THE TOYS TO HAVE
The jolliest indoor games for boys
and girls demand a floor, and the home that has no
floor upon which games may be played falls so far
short of happiness. It must be a floor covered
with linoleum or cork carpet, so that toy soldiers
and such-like will stand up upon it, and of a color
and surface that will take and show chalk marks; the
common green-colored cork carpet without a pattern
is the best of all. It must be no highway to
other rooms, and well lit and airy. Occasionally,
alas! it must be scrubbed and then a truce
to Floor Games. Upon such a floor may be made
an infinitude of imaginative games, not only keeping
boys and girls happy for days together, but building
up a framework of spacious and inspiring ideas in
them for after life. The men of tomorrow will
gain new strength from nursery floors. I am going
to tell of some of these games and what is most needed
to play them; I have tried them all and a score of
others like them with my sons, and all of the games
here illustrated have been set out by us. I am
going to tell of them here because I think what we
have done will interest other fathers and mothers,
and perhaps be of use to them (and to uncles and such-like
tributary sub-species of humanity) in buying presents
for their own and other people’s children.
Now, the toys we play with time after
time, and in a thousand permutations and combinations,
belong to four main groups. We have (1) soldiers,
and with these I class sailors, railway porters, civilians,
and the lower animals generally, such as I will presently
describe in greater detail; (2) bricks; (3) boards
and planks; and (4) a lot of clockwork railway
Rolling-stock and rails. Also
there are certain minor objects tin ships,
Easter eggs, and the like of which I shall
make incidental mention, that like the kiwi and the
duck-billed platypus refuse to be classified.
These we arrange and rearrange in
various ways upon our floor, making a world of them.
In doing so we have found out all sorts of pleasant
facts, and also many undesirable possibilities; and
very probably our experience will help a reader here
and there to the former and save him from the latter.
For instance, our planks and boards, and what one can
do with them, have been a great discovery. Lots
of boys and girls seem to be quite without planks
and boards at all, and there is no regular trade in
them. The toyshops, we found, did not keep anything
of the kind we wanted, and our boards, which we had
to get made by a carpenter, are the basis of half
the games we play. The planks and boards we have
are of various sizes. We began with three of two
yards by one; they were made with cross pieces like
small doors; but these we found unnecessarily large,
and we would not get them now after our present experience.
The best thickness, we think, is an inch for the larger
sizes and three-quarters and a half inch for the smaller;
and the best sizes are a yard square, thirty inches
square, two feet, and eighteen inches square one
or two of each, and a greater number of smaller ones,
18 x 9, 9 x 9, and 9 x 4-1/2. With the larger
ones we make islands and archipelagos on our floor
while the floor is a sea, or we make a large island
or a couple on the Venice pattern, or we pile the
smaller on the larger to make hills when the floor
is a level plain, or they roof in railway stations
or serve as bridges, in such manner as I will presently
illustrate. And these boards of ours pass into
our next most important possession, which is our box
of bricks.
(But I was nearly forgetting to tell
this, that all the thicker and larger of these boards
have holes bored through them. At about every
four inches is a hole, a little larger than an ordinary
gimlet hole. These holes have their uses, as
I will tell later, but now let me get on to the box
of bricks.)
This, again, wasn’t a toy-shop
acquisition. It came to us by gift from two generous
friends, unhappily growing up and very tall at that;
and they had it from parents who were one of several
families who shared in the benefit of a Good Uncle.
I know nothing certainly of this man except that he
was a Radford of Plymouth. I have never learned
nor cared to learn of his commoner occupations, but
certainly he was one of those shining and distinguished
uncles that tower up at times above the common levels
of humanity. At times, when we consider our derived
and undeserved share of his inheritance and count
the joys it gives us, we have projected half in jest
and half in earnest the putting together of a little
exemplary book upon the subject of such exceptional
men: Celebrated Uncles, it should be called;
and it should stir up all who read it to some striving
at least towards the glories of the avuncular crown.
What this great benefactor did was to engage a deserving
unemployed carpenter through an entire winter making
big boxes of wooden bricks for the almost innumerable
nephews and nieces with which an appreciative circle
of brothers and sisters had blessed him. There
are whole bricks 4-1/2 inches x 2-1/4 x 1-1/8; and
there are quarters called by those previous
owners (who have now ascended to, we hope but scarcely
believe, a happier life near the ceiling) “piggys.”
You note how these sizes fit into the sizes of the
boards, and of each size we have never
counted them, but we must have hundreds. We can
pave a dozen square yards of floor with them.
How utterly we despise the silly little
bricks of the toyshops! They are too small to
make a decent home for even the poorest lead soldiers,
even if there were hundreds of them, and there are
never enough, never nearly enough; even if you take
one at a time and lay it down and say, “This
is a house,” even then there are not enough.
We see rich people, rich people out of motor cars,
rich people beyond the dreams of avarice, going into
toyshops and buying these skimpy, sickly, ridiculous
pseudo-boxes of bricklets, because they do not know
what to ask for, and the toyshops are just the merciless
mercenary enemies of youth and happiness so
far, that is, as bricks are concerned. Their
unfortunate under-parented offspring mess about with
these gifts, and don’t make very much of them,
and put them away; and you see their consequences
in after life in the weakly-conceived villas and silly
suburbs that people have built all round big cities.
Such poor under-nourished nurseries must needs fall
back upon the Encyclopedia Britannica, and even that
is becoming flexible on India paper! But our
box of bricks almost satisfies. With our box of
bricks we can scheme and build, all three of us, for
the best part of the hour, and still have more bricks
in the box.
So much now for the bricks. I
will tell later how we use cartridge paper and cardboard
and other things to help in our and of the decorative
make of plasticine. Of course, it goes without
saying that we despise those foolish, expensive, made-up
wooden and pasteboard castles that are sold in shops playing
with them is like playing with somebody else’s
dead game in a state of rigor mortis.
Let me now say a little about toy soldiers and the
world to which they belong. Toy soldiers used
to be flat, small creatures in my own boyhood, in
comparison with the magnificent beings one can buy
to-day. There has been an enormous improvement
in our national physique in this respect. Now
they stand nearly two inches high and look you broadly
in the face, and they have the movable arms and alert
intelligence of scientifically exercised men.
You get five of them mounted or nine afoot in a box
for a small price. We three like those of British
manufacture best; other makes are of incompatible
sizes, and we have a rule that saves much trouble,
that all red coats belong to G. P. W., and all other
colored coats to F. R. W., all gifts, bequests, and
accidents notwithstanding. Also we have sailors;
but, since there are no red-coated sailors, blue counts
as red.
Then we have “beefeaters,”
Indians, Zulus, for whom there are
special rules. We find we can buy lead dogs,
cats, lions, tigers, horses, camels, cattle, and elephants
of a reasonably corresponding size, and we have also
several boxes of railway porters, and some soldiers
we bought in Hesse-Darmstadt that we pass off on an
unsuspecting home world as policemen. But we want
civilians very badly. We found a box of German
from an exaggerated curse of militarism, and even
the grocer wears épaulettes. This might
please Lord Roberts and Mr. Leo Maxse, but it certainly
does not please us. I wish, indeed, that we could
buy boxes of tradesmen: a blue butcher, a white
baker with a loaf of standard bread, a merchant or
so; boxes of servants, boxes of street traffic, smart
sets, and so forth. We could do with a judge
and lawyers, or a box of vestrymen. It is true
that we can buy Salvation Army lasses and football
players, but we are cold to both of these. We
have, of course, boy scouts. With such boxes
of civilians we could have much more fun than with
the running, marching, swashbuckling soldiery that
pervades us. They drive us to reviews; and it
is only emperors, kings, and very silly small boys
who can take an undying interest in uniforms and reviews.
And lastly, of our railways, let me
merely remark here that we have always insisted upon
one uniform gauge and everything we buy fits into
and develops our existing railway system. Nothing
is more indicative of the wambling sort of parent
and a coterie of witless, worthless uncles than a
heap of railway toys of different gauges and natures
in the children’s playroom. And so, having
told you of the material we have, let me now tell
you of one or two games (out of the innumerable many)
that we have played. Of course, in this I have
to be a little artificial. Actual games of the
kind I am illustrating here have been played by us,
many and many a time, with joy and happy invention
and no thought of publication. They have gone
now, those games, into that vaguely luminous and iridescent
into which happiness have tried out again points in
world of memories all love-engendering must go.
But we our best to set them and recall the good them
here.