<h2><SPAN name="FIGHTIER_THAN_THE_SWORD" id="FIGHTIER_THAN_THE_SWORD">FIGHTIER THAN THE SWORD</SPAN></h2>
<div class="figlefta" style="width: 10%;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_106.png" width-obs="100%" alt="T" /></div>
<p><span class="hidden">T</span>his world would be a far different place if there were peace among
pens. As it is, however, every pen wears a drop of ink on its shoulder.</p>
<p>Not even the tender ministrations of chamois cloth will soothe its
savage heart. It is deaf to sweet reasonableness. Returning drunk from
the inkwell, it will smutch the hand that fed it, cast blots upon the
fairest names, and ravish virgin sheets of paper. And when you try to
force it to a more civilized way of behaving, you discover it has its
points crossed.</p>
<p>A pen thus divided against itself will not write. There must be freedom
for the black fluid. There must be perfect harmony—two<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</SPAN></span> prongs with but
a single point, two parts that meet as one. Disunion is a sign of
weakness.</p>
<p>I had a pen once whose prongs became estranged. They were egoists: each
followed his individual bent, and was determined to make his own mark in
his own field. For the sake of appearances, they took their meals of ink
together, but immediately afterward, when pressure was brought to bear
upon them, they separated. Yet when one of them, striving too hard after
originality, broke under the strain, his widow was left desolate.</p>
<p>More domestic in an old-fashioned way is that staunch, blunt family, the
Stubbs. They are firm and substantial sort of pens. By people who
dislike them they are called phlegmatic, stodgy, close, stiffnibbed; and
it must be admitted, they do lack the sprightliness of the Sharps; but,
after all, these unyielding puritans, with their heavy touch, are more
trustworthy than their acute but volatile cousins. For temperament in a
pen finds vent in sudden splutterings.</p>
<p>The difference in their natures is evidenced by the way they meet
obstacles. The Stubbs,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</SPAN></span> plodding along doggedly, overcome all hazards in
the paper; whereas the Sharps, tripping nonchalantly, come to grief at
the first bunker, and before they get started again, waste several
strokes and gouge the course. And when the Sharps attempt to run the
gauntlet of expensive linen stationery (the higher the price, the higher
the ridges), they get held up at every cable crossing. But there is a
kind of paper—smooth, slippery, insidious—that prompts both the Sharps
and the Stubbs to evil ways. They know they are doing wrong, however;
for they are ashamed, and conceal their tracks, rendering all tracing
impossible.</p>
<p>It is a great pity that pens are not more consistent about their ink
giving. One moment they are stingy, and the next lavish. Perhaps this
may be due to absent-mindedness.</p>
<p>Beginning a letter to a crabbed old relative, you say to your pen, "Give
me a little ink for 'Dear Uncle Jonathan.'"</p>
<p>It ignores the request. You urge again. Still it is thinking of
something else. "Here, wake up, now!" (You shake it violently.) "Give me
some ink!"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Why, certainly," it replies effusively. "Take a blot."</p>
<p>And "Dear Uncle Jonathan" is buried with deep mourning.</p>
<p>Haphazard as their outgivings appear to be, I have a theory that they
are in reality quite logical; for I have noticed that <em>pens spend most
ink on things that are worth most</em>. Thus, a pen that would grudge to
disburse a single minim on a cheap sheet of a pad, will gladly expend
all it has upon a costly embroidered tablecloth. And it finds the
flyleaf of a handsome book (which if separate from the volume it would
regard as a mere scrap of paper) amazingly absorbing. If it take a fancy
to something large and sumptuous, such as an oriental rug, and yet not
have on hand sufficient ink for such an outlay, it will appropriate it
with a deposit of spot splash.</p>
<p>However little aptitude a pen may have for writing, it is sure to
display rare skill as a fisherman. In the most unpromising inkwell it
will catch deep sea monsters that astound you. It will spear great
flounders of blotting paper and wriggly eels of string. It will drag<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</SPAN></span> up
from the bottom wreckage of forgotten times, prehistoric flora and
fauna—an antique rubber band, a female tress (perhaps of some ink-nymph
long dead or discharged), a tack bent with age, a perfectly preserved
shoe button, a less perfectly preserved mummy of a fly.</p>
<p>The perseverance of this follower of Izaak Walton is admirable. It will
cast patiently again and again without a single dribble, and then, all
at once, it will come struggling triumphantly to the surface with a
whale of a June bug it has harpooned. Whereupon, as is the custom with
fishermen who write, it will make a grand splurge of its catch on paper.</p>
<p>In order to prevent such piscatorial dippiness, pen fanciers have bred
the <em>fountain</em> species, the latest variety of which is self-spilling.
Pens of this artificially produced species are very nervous. They have
to be handled with extreme care. For example, if one of them is held
upside down, all the ink runs to its head, and there is danger of a
hemorrhage. Its digestive system is poor: it regurgitates and bubbles at
the mouth. The least thing upsets<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</SPAN></span> its stomach. If you forget to put its
cap on, even in mild weather, it contracts a serious congestion of the
throat; with the result that the next letter you write proves dry-point
etching.</p>
<p>Taken all in all, pens have a great deal to answer for. The record they
have left on the pages of history is a black one. Many a person who has
sat down to write something bright and optimistic, has been so
disillusioned and embittered by his pen, that he has ended by hacking a
hymn of hate or drooling a dirge of despair. Which accounts for most of
the world's harsh diplomacy and morbid literature.</p>
<p>Even this essay was originally intended to be cheerful.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />