Saturday, September 26, 2020

Novel Notes, by Jerome K. Jerome.

 

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Novel Notes
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Some parts of this work give the impression that his most famous work, Three Men On A Boat (To Say Nothing Of The Dog), grew out of this one; that he'd, by then, given up on attempt to be taken seriously as a profound and serious author, and found his style. 

This impression grows stronger, of course, when he describes his living on a houseboat with his family. 
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"Years ago, when I was very small, we lived in a great house in a long, straight, brown-coloured street, in the east end of London. It was a noisy, crowded street in the daytime; but a silent, lonesome street at night, when the gas-lights, few and far between, partook of the character of lighthouses rather than of illuminants, and the tramp, tramp of the policeman on his long beat seemed to be ever drawing nearer, or fading away, except for brief moments when the footsteps ceased, as he paused to rattle a door or window, or to flash his lantern into some dark passage leading down towards the river. 

"The house had many advantages, so my father would explain to friends who expressed surprise at his choosing such a residence, and among these was included in my own small morbid mind the circumstance that its back windows commanded an uninterrupted view of an ancient and much-peopled churchyard. Often of a night would I steal from between the sheets, and climbing upon the high oak chest that stood before my bedroom window, sit peering down fearfully upon the aged gray tombstones far below, wondering whether the shadows that crept among them might not be ghosts--soiled ghosts that had lost their natural whiteness by long exposure to the city's smoke, and had grown dingy, like the snow that sometimes lay there."

His mother caught him at it and asked what he was doing, and he told about wondering how ghosts feel. She put him back in bed and sang, and he felt a tear fall on him. 

"Poor little mother, she had a notion, founded evidently upon inborn belief rather than upon observation, that all children were angels, and that, in consequence, an altogether exceptional demand existed for them in a certain other place, where there are more openings for angels, rendering their retention in this world difficult and undependable. My talk about ghosts must have made that foolishly fond heart ache with a vague dread that night, and for many a night onward, I fear. 

"For some time after this I would often look up to find my mother's eyes fixed upon me. Especially closely did she watch me at feeding times, and on these occasions, as the meal progressed, her face would acquire an expression of satisfaction and relief. 

"Once, during dinner, I heard her whisper to my father (for children are not quite so deaf as their elders think), "He seems to eat all right." 

""Eat!" replied my father in the same penetrating undertone; "if he dies of anything, it will be of eating." 

"So my little mother grew less troubled, and, as the days went by, saw reason to think that my brother angels might consent to do without me for yet a while longer; and I, putting away the child with his ghostly fancies, became, in course of time, a grown-up person, and ceased to believe in ghosts, together with many other things that, perhaps, it were better for a man if he did believe in."
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Subsequently years later the protagonist - named Harry, so the author isn't owning up being the protagonist - found the novel notes, titled so, which was a collection of endeavours by four friends, and this work is result of his polishing it up a little. 

"Diving into a long unopened drawer, I had, by chance, drawn forth a dusty volume of manuscript, labelled upon its torn brown paper cover, NOVEL NOTES."

"The book was a compilation, half diary, half memoranda. In it lay the record of many musings, of many talks, and out of it--selecting what seemed suitable, adding, altering, and arranging--I have shaped the CHAPTERs that hereafter follow."

"When, on returning home one evening, after a pipe party at my friend Jephson's, I informed my wife that I was going to write a novel, she expressed herself as pleased with the idea. She said she had often wondered I had never thought of doing so before. "Look," she added, "how silly all the novels are nowadays; I'm sure you could write one." (Ethelbertha intended to be complimentary, I am convinced; but there is a looseness about her mode of expression which, at times, renders her meaning obscure.) 

"When, however, I told her that my friend Jephson was going to collaborate with me, she remarked, "Oh," in a doubtful tone; and when I further went on to explain to her that Selkirk Brown and Derrick MacShaughnassy were also going to assist, she replied, "Oh," in a tone which contained no trace of doubtfulness whatever, and from which it was clear that her interest in the matter, as a practical scheme, had entirely evaporated."
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Here on, for a while, readers familiar with the author have a treat in the style of his most famous works. Then he turns suddenly and begins to describe dreams, with increasing horror in the Hitchcock sense of doom impending but not quite getting there. 

One seems prescient, or is it a common tale? 

"In another dream that I remember, an angel (or a devil, I am not quite sure which) has come to a man and told him that so long as he loves no living human thing--so long as he never suffers himself to feel one touch of tenderness towards wife or child, towards kith or kin, towards stranger or towards friend, so long will he succeed and prosper in his dealings--so long will all this world's affairs go well with him; and he will grow each day richer and greater and more powerful. But if ever he let one kindly thought for living thing come into his heart, in that moment all his plans and schemes will topple down about his ears; and from that hour his name will be despised by men, and then forgotten. 

"And the man treasures up these words, for he is an ambitious man, and wealth and fame and power are the sweetest things in all the world to him. A woman loves him and dies, thirsting for a loving look from him; children's footsteps creep into his life and steal away again, old faces fade and new ones come and go. 

"But never a kindly touch of his hand rests on any living thing; never a kindly word comes from his lips; never a kindly thought springs from his heart. And in all his doings fortune favours him. 

"The years pass by, and at last there is left to him only one thing that he need fear--a child's small, wistful face. The child loves him, as the woman, long ago, had loved him, and her eyes follow him with a hungry, beseeching look. But he sets his teeth, and turns away from her. 

"The little face grows thin, and one day they come to him where he sits before the keyboard of his many enterprises, and tell him she is dying. He comes and stands beside the bed, and the child's eyes open and turn towards him; and, as he draws nearer, her little arms stretch out towards him, pleading dumbly. But the man's face never changes, and the little arms fall feebly back upon the tumbled coverlet, and the wistful eyes grow still, and a woman steps softly forward, and draws the lids down over them; then the man goes back to his plans and schemes.

"And he succeeds and prospers in all things, and each day he grows richer and greater and more powerful."

Seems too like the Getty story, or at least what was recently shown in a short serial based on history of the family, centred on the kidnapping of the grandson. 
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""But surely there are plenty of good heroines who are interesting," I said. 

""At intervals--when they do something wrong," answered Jephson. "A consistently irreproachable heroine is as irritating as Socrates must have been to Xantippe, or as the model boy at school is to all the other lads. Take the stock heroine of the eighteenth-century romance. She never met her lover except for the purpose of telling him that she could not be his, and she generally wept steadily throughout the interview. She never forgot to turn pale at the sight of blood, nor to faint in his arms at the most inconvenient moment possible. She was determined never to marry without her father's consent, and was equally resolved never to marry anybody but the one particular person she was convinced he would never agree to her marrying. She was an excellent young woman, and nearly as uninteresting as a celebrity at home." 

""Ah, but you're not talking about good women now," I observed. "You're talking about some silly person's idea of a good woman." 

""I quite admit it," replied Jephson. "Nor, indeed, am I prepared to say what is a good woman. I consider the subject too deep and too complicated for any mere human being to give judgment upon. But I am talking of the women who conformed to the popular idea of maidenly goodness in the age when these books were written. You must remember goodness is not a known quantity. It varies with every age and every locality, and it is, generally speaking, your 'silly persons' who are responsible for its varying standards. In Japan, a 'good' girl would be a girl who would sell her honour in order to afford little luxuries to her aged parents. In certain hospitable islands of the torrid zone the 'good' wife goes to lengths that we should deem altogether unnecessary in making her husband's guest feel himself at home. In ancient Hebraic days, Jael was accounted a good woman for murdering a sleeping man, and Sarai stood in no danger of losing the respect of her little world when she led Hagar unto Abraham. In eighteenth-century England, supernatural stupidity and dulness of a degree that must have been difficult to attain, were held to be feminine virtues--indeed, they are so still--and authors, who are always among the most servile followers of public opinion, fashioned their puppets accordingly. Nowadays 'slumming' is the most applauded virtue, and so all our best heroines go slumming, and are 'good to the poor.'""
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""How useful 'the poor' are," remarked MacShaughnassy, somewhat abruptly, placing his feet on the mantelpiece, and tilting his chair back till it stood at an angle that caused us to rivet our attention upon it with hopeful interest. "I don't think we scribbling fellows ever fully grasp how much we owe to 'the poor.' Where would our angelic heroines and our noble-hearted heroes be if it were not for 'the poor'? We want to show that the dear girl is as good as she is beautiful. What do we do? We put a basket full of chickens and bottles of wine on her arm, a fetching little sun-bonnet on her head, and send her round among the poor. How do we prove that our apparent scamp of a hero is really a noble young man at heart? Why, by explaining that he is good to the poor. 

""They are as useful in real life as they are in Bookland. What is it consoles the tradesman when the actor, earning eighty pounds a week, cannot pay his debts? Why, reading in the theatrical newspapers gushing accounts of the dear fellow's invariable generosity to the poor. What is it stills the small but irritating voice of conscience when we have successfully accomplished some extra big feat of swindling? Why, the noble resolve to give ten per cent of the net profits to the poor. 

""What does a man do when he finds himself growing old, and feels that it is time for him to think seriously about securing his position in the next world? Why, he becomes suddenly good to the poor. If the poor were not there for him to be good to, what could he do? He would be unable to reform at all. It's a great comfort to think that the poor will always be with us. They are the ladder by which we climb into heaven.""
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""'No poor!' exclaimed the lady. 'No poor people in the village, or anywhere near?'"

""'I'm sorry to hear that,' said the lady, in a tone of disappointment. 'The place would have suited me so admirably but for that.'"

""My cousin cudgelled his brains again. He did not intend to let a purchaser slip through his fingers if he could help it. At last a bright thought flashed into his mind. 'I'll tell you what we could do,' he said. 'There's a piece of waste land the other end of the village that we've never been able to do much with, in consequence of its being so swampy. If you liked, we could run you up a dozen cottages on that, cheap--it would be all the better their being a bit ramshackle and unhealthy--and get some poor people for you, and put into them.'"

""It ended in the lady's accepting my cousin's offer, and giving him a list of the poor people she would like to have. She selected one bedridden old woman (Church of England preferred); one paralytic old man; one blind girl who would want to be read aloud to; one poor atheist, willing to be converted; two cripples; one drunken father who would consent to be talked to seriously; one disagreeable old fellow, needing much patience; two large families, and four ordinary assorted couples."

""The plan worked exceedingly well, and does so, my cousin tells me, to this day. The drunken father has completely conquered his dislike to strong drink. He has not been sober now for over three weeks, and has lately taken to knocking his wife about. The disagreeable fellow is most conscientious in fulfilling his part of the bargain, and makes himself a perfect curse to the whole village. The others have dropped into their respective positions and are working well. The lady visits them all every afternoon, and is most charitable. They call her Lady Bountiful, and everybody blesses her.""
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""It happened in a tiny Yorkshire village--a peaceful, respectable spot, where folks found life a bit slow. One day, however, a new curate arrived, and that woke things up considerably. He was a nice young man, and, having a large private income of his own, was altogether a most desirable catch. Every unmarried female in the place went for him with one accord. 

""But ordinary feminine blandishments appeared to have no effect upon him. He was a seriously inclined young man, and once, in the course of a casual conversation upon the subject of love, he was heard to say that he himself should never be attracted by mere beauty and charm. What would appeal to him, he said, would be a woman's goodness--her charity and kindliness to the poor. 

""Well, that set the petticoats all thinking. They saw that in studying fashion plates and practising expressions they had been going upon the wrong tack. The card for them to play was 'the poor.' But here a serious difficulty arose. There was only one poor person in the whole parish, a cantankerous old fellow who lived in a tumble-down cottage at the back of the church, and fifteen able-bodied women (eleven girls, three old maids, and a widow) wanted to be 'good' to him. 

""Miss Simmonds, one of the old maids, got hold of him first, and commenced feeding him twice a day with beef-tea; and then the widow boarded him with port wine and oysters. Later in the week others of the party drifted in upon him, and wanted to cram him with jelly and chickens. 

""The old man couldn't understand it. He was accustomed to a small sack of coals now and then, accompanied by a long lecture on his sins, and an occasional bottle of dandelion tea. This sudden spurt on the part of Providence puzzled him. He said nothing, however, but continued to take in as much of everything as he could hold. At the end of a month he was too fat to get through his own back door. 

""The competition among the women-folk grew keener every day, and at last the old man began to give himself airs, and to make the place hard for them. He made them clean his cottage out, and cook his meals, and when he was tired of having them about the house, he set them to work in the garden. 

""They grumbled a good deal, and there was a talk at one time of a sort of a strike, but what could they do? He was the only pauper for miles round, and knew it. He had the monopoly, and, like all monopolises, he abused his position. 

""He made them run errands. He sent them out to buy his 'baccy,' at their own expense. On one occasion he sent Miss Simmonds out with a jug to get his supper beer. She indignantly refused at first, but he told her that if she gave him any of her stuck-up airs out she would go, and never come into his house again. If she wouldn't do it there were plenty of others who would. She knew it and went. 

""They had been in the habit of reading to him--good books with an elevating tendency. But now he put his foot down upon that sort of thing. He said he didn't want Sunday-school rubbish at his time of life. What he liked was something spicy. And he made them read him French novels and seafaring tales, containing realistic language. And they didn't have to skip anything either, or he'd know the reason why. 

""He said he liked music, so a few of them clubbed together and bought him a harmonium. Their idea was that they would sing hymns and play high- class melodies, but it wasn't his. His idea was--'Keeping up the old girl's birthday' and 'She winked the other eye,' with chorus and skirt dance, and that's what they sang. 

""To what lengths his tyranny would have gone it is difficult to say, had not an event happened that brought his power to a premature collapse. This was the curate's sudden and somewhat unexpected marriage with a very beautiful burlesque actress who had lately been performing in a neighbouring town. He gave up the Church on his engagement, in consequence of his fiancee's objection to becoming a minister's wife. She said she could never 'tumble to' the district visiting. 

""With the curate's wedding the old pauper's brief career of prosperity ended. They packed him off to the workhouse after that, and made him break stones.""
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"For the poor themselves--I do not mean the noisy professional poor, but the silent, fighting poor--one is bound to feel a genuine respect. One honours them, as one honours a wounded soldier."
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"I could not myself see any reason why we should not be able to think as well on a houseboat as anywhere else, and accordingly it was settled that I should go down and establish myself upon the thing, and that the others should visit me there from time to time, when we would sit round and toil."
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"For, when you are very, very young you dream that the summer is all sunny days and moonlight nights, that the wind blows always softly from the west, and that roses will thrive anywhere. But, as you grow older, you grow tired of waiting for the gray sky to break. So you close the door and come in, and crouch over the fire, wondering why the winds blow ever from the east: and you have given up trying to rear roses."
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"An old corncrake lived near to us, and the way he used to disturb all the other birds, and keep them from going to sleep, was shameful. Amenda, who was town-bred, mistook him at first for one of those cheap alarm clocks, and wondered who was winding him up, and why they went on doing it all night; and, above all, why they didn't oil him."
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"Most of us can recall our unpleasant experiences with amused affection; Jephson possessed the robuster philosophy that enabled him to enjoy his during their actual progress. He arrived drenched to the skin, chuckling hugely at the idea of having come down on a visit to a houseboat in such weather. 

"Under his warming influence, the hard lines on our faces thawed, and by supper time we were, as all Englishmen and women who wish to enjoy life should be, independent of the weather. 

"Later on, as if disheartened by our indifference, the rain ceased, and we took our chairs out on the deck, and sat watching the lightning, which still played incessantly. Then, not unnaturally, the talk drifted into a sombre channel, and we began recounting stories, dealing with the gloomy and mysterious side of life."

Here, he gives the germ of exchange of ghost stories, which he later published as worked into an independent work, The Man Of Science. 
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""Seriously speaking," said he, "don't you think that there are some experiences great enough to break up and re-form a man's nature?" 

""To break up," I replied, "yes; but to re-form, no. Passing through a great experience may shatter a man, or it may strengthen a man, just as passing through a furnace may melt or purify metal, but no furnace ever lit upon this earth can change a bar of gold into a bar of lead, or a bar of lead into one of gold.""

But - was the author unaware of other possible transformations? Such as formation of diamonds? Or, despite their hardness, the fundamental connection with coal, so both do burn up to ashes? Or even simpler, transformation of bare earth into orchard or garden or fields of golden harvest, and its opposite, transformation of green earth and of towns and cities into ashes due to megalomaniac despots? 

What he gives next, as example of change, is the most gruesome story anyone can imagine - except, that where racism and exploitation of subjects, by rulers not native to soil, are combined, then horrors like that and far worse have been known to take place. Churchill refusing to allow beyond Australia the ships of aid for India sent by FDR after millions died of starvation in India because the harvest was simply taken away by the British, and Churchill commenting to the effect that Indians dying was of no importance and it was better on the whole, can be seen as this story magnified - foe, while the victim in the story is a young British wife, the culprit is largely the disdain that British rulers held India and her people in, thereby never learning anything due to a presumption about their knowing better because they had no tan. That the ballot was merely due to centuries of life in dark Nordic latitudes and held no virtue whatsoever never occurred to them, and still doesn't. 

Funny, they've not even thought about the stereotypes of romance - fair damsel, tall dark guy - that prevails in not only Europe but India (although the couple in each case is strictly within the same race), and wondered why! If they did, it would drive racism out of heads. 
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"At the present rate of decrease, deaths by violence will be unheard of in another decade, and a murder story will be laughed at as too improbable to be interesting."

Written shortly before the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand in Sarajevo, and hence surprising for those reading it well over a century after it was written. 
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Chapter IX has the author give a story that seems the seed for Three Faces Of An Eve, even though the latter was based on a real story, without the complete barrier between the two personalities. Here it's a Balliol man, Joseph Smythe, who is a concertina playing 'arry Smith at a seaside town other half of his time. 

Author being Jerome K. Jerome, here Smythe is in love with the common young woman Liza whom Smith is bored with, while she has the opposite preference for Smith over Smythe, being unaware the two are the same man. But Smith is smitten by Miss Edith Trevior, elite, whom Smythe is bored with, and her inclination naturally enough is to look at Smith as dirt. 

""We said good-night at the corner of Bond Street, and I did not see him again till one afternoon late in the following March, when I ran against him in Ludgate Circus. He was wearing his transition blue suit and bowler hat. I went up to him and took his arm. 

""'Which are you?' I said. 

""'Neither, for the moment,' he replied, 'thank God. Half an hour ago I was Smythe, half an hour hence I shall be Smith. For the present half- hour I am a man.' 

""There was a pleasant, hearty ring in his voice, and a genial, kindly light in his eyes, and he held himself like a frank gentleman. 

""'You are certainly an improvement upon both of them,' I said. 

""He laughed a sunny laugh, with just the shadow of sadness dashed across it. 'Do you know my idea of Heaven?' he said. 

""'No,' I replied, somewhat surprised at the question. 

""'Ludgate Circus,' was the answer. 'The only really satisfying moments of my life,' he said, 'have been passed in the neighbourhood of Ludgate Circus. I leave Piccadilly an unhealthy, unwholesome prig. At Charing Cross I begin to feel my blood stir in my veins. From Ludgate Circus to Cheapside I am a human thing with human feeling throbbing in my heart, and human thought throbbing in my brain--with fancies, sympathies, and hopes. At the Bank my mind becomes a blank. As I walk on, my senses grow coarse and blunted; and by the time I reach Whitechapel I am a poor little uncivilised cad. On the return journey it is the same thing reversed.' 

""'Why not live in Ludgate Circus,' I said, 'and be always as you are now?' 

""'Because,' he answered, 'man is a pendulum, and must travel his arc.' "'My dear Mac,' said he, laying his hand upon my shoulder, 'there is only one good thing about me, and that is a moral. Man is as God made him: don't be so sure that you can take him to pieces and improve him. All my life I have sought to make myself an unnaturally superior person. Nature has retaliated by making me also an unnaturally inferior person. Nature abhors lopsidedness. She turns out man as a whole, to be developed as a whole. I always wonder, whenever I come across a supernaturally pious, a supernaturally moral, a supernaturally cultured person, if they also have a reverse self.' 

""I was shocked at his suggested argument, and walked by his side for a while without speaking. At last, feeling curious on the subject, I asked him how his various love affairs were progressing. 

""'Oh, as usual,' he replied; 'in and out of a cul de sac. When I am Smythe I love Eliza, and Eliza loathes me. When I am Smith I love Edith, and the mere sight of me makes her shudder. It is as unfortunate for them as for me. I am not saying it boastfully. Heaven knows it is an added draught of misery in my cup; but it is a fact that Eliza is literally pining away for me as Smith, and--as Smith I find it impossible to be even civil to her; while Edith, poor girl, has been foolish enough to set her heart on me as Smythe, and as Smythe she seems to me but the skin of a woman stuffed with the husks of learning, and rags torn from the corpse of wit.'"
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Chapter XI has a horror story about a mechanical dancer made by an artisan in Furtwangen, it's horror almost matched by the previous story about an affair in Cairo. The two are somewhat evoking of other works of roughly around the time, one of The Painted Veil by W. Somerset Maugham and other of Frankenstein by Mary Shelley. 
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"I think as a young man he was better than most of us. But he lacked that great gift which is the distinguishing feature of the English-speaking race all the world over, the gift of hypocrisy. He seemed incapable of doing the slightest thing without getting found out; a grave misfortune for a man to suffer from, this. 

"Dear simple-hearted fellow, it never occurred to him that he was as other men--with, perhaps, a dash of straightforwardness added; he regarded himself as a monster of depravity."

After the story of this unfortunate man, the author gives another story, that of a Prussian soldier who'd been awarded the iron cross; the story reminds one of one of the more enjoyable comedies of George Bernard Shaw, about a Swiss mercenary and a Serbian soldier. 
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"Human Nature has worn its conventions for so long that its habit has grown on to it. In this nineteenth century it is impossible to say where the clothes of custom end and the natural man begins. Our virtues are taught to us as a branch of 'Deportment'; our vices are the recognised vices of our reign and set. Our religion hangs ready-made beside our cradle to be buttoned upon us by loving hands. Our tastes we acquire, with difficulty; our sentiments we learn by rote. At cost of infinite suffering, we study to love whiskey and cigars, high art and classical music. In one age we admire Byron and drink sweet champagne: twenty years later it is more fashionable to prefer Shelley, and we like our champagne dry. At school we are told that Shakespeare is a great poet, and that the Venus di Medici is a fine piece of sculpture; and so for the rest of our lives we go about saying what a great poet we think Shakespeare, and that there is no piece of sculpture, in our opinion, so fine as the Venus di Medici. If we are Frenchmen we adore our mother; if Englishmen we love dogs and virtue. We grieve for the death of a near relative twelve months; but for a second cousin we sorrow only three. The good man has his regulation excellencies to strive after, his regulation sins to repent of. I knew a good man who was quite troubled because he was not proud, and could not, therefore, with any reasonableness, pray for humility. In society one must needs be cynical and mildly wicked: in Bohemia, orthodoxly unorthodox."
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"There is a fairy story that I read many, many years ago that has never ceased to haunt me. It told how a little boy once climbed a rainbow. And at the end of the rainbow, just behind the clouds, he found a wondrous city. Its houses were of gold, and its streets were paved with silver, and the light that shone upon it was as the light that lies upon the sleeping world at dawn. In this city there were palaces so beautiful that merely to look upon them satisfied all desires; temples so perfect that they who once knelt therein were cleansed of sin. And all the men who dwelt in this wondrous city were great and good, and the women fairer than the women of a young man's dreams. And the name of the city was, "The city of the things men meant to do.""
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September 21, 2020 - September 26, 2020.
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Monday, September 21, 2020

The New Utopia, by Jerome K. Jerome.

 

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THE NEW UTOPIA
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About someone who sleeps through the "GREAT SOCIAL REVOLUTION OF 1899.", for ten years before being discovered and thence left in a museum as an experiment, and wakes up in the new utopia of equality. 

Turns out it was only a nightmare. But quite a horror, at that. 
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"1891 -  I had spent an extremely interesting evening. I had dined with some very "advanced" friends of mine at the "National Socialist Club". We had had an excellent dinner: the pheasant, stuffed with truffles, was a poem; and when I say that the '49 Chateau Lafitte was worth the price we had to pay for it, I do not see what more I can add in its favour."

Notice the name of the club. Is it only the name that's connecting it with the then unimaginable future, now infamous past, party?
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"I listened very attentively while my friends explained how, for the thousands of centuries during which it had existed before they came, the world had been going on all wrong, and how, in the course of the next few years or so, they meant to put it right. 

"Equality of all mankind was their watchword--perfect equality in all things--equality in possessions, and equality in position and influence, and equality in duties, resulting in equality in happiness and contentment. 

"The world belonged to all alike, and must be equally divided. Each man's labour was the property, not of himself, but of the State which fed and clothed him, and must be applied, not to his own aggrandisement, but to the enrichment of the race. 

"Individual wealth--the social chain with which the few had bound the many, the bandit's pistol by which a small gang of rob- bers had thieved--must be taken from the hands that too long had held it. 

"Social distinctions--the barriers by which the rising tide of humanity had hitherto been fretted and restrained--must be for ever swept aside. The human race must press onward to its destiny (whatever that might be), not as at present, a scattered horde, scrambling, each man for himself, over the broken ground of un- equal birth and fortune--the soft sward reserved for the feet of the pampered, the cruel stones reserved for the feet of the cursed,--but an ordered army, marching side by side over the level plain of equity and equality. 

"The great bosom of our Mother Earth should nourish all her children, like and like; none should be hungry, none should have too much. The strong man should not grasp more than the weak; the clever should not scheme to seize more than the simple. The earth was man's, and the fulness thereof; and among all mankind it should be portioned out in even shares. All men were equal by the laws of man. 

"With inequality comes misery, crime, sin, selfishness, arrogance, hypocrisy. In a world in which all men were equal, there would exist no temptation to evil, and our natural nobility would assert itself."

"We raised our glasses and drank to EQUALITY, sacred EQUALITY; and then ordered the waiter to bring us Green Char- treuse and more cigars."
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""What's the matter?" he asked; "anything disturbed you?" 

""No," I said; "I always wake up like this, when I feel I've had enough sleep. What century is this?" 

""This," he said, "is the twenty-ninth century. You have been asleep for just one thousand years." 

""Ah! well, I feel all the better for it," I replied, getting down off the table. "There's nothing like having one's sleep out."

""I take it you are going to do the usual thing." said the old gentleman to me, as I proceeded to put on my clothes, which had been lying beside me in the case. "You'll want me to walk round the city with you, and explain all the changes to you, while you ask questions and make silly remarks?" 

""Yes," I replied, "I suppose that's what I ought to do.""

"Everyone was dressed, as was also my guide, in a pair of grey trousers, and a grey tunic, buttoning tight round the neck and fastened round the waist by a belt. Each man was clean shaven, and each man had black hair. 

"I said: 

""Are all men twins?" 

""Twins! Good gracious, no!" answered my guide. "Whatever made you fancy that?" 

""Why, they all look so much alike," I replied; "and they've all got black hair!" 

""Oh; that's the regulation colour for hair," explained my companion: "we've all got black hair. If a man's hair is not black naturally, he has to have it dyed black." 

""Why?" I asked. "Why!" retorted the old gentleman, somewhat irritably. 

""Why, I thought you understood that all men were now equal. What would become of our equality if one man or woman were allowed to swagger about in golden hair, while another had to put up with carrots?"

"He said that they had found they could not maintain their equality when people were allowed to wash themselves. Some people washed three or four times a day, while others never touched soap and water from one year's end to the other, and in consquence there got to be two distinct classes, the Clean and the Dirty. All the old class prejudices began to be revived. The clean despised the dirty, and the dirty hated the clean. So, to end dissension, the State decided to do the washing itself, and each citizen was now washed twice a day by government-appointed officials; and private washing was prohibited."

Further descriptions of living arrangements are so like what one yt video showed about a factory in China, it's not as funny as the author thought, if he did.  
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For that matter, further description is all horror - abolishing not only marriage but love, breeding of humans no different from that of cattle, children taken at birth by state and brought up until they finish their state selected training at twenty, country all market garden with rectangular roads and canals, world all one language and no variety, anyone better has an arm or a leg or head to lose! No literature and no art, either. No sports, of course. 

"I looked at the faces of the men and women that were passing. There was a patient, almost pathetic, expression upon them all. I wondered where I had seen that look before; it seemed familiar to me. 

"All at once I remembered. It was just the quiet, troubled, wondering expression that I had always noticed upon the faces of the horses and oxen that we used to breed and keep in the old world."
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September 21, 2020 - September 21, 2020.
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The Master Of Mrs. Chilvers, by Jerome K. Jerome.

 

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The Master Of Mrs. Chilvers
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Amazing, especially for its times. 

Introduction to the play, a description of characters, is quite illuminating, about not only the general idea of the play but also the author and his times. 
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GEOFFREY CHILVERS, M.P. [President Men’s League for the Extension of the Franchise to Women] A loving husband, and (would-be) affectionate father. Like many other good men, he is in sympathy with the Woman’s Movement: “not thinking it is coming in his time.” 

ANNYS CHILVERS [nee Mogton, Hon. Sec. Women’s Parliamentary Franchise League] A loving wife, and (would-be) affection mother. Many thousands of years have gone to her making. A generation ago, she would have been the ideal woman: the ideal helpmeet. But new ideas are stirring in her blood, a new ideal of womanhood is forcing itself upon her. 

LADY MOGTON [President W.P.F.L.] She knows she would be of more use in Parliament than many of the men who are there; is naturally annoyed at the Law’s stupidity in keeping her out. 

PHOEBE MOGTON [Org. Sec. W.P.F.L.] The new girl, thinking more of politics than of boys. But that will probably pass. 

JANET BLAKE [Jt. Org. Sec. W.P.F.L.] She dreams of a new heaven and a new earth when woman has the vote. 

MRS. MOUNTCALM VILLIERS [Vice-President W.P.F.L.] She was getting tired of flirting. The Woman’s Movement has arrived just at the right moment. 

ELIZABETH SPENDER [Hons. Treas. W.P.F.L.] She sees woman everywhere the slave of man: now pampered, now beaten, but ever the slave. She can see no hope of freedom but through warfare. 

MRS. CHINN A mother. JAWBONES A bill-poster. Movements that do not fit in with the essentials of life on thirty shillings a week have no message so far as Jawbones is concerned. 

GINGER Whose proper name is Rose Merton, and who has to reconcile herself to the fact that so far as her class is concerned the primaeval laws still run. 

DORIAN ST. HERBERT [Hon. Sec. M.L.E.F.W.] He is interested in all things, the Woman’s Movement included. 

BEN LAMB, M.P. As a student of woman, he admits to being in the infants’ class. SIGSBY An Election Agent. He thinks the modern woman suffers from over-indulgence. He would recommend to her the teachings of St. Paul. 

HAKE A butler. He does not see how to avoid his wife being practically a domestic servant without wages. 

A DEPUTATION It consists of two men and three women. Superior people would call them Cranks. But Cranks have been of some service to the world, and the use of superior people is still to be discovered.
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"ANNYS [To ELIZABETH.] I so want you to meet Geoffrey. He’ll alter your opinion of men. 

"ELIZABETH My opinion of men has been altered once or twice — each time for the worse. 

"ANNYS Why do you dislike men? 

"ELIZABETH [With a short laugh.] Why does the slave dislike the slave-owner? 

"PHOEBE Oh, come off the perch. You spend five thousand a year provided for you by a husband that you only see on Sundays. We’d all be slaves at that price. 

"ELIZABETH The chains have always been stretched for the few. My sympathies are with my class. 

"ANNYS But men like Geoffrey — men who are devoting their whole time and energy to furthering our cause; what can you have to say against them? 

"ELIZABETH Simply that they don’t know what they’re doing. The French Revolution was nursed in the salons of the French nobility. When the true meaning of the woman’s movement is understood we shall have to get on without the male sympathiser."
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"ST. HERBERT Deplorable; but of course not your fault. I mention it because of its importance to the present matter. Under Clause A of the Act for the Better Regulation, &c., &c., all persons “mentally deficient” are debarred from becoming members of Parliament. The classification has been held to include idiots, infants, and women."

"ST. HERBERT A leader of the Orange Party was opposed by a Nationalist, and the proceedings promised to be lively. They promised for a while to be still livelier, owing to the nomination at the last moment of the local lunatic. 

"PHOEBE [To ANNYS.] This is where we come in. 

"ST. HERBERT There is always a local lunatic, who, if harmless, is generally a popular character. James Washington McCaw appears to have been a particularly cheerful specimen. One of his eccentricities was to always have a skipping-rope in his pocket; wherever the traffic allowed it, he would go through the streets skipping. He said it kept him warm. Another of his tricks was to let off fireworks from the roof of his house whenever he heard of the death of anybody of importance. The Returning Officer refused his nomination — which, so far as his nominators were concerned, was intended only as a joke — on the grounds of his being by common report a person of unsound mind. And there, so far as South-west Belfast was concerned, the matter ended. 

"PHOEBE Pity. 

"ST. HERBERT But not so far as the Returning Officer was concerned. McCaw appears to have been a lunatic possessed of means, imbued with all an Irishman’s love of litigation. He at once brought an action against the Returning Officer, his contention being that his mental state was a private matter, of which the Returning Officer was not the person to judge. 

"PHOEBE He wasn’t a lunatic all over. 

"ST. HERBERT We none of us are. The case went from court to court. In every instance the decision was in favour of the Returning Officer. Until it reached the House of Lords. The decision was given yesterday afternoon — in favour of the man McCaw. 

"ELIZABETH Then lunatics, at all events, are not debarred from going to the poll."
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"PHOEBE It’s awfully rough on you, Geoffrey. I can see it from your point of view. But one can’t help remembering the things that you yourself have said. 

"GEOFFREY I know; I know. I’ve been going up and down the country, excusing even your excesses on the ground that no movement can force its way to the front without treading on innumerable toes. For me, now, to cry halt merely because it happens to be my own toes that are in the way would be — ridiculous — absurd — would be monstrous. [Nobody contradicts him.] You are perfectly justified- -if this case means what you say it does — in putting up a candidate against me for East Poplar. Only, naturally, it cannot be Annys. [He reaches out his hand to where ANNYS stands a little behind him, takes her hand.] Annys and I have fought more than one election. It has been side by side. 

"ELIZABETH The lady a little behind. 

"GEOFFREY [He moves away with an expression of deep annoyance.] 

"JANET [She comes forward. She holds forth her hands with a half- appealing, half-commanding gesture. She almost seems inspired.] Would it not be so much better if, in this first political contest between man and woman, the opponents were two people honouring one another, loving one another? Would it not show to all the world that man and woman may meet — contend in public life without anger, without scorn? [There is a pause. They stand listening.] I do not know, but it seems to me that if Mr. Chilvers could bring himself to do this it would be such a big thing — perhaps the most chivalrous thing that a man has ever done to help women. If he would put aside, quite voluntarily, all the man’s privilege — just say to the people, “Now choose — one of us two to serve you. We stand before you, equal, my wife and I.” I don’t know how to put it, but I feel that by merely doing that one thing Mr. Chilvers would solve the whole problem. It would prove that good men are ready to give us of their free accord all that we claim. We should gain our rights, not by warfare, but through love and understanding. Wouldn’t that be — so much better? [She looks — her hands still appealing — from one to the other.]"
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"ANNYS Do you know how long we have been married? Eight years. And do you know, sir, that all that time we have never had a difference? Don’t you think it will be good for you? 

"GEOFFREY Do you know WHY we have never had a difference? Because you have always had your own way. 

"ANNYS Oh! 

"GEOFFREY You have got so used to it, you don’t notice it. 

"ANNYS Then it will be good for me. I must learn to suffer opposition. [She laughs.] 

"GEOFFREY You won’t like it. 

"ANNYS Do you know, I’m not at all sure that I shan’t. [Unconsciously they let loose of one another.] You see, I shall have the right of hitting back. [Again she laughs.] 

"GEOFFREY [Also laughingly.] Is woman going to develop the fighting instinct? 

"ANNYS I wonder. [A moment’s silence.] 

"GEOFFREY The difficulty in our case is there seems nothing to fight about. 

"ANNYS We must think of something. [Laughs.] 

"GEOFFREY What line are you going to take — what is your argument: why they should vote for you in preference to me? 

"ANNYS Simply that I am a woman. 

"GEOFFREY My dear child, that won’t be enough. Why should they vote for you merely because you’re a woman? 

"ANNYS [Slightly astonished.] Because — because women are wanted in public life. 

"GEOFFREY Who wants them? 

"ANNYS [More astonished.] Who? Why — [it doesn’t seem too clear.] Why, all of us — you, yourself! 

"GEOFFREY I’m not East Poplar. ANNYS [Is puzzled a moment, then valiantly.] I shall ask them to send me to Parliament to represent the interests of their women — and therefore of themselves — the interests of their children. 

"GEOFFREY Children! What do you know about children? [Another silence.] 

"ANNYS Personally — no. We have had no children of our own, of course. But [hopefully] it is a woman’s instinct. 

"GEOFFREY Oh, Lord! That’s what the lady said who had buried seven. 

"ANNYS [Her mouth is growing hard.] Don’t you believe in the right of women to share in the government of the country? GEOFFREY Some women. Yes. I can see some capable - 

"ANNYS [Winces.] 

"GEOFFREY — elderly, motherly woman who has brought up a dozen children of her own — who knows the world, being of some real use. 

"ANNYS If it comes to that, there must be — I don’t say more “capable,” but more experienced, more fatherly men than yourself. [He turns, they look at one another. His tone almost touched contempt — hers was veiled anger.] 

"GEOFFREY THAT’S the danger. It may come to a real fight."
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"GINGER Was talking to old Dot-and-carry-one the other d’y. You know who I mean — chap with the wooden leg as ‘as ‘is pitch outside the “George.” “Wot do you wimmen want worrying yourselves about things outside the ‘ome?” ‘e says to me. “You’ve got the children,” ‘e says. “Oh,” I says, “and whose fault’s that, I’d like to know? You wait till we’ve got the vote,” I says, “we’ll soon show you—”"
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"SIGSBY Look here. What I want to know is this: am I being asked to regard Lady Mogton as my opponent’s election agent, or as my principal’s mother-in-law? That point’s got to be settled. [His vehemence deepens.] Look at all these posters. Not to be used, for fear the other side mayn’t like them. Now Lady Mogton writes me that my candidate’s supporters are not to employ a certain argument she disapproves of: because, if they do, she’ll tell his wife. Is this an election, or is it a family jar?"
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"SIGSBY What have you been doing? 

"JAWBONES Clinging to a roof for the last three hours. 

"SIGSBY Clinging to a roof! What for? 

"JAWBONES [He boils over.] Wot for? ‘Cos I didn’t want to fall off! Wot do you think: ‘cos I was fond of it? 

"SIGSBY I don’t understand - 

"JAWBONES You find yourself ‘alf way up a ladder, posting bills as the other side ‘as took objection to — with a crowd of girls from Pink’s jam factory waiting for you at the bottom with a barrel of treacle, and you WILL understand. Nothing else for me to do, o’ course, but to go up. Then they took the ladder away. 

"SIGSBY Where are the bills? JAWBONES Last I see of them was their being put into a ‘earse on its way to Ilford Cemetery.

"SIGSBY This has got to be seen into. This sort of thing can’t be allowed to go on. [He snatches up his hat.] 

"JAWBONES There’s another suggestion I’d like to make. 

"SIGSBY [Pauses.] 

"JAWBONES That is, if this election is going to be fought fairly, that our side should be provided with ‘at-pins."
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"GEOFFREY [He leans back in his chair.] Do you remember Tommy the Terrier, as they used to call him in the House — was always preaching Socialism? 

"ST. HERBERT Quite the most amusing man I ever met! 

"GEOFFREY And not afraid of being honest. Do you remember his answer when somebody asked him what he would do if Socialism, by any chance, really became established in England? He had just married an American heiress. He said he should emigrate. I am still convinced that woman is entitled to equal political rights with man. I didn’t think it was coming in my time. There are points in the problem remaining to be settled before we can arrive at a working solution. This is one of them. [He takes up the letter and reads.] “Are you prepared to have as your representative a person who for six months out of every year may be incapacitated from serving you?” It’s easy enough to say I oughtn’t to allow my supporters to drag in the personal element. I like it even less myself. But what’s the answer?"

"ST. HERBERT The answer, I should say, would be that the majority of women will continue to find something better to do. The women who will throw themselves into politics will be the unattached women, the childless women. [In an instant he sees his mistake, but it is too late.] 

"GEOFFREY [He rises, crosses to the desk, throws into a waste- paper-basket a piece of crumpled paper that was in his hand; then turns. The personal note has entered into the discussion.] The women who WANT to be childless — what about them? 

"ST. HERBERT [He shrugs his shoulders.] Are there any such? 

"GEOFFREY There are women who talk openly of woman’s share in the general scheme being a “burden” on her — an “incubus.” 

"ST. HERBERT A handful of cranks. To the normal woman motherhood has always been the one supreme desire. 

"GEOFFREY Because children crowned her with honour. The barren woman was despised. All that is changing. This movement is adding impulse to it. 

"ST. HERBERT Movements do not alter instincts. 

"GEOFFREY But they do. Ever since man emerged from the jungle he has been shedding his instincts — shaping them to new desires. Where do you find this all-prevailing instinct towards maternity? Among the women of society, who sacrifice it without a moment’s hesitation to their vanity — to their mere pleasures? The middle- class woman — she, too, is demanding “freedom.” Children, servants, the home! — they are too much for her “nerves.” And now there comes this new development, appealing to the intellectual woman. Is there not danger of her preferring political ambition, the excitement of public life, to what has come to be regarded as the “drudgery” of turning four walls into a home, of peopling the silence with the voices of the children? [He crosses to the table- -lays his hand again upon the open letter.] How do you know that this may not be her answer—”I have no children. I never mean to have children”?"
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"MR. PEEKIN We propose, Mr. Chilvers, to come to the point at once. [He is all smiles, caressing gestures.] 

"GEOFFREY Excellent. 

"PEEKIN If I left a baby at your door, what would you do with it? 

"GEOFFREY [For a moment he is taken aback, recovers himself.] Are you thinking of doing so? 

"PEEKIN It’s not impossible. 

"GEOFFREY Well, it sounds perhaps inhospitable, but do you know I really think I should ask you to take it away again. 

"PEEKIN Yes, but by the time you find it there, I shall have disappeared — skedaddled. 

"HOPPER Good. [He rubs his hands. Smiles at the others.] 

"GEOFFREY In that case I warn you that I shall hand it over to the police. 

"PEEKIN [He turns to the others.] I don’t myself see what else Mr. Chilvers could be expected to do. 

"MISS BORLASSE He’d be a fool not to. 

"GEOFFREY Thank you. So far we seem to be in agreement. And now may I ask to what all this is leading? 

"PEEKIN [He changes from the debonnair to the dramatic.] How many men, Mr. Chilvers, leave their babies every year at the door of poverty-stricken women? What are they expected to do with them? 

"[A moment. The DEPUTATION murmur approval.] 

"GEOFFREY I see. But is there no difference between the two doors? I am not an accomplice. 

"PEEKIN An accomplice! Is the ignorant servant-girl — first lured into the public-house, cajoled, tricked, deceived by false promises — the half-starved shop-girl in the hands of the practised libertine — is she an accomplice? 

"MRS. PEEKIN [A dowdily-dressed, untidy woman, but the face is sweet and tender.] Ah, Mr. Chilvers, if you could only hear the stories that I have heard from dying lips. 

"GEOFFREY Very pitiful, my dear lady. And, alas, only too old. But there are others. It would not be fair to blame always the man. 

"ANNYS [Unnoticed, drawn by the subject, she has risen and come down.] Perhaps not. But the punishment always falls on the woman. Is THAT quite fair? 

"GEOFFREY [He is irritated at ANNYS’S incursion into the discussion.] My dear Annys, that is Nature’s law, not man’s. All man can do is to mitigate it. 

"PEEKIN That is all we ask. The suffering, the shame, must always be the woman’s. Surely that is sufficient. 

"GEOFFREY What do you propose? 

"MISS BORLASSE [In her deep, fierce tones.] That all children born out of wedlock should be a charge upon the rates. 

"MISS RICKETTS [A slight, fair, middle-aged woman, with a nervous hesitating manner.] Of course, only if the mother wishes it. 

"GEOFFREY [The proposal staggers him. But the next moment it inspires him with mingled anger and amusement.] My dear, good people, have you stopped for one moment to consider what the result of your proposal would be? 

"PEEKIN For one thing, Mr. Chilvers, the adding to the populace of healthy children in place of the stunted and diseased abortions that is all that these poor women, out of their scanty earnings, can afford to present to the State. 

"GEOFFREY Humph! That incidentally it would undermine the whole institution of marriage, let loose the flood-gates that at present hold immorality in check, doesn’t appear to trouble you. That the law must be altered to press less heavily upon the woman — that the man must be made an equal sharer in the penalty — all that goes without saying. The remedy you propose would be a thousand times worse than the disease. 

"ANNYS And meanwhile? Until you have devised this scheme [there is a note of contempt in her voice] under which escape for the man will be impossible? 

"GEOFFREY The evil must continue. As other evils have to until the true remedy is found. 

"PEEKIN [He has hurriedly consulted with the others. All have risen — he turns to GEOFFREY.] You will not support our demand? 

"GEOFFREY Support it! Do you mean that you cannot yourselves see that you are holding out an indemnity to every profligate, male and female, throughout the land — that you would be handicapping, in the struggle for existence, every honest man and woman desirous of bringing up their children in honour and in love? Your suggestion is monstrous! 

"PEEKIN [The little man is not without his dignity.] We apologise, Mr. Chilvers, for having taken up your time. 

"GEOFFREY I am sorry the matter was one offering so little chance of agreement. 

"PEEKIN We will make only one slight further trespass on your kindness. Mrs. Chilvers, if one may judge, would seem to be more in sympathy with our views. Might we — it would be a saving of time and shoe leather [he smiles] — might we take this opportunity of laying our case before her? 

"GEOFFREY It would be useless. 

"[A short silence. ANNYS, with ELIZABETH and PHOEBE a little behind her, stands right. LAMB, SIGSBY, and ST. HERBERT are behind GEOFFREY centre. The DEPUTATION is left.] 

"HOPPER Do we gather that in this election you speak for both candidates? 

"GEOFFREY In matters of common decency, yes. My wife does not associate herself with movements for the encouragement of vice. [There is another moment’s silence.] 

"ANNYS But, Geoffrey, dear — we should not be encouraging the evil. We should still seek to find the man, to punish him. The woman would still suffer - 

"GEOFFREY My dear Annys, this is neither the time nor place for you and me to argue out the matter. I must ask you to trust to my judgment. 

"ANNYS I can understand your refusing, but why do you object to my - 

"GEOFFREY Because I do not choose for my wife’s name to be linked with a movement that I regard as criminal. I forbid it. 

"[It was the moment that was bound to come. The man’s instincts, training, have involuntarily asserted themselves. Shall the woman yield? If so, then down goes the whole movement — her claim to freedom of judgment, of action, in all things. All watch the struggle with breathless interest.] 

"ANNYS [She speaks very slowly, very quietly, but with a new note in her voice.] I am sorry, but I have given much thought to this matter, and — I do not agree with you. 

"MRS. PEEKIN You will help us? 

"ANNYS I will do what I can. 

"PEEKIN [He takes from his pocket a folded paper.] It is always so much more satisfactory when these things are in writing. Candidates, with the best intentions in the world, are apt to forget. [He has spread the paper on a corner of the table. He has in his hand his fountain-pen.] 

"ANNYS [With a smile.] I am not likely to forget, but if you wish it — [She approaches the table.] 

"GEOFFREY [He interposes. His voice is very low, almost a whisper.] My wife will not sign. 

"ANNYS [She also speaks low, but there is no yielding in her voice.] I am not only your wife. I have a duty also to others."
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"GEOFFREY [He is writing.] Sigsby. 

"SIGSBY Hallo! 

"GEOFFREY That poster I told young Gordon I wouldn’t sanction, “The Woman spouting politics, the Man returning to a slattern’s home.” 

"[SIGSBY enters.] 

"SIGSBY I have countermanded them. 

"GEOFFREY Countermand them again. We shall want a thousand. 

"SIGSBY [Can hardly believe his ears.] 

"GEOFFREY [With a gesture round the room.] All of them. “A Man for Men!” “Save the Children!” “Guard your Homes!” All the damned collection. Order as many as you want. 

"SIGSBY [His excitement rising.] I can go ahead. You mean it? 

"GEOFFREY [He looks at him.] It’s got to be a fight! [A moment. He returns to his writing.] Telephone Hake that I shall be dining at the Reform Club."
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"LADY MOGTON I am sorry. 

"SIGSBY [He snarls.] “The Mother’s Hand shall Help Us!” One of your posters, I think. 

"LADY MOGTON You shouldn’t have insulted them — calling them old washerwomen! 

"SIGSBY Insult! Can’t one indulge in a harmless jeu d’esprit — [he pronounces it according to his own ideas] — without having one’s clothes torn off one’s back? [Fiercely.] What do you mean by it — disgracing your sex? 

"LADY MOGTON Are you addressing me? 

"SIGSBY All of you. Upsetting the foundations upon which society has been reared — the natural and lawful subjection of the woman to the man. Why don’t you read St. Paul? 

"LADY MOGTON St. Paul was addressing Christians. When men behave like Christians there will be no need of Votes for Women. You read St. Paul on men. [To JANET.] I shall want you!"
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"GEOFFREY So this is only the beginning? You have decided to devote yourself to a political career? 

"ANNYS Why not? 

"GEOFFREY If I were to ask you to abandon it, to come back to your place at my side — helping me, strengthening me? 

"ANNYS You mean you would have me abandon my own task — merge myself in you? 

"GEOFFREY Be my wife. 

"ANNYS It would not be right. I, too, have my work. 

"GEOFFREY If it takes you away from me? 

"ANNYS Why need it take me away from you? Why cannot we work together for common ends, each in our own way? GEOFFREY We talked like that before we tried it. Marriage is not a partnership; it is a leadership. 

"ANNYS [She looks at him.] You mean — an ownership. GEOFFREY Perhaps you’re right. I didn’t make it. I’m only — beginning to understand it. 

"ANNYS And I too. It is not what I want. 

"GEOFFREY You mean its duties have become irksome to you. 

"ANNYS I mean I want to be the judge myself of what are my duties. 

"GEOFFREY I no longer count. You will go your way without me? 

"ANNYS I must go the way I think right. 

"GEOFFREY [He flings away.] If you win to-night you will do well to make the most of it. Take my advice and claim the seat. 

"ANNYS [Looks at him puzzled.] 

"ELIZABETH Why? 

"GEOFFREY Because [with a short, ugly laugh] the Lord only knows when you’ll get another opportunity. 

"ELIZABETH You are going to stop us? 

"GEOFFREY To stop women from going to the poll. The Bill will be introduced on Monday. Carried through all its stages the same week. 

"ELIZABETH You think it will pass? 

"GEOFFREY The Whips assure me that it will. ANNYS But they cannot, they dare not, without your assent. The — [The light breaks in upon her.] Who is bringing it in? 

"GEOFFREY I am. 

"ANNYS [Is going to speak.] 

"GEOFFREY [He stops her.] Oh, I’m prepared for all that — ridicule, abuse. “Chilvers’s Bill for the Better Regulation of Mrs. Chilvers,” they’ll call it. I can hear their laughter. Yours won’t be among it. 

"ANNYS But, Geoffrey! What is the meaning? Merely to spite me, are you going to betray a cause that you have professed belief in — that you have fought for? 

"GEOFFREY Yes — if it is going to take you away from me. I want you. No, I don’t want a friend—”a fellow-worker” — some interesting rival in well doing. I can get all that outside my home. I want a wife. I want the woman I love to belong to me — to be mine. I am not troubling about being up to date; I’m talking what I feel — what every male creature must have felt since the protoplasmic cell developed instincts. I want a woman to love — a woman to work for — a woman to fight for — a woman to be a slave to. But mine — mine, and nothing else. All the rest [he makes a gesture] is talk. [He closes the window, shutting out the hubbub of the crowd.] 

"ANNYS [A strange, new light has stolen in. She is bewildered, groping.] But — all this is new between us. You have not talked like this for — not since — We were just good friends — comrades. 

"GEOFFREY And might have remained so, God knows! I suppose we’re made like that. So long as there was no danger passion slept. I cannot explain it. I only know that now, beside the thought of losing you, all else in the world seems meaningless. The Woman’s Movement! [He makes a gesture of contempt.] Men have wrecked kingdoms for a woman before now — and will again. I want you! [He comes to her.] Won’t you come back to me, that we may build up the home we used to dream of? Wasn’t the old love good? What has this new love to give you? Work that man can do better. The cause of the women — the children! Has woman loved woman better than man? Will the world be better for the children, man and woman contending? Come back to me. Help me. Help me to fight for all good women. Teach me how I may make the world better — for our children. 

"ANNYS [The light is in her eyes. She stands a moment. Her hands are going out to him.] 

:ELIZABETH [She comes between them.] Yes, go to him. He will be very good to you. Good men are kind to women, kind even to their dogs. You will be among the pampered few! You will be happy. And the others! What does it matter? 

"[They draw apart. She stands between them, the incarnation of the spirit of sex war.] 

"The women that have not kind owners — the dogs that have not kind masters — the dumb women, chained to their endless, unpaid drudgery! Let them be content. What are they but man’s chattel? To be honoured if it pleases him, or to be cast into the dust. Man’s pauper! Bound by his laws, subject to his whim; her every hope, her every aspiration, owed to his charity. She toils for him without ceasing: it should be her “pleasure.” She bears him children, when he chooses to desire them. They are his to do as he will by. Why seek to change it? Our man is kind. What have they to do with us: the women beaten, driven, overtasked — the women without hope or joy, the livers of grey lives that men may laugh and spend — the women degraded lower than the beasts to pander to the beast in man — the women outraged and abandoned, bearing to the grave the burden of man’s lust? Let them go their way. They are but our sisters of sorrow. And we who could help them — we to whom God has given the weapons: the brain, and the courage — we make answer: “I have married a husband, and I cannot come.” [A silence.] 

"GEOFFREY Well, you have heard. [He makes a gesture.] What is your answer? 

"ANNYS [She comes to him.] Don’t you love me enough to humour me a little — to put up with my vexing ways? I so want to help, to feel I am doing just a little, to make the world kinder. I know you can do it better, but I want so to be “in it.” [She laughs.] Let us forget all this. Wake up to-morrow morning with fresh hearts. You will be Member for East Poplar. And then you shall help me to win Manchester. [She puts her hands upon his breast: she would have him take her in his arms.] I am not strong enough to fight alone. 

"GEOFFREY I want you. Let Manchester find some one else. 

"ANNYS [She draws away from him.] And if I cannot — will not? 

"GEOFFREY I bring in my Bill on Monday. We’ll be quite frank about it. That is my price — you. I want you!"
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The two were reunited despite her win, partly because her news of expecting changed him, but the more fundamental change was due to his beginning of comprehension due to his talk with his office cook who was a widow, of what women go through as mothers, often supporting large number of children alone. 
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September 20, 2020 - September 21, 2020.
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Sunday, September 20, 2020

The Man of Science: by Jerome K. Jerome.

 

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The Man of Science
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The story of a wronged man's spirit perusing the wrongdoers long after the death of the former, told between a group of friends, beginning with something that happens to the protagonist - a gripping story with a chilling end. 

"I met a man in the Strand one day that I knew very well, as I thought, though I had not seen him for years. We walked together to Charing Cross, and there we shook hands and parted. Next morning, I spoke of this meeting to a mutual friend, and then I learnt, for the first time, that the man had died six months before. 

"The natural inference was that I had mistaken one man for another, an error that, not having a good memory for faces, I frequently fall into. What was remarkable about the matter, however, was that throughout our walk I had conversed with the man under the impression that he was that other dead man, and, whether by coincidence or not, his replies had never once suggested to me my mistake."

""Well, do you believe that the spirits of the dead have not only the power of revisiting this earth at their will, but that, when here, they have the power of action, or rather, of exciting to action? Let me put a definite case. A spiritualist friend of mine, a sensible and by no means imaginative man, once told me that a table, through the medium of which the spirit of a friend had been in the habit of communicating with him, came slowly across the room towards him, of its own accord, one night as he sat alone, and pinioned him against the wall. Now can any of you believe that, or can't you?" 

""I could," Brown took it upon himself to reply; "but, before doing so, I should wish for an introduction to the friend who told you the story. Speaking generally," he continued, "it seems to me that the difference between what we call the natural and the supernatural is merely the difference between frequency and rarity of occurrence. Having regard to the phenomena we are compelled to admit, I think it illogical to disbelieve anything we are unable to disprove.""
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September 20, 2020 - September 20, 2020.
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