<h2>THE INNOCENCE OF REGINALD</h2>
<p>Reginald slid a carnation of the newest shade into the
buttonhole of his latest lounge coat, and surveyed the result
with approval. “I am just in the mood,” he
observed, “to have my portrait painted by someone with an
unmistakable future. So comforting to go down to posterity
as ‘Youth with a Pink Carnation’ in
catalogue—company with ‘Child with Bunch of
Primroses,’ and all that crowd.”</p>
<p>“Youth,” said the Other, “should suggest
innocence.”</p>
<p>“But never act on the suggestion. I don’t
believe the two ever really go together. People talk
vaguely about the innocence of a little child, but they take
mighty good care not to let it out of their sight for twenty
minutes. The watched pot never boils over. I knew a
boy once who really was innocent; his parents were in Society,
but they never gave him a moment’s anxiety from his
infancy. He believed in company prospectuses, and in the
purity of elections, and in women marrying for love, and even in
a system for winning at roulette. He never quite lost his
faith in it, but he dropped more money than his employers could
afford to lose. When last I heard of him, he was believing
in his innocence; the jury weren’t. All the same, I
really am innocent just now of something everyone accuses me of
having done, and so far as I can see, their accusations will
remain unfounded.”</p>
<p>“Rather an unexpected attitude for you.”</p>
<p>“I love people who do unexpected things.
Didn’t you always adore the man who slew a lion in a pit on
a snowy day? But about this unfortunate innocence.
Well, quite long ago, when I’d been quarrelling with more
people than usual, you among the number—it must have been
in November, I never quarrel with you too near Christmas—I
had an idea that I’d like to write a book. It was to
be a book of personal reminiscences, and was to leave out
nothing.”</p>
<p>“Reginald!”</p>
<p>“Exactly what the Duchess said when I mentioned it to
her. I was provoking and said nothing, and the next thing,
of course, was that everyone heard that I’d written the
book and got it in the press. After that, I might have been
a gold-fish in a glass bowl for all the privacy I got.
People attacked me about it in the most unexpected places, and
implored or commanded me to leave out things that I’d
forgotten had ever happened. I sat behind Miriam Klopstock
one night in the dress circle at His Majesty’s, and she
began at once about the incident of the Chow dog in the bathroom,
which she insisted must be struck out. We had to argue it
in a disjointed fashion, because some of the people wanted to
listen to the play, and Miriam takes nines in voices. They
had to stop her playing in the ‘Macaws’ Hockey Club
because you could hear what she thought when her shins got mixed
up in a scrimmage for half a mile on a still day. They are
called the Macaws because of their blue-and-yellow costumes, but
I understand there was nothing yellow about Miriam’s
language. I agreed to make one alteration, as I pretended I
had got it a Spitz instead of a Chow, but beyond that I was
firm. She megaphoned back two minutes later, ‘You
promised you would never mention it; don’t you ever keep a
promise?’ When people had stopped glaring in our
direction, I replied that I’d as soon think of keeping
white mice. I saw her tearing little bits out of her
programme for a minute or two, and then she leaned back and
snorted, ‘You’re not the boy I took you for,’
as though she were an eagle arriving at Olympus with the wrong
Ganymede. That was her last audible remark, but she went on
tearing up her programme and scattering the pieces around her,
till one of her neighbours asked with immense dignity whether she
should send for a wastepaper basket. I didn’t stay
for the last act.”</p>
<p>“Then there is Mrs.—oh, I never can remember her
name; she lives in a street that the cabmen have never heard of,
and is at home on Wednesdays. She frightened me horribly
once at a private view by saying mysteriously, ‘I
oughtn’t to be here, you know; this is one of my
days.’ I thought she meant that she was subject to
periodical outbreaks and was expecting an attack at any
moment. So embarrassing if she had suddenly taken it into
her head that she was Cesar Borgia or St. Elizabeth of
Hungary. That sort of thing would make one unpleasantly
conspicuous even at a private view. However, she merely
meant to say that it was Wednesday, which at the moment was
incontrovertible. Well, she’s on quite a different
tack to the Klopstock. She doesn’t visit anywhere
very extensively, and, of course, she’s awfully keen for me
to drag in an incident that occurred at one of the Beauwhistle
garden-parties, when she says she accidentally hit the shins of a
Serene Somebody or other with a croquet mallet and that he swore
at her in German. As a matter of fact, he went on
discoursing on the Gordon-Bennett affair in French. (I
never can remember if it’s a new submarine or a
divorce. Of course, how stupid of me!) To be
disagreeably exact, I fancy she missed him by about two
inches—over-anxiousness, probably—but she likes to
think she hit him. I’ve felt that way with a
partridge which I always imagine keeps on flying strong, out of
false pride, till it’s the other side of the hedge.
She said she could tell me everything she was wearing on the
occasion. I said I didn’t want my book to read like a
laundry list, but she explained that she didn’t mean those
sort of things.”</p>
<p>“And there’s the Chilworth boy, who can be
charming as long as he’s content to be stupid and wear what
he’s told to; but he gets the idea now and then that
he’d like to be epigrammatic, and the result is like
watching a rook trying to build a nest in a gale. Since he
got wind of the book, he’s been persecuting me to work in
something of his about the Russians and the Yalu Peril, and is
quite sulky because I won’t do it.”</p>
<p>“Altogether, I think it would be rather a brilliant
inspiration if you were to suggest a fortnight in
Paris.”</p>
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