FUNICULARS, MARBLE TOWERS, CASTLES AND WAR GAMES, BUT
VERY LITTLE OF WAR GAMES
I have now given two general types
of floor game; but these are only just two samples
of delightful and imagination-stirring variations that
can be contrived out of the toys I have described.
I will now glance rather more shortly at some other
very good uses of the floor, the boards, the bricks,
the soldiers, and the railway system that
pentagram for exorcising the evil spirit of dulness
from the lives of little boys and girls. And
first, there is a kind of lark we call Funiculars.
There are times when islands cease somehow to dazzle,
and towns and cities are too orderly and uneventful
and cramped for us, and we want something something
to whizz. Then we say: “Let us make
a funicular. Let us make a funicular more than
we have ever done. Let us make one to reach up
to the table.” We dispute whether it isn’t
a mountain railway we are after. The bare name
is refreshing; it takes us back to that unforgettable
time when we all went to Wengen, winding in and out
and up and up the mountain side from slush,
to such snow and sunlight as we had never seen before.
And we make a mountain railway. So far, we have
never got it up to the table, but some day we will,
Then we will have a station there on the flat, and
another station on the floor, with shunts and sidings
to each.
The peculiar joy of the mountain railway
is that, if it is properly made, a loaded car not
a toy engine; it is too rough a game for delicate,
respectable engines will career from top
to bottom of the system, and go this way and that
as your cunningly-arranged switches determine; and
afterwards and this is a wonderful and distinctive
discovery you can send it back by ’lectric.
What is a ’lectric? You
may well ask. ’Lectrics were invented almost
by accident, by one of us, to whom also the name is
due. It came out of an accident to a toy engine;
a toy engine that seemed done for and that was yet
full of life.
You know, perhaps, what a toy engine
is like. It has the general appearance of a railway
engine; funnels, buffers, cab, and so forth.
All these are very elegant things, no doubt; but they
do not make for lightness, they do not facilitate
hill-climbing. Now, sometimes an engine gets
its clockwork out of order, and then it is over and
done for; but sometimes it is merely the outer semblance
that is injured the funnel bent, the body
twisted. You remove the things and, behold! you
have bare clockwork on wheels, an apparatus of almost
malignant energy, soul without body, a kind of metallic
rage. This it was that our junior member instantly
knew for a ’lectric, and loved from the moment
of its stripping.
(I have, by the by, known a very serviceable
little road ’lectric made out of a clockwork
mouse.)
Well, when we have got chairs and
boxes and bricks, and graded our line skilfully and
well, easing the descent, and being very careful of
the joining at the bends for fear that the descending
trucks and cars will jump the rails, we send down
first an empty truck, then trucks loaded with bricks
and lead soldiers, and then the ’lectric; and
then afterwards the sturdy ’lectric shoves up
the trucks again to the top, with a kind of savagery
of purpose and a whizz that is extremely gratifying
to us. We make switches in these lines; we make
them have level-crossings, at which collisions are
always being just averted; the lines go over and under
each other, and in and out of tunnels.
The marble tower, again, is a great
building, on which we devise devious slanting ways
down which marbles run. I do not know why it is
amusing to make a marble run down a long intricate
path, and dollop down steps, and come almost but not
quite to a stop, and rush out of dark places and across
little bridges of card: it is, and we often do
it.
Castles are done with bricks and cardboard
turrets and a portcullis of card, and drawbridge and
moats; they are a mere special sort of city-building,
done because we have a box of men in armor. We
could reconstruct all sorts of historical periods
if the toy soldier makers would provide us with people.
But at present, as I have already complained, they
make scarcely anything but contemporary fighting men.
And of the war game I must either write volumes or
nothing. For the present let it be nothing.
Some day, perhaps, I will write a great book about
the war game and tell of battles and campaigns and
strategy and tactics. But this time I set out
merely to tell of the ordinary joys of playing with
the floor, and to gird improvingly and usefully at
toymakers. So much, I think, I have done.
If one parent or one uncle buys the wiselier for me,
I shall not altogether have lived in vain.