<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
<p class="gutsumm">Reflections. I make another Good
Joke. Am annoyed at the constant serving-up of the
“Blanc-Mange.” Lupin expresses his opinion of
Weddings. Lupin falls out with Daisy Mutlar.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">November</span> 16.—Woke about
twenty times during the night, with terrible thirst.
Finished off all the water in the bottle, as well as half that in
the jug. Kept dreaming also, that last night’s party
was a failure, and that a lot of low people came without
invitation, and kept chaffing and throwing things at Mr. Perkupp,
till at last I was obliged to hide him in the box-room (which we
had just discovered), with a bath-towel over him. It seems
absurd now, but it was painfully real in the dream. I had
the same dream about a dozen times.</p>
<p>Carrie annoyed me by saying: “You know champagne never
agrees with you.” I told her I had only a couple of
glasses of it, having kept myself entirely to port. I added
that good champagne hurt nobody, and Lupin told me he had only
got it from a traveller as a favour, as that particular brand had
been entirely bought up by a West-End club.</p>
<p>I think I ate too heartily of the “side dishes,”
as the waiter called them. I said to Carrie: “I wish
I had put those ‘side dishes’
<i>aside</i>.” I repeated this, but Carrie was busy,
packing up the teaspoons we had borrowed of Mrs. Cummings for the
party. It was just half-past eleven, and I was starting for
the office, when Lupin appeared, with a yellow complexion, and
said: “Hulloh! Guv., what priced head have you this
morning?” I told him he might just as well speak to
me in Dutch. He added: “When I woke this morning, my
head was as big as Baldwin’s balloon.” On the
spur of the moment I said the cleverest thing I think I have ever
said; viz.: “Perhaps that accounts for the
para<i>shooting</i> pains.” We roared.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">November</span> 17.—Still feel tired
and headachy! In the evening Gowing called, and was full of
praise about our party last Wednesday. He said everything
was done beautifully, and he enjoyed himself enormously.
Gowing can be a very nice fellow when he likes, but you never
know how long it will last. For instance, he stopped to
supper, and seeing some <i>blanc-mange</i> on the table, shouted
out, while the servant was in the room: “Hulloh! The
remains of Wednesday?”</p>
<p><span class="smcap">November</span> 18.—Woke up quite
fresh after a good night’s rest, and feel quite myself
again. I am satisfied a life of going-out and Society is
not a life for me; we therefore declined the invitation which we
received this morning to Miss Bird’s wedding. We only
met her twice at Mrs. James’, and it means a present.
Lupin said: “I am with you for once. To my mind a
wedding’s a very poor play. There are only two parts
in it—the bride and bridegroom. The best man is only
a walking gentleman. With the exception of a crying father
and a snivelling mother, the rest are <i>supers</i> who have to
dress well and have to <i>pay</i> for their insignificant parts
in the shape of costly presents.” I did not care for
the theatrical slang, but thought it clever, though
disrespectful.</p>
<p>I told Sarah not to bring up the <i>blanc-mange</i> again for
breakfast. It seems to have been placed on our table at
every meal since Wednesday. Cummings came round in the
evening, and congratulated us on the success of our party.
He said it was the best party he had been to for many a year; but
he wished we had let him know it was full dress, as he would have
turned up in his swallow-tails. We sat down to a quiet game
of dominoes, and were interrupted by the noisy entrance of Lupin
and Frank Mutlar. Cummings and I asked them to join
us. Lupin said he did not care for dominoes, and suggested
a game of “Spoof.” On my asking if it required
counters, Frank and Lupin in measured time said: “One, two,
three; go! Have you an estate in Greenland?” It
was simply Greek to me, but it appears it is one of the customs
of the “Holloway Comedians” to do this when a member
displays ignorance.</p>
<p>In spite of my instructions, that <i>blanc-mange</i> was
brought up again for supper. To make matters worse, there
had been an attempt to disguise it, by placing it in a glass dish
with jam round it. Carrie asked Lupin if he would have
some, and he replied: “No second-hand goods for me, thank
you.” I told Carrie, when we were alone, if that
<i>blanc-mange</i> were placed on the table again I should walk
out of the house.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">November</span> 19, Sunday.—A
delightfully quiet day. In the afternoon Lupin was off to
spend the rest of the day with the Mutlars. He departed in
the best of spirits, and Carrie said: “Well, one advantage
of Lupin’s engagement with Daisy is that the boy seems
happy all day long. That quite reconciles me to what I must
confess seems an imprudent engagement.”</p>
<p>Carrie and I talked the matter over during the evening, and
agreed that it did not always follow that an early engagement
meant an unhappy marriage. Dear Carrie reminded me that we
married early, and, with the exception of a few trivial
misunderstandings, we had never had a really serious word.
I could not help thinking (as I told her) that half the pleasures
of life were derived from the little struggles and small
privations that one had to endure at the beginning of one’s
married life. Such struggles were generally occasioned by
want of means, and often helped to make loving couples stand
together all the firmer.</p>
<p>Carrie said I had expressed myself wonderfully well, and that
I was quite a philosopher.</p>
<p>We are all vain at times, and I must confess I felt flattered
by Carrie’s little compliment. I don’t pretend
to be able to express myself in fine language, but I feel I have
the power of expressing my thoughts with simplicity and
lucidness. About nine o’clock, to our surprise, Lupin
entered, with a wild, reckless look, and in a hollow voice, which
I must say seemed rather theatrical, said: “Have you any
brandy?” I said: “No; but here is some
whisky.” Lupin drank off nearly a wineglassful
without water, to my horror.</p>
<p>We all three sat reading in silence till ten, when Carrie and
I rose to go to bed. Carrie said to Lupin: “I hope
Daisy is well?”</p>
<p>Lupin, with a forced careless air that he must have picked up
from the “Holloway Comedians,” replied: “Oh,
Daisy? You mean Miss Mutlar. I don’t know
whether she is well or not, but please <i>never to mention her
name again in my presence</i>.”</p>
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