There are two kinds of clocks.
There is the clock that is always wrong, and that
knows it is wrong, and glories in it; and there is
the clock that is always right except when
you rely upon it, and then it is more wrong than you
would think a clock could be in a civilized
country.
I remember a clock of this latter
type, that we had in the house when I was a boy, routing
us all up at three o’clock one winter’s
morning. We had finished breakfast at ten minutes
to four, and I got to school a little after five,
and sat down on the step outside and cried, because
I thought the world had come to an end; everything
was so death-like!
The man who can live in the same house
with one of these clocks, and not endanger his chance
of heaven about once a month by standing up and telling
it what he thinks of it, is either a dangerous rival
to that old established firm, Job, or else he does
not know enough bad language to make it worth his
while to start saying anything at all.
The great dream of its life is to
lure you on into trying to catch a train by it.
For weeks and weeks it will keep the most perfect time.
If there were any difference in time between that
clock and the sun, you would be convinced it was the
sun, not the clock, that wanted seeing to. You
feel that if that clock happened to get a quarter of
a second fast, or the eighth of an instant slow, it
would break its heart and die.
It is in this spirit of child-like
faith in its integrity that, one morning, you gather
your family around you in the passage, kiss your children,
and afterward wipe your jammy mouth, poke your finger
in the baby’s eye, promise not to forget to
order the coals, wave at last fond adieu with the
umbrella, and depart for the railway-station.
I never have been quite able to decide,
myself, which is the more irritating to run two miles
at the top of your speed, and then to find, when you
reach the station, that you are three-quarters of an
hour too early; or to stroll along leisurely the whole
way, and dawdle about outside the booking-office,
talking to some local idiot, and then to swagger carelessly
on to the platform, just in time to see the train go
out!
As for the other class of clocks the
common or always-wrong clocks they are
harmless enough. You wind them up at the proper
intervals, and once or twice a week you put them right
and “regulate” them, as you call it (and
you might just as well try to “regulate”
a London tom-cat). But you do all this, not from
any selfish motives, but from a sense of duty to the
clock itself. You want to feel that, whatever
may happen, you have done the right thing by it, and
that no blame can attach to you.
So far as looking to it for any return
is concerned, that you never dream of doing, and consequently
you are not disappointed. You ask what the time
is, and the girl replies:
“Well, the clock in the dining-room
says a quarter past two.”
But you are not deceived by this.
You know that, as a matter of fact, it must be somewhere
between nine and ten in the evening; and, remembering
that you noticed, as a curious circumstance, that the
clock was only forty minutes past four, hours ago,
you mildly admire its energies and resources, and
wonder how it does it.
I myself possess a clock that for
complicated unconventionality and light-hearted independence,
could, I should think, give points to anything yet
discovered in the chronometrical line. As a mere
time-piece, it leaves much to be desired; but, considered
as a self-acting conundrum, it is full of interest
and variety.
I heard of a man once who had a clock
that he used to say was of no good to any one except
himself, because he was the only man who understood
it. He said it was an excellent clock, and one
that you could thoroughly depend upon; but you wanted
to know it to have studied its system.
An outsider might be easily misled by it.
“For instance,” he would
say, “when it strikes fifteen, and the hands
point to twenty minutes past eleven, I know it is a
quarter to eight.”
His acquaintanceship with that clock
must certainly have given him an advantage over the
cursory observer!
But the great charm about my clock
is its reliable uncertainty. It works on no method
whatever; it is a pure emotionalist. One day it
will be quite frolicsome, and gain three hours in
the course of the morning, and think nothing of it;
and the next day it will wish it were dead, and be
hardly able to drag itself along, and lose two hours
out of every four, and stop altogether in the afternoon,
too miserable to do anything; and then, getting cheerful
once more toward evening, will start off again of
its own accord.
I do not care to talk much about this
clock; because when I tell the simple truth concerning
it, people think I am exaggerating.
It is very discouraging to find, when
you are straining every nerve to tell the truth, that
people do not believe you, and fancy that you are
exaggerating. It makes you feel inclined to go
and exaggerate on purpose, just to show them the difference.
I know I often feel tempted to do so myself it
is my early training that saves me.
We should always be very careful never
to give way to exaggeration; it is a habit that grows
upon one.
And it is such a vulgar habit, too.
In the old times, when poets and dry-goods salesmen
were the only people who exaggerated, there was something
clever and distingue about a reputation for
“a tendency to over, rather than to under-estimate
the mere bald facts.” But everybody exaggerates
nowadays. The art of exaggeration is no longer
regarded as an “extra” in the modern bill
of education; it is an essential requirement, held
to be most needful for the battle of life.
The whole world exaggerates.
It exaggerates everything, from the yearly number
of bicycles sold to the yearly number of heathens converted into
the hope of salvation and more whiskey. Exaggeration
is the basis of our trade, the fallow-field of our
art and literature, the groundwork of our social life,
the foundation of our political existence. As
schoolboys, we exaggerate our fights and our marks
and our fathers’ debts. As men, we exaggerate
our wares, we exaggerate our feelings, we exaggerate
our incomes except to the tax-collector,
and to him we exaggerate our “outgoings”;
we exaggerate our virtues; we even exaggerate our vices,
and, being in reality the mildest of men, pretend we
are dare-devil scamps.
We have sunk so low now that we try
to act our exaggerations, and to live up to
our lies. We call it “keeping up appearances;”
and no more bitter phrase could, perhaps, have been
invented to describe our childish folly.
If we possess a hundred pounds a year,
do we not call it two? Our larder may be low
and our grates be chill, but we are happy if the “world”
(six acquaintances and a prying neighbor) gives us
credit for one hundred and fifty. And, when we
have five hundred, we talk of a thousand, and the
all-important and beloved “world” (sixteen
friends now, and two of them carriage-folks!) agree
that we really must be spending seven hundred, or
at all events, running into debt up to that figure;
but the butcher and baker, who have gone into the
matter with the housemaid, know better.
After awhile, having learned the trick,
we launch out boldly and spend like Indian Princes or
rather seem to spend; for we know, by this
time, how to purchase the seeming with the seeming,
how to buy the appearance of wealth with the appearance
of cash. And the dear old world Beelzebub
bless it! for it is his own child, sure enough; there
is no mistaking the likeness, it has all his funny
little ways gathers round, applauding and
laughing at the lie, and sharing in the cheat, and
gloating over the thought of the blow that it knows
must sooner or later fall on us from the Thor-like
hammer of Truth.
And all goes merry as a witches’
frolic until the gray morning dawns.
Truth and fact are old-fashioned and
out-of-date, my friends, fit only for the dull and
vulgar to live by. Appearance, not reality, is
what the clever dog grasps at in these clever days.
We spurn the dull-brown solid earth; we build our
lives and homes in the fair-seeming rainbow-land of
shadow and chimera.
To ourselves, sleeping and waking
there, behind the rainbow, there is no beauty
in the house; only a chill damp mist in every room,
and, over all, a haunting fear of the hour when the
gilded clouds will melt away, and let us fall somewhat
heavily, no doubt upon the hard world underneath.
But, there! of what matter is our
misery, our terror? To the stranger, our
home appears fair and bright. The workers in the
fields below look up and envy us our abode of glory
and delight! If they think it pleasant,
surely we should be content. Have we not
been taught to live for others and not for ourselves,
and are we not acting up bravely to the teaching in
this most curious method?
Ah! yes, we are self-sacrificing enough,
and loyal enough in our devotion to this new-crowned
king, the child of Prince Imposture and Princess Pretense.
Never before was despot so blindly worshiped!
Never had earthly sovereign yet such world-wide sway!
Man, if he would live, must
worship. He looks around, and what to him, within
the vision of his life, is the greatest and the best,
that he falls down and does reverence to. To
him whose eyes have opened on the nineteenth century,
what nobler image can the universe produce than the
figure of Falsehood in stolen robes? It is cunning
and brazen and hollow-hearted, and it realizes his
souls ideal, and he falls and kisses its feet, and
clings to its skinny knees, swearing fealty to it for
evermore!
Ah! he is a mighty monarch, bladder-bodied
King Humbug! Come, let us build up temples of
hewn shadows wherein we may adore him, safe from the
light. Let us raise him aloft upon our Brummagem
shields. Long live our coward, falsehearted chief! fit
leader for such soldiers as we! Long live the
Lord-of-Lies, anointed! Long live poor King Appearances,
to whom all mankind bows the knee!
But we must hold him aloft very carefully,
oh, my brother warriors! He needs much “keeping
up.” He has no bones and sinews of his own,
the poor old flimsy fellow! If we take our hands
from him, he will fall a heap of worn-out rags, and
the angry wind will whirl him away, and leave us forlorn.
Oh, let us spend our lives keeping him up, and serving
him, and making him great that is, evermore
puffed out with air and nothingness until
he burst, and we along with him!
Burst one day he must, as it is in
the nature of bubbles to burst, especially when they
grow big. Meanwhile, he still reigns over us,
and the world grows more and more a world of pretense
and exaggeration and lies; and he who pretends and
exaggerates and lies the most successfully, is the
greatest of us all.
The world is a gingerbread fair, and
we all stand outside our booths and point to the gorgeous-colored
pictures, and beat the big drum and brag. Brag!
brag! Life is one great game of brag!
“Buy my soap, oh ye people,
and ye will never look old, and the hair will grow
again on your bald places, and ye will never be poor
or unhappy again; and mine is the only true soap.
Oh, beware of spurious imitations!”
“Buy my lotion, all ye that
suffer from pains in the head, or the stomach, or
the feet, or that have broken arms, or broken hearts,
or objectionable mothers-in-law; and drink one bottle
a day, and all your troubles will be ended.”
“Come to my church, all ye that
want to go to Heaven, and buy my penny weekly guide,
and pay my pew-rates; and, pray ye, have nothing to
do with my misguided brother over the road. This
is the only safe way!”
“Oh, vote for me, my noble and
intelligent electors, and send our party into power,
and the world shall be a new place, and there shall
be no sin or sorrow any more! And each free and
independent voter shall have a bran new Utopia made
on purpose for him, according to his own ideas, with
a good-sized, extra-unpleasant purgatory attached,
to which he can send everybody he does not like.
Oh! do not miss this chance!”
Oh! listen to my philosophy, it is
the best and deepest. Oh! hear my songs, they
are the sweetest. Oh! buy my pictures, they alone
are true art. Oh! read my books, they are the
finest.
Oh! I am the greatest cheesemonger,
I am the greatest soldier, I am the
greatest statesman, I am the greatest poet,
I am the greatest showman, I am the
greatest mountebank, I am the greatest editor,
and I am the greatest patriot. We are
the greatest nation. We are the only good people.
Ours is the only true religion. Bah! how
we all yell!
How we all brag and bounce, and beat
the drum and shout; and nobody believes a word we
utter; and the people ask one another, saying:
“How can we tell who is the
greatest and the cleverest among all these shrieking
braggarts?”
And they answer:
“There is none great or clever.
The great and clever men are not here; there is no
place for them in this pandemonium of charlatans and
quacks. The men you see here are crowing cocks.
We suppose the greatest and the best of them
are they who crow the loudest and the longest; that
is the only test of their merits.”
Therefore, what is left for us to
do, but to crow? And the best and greatest of
us all, is he who crows the loudest and the longest
on this little dunghill that we call our world!
Well, I was going to tell you about our clock.
It was my wife’s idea, getting
it, in the first instance. We had been to dinner
at the Buggles’, and Buggles had just bought
a clock “picked it up in Essex,”
was the way he described the transaction. Buggles
is always going about “picking up” things.
He will stand before an old carved bedstead, weighing
about three tons, and say:
“Yes pretty little
thing! I picked it up in Holland;” as though
he had found it by the roadside, and slipped it into
his umbrella when nobody was looking!
Buggles was rather full of this clock.
It was of the good old-fashioned “grandfather”
type. It stood eight feet high, in a carved-oak
case, and had a deep, sonorous, solemn tick, that
made a pleasant accompaniment to the after-dinner
chat, and seemed to fill the room with an air of homely
dignity.
We discussed the clock, and Buggles
said how he loved the sound of its slow, grave tick;
and how, when all the house was still, and he and
it were sitting up alone together, it seemed like some
wise old friend talking to him, and telling him about
the old days and the old ways of thought, and the
old life and the old people.
The clock impressed my wife very much.
She was very thoughtful all the way home, and, as
we went upstairs to our flat, she said, “Why
could not we have a clock like that?” She said
it would seem like having some one in the house to
take care of us all she should fancy it
was looking after baby!
I have a man in Northamptonshire from
whom I buy old furniture now and then, and to him
I applied. He answered by return to say that he
had got exactly the very thing I wanted. (He always
has. I am very lucky in this respect.) It was
the quaintest and most old-fashioned clock he had
come across for a long while, and he enclosed photograph
and full particulars; should he send it up?
From the photograph and the particulars,
it seemed, as he said, the very thing, and I told
him, “Yes; send it up at once.”
Three days afterward, there came a
knock at the door there had been other
knocks at the door before this, of course; but I am
dealing merely with the history of the clock.
The girl said a couple of men were outside, and wanted
to see me, and I went to them.
I found they were Pickford’s
carriers, and glancing at the way-bill, I saw that
it was my clock that they had brought, and I said,
airily, “Oh, yes, it’s quite right; bring
it up!”
They said they were very sorry, but
that was just the difficulty. They could not
get it up.
I went down with them, and wedged
securely across the second landing of the staircase,
I found a box which I should have judged to be the
original case in which Cleopatra’s Needle came
over.
They said that was my clock.
I brought down a chopper and a crowbar,
and we sent out and collected in two extra hired ruffians
and the five of us worked away for half an hour and
got the clock out; after which the traffic up and down
the staircase was resumed, much to the satisfaction
of the other tenants.
We then got the clock upstairs and
put it together, and I fixed it in the corner of the
dining-room.
At first it exhibited a strong desire
to topple over and fall on people, but by the liberal
use of nails and screws and bits of firewood, I made
life in the same room with it possible, and then, being
exhausted, I had my wounds dressed, and went to bed.
In the middle of the night my wife
woke me up in a great state of alarm, to say that
the clock had just struck thirteen, and who did I think
was going to die?
I said I did not know, but hoped it
might be the next-door dog.
My wife said she had a presentiment
it meant baby. There was no comforting her; she
cried herself to sleep again.
During the course of the morning,
I succeeded in persuading her that she must have made
a mistake, and she consented to smile once more.
In the afternoon the clock struck thirteen again.
This renewed all her fears. She
was convinced now that both baby and I were doomed,
and that she would be left a childless widow.
I tried to treat the matter as a joke, and this only
made her more wretched. She said that she could
see I really felt as she did, and was only pretending
to be light-hearted for her sake, and she said she
would try and bear it bravely.
The person she chiefly blamed was Buggles.
In the night the clock gave us another
warning, and my wife accepted it for her Aunt Maria,
and seemed resigned. She wished, however, that
I had never had the clock, and wondered when, if ever,
I should get cured of my absurd craze for filling
the house with tomfoolery.
The next day the clock struck thirteen
four times and this cheered her up. She said
that if we were all going to die, it did not so much
matter. Most likely there was a fever or a plague
coming, and we should all be taken together.
She was quite light-hearted over it!
After that the clock went on and killed
every friend and relation we had, and then it started
on the neighbors.
It struck thirteen all day long for
months, until we were sick of slaughter, and there
could not have been a human being left alive for miles
around.
Then it turned over a new leaf, and
gave up murdering folks, and took to striking mere
harmless thirty-nines and forty-ones. Its favorite
number now is thirty-two, but once a day it strikes
forty-nine. It never strikes more than forty-nine.
I don’t know why I have never been
able to understand why but it doesn’t.
It does not strike at regular intervals,
but when it feels it wants to and would be better
for it. Sometimes it strikes three or four times
within the same hour, and at other times it will go
for half-a-day without striking at all.
He is an odd old fellow!
I have thought now and then of having
him “seen to,” and made to keep regular
hours and be respectable; but, somehow, I seem to have
grown to love him as he is with his daring mockery
of Time.
He certainly has not much respect
for it. He seems to go out of his way almost
to openly insult it. He calls half-past two thirty-eight
o’clock, and in twenty minutes from then he
says it is one!
Is it that he really has grown to
feel contempt for his master, and wishes to show it?
They say no man is a hero to his valet; may it be
that even stony-face Time himself is but a short-lived,
puny mortal a little greater than some
others, that is all to the dim eyes of this
old servant of his? Has he, ticking, ticking,
all these years, come at last to see into the littleness
of that Time that looms so great to our awed human
eyes?
Is he saying, as he grimly laughs,
and strikes his thirty-fives and forties: “Bah!
I know you, Time, godlike and dread though you seem.
What are you but a phantom a dream like
the rest of us here? Ay, less, for you will pass
away and be no more. Fear him not, immortal men.
Time is but the shadow of the world upon the background
of Eternity!”