I’m not going to discuss the
Fiscal Question (said Reginald); I wish to be original.
At the same time, I think one suffers more than one
realises from the system of free imports. I should
like, for instance, a really prohibitive duty put
upon the partner who declares on a weak red suit and
hopes for the best. Even a free outlet for compressed
verbiage doesn’t balance matters. And
I think there should be a sort of bounty-fed export
(is that the right expression?) of the people who impress
on you that you ought to take life seriously.
There are only two classes that really can’t
help taking life seriously-schoolgirls of
thirteen and Hohenzollerns; they might be exempt.
Albanians come under another heading; they take life
whenever they get the opportunity. The one Albanian
that I was ever on speaking terms with was rather a
decadent example. He was a Christian and a grocer,
and I don’t fancy he had ever killed anybody.
I didn’t like to question him on the subject-that
showed my delicacy. Mrs. Nicorax says I have
no delicacy; she hasn’t forgiven me about the
mice. You see, when I was staying down there,
a mouse used to cake-walk about my room half the night,
and none of their silly patent traps seemed to take
its fancy as a bijou residence, so I determined to
appeal to the better side of it-which with
mice is the inside. So I called it Percy, and
put little delicacies down near its hole every night,
and that kept it quiet while I read Max Nordau’s
Degeneration and other reproving literature,
and went to sleep. And now she says there is
a whole colony of mice in that room.
That isn’t where the indelicacy
comes in. She went out riding with me, which
was entirely her own suggestion, and as we were coming
home through some meadows she made a quite unnecessary
attempt to see if her pony would jump a rather messy
sort of brook that was there. It wouldn’t.
It went with her as far as the water’s edge,
and from that point Mrs. Nicorax went on alone.
Of course I had to fish her out from the bank, and
my riding-breeches are not cut with a view to salmon-fishing-it’s
rather an art even to ride in them. Her habit-skirt
was one of those open questions that need not be adhered
to in emergencies, and on this occasion it remained
behind in some water-weeds. She wanted me to
fish about for that too, but I felt I had done enough
Pharaoh’s daughter business for an October afternoon,
and I was beginning to want my tea. So I bundled
her up on to her pony, and gave her a lead towards
home as fast as I cared to go. What with the
wet and the unusual responsibility, her abridged costume
did not stand the pace particularly well, and she got
quite querulous when I shouted back that I had no pins
with me-and no string. Some women
expect so much from a fellow. When we got into
the drive she wanted to go up the back way to the
stables, but the ponies know they always get
sugar at the front door, and I never attempt to hold
a pulling pony; as for Mrs. Nicorax, it took her all
she knew to keep a firm hand on her seceding garments,
which, as her maid remarked afterwards, were more
tout than ensemble. Of course nearly
the whole house-party were out on the lawn watching
the sunset-the only day this month that
it’s occurred to the sun to show itself, as Mrs.
Nic. viciously observed-and I shall never
forget the expression on her husband’s face
as we pulled up. “My darling, this is too
much!” was his first spoken comment; taking
into consideration the state of her toilet, it was
the most brilliant thing I had ever heard him say,
and I went into the library to be alone and scream.
Mrs. Nicorax says I have no delicacy.
Talking about tariffs, the lift-boy,
who reads extensively between the landings, says it
won’t do to tax raw commodities. What,
exactly, is a raw commodity? Mrs. Van Challaby
says men are raw commodities till you marry them;
after they’ve struck Mrs. Van C., I can fancy
they pretty soon become a finished article.
Certainly she’s had a good deal of experience
to support her opinion. She lost one husband
in a railway accident, and mislaid another in the
Divorce Court, and the current one has just got himself
squeezed in a Beef Trust. “What was he
doing in a Beef Trust, anyway?” she asked tearfully,
and I suggested that perhaps he had an unhappy home.
I only said it for the sake of making conversation;
which it did. Mrs. Van Challaby said things about
me which in her calmer moments she would have hesitated
to spell. It’s a pity people can’t
discuss fiscal matters without getting wild.
However, she wrote next day to ask if I could get
her a Yorkshire terrier of the size and shade that’s
being worn now, and that’s as near as a woman
can be expected to get to owning herself in the wrong.
And she will tie a salmon-pink bow to its collar,
and call it “Reggie,” and take it with
her everywhere-like poor Miriam Klopstock,
who would take her Chow with her to the bathroom,
and while she was bathing it was playing at she-bears
with her garments. Miriam is always late for
breakfast, and she wasn’t really missed till
the middle of lunch.
However, I’m not going any further
into the Fiscal Question. Only I should like
to be protected from the partner with a weak red tendency.