<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<div id="title_page"><SPAN class="pagenum disguise" id="page1" title="1"> </SPAN>
<h1>THE ROUGH ROAD</h1>
<p id="author"><em>by</em><br/>
WILLIAM J. LOCKE</p>
<p id="edition">First Edition <span style="padding:0em 2em;">. . .</span> September 1918</p>
<p id="publisher">JOHN LANE <br/>
THE BODLEY HEAD LTD</p>
</div>
<div id="dedication_page"><SPAN class="pagenum disguise" id="page2" title="2"> </SPAN>
<p id="dedicatee">TO <br/>
SHEILA</p>
<p>THIS LITTLE TALE OF <br/>
THE GREAT WAR <br/>
AS A MEMORY FOR AFTER YEARS</p>
</div>
<p id="internal_title"><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page3" title="3"> </SPAN>THE ROUGH ROAD</p>
<div class="chapter" id="chapter_I">
<h2 class="chapter_title">CHAPTER I</h2>
<p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">This</span> is the story of Doggie Trevor. It tells of
his doings and of a girl in England and a girl
in France. Chiefly it is concerned with the influences
that enabled him to win through the war. Doggie
Trevor did not get the Victoria Cross. He got no
cross or distinction whatever. He did not even attain
the sorrowful glory of a little white cross above his
grave on the Western Front. Doggie was no hero of
romance, ancient or modern. But he went through
with it and is alive to tell the tale.</p>
<p>The brutal of his acquaintance gave him the name
of “Doggie” years before the war was ever thought
of, because he had been brought up from babyhood
like a toy Pom. The almost freak offspring of elderly
parents, he had the rough world against him from
birth. His father died before he had cut a tooth.
His mother was old enough to be his grandmother.
She had the intense maternal instinct and the brain,
such as it is, of an earwig. She wrapped Doggie—his
real name was James Marmaduke—in cotton-wool,
and kept him so until he was almost a grown
man. Doggie had never a chance. She brought him
up like a toy Pom until he was twenty-one—and then
she died. Doggie being comfortably off, continued
the maternal tradition and kept on bringing himself
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page4" title="4"> </SPAN>up like a toy Pom. He did not know what else to
do. Then, when he was five-and-twenty, he found
himself at the edge of the world gazing in timorous
starkness down into the abyss of the Great War.
Something kicked him over the brink and sent him
sprawling into the thick of it.</p>
<hr class="thoughtbreak" />
<p class="post_thoughtbreak">That the world knows little of its greatest men
is a commonplace among silly aphorisms. With far
more justice it may be stated that of its least men the
world knows nothing and cares less. Yet the Doggies
of the War, who on the cry of “Havoc!” have been
let loose, much to their own and everybody else’s
stupefaction, deserve the passing tribute sometimes,
poor fellows, of a sigh, sometimes of a smile, often
of a cheer. Very few of them—very few, at any
rate, of the English Doggies—have tucked their little
tails between their legs and run away. Once a brawny
humorist wrote to Doggie Trevor “<em lang="la" xml:lang="la">Sursum cauda.</em>”
Doggie happened to be at the time in a water-logged
front trench in Flanders and the writer basking in the
mild sunshine of Simla with his Territorial regiment.
Doggie, bidden by the Hedonist of circumstance to
up with his tail, felt like a scorpion.</p>
<p>Such feelings, however, will be more adequately
dealt with hereafter. For the moment, it is only
essential to obtain a general view of the type to which
Trevor belonged.</p>
<hr class="thoughtbreak" />
<p class="post_thoughtbreak">If there is one spot in England where the present
is the past, where the future is still more of the past,
where the past wraps you and enfolds you in the
dreamy mist of Gothic beauty, where the lazy meadows
sloping riverward deny the passage of the centuries,
where the very clouds are secular, it is the cathedral
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page5" title="5"> </SPAN>town of Durdlebury. No factory chimneys defile with
their smoke its calm air, or defy its august and heaven-searching
spires. No rabble of factory hands shocks
its few and sedate streets. Divine Providence, according
to the devout, and the crass stupidity of the local
authorities seventy years ago, according to progressive
minds, turned the main line of railway twenty miles
from the sacred spot. So that to this year of grace it
is the very devil of a business to find out, from Bradshaw,
how to get to Durdlebury, and, having found,
to get there. As for getting away, God help you!
But whoever wanted to get away from Durdlebury,
except the Bishop? In pre-motor days he used to
grumble tremendously and threaten the House of
Lords with Railway Bills and try to blackmail the
Government with dark hints of resignation, and so he
lived and threatened and made his wearisome diocesan
round of visits and died. But now he has his episcopal
motor-car, which has deprived him of his grievances.</p>
<p>In the Close of Durdlebury, greenswarded, silent,
sentinelled by immemorial elms that guard the dignified
Gothic dwellings of the cathedral dignitaries, was
James Marmaduke Trevor born. His father, a man
of private fortune, was Canon of Durdlebury. For
many years he lived in the most commodious canonical
house in the Close with his sisters Sophia and Sarah.
In the course of time a new Dean, Dr. Conover,
was appointed to Durdlebury, and, restless innovator
that he was, underpinned the North Transept and
split up Canon Trevor’s home by marrying Sophia.
Then Sarah, bitten by the madness, committed abrupt
matrimony with the Rev. Vernon Manningtree, Rector
of Durdlebury. Canon Trevor, many years older
than his sisters, remained for some months in bewildered
loneliness, until one day he found himself standing
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page6" title="6"> </SPAN>in front of the cathedral altar with Miss Mathilda
Jessup, while the Bishop pronounced over them words
diabolically strange yet ecclesiastically familiar. Miss
Jessup, thus transformed into Mrs. Trevor, was a
mature and comfortable maiden lady of ample means,
the only and orphan daughter of a late Bishop of Durdlebury.
Never had there been such a marrying and
giving in marriage in the cathedral circle. Children
were born in Decanal, Rectorial and Canonical homes.
First a son to the Manningtrees, whom they named
Oliver. Then a daughter to the Conovers. Then
a son, named James Marmaduke, after the late Bishop
Jessup, was born to the Trevors. The profane say
that Canon Trevor, a profound patristic theologian
and an enthusiastic palæontologist, couldn’t make head
or tail of it all, and, unable to decide whether James
Marmaduke should be attributed to Tertullian or the
Neolithic period, expired in an agony of dubiety. At
any rate, the poor man died. The widow, of necessity,
moved from the Close, in order to make way for the
new Canon, and betook herself with her babe to
Denby Hall, the comfortable house on the outskirts of
the town in which she had dwelt before her marriage.</p>
<p>The saturated essence of Durdlebury ran in Marmaduke’s
blood: an honourable essence, a proud essence;
an essence of all that is statically beautiful and dignified
in English life; but an essence which, without
admixture of wilder and more fluid elements, is apt
to run thick and clog the arteries. Marmaduke was
coddled from his birth. The Dean, then a breezy,
energetic man, protested. Sarah Manningtree protested.
But when the Dean’s eldest born died of
diphtheria, Mrs. Trevor, in her heart, set down the
death as a judgment on Sophia for criminal carelessness;
and when young Oliver Manningtree grew up
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page7" title="7"> </SPAN>to be an intolerable young Turk and savage, she looked
on Marmaduke and, thanking heaven that he was
not as other boys were, enfolded him more than ever
beneath her motherly wing. When Oliver went to
school in the town and tore his clothes, and rolled in
mud and punched other boys’ heads, Marmaduke
remained at home under the educational charge of a
governess. Oliver, lean and lanky and swift-eyed,
swaggered through the streets unattended from the
first day they sent him to a neighbouring kindergarten.
As the months and years of his childish life
passed, he grew more and more independent and vagabond.
He swore blood brotherhood with a butcher-boy
and, unknown to his pious parents, became the
leader of a ferocious gang of pirates. Marmaduke,
on the other hand, was never allowed to cross the
road without feminine escort. Oliver had the profoundest
contempt for Marmaduke. Being two years
older, he kicked him whenever he had a chance.
Marmaduke loathed him. Marmaduke shrank into
Miss Gunter, the governess’s, skirts whenever he saw
him. Mrs. Trevor therefore regarded Oliver as the
youthful incarnation of Beelzebub, and quarrelled
bitterly with her sister-in-law.</p>
<p>One day, Oliver, with three or four of his piratical
friends, met Marmaduke and Miss Gunter and a little
toy terrier in the High Street. The toy terrier was
attached by a lead to Miss Gunter on the one side,
Marmaduke by a hand on the other. Oliver straddled
rudely across the path.</p>
<p>“Hallo! Look at thet two little doggies!” he
cried. He snapped his fingers at the terrier. “Come
along, Tiny!” The terrier yapped. Oliver grinned
and turned to Marmaduke. “Come along, Fido,
dear little doggie.”</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page8" title="8"> </SPAN>“You’re a nasty, rude, horrid boy, and I shall tell
your mother,” declared Miss Gunter indignantly.</p>
<p>But Oliver and his pirates laughed with the truculence
befitting their vocation, and bowing with ironical
politeness, let their victim depart to the parody of a
popular song: “Good-bye, Doggie, we shall miss
you.”</p>
<p>From that day onwards Marmaduke was known
as “Doggie” throughout all Durdlebury, save to his
mother and Miss Gunter. The Dean himself grew
to think of him as “Doggie.” People to this day
call him Doggie, without any notion of the origin of
the name.</p>
<p>To preserve him from persecution, Mrs. Trevor
jealously guarded him from association with other boys.
He neither learned nor played any boyish games. In
defiance of the doctor, whom she regarded as a member
of the brutal anti-Marmaduke League, Mrs. Trevor
proclaimed Marmaduke’s delicacy of constitution. He
must not go out into the rain, lest he should get damp,
nor into the hot sunshine, lest he should perspire.
She kept him like a precious plant in a carefully warmed
conservatory. Doggie, used to it from birth, looked
on it as his natural environment. Under feminine
guidance and tuition he embroidered and painted
screens and played the piano and the mandolin, and
read Miss Charlotte Yonge and learned history from
the late Mrs. Markham. Without doubt his life was
a happy one. All that he asked for was sequestration
from Oliver and his associates.</p>
<p>Now and then the cousins were forced to meet—at
occasional children’s parties, for instance. A little
daughter, Peggy, had been born in the Deanery, replacing
the lost firstborn, and festivals—to which came
the extreme youth of Durdlebury—were given in her
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page9" title="9"> </SPAN>honour. She liked Marmaduke, who was five years
her senior, because he was gentle and clean and wore
such beautiful clothes and brushed his hair so nicely;
whereas she detested Oliver, who, even at an afternoon
party, looked as if he had just come out of a
rabbit-hole. Besides, Marmaduke danced beautifully;
Oliver couldn’t and wouldn’t, disdaining such effeminate
sports. His great joy was to put out a sly leg
and send Doggie and his partner sprawling. Once the
Dean caught him at it, and called him a horrid little
beast, and threatened him with neck and crop expulsion
if he ever did it again. Doggie, who had picked
himself up and listened to the rebuke, said:</p>
<p>“I’m very glad to hear you talk to him like that,
Uncle. I think his behaviour is perfectly detestable.”</p>
<p>The Dean’s lips twitched and he turned away
abruptly. Oliver glared at Doggie.</p>
<p>“Oh, my holy aunt!” he whispered hoarsely.
“Just you wait till I get you alone!”</p>
<p>Oliver got him alone, an hour later, in a passage,
having lain in ambush for him, and after a few busy
moments, contemplated a bruised and bleeding Doggie
blubbering in a corner.</p>
<p>“Do you think my behaviour is detestable now?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” whimpered Doggie.</p>
<p>“I’ve a good mind to go on licking you until you
say ‘no,’” said Oliver.</p>
<p>“You’re a great big bully,” said Doggie.</p>
<p>Oliver reflected. He did not like to be called a
bully. “Look here,” said he, “I’ll stick my right
arm down inside the back of my trousers and fight
you with my left.”</p>
<p>“I don’t want to fight. I can’t fight,” cried
Doggie.</p>
<p>Oliver put his hands in his pockets.</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page10" title="10"> </SPAN>“Will you come and play Kiss-in-the-Ring, then?”
he asked sarcastically.</p>
<p>“No,” replied Doggie.</p>
<p>“Well, don’t say I haven’t made you generous
offers,” said Oliver, and stalked away.</p>
<p>It was all very well for the Rev. Vernon Manningtree,
when discussing this incident with the Dean,
to dismiss Doggie with a contemptuous shrug and
call him a little worm without any spirit. The unfortunate
Doggie remained a human soul with a human
destiny before him. As to his lack of spirit——</p>
<p>“Where,” said the Dean, a man of wider sympathies,
“do you suppose he could get any from? Look at
his parentage. Look at his upbringing by that idiot
woman.”</p>
<p>“If he belonged to me, I’d drown him,” said the
Rector.</p>
<p>“If I had my way with Oliver,” said the Dean,
“I’d skin him alive.”</p>
<p>“I’m afraid he’s a young devil,” said the Rector,
not without paternal pride. “But he has the makings
of a man.”</p>
<p>“So has Marmaduke,” replied the Dean.</p>
<p>“Bosh!” said Mr. Manningtree.</p>
<hr class="thoughtbreak" />
<p class="post_thoughtbreak">When Oliver went to Rugby, happier days than
ever dawned for Marmaduke. There were only the
holidays to fear. But as time went on, the haughty
contempt of Oliver, the public-school boy, for the
home-bred Doggie, forbade him to notice the little
creature’s existence; so that even the holidays lost
their gloomy menace and became like the normal
halcyontide. Meanwhile Doggie grew up. When
he reached the age of fourteen, the Dean, by strenuous
endeavour, rescued him from the unavailing tuition
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page11" title="11"> </SPAN>of Miss Gunter. But school for Marmaduke Mrs.
Trevor would not hear of. It was brutal of Edward—the
Dean—to suggest such a thing. Marmaduke—so
sensitive and delicate—school would kill him.
It would undo all the results of her unceasing care.
It would make him coarse and vulgar, like other horrid
boys. She would sooner see him dead at her feet
than at a public school. It was true that he ought
to have the education of a gentleman. She did not
need Edward to point out her duty. She would
engage a private tutor.</p>
<p>“All right. I’ll get you one,” said the Dean.</p>
<p>The Master of his old college at Cambridge sent
him an excellent youth, who had just taken his degree—a
second class in the Classical Tripos—an all-round
athlete and a gentleman. The first thing he did
was to take Marmaduke on the lazy river that flowed
through the Durdlebury meadows, thereby endangering
his life, woefully blistering his hands, and making
him ache all over his poor little body. After a quarter
of an hour’s interview with Mrs. Trevor, the indignant
young man threw up his post and departed.</p>
<p>Mrs. Trevor determined to select a tutor herself.
A scholastic agency sent her a dozen candidates. She
went to London and interviewed them all. A woman,
even of the most limited intelligence, invariably knows
what she wants, and invariably gets it. Mrs. Trevor
got Phineas McPhail, M.A. Glasgow, B.A. Cambridge
(Third Class Mathematical Greats), reading for Holy
Orders.</p>
<p>“I was training for the ministry in the Free Kirk
of Scotland,” said he, “when I gradually became aware
of the error of my ways, and saw that there could only
be salvation in the episcopal form of Church government.
As the daughter of a bishop, Mrs. Trevor,
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page12" title="12"> </SPAN>you will appreciate my conscientious position. An
open scholarship and the remainder of my little patrimony
enabled me to get my Oxford degree. You
would have no objection to my continuing my theological
studies while I undertake the education of
your son?”</p>
<p>Phineas McPhail pleased Mrs. Trevor. He had
what she called a rugged, honest Scotch face, with a
very big nose in the middle of it, and little grey eyes
overhung by brown and shaggy eyebrows. He spoke
with the mere captivating suggestion of an accent.
The son of decayed, proud, and now extinct gentlefolk,
he presented personal testimonials of an unexceptionable
quality.</p>
<p>Phineas McPhail took to Doggie and Durdlebury
as a duck to water. He read for Holy Orders for
seven years. When the question of his ordination
arose, he would declare impressively that his sacred
duty was the making of Marmaduke into a scholar
and a Christian. That duty accomplished, he would
begin to think of himself. Mrs. Trevor accounted
him the most devoted and selfless friend that woman
ever had. He saw eye to eye with her in every detail
of Marmaduke’s upbringing. He certainly taught the
boy, who was naturally intelligent, a great deal, and
repaired the terrible gaps in Miss Gunter’s system of
education. McPhail had started life with many eager
curiosities, under the impulse of which he had amassed
considerable knowledge of a superficial kind which,
lolling in an arm-chair, with a pipe in his mouth,
he found easy to impart. To the credit side of Mrs.
Trevor’s queer account it may be put that she did not
object to smoking. The late Canon smoked incessantly.
Perhaps the odour of tobacco was the only
keen memory of her honeymoon and brief married life.</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page13" title="13"> </SPAN>During his seven years of soft living, Phineas McPhail
scientifically developed an original taste for whisky.
He seethed himself in it as the ancients seethed a kid
in its mother’s milk. He had the art to do himself
to perfection. Mrs. Trevor beheld in him the mellowest
and blandest of men. Never had she the slightest
suspicion of evil courses. To such a pitch of cunning
in the observance of the proprieties had he arrived,
that the very servants knew not of his doings. It
was only later—after Mrs. Trevor’s death—when a
surveyor was called in by Marmaduke to put the old
house in order, that a disused well at the back of the
house was found to be half filled with hundreds of
whisky bottles secretly thrown in by Phineas McPhail.</p>
<p>The Dean and Mr. Manningtree, although ignorant
of McPhail’s habits, agreed in calling him a lazy
hound and a parasite on their fond sister-in-law. And
they were right. But Mrs. Trevor turned a deaf
ear to their slanders. They were unworthy to be
called Christian men, let alone ministers of the Gospel.
Were it not for the sacred associations of her father
and her husband, she would never enter the cathedral
again. Mr. McPhail was exactly the kind of tutor
that Marmaduke needed. Mr. McPhail did not
encourage him to play rough games, or take long
walks, or row on the river, because he appreciated his
constitutional delicacy. He was the only man in the
world during her unhappy widowhood who understood
Marmaduke. He was a treasure beyond price.</p>
<p>When Doggie was sixteen, fate, fortune, chance, or
whatever you like to call it, did him a good turn. It
made his mother ill, and sent him away with her to
foreign health resorts. Doggie and McPhail travelled
luxuriously, lived in luxurious hotels and visited in
luxurious ease various picture galleries and monuments
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page14" title="14"> </SPAN>of historic or æsthetic interest. The boy, artistically
inclined and guided by the idle yet well-informed
Phineas, profited greatly. Phineas sought profit to
them both in other ways.</p>
<p>“Mrs. Trevor,” said he, “don’t you think it a
sinful shame for Marmaduke to waste his time over
Latin and mathematics, and such things as he can
learn at home, instead of taking advantage of his
residence in a foreign country to perfect himself in
the idiomatic and conversational use of the language?”</p>
<p>Mrs. Trevor, as usual, agreed. So thenceforward,
whenever they were abroad, which was for three or
four months of each year, Phineas revelled in sheer
idleness, nicotine, and the skilful consumption of
alcohol, while highly paid professors taught Marmaduke—and,
incidentally, himself—French and Italian.</p>
<p>Of the world, however, and of the facts, grim or
seductive, of life, Doggie learned little. Whether by
force of some streak of honesty, whether through
sheer laziness, whether through canny self-interest,
Phineas McPhail conspired with Mrs. Trevor to keep
Doggie in darkest ignorance. His reading was selected
like that of a young girl in a convent: he was taken
only to the most innocent of plays: foreign theatres,
casinos, and such-like wells of delectable depravity,
existed almost beyond his ken. Until he was twenty
it never occurred to him to sit up after his mother had
gone to bed. Of strange goddesses he knew nothing.
His mother saw to that. He had a mild affection
for his cousin Peggy, which his mother encouraged.
She allowed him to smoke cigarettes, drink fine claret,
the remains of the cellar of her father, the bishop, a
connoisseur, and <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">crème de menthe</em>. And, until she
died, that was all poor Doggie knew of the lustiness
of life.</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page15" title="15"> </SPAN>Mrs. Trevor died, and Doggie, as soon as he had
recovered from the intensity of his grief, looked out
upon a lonely world. Phineas, like Mrs. Micawber,
swore he would never desert him. In the perils of
Polar exploration or the comforts of Denby Hall, he
would find Phineas McPhail ever by his side. The
first half-dozen or so of these declarations consoled
Doggie tremendously. He dreaded the Church
swallowing up his only protector and leaving him
defenceless. Conscientiously, however, he said:</p>
<p>“I don’t want your affection for me to stand in
your way, sir.”</p>
<p>“‘Sir’?” cried Phineas, “is it not practicable for
us to do away with the old relations of master and pupil,
and become as brothers? You are now a man, and
independent. Let us be Pylades and Orestes. Let
us share and share alike. Let us be Marmaduke and
Phineas.”</p>
<p>Doggie was touched by such devotion. “But your
ambitions to take Holy Orders, which you have sacrificed
for my sake?”</p>
<p>“I think it may be argued,” said Phineas, “that
the really beautiful life is delight in continued sacrifice.
Besides, my dear boy, I am not quite so sure
as I was when I was young, that by confining
oneself within the narrow limits of a sacerdotal
profession, one can retain all one’s wider sympathies
both with human infirmity and the gladder things of
existence.”</p>
<p>“You’re a true friend, Phineas,” said Doggie.</p>
<p>“I am,” replied Phineas.</p>
<p>It was just after this that Doggie wrote him a
cheque for a thousand pounds on account of a vaguely
indicated year’s salary.</p>
<p>If Phineas had maintained the wily caution which
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page16" title="16"> </SPAN>he had exercised for the past seven years, all might
have been well. But there came a time when unneedfully
he declared once more that he would never
desert Marmaduke, and declaring it, hiccoughed so
horribly and stared so glassily, that Doggie feared he
might be ill. He had just lurched into Doggie’s own
peacock-blue and ivory sitting-room when he was
mournfully playing the piano.</p>
<p>“You’re unwell, Phineas. Let me get you something.”</p>
<p>“You’re right, laddie,” Phineas agreed, his legs
giving way alarmingly, so that he collapsed on a
brocade-covered couch. “It’s a touch of the sun,
which I would give you to understand,” he continued
with a self-preservatory flash, for it was an overcast
day in June, “is often magnified in power when it
is behind a cloud. A wee drop of whisky is what I
require for a complete recovery.”</p>
<p>Doggie ran into the dining-room and returned with
a decanter of whisky, glass and siphon—an adjunct
to the sideboard since Mrs. Trevor’s death. Phineas
filled half the tumbler with spirit, tossed it off, smiled
fantastically, tried to rise, and rolled upon the carpet.
Doggie, frightened, rang the bell. Peddle, the old
butler, appeared.</p>
<p>“Mr. McPhail is ill. I can’t think what can be
the matter with him.”</p>
<p>Peddle looked at the happy Phineas with the eyes
of experience.</p>
<p>“If you will allow me to say so, sir,” said he, “the
gentleman is dead drunk.”</p>
<p>And that was the beginning of the end of Phineas.
He lost grip of himself. He became the scarlet scandal
of Durdlebury and the terror of Doggie’s life. The
Dean came to the rescue of a grateful nephew. A
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page17" title="17"> </SPAN>swift attack of delirium tremens crowned and ended
Phineas McPhail’s Durdlebury career.</p>
<p>“My boy,” said the Dean on the day of Phineas’s
expulsion, “I don’t want to rub it in unduly, but I’ve
warned your poor mother for years, and you for months,
against this bone-idle, worthless fellow. Neither of
you would listen to me. But you see that I was right.
Perhaps now you may be more inclined to take my
advice.”</p>
<p>“Yes, Uncle,” replied Doggie submissively.</p>
<p>The Dean, a comfortable florid man in the early
sixties, took up his parable and expounded it for three-quarters
of an hour. If ever young man heard that
which was earnestly meant for his welfare, Doggie
heard it from his Very Reverend Uncle’s lips.</p>
<p>“And now, my dear boy,” said the Dean by way
of peroration, “you cannot but understand that it is
your bounden duty to apply yourself to some serious
purpose in life.”</p>
<p>“I do,” said Doggie. “I’ve been thinking over
it for a long time. I’m going to gather material for
a history of wall-papers.”</p>
</div>
<div class="chapter" id="chapter_II"><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page18" title="18"> </SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />