet, see how
I restrain myself, and perforce adopt the conventional procedure, as
one too proud to betray his ravening hunger! I must be calm, I
must be polite--and you shall know only by my forgetfulness of the
salt and my attention to the bones of thought, how the game interests
me. In speaking of love, I must let my head guard my heart, too,
for it is in the endeavour to misunderstand women that we pass our
most delightful moments. They will not permit men to be too sure
of them, and what you learn from one, you must hide carefully from
the next. So I begin my fencing with a great feint of awkwardness,
like a master with a beginner, knowing well enough how likely to get
into trouble is any one who pretends innocence.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>For a long time I believed it all a conspiracy of the novelists,
and that love, so ideally depicted, was but a myth, kept alive by the
craft, to furnish a backbone for literary sensation. But
there are undoubtedly many bigoted believers in the
theory of love. The women, however, who admit that
it is a lost art, complain piteously of the ineptitude of
the other sex. I confess that few men can satisfactorily
acquit themselves of the ordeal of courtship without some tuition, but,
once having acquired the rudiments of the profession, it seems
inconsistent to taunt them with the experiments of their apprenticeship.
It is too much to require a man to make a gallant wooing and then
twit him with the "promiscuousness" by which he won his facility.
Yet, some, doubtless, have learned also to defend themselves against
this last accusation; it is the test of the Passed Master. For the
other, poor dolts, who never see the opportunity for action, however
adroitly presented, who speak when they should hold tongue and
leave undone all those things that they ought to have done--the
girls marry them, to be sure, but most of the love-making is on the
wrong side. There are more yawns than kisses; the brutal question
satisfies the yop, and he bungles through the engagement, breaking
doggedly through the crust of the acquaintance, witless of the
delightful perils of thin ice.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And yet I think the subject might be mastered in four lessons
with a good teacher, so that a man of ordinary capacity could make
good way for himself. This is by no means a new theory; it is the
foundation of many a comedy of errors, this of Love with a Tutor.
But go not to school of a maid, for she will fool you to the top of
your bent, nor to a married woman either, but to a man like my
younger brother here, no Lothario, but one who can keep two steps
ahead of any affair he enters.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>If a man be agile and daring, with sufficient ardour to assume
the offensive, having an audacious tongue and a wary
eye with a fine sense of congruity and tact, withal, if
he can make love with a laugh and a rhyme, as Cyrano
fought, then 'tis a different matter, and he needs no
pilot to take his sweetheart over the bar and into the
port. He must be bold, but not too bold, carry a big spread of
canvas, luff, reef and tack her with no shuffling, cast the lead on the
run, keeping in soundings, and never lose headway when she comes
about into a new mood. He must bear a sensitive hand at the tiller,
keep her close up to the wind with no tremble in the leach of the
sail, and gain advantage from every tide and cross-current. Better
dash against the reef than run high and dry upon the shoal!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It is a pity, is it not, to dissect love in such a fashion? I
should have my hero quite at the mercy of the gale of passion, and
be swept forward, he knows not how and cares not where; he should
lose his wits and take a mad delight in the fury of the storm, seeing
no spot upon his horizon. And yet I dare not be warmer, for
sometime I may decide to fall in love myself, and I would not have my
chances wrecked by any genuine confession of faith, set in type, to
which She might refer, with a beautiful taunt. No! it is better to
phrase and verbalize; the subject is too dear, and near done to its
death already. I would but suggest the cross-references, and, under
a mien of the most atrocious conceit, throw my female readers off
their guard, leaving my fellow men to read between the lines.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>For I hear that men do fall in love with women, and women fall
in love with loving. So be it. I have known girls, too, to take both
vanilla and strawberry in their soda-water, which proves them to be
not altogether simple in their tastes. The best of them will talk
volubly upon love in the abstract, while the average man (to which
category I hope I have the honour of not belonging)
keeps his mouth closed on the matter, with his tongue
in his cheek, and his ideas, if he have any, well hidden
behind his words.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So, if I avail myself of the feminine franchise, it
must be done cautiously, for many are the difficulties of the young
man who would love a girl today, and only a precious few of the old
school of beaux would understand the twentieth century's subtleties,
even if all could be explained. Many are the misfortunes in the
Lover's Litany, from which the modern maiden sighs, "Good Lord,
deliver us!" A man must take her in earnest, but he must by no
means take himself too seriously; it is proper to treat your passion
cavalierly--indeed, he jests at scars who has felt the most amorous
darts, nowadays--but he must never make himself or her ridiculous.
He may take whimsical amusement in his own conquest, but must
beware "the little broken laugh that spoils a kiss." And above all,
mind you the </span><em class="italics">mise-en-scène</em><span>,--the stage must be set so and so; the
sun must not see what the moon sees. Sometimes you must have
your heart in your mouth, and sometimes on your sleeve, and oftener
she must have it herself. 'Tis very perplexing!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The best a man can do, in this practical age, is to mean business,
while he is about it, and hold over as much for the next day as will
not interfere with his commerce elsewhere. The woman may take her
romance to bed, or keep it warm in the oven against his return, but he
must be out and down-town to earn his living as well as his loving,
amongst dollars and pounds and cent per cent, while she enjoys the
traffic in pure abstractions. And both must hide and manage as if it
were a sin, lest Mrs. Grundy undo them; they must snatch their kisses,
as it were, on horseback. Such are the victims of supercivilization!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There was a time, the poets tell, when it was not
so difficult, and a man might wear a lady's scarf on his
sleeve, and be proud of the badge. It takes much
more complicated machinery than that simple love to
make the world go round, nowadays--perhaps because
it goes so much faster. There was a time when an elopement might
be picturesque and not necessarily followed by divorce; but where
now shall I find the hard-hearted parent who shall justify the
adventure? The modern mother is too easy. She is like Mrs. Brown in
the </span><em class="italics">Bab Ballads</em><span>--"a foolish, weak but amiable old thing." She
reposes a trust in her daughter that does more credit to her affection
than to her knowledge of human nature.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But whoa! I believe I have forgotten my manners! I have
insulted my fellows, guyed the girls, and here I am on the high road
to disqualifying myself with the more respectable generation. So I
shall cease, but I will not apologize, for though I came to scoff, I
shall not remain to prey. I believe I am not more than half
wrong after all. There is love, and there is loving, and if you have
followed me, you know which is which. It was Rosalind who said,
"Some Cupid kills with arrows, some with traps!" How she
would smile and sneer at this verbiage! She knew a lover from
a philanderer, she had her opinion of the laggard and
the butterfly rover, and she would no doubt
say: "Cupid hath clapped him on
the shoulder, but I'll warrant
him heart-whole!"</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="where-is-bohemia"><span class="bold large">Where is Bohemia?</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>The name "Bohemian" was first used to describe the gypsies
of that nationality who appeared in France in the
thirteenth century, but to us the term has come to carry with
it a wider significance than any dependent upon that little
kingdom in the north of Austria, and only a few characteristic traits
of those wandering vagabonds survive in those who bear, whether in
reproach or praise, the appellation "Bohemian."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>To take the world as one finds it, the bad with the good, making
the best of the present moment--to laugh at Fortune alike whether
she be generous or unkind--to spend freely when one has money,
and to hope gaily when one has none--to fleet the time carelessly,
living for love and art--this is the temper and spirit of the modern
Bohemian in his outward and visible aspect. It is a light and graceful
philosophy, but it is the Gospel of the Moment, this exoteric phase
of the Bohemian religion; and if, in some noble natures, it rises to a
bold simplicity and naturalness, it may also lend its butterfly precepts
to some very pretty vices and lovable faults, for in Bohemia one may
find almost every sin save that of Hypocrisy.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Yet, if we were able without casuistry to divide misdeeds into
two categories, those subjective and objective in their direct
effects--separating those sins which hurt only the sinner from those which
act upon his fellows--the Bohemian would, perhaps, be found to
have fewer than most of this harsher, crueller sort. His faults are
more commonly those of self-indulgence, thoughtlessness, vanity and
procrastination, and these usually go hand-in-hand
with generosity, love and charity; for it is not enough
to be one's self in Bohemia, one must allow others to
be themselves, as well.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So much for the common definition of this much-used
name. But no English word can stand for long in its primary
meaning. It must change insensibly, growing from day to day, till
it embraces the spirit as well as the letter of the fact it expresses.
The word "gentleman" has thus grown with a secondary, spiritual
significance; so has the word "prayer" by the interpretation of a
more liberal, far-reaching thought. So with the name "Bohemian"--it
has ranged beyond the vagrom, inconstant, happy-go-lucky,
devil-may-care, hand-to-mouth follower after pleasure, and now under its
banner may be found more serious enthusiasts who are not afraid
to offend smug respectability, and are in more or less open revolt
against convention, bigotry and prejudice. It is their bond that
they have forsworn allegiance to Mrs. Grundy. They dare be
themselves without pretentious, they make and keep their friends without
compromise.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>What, then, is it that makes this mythical empire of Bohemia
unique, and what is the charm of its mental fairyland? It is this:
there are no roads in all Bohemia! One must choose and find one's
own path, be one's own self, live one's own life. Whether one
makes for the larger freedom of the hills, or loses one's self in the
sacred stillness of the forest, the way is open to endeavour wherever
one wills. Yet, though there is no beaten track, there are still signs
in the wilderness showing where master minds have passed. Here is a
broken jug beneath the bough, snowed under with drifting rose petals,
where one frail-souled dreamer loitered on the way, and, with his
Beloved, filled the cup that clears Today of past regrets
and future fears, singing out his heart in lovely plaint.
And here, along a higher trail, a few blazings in the
forest mark where another great Bohemian in this life
exempt from public haunt found tongues in trees,
books in the running brooks, sermons in stones and good in
everything.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Within Bohemia are many lesser states, and these I have roughly
charted on my travels, so that, though I may have left some
precincts unexplored, I know at least that these territories lying on my
map are veritable provinces of this land of freedom and sincerity.
On the shore of the magic Sea of Dreams, beyond whose horizon
dances the Adventurous Main, lies the Pays de la Jeunesse, the
country of Youth and Romance, a joyous plaisaunce free from care
or caution, whose green, wide fields lie bathed in glamorous
sunshine. To the eastward lie the pleasant groves of Arcady, the
dreamland, home of love and poetry. Here in this Greek paradise
of rustic simplicity and joyous innocence and hope, has lived every
poet who has ever sung the lyric note, and here have visited, for
some brief space, all who have dreamed, all who have longed, all who
have loved. Here is the old joy of life made manifest and abundant;
here Mother Nature speaks most clearly to her children. For the
most, however, it is but a holiday country, and they who discover it
often pass, never to return, forgetting its glories and its mysteries as
they forget that lost country of their youth, counting it all illusion.
Yet some few come back to the Port of Peace to lose the world again,
renewing the immemorial enchantment.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>To the south, over the long procession of the hills, lies Vagabondia,
home of the gypsy and wanderer, who claims a wilder freedom
beneath the stars--outlawed or voluntary exile from
all restraint. This country is rocky and precipitate,
full of dangers, a land of feverish unrest.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>One other district lies hidden and remote, locked
in the central fastnesses of Bohemia. Here is the
Forest of Arden, whose greenwood holds a noble fellowship, bound in
truth and human simplicity. It is a little golden world apart, and
though it is the most secret, it is the most accessible of refugees, so
that there are never too many there, and never too few. Here is
spoken a universal language, Nature's own speech, the native dialect
of the heart. Men come and go from this bright country, but once
having been free of the wood, you are of the Brotherhood and
recognize your fellows by instinct, and know them, as they know you,
for what you are.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Now, as Bohemia, unfortunately, is not an island, it has its neighbours
and its frontiers. To the west lies Philistia, arid, dry and flat,
the abode of shams, dogmas and sluggish creeds. Here stands Vanitas,
overlooking a great desert, walled in by custom, guarded by false
pride. It is but a step over the border, however, from Bohemia the
true to that false Debatable Ground whose affectations are more
insincere even than the shams of the real Philistia, and the youngster,
questing the hero-haunted country of his youth, chasing his phantoms,
may go wide of his reckoning, misled by the mockery of life
made by these disguised Philistines. In the City of Shams,
hypocrites are content to assume the virtues they have not, but here on
the borders of Bohemia their vices are all pretense as well!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>On the further boundary of Bohemia, also, hangs an unsavoury
neighbour. Here is a madder and more terrible domain, the land of
lust and cruelty, lawless and loveless, dwelling in endless war. To
this fierce country Vagabondia lies perilously near, and
many a wanderer has crossed the frontier to find
himself, before he knew, within that evil land, where
freedom has become licence, and tolerance grown into
Anarchy.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Wide across all three empires stretch the Hills of Fame. In
Philistia men must be born great; there is no other distinction
possible save that of riches or inherited power. In Bohemia men achieve
greatness, working onward and upward, bringing their own great
dreams to fulfillment; while in Licentia, those only become great who
have an infamous notoriety thrust upon them by their own high
crimes.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We cannot all mount those heights from whose crest one may
look over the Sea of Care, past the Isle of Idleness to the
Adventurous Main, but there is joy enough on the lowland. Happy indeed
is he who, in his journey of life, has escaped the perils of that false
Bohemia, crouching on the frontier, and has found his way to
the happy forest, met his own people and drunk of
the Fountain of Immortal Youth; for there
is the warm, beating, human heart
of the True Bohemia!</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-bachelor-s-advantage"><span class="bold large">The Bachelor's Advantage</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>There are enough who think "a young man married is
a young man marred" to cause the bachelor to hesitate
before renouncing his liberties, and to fight shy of
entanglement as long as possible. If he writes down the "pros"
and "cons," like Robinson Crusoe, he will find he has many
advantages in his single state that must inevitably be forfeited when
he weds.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It is not only that "when I was single my pockets would jingle,
I would I were single again"; it is not so much, either, that his
play-day will be over and he must "settle down," stop butterfly-lovering
to and fro, and gathering the roses as he goes, and have no
haunting white face sitting up for him at home to ask him why, and
how, and where. This licence, if he be a man of sentiment, he willingly
foregoes for the larger possibilities of satisfactory comradeship
and sympathy. He can pay double rent and taxes, too, without
grumbling; take manfully the shock of surprise when expenses jump
with the new establishment; he may be initiated in doctors' fees, and
submit debonairly to a thousand restrictions of time, place and
opportunity. But more piquant than any of these trials is the discovery
that he has lost his old-time place and privilege of welcome as a
bachelor--that "come any time" hospitality of his dearest friends.
He is saddled with a secondary consideration.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Try as he may, no young man can marry to please his whole
acquaintance. The world, for the most part, still looks with
patronizing approval upon a girl's wedding so long as she
chooses or is chosen by a man not hopelessly
impossible. She has embraced an opportunity and usually
her mother cultivates a grateful fondness for the
son-in-law. If he has a scarcity of amiable traits she will
even manufacture them for him, and put them on the market with
display. Not so the mother of the groom. She analyses the bride
with incisive dissection, and it is hardly possible that any woman
shall be found quite worthy to mate with her son. It takes a woman
to read women, she says, and the little wife has to make a fight
for each step of the road from condescension through complaisance
to compliment.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The young man's friends, too, are exigent, and he soon finds
that, though the two have been made one in the sight of law and
clergy, society knows no such miraculous algebra. You may squeeze
in an extra chair at the dinner table for a desirable and "interesting
young man," but to include another lady, and that his wife, requires
a tiresome rearrangement. He does not come alone ordinarily, nor
would he if asked, and so he drops out of his little world and must
set about the creation of a new one. He may have had latch-key
privileges at a dozen houses, free to come night or morning, the
recipient of many sudden invitations for theatre, supper or
country--but that is all over. It is his turn to do the inviting. The
table has been well turned when he sits down to meat!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Is it to be wondered at, then, that the bachelor is selfish? He
escapes lightly the lesson of compromise; his whole life is a training
in egoism, and he makes the most of his desirability, getting usually
far more than he gives. He is free to experiment in acquaintance
though it goes no farther than innocuous flirtation. He may make
friendships for himself and break them at will, lightly
dodging the tie. There are hundreds in every city
who need go only where they wish, skipping even
"duty calls," sure of forgiveness. He may know
men and women he cares for, and, through the lack of
experience in a life-long intimacy, he may preserve many illusions
as to women. If he has an income, or a profession that demands no
abode, he can wander "to and fro in the earth and walk up and down
in it" free as Satan. He travels the farthest who travels alone.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Still, this cannot go on forever, and his franchise wanes. With
the first pang of middle age Nature asserts her imperious demand for
permanent companionship. The "cons" grow heavier, and the "pros"
more attractive. He sees maid after maid of his younger fancy pass
out of the game without regret, but the first sight of the new
generation strikes him to the heart. He is "uncled" by more and more
adopted nephews and nieces, and the sight of their fresh eyes awakens
the immemorial longing in him. And then, suddenly, another
"pro" comes upon the list, an undeniable item of importance,
throwing its influence so heavily upon the side of marriage that no
number of his foolish little "cons" can ever balance the account.
He is in love, and there is but one definition for that state. It is
the immediate, ravenous, compelling desire for a wife. There is
nothing for it but to renounce allegiance to his old friends and
become naturalized into a new citizenship.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But though all over town the doors to which he cried
"open sesame" bang sullenly to shut him
out, he does not notice it if
that one portal lets
him in!</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-confessions-of-an-ignoramus"><span class="bold large">The Confessions of an Ignoramus</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Musicians tell me that I am exceptionally fortunate.
I know absolutely nothing of music. It is not a bald,
fathomless innocence, however. I am not tone-deaf,
for instance, and certain compositions please me; and,
knowing nothing, I have been treated with indulgent complaisance
by the profession, and amongst them I have the unique licence of
being privileged to like whatever I choose. It is no small
distinction this, nowadays, when one is nicely and strictly rated by his
compliance to the regnant mode, but I have to fight tooth and nail
to defend my innocence. I have determined that whatever happens,
I will not be educated.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>For a while, once on a time, I hazarded my franchise of free
speech and weakly accepted the tutelage of a master, that I might at
least gain a familiarity with the catch-words of the musical fraternity.
It was the more reprehensible and foolish because I had already lost
my virginity in art circles by the same servility. Long ago I learned
to phrase and gesticulate at the picture galleries, and try as I may,
I cannot forget the formulas. I learned to stand with eyes half
closed before a painting, and waving my hand, murmur, "I like </span><em class="italics">this</em><span>
part, in here!" I caught that knowing waggle of the right thumb,
and prated of "modelling, tricky work, atmosphere, composition,
values," and such humbuggery. I could say, straight-faced, and with a
vicious, explosive gesture, "Oh, it's good in colour, but it just lacks
</span><em class="italics">that</em><span>, you know!" By Jove! I was in it up to the ears before I
knew it, and now my critiques are retailed to the
semi-elect as coming from one of the Cognoscenti. I have
learned the terminology of the craft so well that my
very instructors have forgotten my novitiate; but an
art exhibition is a horror to me, for I go bound by the
tenure of hypocrisy and dare not walk freely, forced to rattle my
chains as I limp through the forbidden pastures of delight--the
candy box pictures and chromos that my soul loves with that fierce
first love that never dies.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So I have learned to avoid the Pierian spring now, having escaped
the seductions of Euterpe by the merest chance. He is said to be a
fool who is caught twice by the same trick, and I write myself down
a worse-witted clown yet when I confess how far on the high-road to
folly I was before I jumped the fence of conventional parlance and
broke for the wide fields where lies my freedom.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I had been led astray by practicing the non-committal remark,
"Oh, what </span><em class="italics">is</em><span> that?" as soon as the piano keys cooled off from the
startling massage of the furious performer. I was bold. I even
dared to be the first to speak, and I threw ambiguous meanings into
that well-known exclamation, for I was assured it was always safe,
whether it followed a Moskowski mazurka hot from the blunt fingers
of a Kansas City poor relation, or a somnolent Chopinian prelude
hypnotized by the evening star. I learned that the statute of
Absorbed Attention had expired, and that the lifted eyebrow, the
semi-concealed shrug, the overt smile behind the performer's back,
and the </span><em class="italics">ex post facto</em><span> rescindment of all these in one mucilaginous
compliment, were now good taste. Bah! I sickened of it all soon
enough, for I had been piously brought up, and my Puritan blood
was anti-toxic to the corruptions of the musical microbe.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And so I have forgotten to speak of Grieg as a
"mere sentimentalist" and all the rest of the Pharisee's
Phrase-book, thank God! I can hear the "Mill in
the Forest" and check up its verisimilitudes, item by
item, even as I have dared to renew my youth with
Charles Dickens, and laugh, cry, and grow hot and cold with Scott's
marionettes.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Yet, as I said, my innocence is not altogether empty. There
is, indeed, no such thing in life as absolute darkness; one's eyes
revolt and hasten to fill the vacuum by floating in sparks,
dream-patterns, figures whimsical and figures grotesque, shifting, clad in
complimentary colors, to appease the indignant cups and rods of the
retina. And so my musical ignorance is alive with a fey intelligence
of its own. I have come at last to an original conception of what is
good and what is bad by its mere psychological effect, as illogical as
a woman's intuition, yet as absolute and empirical as the test of acid
and alkali by litmus.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It has come to this, that I know now I shall never hear good
music again. When I was young the phrase "classical music" was
still extant (I come of the middle classes, where one calls a spade a
spade), and that variety of sound, "the most expensive of noises,"
was as incomprehensible as was the training for its appreciation
arduous; so that beauty for its own sake was unknown, or lurked behind
the horizontal mountains of Truth that shut in the New England
landscape.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But as my knowledge and love of art grew, and I mingled with
those that spoke this foreign tongue of beauty, I had opportunity
of hearing music, the only music that was worth while to them, the
music that endures and lives, continually virile and creative.
Curiously enough, and unhappily for me, so long a stranger
to such influences, I found that some compositions
spelled me with their subtlety, tranced me into revery,
while others awakened active feelings of amusement,
surprise, or scientific curiosity as to their construction;
and so, ignorant of technique and composition, harmony, and all the
rules of the art, I have gone back to the woman in me, and trust to
her little ounce of instinct.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>When the vibrant chords, the sobbing pulsations and the
mystical nuances grow faint and die away as my dream mounts on the
wings of an invisible melody, leaving the sawing bows, the brazen
curly horns, the discs, cylinders, strings, keys, triangles, curves and
tubes, with which paraphernalia the magicians of the orchestra have
bewitched me, far, far, far below where I soar aloft, naked and alone
in the secret spaces of my soul,--I know (not then, but afterward)
that the talisman has been at work, and as the rhythm dies and I
drop, drop to the world again and turn to the trembling,
wide-eyed girl at my left, and am roused by the brutal
applause that surges around me,--I know that
this was music. But I have not
heard it. Alas! Shall I
never hear it?</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="a-music-box-recital"><span class="bold large">A Music-Box Recital</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Hid secretly in my heart, I long had a passion for
music-boxes. While I was innocent of the ways of the world,
and thought that Art, as some think that Manners, had
a ritual to which one must conform in order to be considered
a gentleman, I hid this low-born taste from my friends and
talked daintily of Brahms, his frozen music, of the architectural
sonata, and other things I did not understand. How musicians and
artists must have laughed at me when they saw my hands--square,
constructive palms, wilful thumbs and mechanical fingers! Music-box
hands! But though I had long ceased cutting stencils of other
people's thoughts and frescoing my own vanity therewith, I dared
not confess to John this wretchedly vulgar </span><em class="italics">penchant</em><span> for the music-box
of Commerce--the small, varnished, brass and cedar affair, which is
the only instrument I can play.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But at ten of the clock one night the yearning became so intense
in me that I burst the bonds of my discretion, and lo! at the first
word John fell heavily into my arms. He, too, cherished this
unhallowed joy in secret, and had long hidden this </span><em class="italics">tendresse</em><span> behind
a mask of propriety. We dried our eyes, and were into overcoats
and out on the street in a single presto measure, set to a swift
staccato march for the Bowery. We must have a music-box apiece
before we slept--we swore it in a great forte oath! Prestissimo!
but we were hungry for a good three-dollar package of discord! It
was none of these modern contrivances with perforated discs and
interchangeable tunes we were after; not the
penny-in-the-slot, beer saloon air-shaker nor the
authropomorphic Pianola; only the regulation old-fashioned
Swiss instrument would serve, the music-box of our
youth, the wonderful, complicated little engine with
a cylinder bristling with pins that picked forth harmonies from the
soul of a steel comb, its melody limpid with treble accompaniments
lithely sustained at the small end, where the teeth are small and
active, with a picture of children skating on the cover top, and
beneath, under glass--oh! rapture!--the whirring wheels all in
sight, tempting the small, inquisitive finger of youth.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>After an incredible amount of discussion as to the relative merits
of the repertoires, we came to a decision and fled home, to abandon
ourselves to the distractions of our tiny orchestras. The boxes were
so full of music! They have been trying to empty themselves ever
since, but the magic purse seems inexhaustible. One night, in my
idyllic youth, a German band played all night long under my window;
but now I could carry the divine gift of music in my overcoat pocket!
I was like that Persian monarch for whom was made the first pair of
shoes. "Your Majesty," said his vizier, "now at last for you, indeed,
is the whole world covered with leather, as thou hast demanded!" O
Allah! Now for me was the whole world patrolled with German
bands! They played "Say Au Revoir, but not Good-bye" under
my pillow; they gave me "Honey, my Honey" as I ate my breakfast.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Before the week was up we had learned every tune by heart,
down to the last grace-note in the accompaniment. We had learned,
too, the sequence of tunes, inevitable, unchanging as the laws of the
Medes of old. Never again shall I be able to hear "Sweet Marie"
played without a shock that it is not followed by the "Isabella
Waltz!" Never again shall I hear the end of
"Honey, my Honey" without a tremble of nervous
suspense till comes the little </span><em class="italics">click!</em><span> of the shooting
cylinder, the apprehensive pause, and then--hurrah! the
first gay notes of "Sweet Marie!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But we could not long endure the perfect simplicity of
the airs, and the old touch of supercivilization led us on to
attempt to vary and improve the performance of our songs. It
was John who discovered the virtue of a few pillows stuffed on
top of the machine, and he achieved immense </span><em class="italics">con expressione</em><span>
effects by waving the box wildly in the air. I contented myself
with changing the angle of the fan-wheel so as to make it play
</span><em class="italics">allegro</em><span>; then one got so very much music in such a very little
while--surely a pardonable gluttony! Had my box been larger
I might have heard seven complete operas in an hour, like the
old Duke in "Sylvie and Bruno!" Yet, after all, it was versatility
of quality, rather than mere quantity, that should be the greatest
victory, and we set out on experiments in </span><em class="italics">timbre</em><span>. At last we found,
John and I, that by inserting a little paper cylinder under the glass,
so as to press on the keys, we could give Sousa the grip, as one
might say, and he would cough and wheeze in a way to amply discredit
the statement that there is no such thing as humour in music.
A greater thickness of paper gives the effect of a </span><em class="italics">duo</em><span> with mandolin
and banjo, and this was by far the most successful of our variations.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I should end as I began, I know, by a bit of maudlin philosophical
moralysis. I might, for instance, trace the resemblances in the
musical world and say that for me the conductor waving his baton is
as one who winds the key to a very human music-box, in which each
tooth of the comb is a living, vibrant human being. Or I might broach
a flagon of morality, forbye, and show how each one of
us plays his little mental tunes in a set routine, wound
up by the Great Musician; what devils stick their
fingers into our works, and bid us play more fast or
slow, more loud, more low; what jests of Fate, who
inserts her cacophonous paper cylinder that we may wheeze through
misfortunate obbligatos of pain.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But no! My forelegs are stuck in the bog of realism, and
I shall not budge from the literal presentation, for my little
kingdom of delight suffered a revolution! It was John's fault, for
John had been affecting a musical countess who gave afternoon
talks on the "art of listening," in a studio--dry molecular analyses
of Kneisel Quartets and such like verbiage. So he came home late
one night, while a music-box was bowling away merrily upon the
couch with a one-pillow soft pedal. It was my music-box, too!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Bah!" he swore, "your box phrases so abominably. It is so
cold, so restrained, so colourless! Hear mine, now--isn't that
an excellent </span><em class="italics">pianissimo</em><span>? There's polished technique! There's </span><em class="italics">chiaro
scuro</em><span>! Oh, listen to that 'Cat Came Back!' My machine is an
artist; yours is a mere </span><em class="italics">virtuoso</em><span>. Mine is a Joachim, a d'Albert;
yours is a Musin, a de Kontski. Get onto the smooth, suave </span><em class="italics">legato</em><span>
of this wonderful box! Hear its virile octaves! Hark to those
scales, like strings of white-hot pearls dropping upon velvet!" He
was moaning and tossing as he snored these parodies. It was a
nightmare, both for him and for me. At four o'clock, in the
first pink grey of the morning, I could endure
it no longer. I arose haggardly and
threw the two music-boxes
into the fire!</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="a-plea-for-the-precious"><span class="bold large">A Plea for the Precious</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Now if a youth as mad-headed as I, without bookishness
or literary education of any sort, with neither much of
anything to say, nor much desire to say anything--if
such a charlatan would have his wares bought and his
words read, he must be antic beyond his contemporains (a shorter
word than the English equivalent, whereby I go forward one step in
brevity and back two in translation). He must pique curiosity and
tempt the reader on; he must pay a contango, which is, by the same
token, a premium paid for the privilege of deferring interest. He
must in short, be "precious," a quality essentially self-conscious.
This has been at times a popular pose in Letters, and when successful
it is a sufficiently amusing one, as poses go; but I name no
names for the sake of the others who fall between the stools of
purpose and pretence--who tie, as one might say, two one-legged
beggars together and think they have made a whole man.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>If I have lured you so far into the web of my vagary, pray come
into my parlour, too, and be hung for the whole sheep that you are,
that I may fleece you close with my sophistries before you go. I
have but one toy here to amuse you. I juggle idioms and balance
phrases upon my pen, and whether you laugh at me or with me, I
care not, </span><em class="italics">moi</em><span>. But as seriously as is possible (seriousness is not my
present pose, I assure you), I would I might wheedle some of your
dogged, clogged, rugged, ragged, fagged, foggy wits out of you, and
constrain you to accept my pinchbeck for true plate the while; for I
have a little sense in my alloy, after all, and you might
go further and fare the worse than by my chatter. If
I dared I would jump boldly into my thesis, without
apologies; but it so happens that it is one that should
be itself its own illustration. I should convince you
of its truth by its own garment of expression, instead of depending
upon my logical introductory presentation. But this I fear to try.
My pistols, I fear, are, as the Duchess of Malfi might say, loaded
with nothing but perfumes and kissing-comfits.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Now that you are well a-muddled, and like to turn to a saner
page, let me button-hole you with one clean statement while you
stand, gasping. Indeed I fear that a dozen have fled already from
my gibbering, and I speak to but one sullen survivor, determined to
collect his promised interest. We know, then, the joy of colour, taste,
sound and odour as mere sensual gratifications, undiluted with
significance. But, since I seldom read, I have never seen the apology
for the sensual pleasures of diction, pure and simple in its essence.
Swinburne, I hear, has his lilts and harmonies in poesy, and perhaps
that is the nearest like, except for the Purpose that drives his chariot;
but I am for that runaway mood that gallops gayly forth into
Nowhere, unguided and unrestrained. A twenty bookmen shall come
up to me, no doubt, with their index fingers set upon examples, but
I am happier in my ignorance, and I prefer to think it has not yet
been done--or, at least, not exactly as I mean. Indeed, you may
depend upon me to evade proof with some quibble.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Your didactic prose is a wain, pulled over the hard city street.
Fiction is the jaunting-car that paddles down the by-side lane.
Poetry wallops you along the bridle path with your mistress Muse
on a pillion, and, but very rarely, dares across country, over a low
hedge or two (but always after some fleeting hare of
thought); but I--I am for the reckless run over the
moor and downs--the riderless random enthusiasm of
nonsense! So out of my way, gentlemen of the red
coats, or I bowl you down! Mazeppa might do for
a figure, but his steed was hampered with the load; his runaway had
too savage an import, and it is my purpose to be only a little mad.
Pegasus is a forbidden metaphor nowadays. He is hackneyed by
the livery of vulgar stables. I prefer that Black Horse, vanned and
terrible, who flicked out the eyes of the Second Calender, as my
mount is like to serve me!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>In the Sonata is an exemplification of my theory. There, now,
is a vehicle that carries no passengers, save what one's fancy lades it
with--it charges and soars with no visible rein to guide it, except
when a thread of melody steers it into some little course of delight.
So there is a secret rhythm in the best prose that is more subtile than
the metres of verse, and which is to the essay what the expression of
the face is to the talker. One may, indeed, use that same word,
expression or gesture, instead of the common term, style. But a
common or house observation shows us that there is some pleasure
in the face whose lips are dumb, and I dare say there is joy for the
coxcomb and female fop in the unworn gown, as it hangs on its
lonely nail, or is draped on the lay figure of meaningless, meaningful
form. So it is to such hair-brains and cockatoos I appeal. Come
to my Masquerade and let us for a wild half-hour wear the spangles
and tights of palestric impropriety, hid by a visor that shall not
betray our thought. In this lesser pantomime one may be irrelevant,
inconsequent and immature, and sport the flower of thought that
has not yet fruited into purpose.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Can you find your way through this frivolity,
mixed metaphor and tricksy phrase, and see what a
wanton a paragraph may become when one sends it
forth, free from the conventional moralities of licenced
Literature? I have been to many such debauch, and
have got so drunk on adjectives that I thought all my thoughts
double. In this Harlequinade, too, there are more games than my
promised Sonata. I will mock you the "Mill in the Forest," or any
other descriptive piece, with coloured words, parodying your orchestra
with graphic nonsense. I will paint the charms of the dance in
seductive syllables; or no! better--the long forthright swing of the
skater, this way, that way, fast and faster, the Ice King's master, the
nibble of the cold, the brush of the rasping breeze, the little rascally
hubbies where the wind has pimpled the surface, and the dark,
blue-black slippery glare beyond, where--damn it! I shock you with a
raucous expletive, and you plunk into a dash of ice-cold remonstrance
up to your ears, and flounder, cold and dripping, tooth-loose,
and grey with fright!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So, at the expense of good taste and to the grief of the judicious,
I force my point upon you. </span><em class="italics">En garde, messieurs</em><span>, and answer
me! I find few enough who can play the game with me or for me.
The age of Chivalry is gone, in horsemanship as well as in feats of
arms and sword-play. Who knows the demi-volt, the caracole, the
curvet, the capriole or the rest of the Seven Movements? Who is
elegant in the High Manege or Raised Airs? Who prances for
the sheer delight of gallant rhetoric, on Litotes, Asteism or
Onomatopoeia? Fain would I be bedevilled, but the Magi are passed away.
I must fall back on Dr. Johnson's pious flim-flam, but the humours
of his verbiage are in me, not in him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Yet the New Century Carnival is proclaimed and,
over the water, there are, I hear, a few who are to
revel with King Rex in the Empire of Unreason. On
this side the nearest we have got to it is a little
machine-made nonsense, ground out for the supposititious
amusement of babes. But what I mean is neither second childhood,
nor bombast, nor buffoonery, nor silliness, nor even insanity--though
that is nearest the mark--but a tipsy Hell-raising with this
wine of our fine old English speech. It has been too long corked
up and cobwebbed by tradition, sanctified to the Elect, and discreetly
dispensed at decorous dinner tables by respectable authors, and
ladies-with-three-names who also write. It has been too long sipped
and tasted mincingly out of the cut-glass goblets of the literary table.
Gentlemen-inebriates all, I wave you the red flag! A torch
this way! What ho! Roysterers! Up younglings, quodlings,
dabchicks, devil-may-cares and mad-mannered blades! To the devil
with the tip-staves and tithing-men, constables, beadles, vergers,
deputy sheriffs and long-lipped parsons! A raid on the wine-cellar
to break flagons of good English, and drink, drink, drink, till your
heads spin! There is still joy and intoxication in the jolly old
bottles that Shakespeare and his giddy-phrased
Buccaneering crew of poets filled! "By Gad--slid!
I scorn it, to be a consort
for every humdrum, hang
them, scroyles!"</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="sub-rosa"><span class="bold large">Sub Rosa</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Perhaps I am as discreet, honourable and loyal as the ordinary
man, but I confess that at times I have a frantic desire to
escape to the moon and tell all I know, or to unburden
myself of the weight of dynamic confidences, pouring my
revelations into the ears of some responsive idiot. In the old days
a corpse was fastened to the felon's back in punishment of certain
crimes, and to me a secret seems almost as deadly a load. The
temptation to vivify the tale and make it walk abroad on its own
legs is hard to deny.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There are secrets so dangerous that to possess them is foolhardy.
It is like storing dynamite in one's drawing-room; an explosion is
always imminent, and publication would mean disaster. I have
known secrets myself, so outrageous, so bulging with scandal, that,
had I not promptly forgotten them, they would have undone society
twenty times over! There is a titilating pleasure in the keeping of
such terrific truths and it increases one's inward pride to think that
one knows of another what, if told, would change the aspect of a life.
The temptation to tell is like being in church and suddenly seized
with an almost irresistible impulse to shriek aloud, or like standing
at the verge of a cliff and being impelled to throw one's self over. To
give way to the perfidious thought means moral death, and when one
falls, one brings others down as well.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Many of us, though we conceit ourselves to be worthy of trust,
are, as regards our secrets, in a state of unstable equilibrium. Women,
seeing and feeling things more personally and subjectively
than men, are especially hazardously poised. So
long as the friendship with the confidant is preserved, the
secret is safe, but let estrangement come, and suddenly
the balance becomes top-heavy; one's morality falls
and the secret escapes in the crash of anger. I have known women
who felt themselves quite free to tell secrets when the proper owner
of them proved guilty of unfaithfulness. The difference in
viewpoint of the sexes seems to be this: men have a definite code of
honour, certain well-recognized laws of conduct acknowledged even
by those who do not always obey them. "The brand of the dog is
upon him by whom is a secret revealed." If a woman is honourable
(in the man's sense of the term), it is a test of her individual
character, and not of conformity to any feminine ethical system.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Most men, for instance, and some women (especially when influenced
by love or great friendship), will keep a confidence not only
passively, but actively. As Kipling's </span><em class="italics">Hafiz</em><span> teaches:--</span></p>
<blockquote>
<div>
<div class="line-block outermost">
<div class="line"><span>"If there be trouble to Herward, and a lie of the blackest can clear,</span></div>
<div class="line"><span>Lie, while thy lips can move, or a man is alive to hear!"</span></div>
</div></div>
</blockquote>
<p class="pfirst"><span>It seems right, too, that in lesser cases one is justified in lying to
protect one's own secret, as in disavowing the authorship of an
anonymous book; for one surely need not be at the mercy of every
questioner. The true confidant is not a mere negative receptacle for
your story, but a positive ally.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>On the other hand, there are those who hold that a singular and
prime friendship dissolves all other obligations whatsoever, and that
secrets betrayed are the greatest sacrifices possible upon the altar of
love. Montaigne says, "The secret I have sworn not to reveal to any
other I may, without perjury, communicate to him who is not
another, but myself." There are few friendships
nowadays so close as his with Estienne de la Boëtie (who,
himself, "would not so much as lie in jest"); theirs
was one of the great friendships of history; but there
is much casuistry used by those who would manifest
their importance in knowing mysterious things. They obey the
letter of the law and tell without really telling, letting the truth leak
out in wise hints and suggestions, or they tell part of a tale and
hoodwink themselves into thinking that they have violated no confidence.
Yet nothing is so dangerous as half a truth. It is like pulling one
end of a bow-knot. Sooner or later it is inevitable that the hearer
will come across the other side, and the cat will be out of the bag.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But some secrets have so great a fiction interest, or such sensational
psychology that one is quite unable to refrain from telling the
tale, without names, or localities, perhaps, merely for the story's sake.
This is, perhaps, permissible when one really tells for the study of
human nature rather than as gossip. It is dangerous always, but a
clever person can so distort certain details that the true characters can
never be traced. For myself, I would never demand absolute confidence,
for I would never tell anything to anybody whose discretion I
could not absolutely trust, and a friend can as often aid one by
telling at the proper time as by keeping silent.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Some secrets are told only for the purpose of being repeated.
What one cannot tell one's self one must get others to tell for one,
and this trick is the theme of many a farce. Women understand
this perfectly; it is their code, and men laugh at it, feeling themselves
superior. The three quickest ways of communication, cynics say, are
telephone, telegraph, and tell-a-woman. Women are notoriously
fond of secrets; it is their only chance for romance. No man who
desires to obtain a woman's affection should
forget this. Not that it is necessary to initiate her into
your affairs, but you will, as soon as possible, see that
something happens which she may consider it wise
not to tell. Cement her interest with some lively
secret that ties you to her irrevocably, so that she cannot come across
your photograph or your letter without a knowing smile.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There are those, too, who hold that their own idea of a secret's
importance is the excuse for divulgence or defense, but a man of
honour will keep the secret of a child as closely as that of an intimate
friend. The ass who surrounds his every narration with mystery and
takes needless precautions, has his rights, and though you may hear
the tale at the next corner you are still bound to silence. Some
respect their own secrets but not those of others and have no
compunctions against wheedling out a confidence from a weak acquaintance,
thereby becoming accessory to the fact of his faithlessness. A secret
discovered should be held as sacred as a secret confided.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The desire to tell secrets is one of the most contagious of
diseases, and few of us are immune. Some vigorous moral constitutions
never succumb, but once an epidemic begins, it is hard work
stopping it, and a secret on the rampage is well nigh irresistible.
Tell your secret, then, broadcast, and let it have its way until it dies
out, or else lock it in your own heart. But above all confide it not
to her who asserts that she never has the slightest desire to
tell, for there, like a seed sown in fertile ground, it
will germinate and flower long after you have
forgotten it, aye, and bring forth
fruit you never planted.</span></p>
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<p class="center pfirst"><span>* * * * * * * *</span></p>
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<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">Books by Gelett Burgess</span></p>
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<p class="pfirst"><span>VIVETTE: or, The Memoirs of the Romance Association. With a
Map of Millamours, by the Author. 152 pp., 8vo. Small, Maynard
& Co., Boston. $1.25.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>A GAGE OF YOUTH: Poems, chiefly from the "Lark," Set Forms,
Lyrics and Ballads. 58 pp., small 8vo. Small, Maynard & Co.,
Boston. $1.00.</span></p>
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<p class="pfirst"><span>THE LIVELY CITY O' LIGG: A Cycle of Modern Fairy Tales
for City Children. With 53 illustrations (8 in colour) by the Author,
210 pp., small 4to. Frederick A. Stokes Co., New York. $1.50.</span></p>
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<p class="pfirst"><span>GOOPS, AND HOW TO BE THEM: A Manual of Manners for
Polite Infants, in Rhyme. With 90 illustrations by the Author. 88
pp., small 4to. Frederick A. Stokes Co., New York. 4th edition.
$1.50.</span></p>
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<p class="pfirst"><span>THE BURGESS NONSENSE BOOK: Being a Complete Collection
of the Humorous Masterpieces of Gelett Burgess, Esq. With 196
illustrations by the Author. 239 pp., small 4to, heavy paper.
Frederick A. Stokes Co., New York. $2.15.</span></p>
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<p class="pfirst"><span>THE ROMANCE OF THE COMMONPLACE: A Collection or
Essays upon the Romantic View of Life. With decorations by the
Author. 152 pp., small 4to. Elder & Shepard, San Francisco. $1.50.</span></p>
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