THE GAME OF THE WONDERFUL ISLANDS
In this game the floor is the sea.
Half rather the larger half because of
some instinctive right of primogeniture is
assigned to the elder of my two sons (he is, as it
were, its Olympian), and the other half goes to his
brother. We distribute our boards about the sea
in an archipelagic manner. We then dress our
islands, objecting strongly to too close a scrutiny
of our proceedings until we have done. Here, in
the illustration, is such an archipelago ready for
its explorers, or rather on the verge of exploration.
There are altogether four islands, two to the reader’s
right and two to the left, and the nearer ones are
the more northerly; it is as many as we could get into
the camera. The northern island to the right
is most advanced in civilization, and is chiefly temple.
That temple has a flat roof, diversified by domes made
of half Easter eggs and cardboard cones. These
are surmounted by decorative work of a flamboyant
character in plasticine, designed by G. P. W. An oriental
population crowds the courtyard and pours out upon
the roadway. Note the grotesque plasticine monsters
who guard the portals, also by G. P. W., who had a
free hand with the architecture of this remarkable
specimen of eastern religiosity. They are nothing,
you may be sure, to the gigantic idols inside, out
of the reach of the sacrilegious camera. To the
right is a tropical thatched hut. The thatched
roof is really that nice ribbed paper that comes round
bottles a priceless boon to these games.
All that comes into the house is saved for us.
The owner of the hut lounges outside the door.
He is a dismounted cavalry-corps man, and he owns
one cow. His fence, I may note, belonged to a
little wooden farm we bought in Switzerland. Its
human inhabitants are scattered; its beasts follow
a precarious living as wild guinea-pigs on the islands
to the south.
Your attention is particularly directed
to the trees about and behind the temple, which thicken
to a forest on the further island to the right.
These trees we make of twigs taken from trees and bushes
in the garden, and stuck into holes in our boards.
Formerly we lived in a house with a little wood close
by, and our forests were wonderful. Now we are
restricted to our garden, and we could get nothing
for this set out but jasmine and pear. Both have
wilted a little, and are not nearly such spirited
trees as you can make out of fir trees, for instance.
It is for these woods chiefly that we have our planks
perforated with little holes. No tin trees can
ever be so plausible and various and jolly as these.
With a good garden to draw upon one can make terrific
sombre woods, and then lie down and look through them
at lonely horsemen or wandering beasts.
That further island on the right is
a less settled country than the island of the temple.
Camels, you note, run wild there; there is a sort
of dwarf elephant, similar to the now extinct kind
of which one finds skeletons in Malta, pigs, a red
parrot, and other such creatures, of lead and wood.
The pear-trees are fine. It is those which have
attracted white settlers (I suppose they are), whose
thatched huts are to be seen both upon the beach and
in-land. By the huts on the beach lie a number
of pear-tree logs; but a raid of negroid savages from
the to the left is in the only settler is the man
in a adjacent island progress, and clearly visible
rifleman’s uniform running inland for help.
Beyond, peeping out among the trees, are the supports
he seeks.
These same negroid savages are as
bold as they are ferocious. They cross arms of
the sea upon their rude canoes, made simply of a strip
of cardboard. Their own island, the one to the
south-left, is a rocky wilderness containing caves.
Their chief food is the wild-goat, but in pursuit
of these creatures you will also sometimes find the
brown bear, who sits he is small but perceptible
to the careful student in the mouth of
his cave. Here, too, you will distinguish small
guinea pig-like creatures of wood, in happier days
the inhabitants of that Swiss farm. Sunken rocks
off this island are indicated by a white foam which
takes the form of letters, and you will also note a
whirlpool between the two islands to the right.
Finally comes the island nearest to
the reader on the left. This also is wild and
rocky, inhabited not by negroid blacks, but by Indians,
whose tents, made by F. R. W. out of ordinary brown
paper and adorned with chalk totems of a rude
and characteristic kind, pour forth their fierce and
well-armed inhabitants at the intimation of an invader.
The rocks on this island, let me remark, have great
mineral wealth. Among them are to be found not
only sheets and veins of silver paper, but great nuggets
of metal, obtained by the melting down of hopelessly
broken soldiers in an iron spoon. Note, too, the
peculiar and romantic shell beach of this country.
It is an island of exceptional interest to the geologist
and scientific explorer. The Indians, you observe,
have domesticated one leaden and one wooden cow.
This is how the game would be set
out. Then we build ships and explore these islands,
but in these pictures the ships are represented as
already arriving. The ships are built out of our
wooden bricks on flat keels made of two wooden pieces
of 9 x 4-1/2; inches, which are very convenient to
push about over the floor. Captain G. P. W. is
steaming into the bay between the eastern and western
islands. He carries heavy guns, his ship bristles
with an extremely aggressive soldiery, who appear
to be blazing away for the mere love of the thing.
(I suspect him of Imperialist intentions.) Captain
F. R. W. is apparently at anchor between his northern
and southern islands. His ship is of a slightly
more pacific type. I note on his deck a lady and
a gentleman (of German origin) with a bag, two of
our all too rare civilians. No doubt the bag
contains samples and a small conversation dictionary
in the negroid dialects. (I think F. R. W. may turn
out to be a Liberal.) Perhaps he will sail on and
rescue the raided huts, perhaps he will land and build
a jetty, and begin mining among the rocks to fill his
hold with silver. Perhaps the natives will kill
and eat the gentleman with the bag. All that
is for Captain F. R. W. to decide.
You see how the game goes on.
We land and alter things, and build and rearrange,
and hoist paper flags on pins, and subjugate populations,
and confer all the blessings of civilization upon these
lands. We keep them going for days. And
at last, as we begin to tire of them, comes the scrubbing
brush, and we must burn our trees and dismantle our
islands, and put our soldiers in the little nests of
drawers, and stand the island boards up against the
wall, and put everything away. Then perhaps,
after a few days, we begin upon some other such game,
just as we feel disposed. But it is never quite
the same game, never. Another time it may be
wildernesses for example, and the boards are hills,
and never a drop of water is to be found except for
the lakes and rivers we may mark out in chalk.
But after one example others are easy, and next I
will tell you of our way of making towns.