<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<p>This etext was prepared by Les Bowler from the 1899 Hurst and
Blackett edition.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/coverb.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="Book cover" title= "Book cover" src="images/covers.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<h1>The Second Thoughts<br/> of<br/> An Idle Fellow</h1>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">By</span><br/>
JEROME K. JEROME<br/>
<span class="GutSmall">AUTHOR OF</span><br/>
<span class="GutSmall">‘THREE MEN IN A BOAT,’
‘IDLE THOUGHTS OF AN IDLE FELLOW,’</span><br/>
<span class="GutSmall">‘STAGELAND,’ ‘JOHN
INGERFIELD,’ ETC.</span></p>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">LONDON</span><br/>
HURST AND BLACKETT, LIMITED<br/>
13, GREAT MARLBOROUGH STREET<br/>
1899<br/>
<span class="GutSmall"><i>All rights reserved</i></span></p>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<p class="gutindent">First printing published August 17, 1898.<br/>
Second printing published September 2, 1898.<br/>
Third printing published November 1, 1898.<br/>
Fourth printing published January 1, 1899.</p>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall"><span class="smcap">Richard Clay</span></span><span class="GutSmall">
& </span><span class="GutSmall"><span class="smcap">Sons</span></span><span class="GutSmall">,
</span><span class="GutSmall"><span class="smcap">Limited</span></span><span class="GutSmall">,
</span><span class="GutSmall"><span class="smcap">London</span></span><span class="GutSmall"> &
</span><span class="GutSmall"><span class="smcap">Bungay</span></span><span class="GutSmall">.</span></p>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
<table>
<tr>
<td><p> </p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="GutSmall">PAGE</span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">On the Art of Making Up One’s
Mind</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page1">1</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">On the Disadvantage of Not Getting
What One Wants</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page29">29</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">On the Exceptional Merit attaching to
the Things We Meant To Do</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page53">53</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">On the Preparation and Employment of
Love Philtres</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page91">91</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">On the Delights and Benefits of
Slavery</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page119">119</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">On the Care and Management of
Women</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page149">149</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">On the Minding of Other People’s
Business</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page175">175</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">On the Time Wasted in Looking Before
One Leaps</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page215">215</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">On the Nobility of
Ourselves</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page245">245</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">On the Motherliness of Man</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page271">271</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">On the Inadvisability of Following
Advice</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page301">301</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><span class="smcap">On the Playing of Marches at the
Funerals Of Marionettes</span></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page335">335</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<h2><SPAN name="page1"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>ON THE ART OF MAKING UP ONE’S MIND</h2>
<p>“<span class="smcap">Now</span>, which would you advise,
dear? You see, with the red I shan’t be able to wear
my magenta hat.”</p>
<p>“Well then, why not have the grey?”</p>
<p>“Yes—yes, I think the grey will be <i>more
useful</i>.”</p>
<p>“It’s a good material.”</p>
<p>“Yes, and it’s a <i>pretty</i> grey. You
know what I mean, dear; not a <i>common</i> grey. Of course
grey is always an <i>uninteresting</i> colour.”</p>
<p>“It’s quiet.”</p>
<p>“And then again, what I feel about the red is that it is
so warm-looking. Red makes you <i>feel</i> warm even when
you’re <i>not</i> warm. You know what I mean,
dear!”</p>
<p>“Well then, why not have the red? It suits
you—red.”</p>
<p>“No; do you really think so?”</p>
<p>“Well, when you’ve got a colour, I mean, of
course!”</p>
<p>“Yes, that is the drawback to red. No, I think, on
the whole, the grey is <i>safer</i>.”</p>
<p>“Then you will take the grey, madam?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I think I’d better; don’t you,
dear?”</p>
<p>“I like it myself very much.”</p>
<p>“And it is good wearing stuff. I shall have it
trimmed with— Oh! you haven’t cut it off, have
you?”</p>
<p>“I was just about to, madam.”</p>
<p>“Well, don’t for a moment. Just let me have
another look at the red. You see, dear, it has just
occurred to me—that chinchilla would look so well on the
red!”</p>
<p>“So it would, dear!”</p>
<p>“And, you see, I’ve <i>got</i> the
chinchilla.”</p>
<p>“Then have the red. Why not?”</p>
<p>“Well, there is the hat I’m thinking
of.”</p>
<p>“You haven’t anything else you could wear with
that?”</p>
<p>“Nothing at all, and it would go so <i>beautifully</i>
with the grey.—Yes, I think I’ll have the grey.
It’s always a safe colour—grey.”</p>
<p>“Fourteen yards I think you said, madam?”</p>
<p>“Yes, fourteen yards will be enough; because I shall mix
it with—One minute. You see, dear, if I take the grey
I shall have nothing to wear with my black jacket.”</p>
<p>“Won’t it go with grey?”</p>
<p>“Not well—not so well as with red.”</p>
<p>“I should have the red then. You evidently fancy
it yourself.”</p>
<p>“No, personally I prefer the grey. But then one
must think of <i>everything</i>, and—Good gracious!
that’s surely not the right time?”</p>
<p>“No, madam, it’s ten minutes slow. We always
keep our clocks a little slow!”</p>
<p>“And we were too have been at Madame Jannaway’s at
a quarter past twelve. How long shopping does take!
Why, whatever time did we start?”</p>
<p>“About eleven, wasn’t it?”</p>
<p>“Half-past ten. I remember now; because, you know,
we said we’d start at half-past nine. We’ve
been two hours already!”</p>
<p>“And we don’t seem to have done much, do
we?”</p>
<p>“Done literally nothing, and I meant to have done so
much. I <i>must</i> go to Madame Jannaway’s.
Have you got my purse, dear? Oh, it’s all right,
I’ve got it.”</p>
<p>“Well, now you haven’t decided whether
you’re going to have the grey or the red.”</p>
<p>“I’m sure I don’t know what I <i>do</i> want
now. I had made up my mind a minute ago, and now it’s
all gone again—oh yes, I remember, the red. Yes,
I’ll have the red. No, I don’t mean the red, I
mean the grey.”</p>
<p>“You were talking about the red last time, if you
remember, dear.”</p>
<p>“Oh, so I was, you’re quite right.
That’s the worst of shopping. Do you know I get quite
confused sometimes.”</p>
<p>“Then you will decide on the red, madam?”</p>
<p>“Yes—yes, I shan’t do any better, shall I,
dear? What do <i>you</i> think? You haven’t got
any other shades of red, have you? This is such an
<i>ugly</i> red.”</p>
<p>The shopman reminds her that she has seen all the other reds,
and that this is the particular shade she selected and
admired.</p>
<p>“Oh, very well,” she replies, with the air of one
from whom all earthly cares are falling, “I must take that
then, I suppose. I can’t be worried about it any
longer. I’ve wasted half the morning
already.”</p>
<p>Outside she recollects three insuperable objections to the
red, and four unanswerable arguments why she should have selected
the grey. She wonders would they change it, if she went
back and asked to see the shop-walker? Her friend, who
wants her lunch, thinks not.</p>
<p>“That is what I hate about shopping,” she
says. “One never has time to really
<i>think</i>.”</p>
<p>She says she shan’t go to that shop again.</p>
<p>We laugh at her, but are we so very much better? Come,
my superior male friend, have you never stood, amid your
wardrobe, undecided whether, in her eyes, you would appear more
imposing, clad in the rough tweed suit that so admirably displays
your broad shoulders; or in the orthodox black frock, that, after
all, is perhaps more suitable to the figure of a man
approaching—let us say, the nine-and-twenties? Or,
better still, why not riding costume? Did we not hear her
say how well Jones looked in his top-boots and breeches, and,
“hang it all,” we have a better leg than Jones.
What a pity riding-breeches are made so baggy nowadays. Why
is it that male fashions tend more and more to hide the male
leg? As women have become less and less ashamed of theirs,
we have become more and more reticent of ours. Why are the
silken hose, the tight-fitting pantaloons, the neat kneebreeches
of our forefathers impossible to-day? Are we grown more
modest—or has there come about a falling off, rendering
concealment advisable?</p>
<p>I can never understand, myself, why women love us. It
must be our honest worth, our sterling merit, that attracts
them—certainly not our appearance, in a pair of tweed
“dittos,” black angora coat and vest, stand-up
collar, and chimney-pot hat! No, it must be our sheer force
of character that compels their admiration.</p>
<p>What a good time our ancestors must have had was borne in upon
me when, on one occasion, I appeared in character at a fancy
dress ball. What I represented I am unable to say, and I
don’t particularly care. I only know it was something
military. I also remember that the costume was two sizes
too small for me in the chest, and thereabouts; and three sizes
too large for me in the hat. I padded the hat, and dined in
the middle of the day off a chop and half a glass of
soda-water. I have gained prizes as a boy for mathematics,
also for scripture history—not often, but I have done
it. A literary critic, now dead, once praised a book of
mine. I know there have been occasions when my conduct has
won the approbation of good men; but never—never in my
whole life, have I felt more proud, more satisfied with myself
than on that evening when, the last hook fastened, I gazed at my
full-length Self in the cheval glass. I was a dream.
I say it who should not; but I am not the only one who said
it. I was a glittering dream. The groundwork was red,
trimmed with gold braid wherever there was room for gold braid;
and where there was no more possible room for gold braid there
hung gold cords, and tassels, and straps. Gold buttons and
buckles fastened me, gold embroidered belts and sashes caressed
me, white horse-hair plumes waved o’er me. I am not
sure that everything was in its proper place, but I managed to
get everything on somehow, and I looked well. It suited
me. My success was a revelation to me of female human
nature. Girls who had hitherto been cold and distant
gathered round me, timidly solicitous of notice. Girls on
whom I smiled lost their heads and gave themselves airs.
Girls who were not introduced to me sulked and were rude to girls
that had been. For one poor child, with whom I sat out two
dances (at least she sat, while I stood gracefully beside
her—I had been advised, by the costumier, <i>not</i> to
sit), I was sorry. He was a worthy young fellow, the son of
a cotton broker, and he would have made her a good husband, I
feel sure. But he was foolish to come as a beer-bottle.</p>
<p>Perhaps, after all, it is as well those old fashions have gone
out. A week in that suit might have impaired my natural
modesty.</p>
<p>One wonders that fancy dress balls are not more popular in
this grey age of ours. The childish instinct to
“dress up,” to “make believe,” is with us
all. We grow so tired of being always ourselves. A
tea-table discussion, at which I once assisted, fell into
this:—Would any one of us, when it came to the point,
change with anybody else, the poor man with the millionaire, the
governess with the princess—change not only outward
circumstances and surroundings, but health and temperament,
heart, brain, and soul; so that not one mental or physical
particle of one’s original self one would retain, save only
memory? The general opinion was that we would not, but one
lady maintained the affirmative.</p>
<p>“Oh no, you wouldn’t really, dear,” argued a
friend; “you <i>think</i> you would.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I would,” persisted the first lady; “I
am tired of myself. I’d even be you, for a
change.”</p>
<p>In my youth, the question chiefly important to me
was—What sort of man shall I decide to be? At
nineteen one asks oneself this question; at thirty-nine we say,
“I wish Fate hadn’t made me this sort of
man.”</p>
<p>In those days I was a reader of much well-meant advice to
young men, and I gathered that, whether I should become a Sir
Lancelot, a Herr Teufelsdrockh, or an Iago was a matter for my
own individual choice. Whether I should go through life
gaily or gravely was a question the pros and cons of which I
carefully considered. For patterns I turned to books.
Byron was then still popular, and many of us made up our minds to
be gloomy, saturnine young men, weary with the world, and prone
to soliloquy. I determined to join them.</p>
<p>For a month I rarely smiled, or, when I did, it was with a
weary, bitter smile, concealing a broken heart—at least
that was the intention. Shallow-minded observers
misunderstood.</p>
<p>“I know exactly how it feels,” they would say,
looking at me sympathetically, “I often have it
myself. It’s the sudden change in the weather, I
think;” and they would press neat brandy upon me, and
suggest ginger.</p>
<p>Again, it is distressing to the young man, busy burying his
secret sorrow under a mound of silence, to be slapped on the back
by commonplace people and asked—“Well, how’s
‘the hump’ this morning?” and to hear his mood
of dignified melancholy referred to, by those who should know
better, as “the sulks.”</p>
<p>There are practical difficulties also in the way of him who
would play the Byronic young gentleman. He must be
supernaturally wicked—or rather must <i>have been</i>;
only, alas! in the unliterary grammar of life, where the future
tense stands first, and the past is formed, not from the
indefinite, but from the present indicative, “to have
been” is “to be”; and to be wicked on a small
income is impossible. The ruin of even the simplest of
maidens costs money. In the Courts of Love one cannot sue
in <i>formâ pauperis</i>; nor would it be the Byronic
method.</p>
<p>“To drown remembrance in the cup” sounds well, but
then the “cup,” to be fitting, should be of some
expensive brand. To drink deep of old Tokay or Asti is
poetical; but when one’s purse necessitates that the
draught, if it is to be deep enough to drown anything, should be
of thin beer at five-and-nine the four and a half gallon cask, or
something similar in price, sin is robbed of its flavour.</p>
<p>Possibly also—let me think it—the conviction may
have been within me that Vice, even at its daintiest, is but an
ugly, sordid thing, repulsive in the sunlight; that
though—as rags and dirt to art—it may afford
picturesque material to Literature, it is an evil-smelling
garment to the wearer; one that a good man, by reason of poverty
of will, may come down to, but one to be avoided with all
one’s effort, discarded with returning mental
prosperity.</p>
<p>Be this as it may, I grew weary of training for a saturnine
young man; and, in the midst of my doubt, I chanced upon a book
the hero of which was a debonnaire young buck, own cousin to Tom
and Jerry. He attended fights, both of cocks and men,
flirted with actresses, wrenched off door-knockers, extinguished
street lamps, played many a merry jest upon many an
unappreciative night watch-man. For all the which he was
much beloved by the women of the book. Why should not I
flirt with actresses, put out street lamps, play pranks on
policemen, and be beloved? London life was changed since
the days of my hero, but much remained, and the heart of woman is
eternal. If no longer prizefighting was to be had, at least
there were boxing competitions, so called, in dingy back parlours
out Whitechapel way. Though cockfighting was a lost sport,
were there not damp cellars near the river where for twopence a
gentleman might back mongrel terriers to kill rats against time,
and feel himself indeed a sportsman? True, the atmosphere
of reckless gaiety, always surrounding my hero, I missed myself
from these scenes, finding in its place an atmosphere more
suggestive of gin, stale tobacco, and nervous apprehension of the
police; but the essentials must have been the same, and the next
morning I could exclaim in the very words of my
prototype—“Odds crickets, but I feel as though the
devil himself were in my head. Peste take me for a
fool.”</p>
<p>But in this direction likewise my fatal lack of means opposed
me. (It affords much food to the philosophic mind, this influence
of income upon character.) Even fifth-rate “boxing
competitions,” organized by “friendly leads,”
and ratting contests in Rotherhithe slums, become expensive, when
you happen to be the only gentleman present possessed of a
collar, and are expected to do the honours of your class in
dog’s-nose. True, climbing lamp-posts and putting out
the gas is fairly cheap, providing always you are not caught in
the act, but as a recreation it lacks variety. Nor is the
modern London lamp-post adapted to sport. Anything more
difficult to grip—anything with less “give” in
it—I have rarely clasped. The disgraceful amount of
dirt allowed to accumulate upon it is another drawback from the
climber’s point of view. By the time you have swarmed
up your third post a positive distaste for “gaiety”
steals over you. Your desire is towards arnica and a
bath.</p>
<p>Nor in jokes at the expense of policemen is the fun entirely
on your side. Maybe I did not proceed with judgment.
It occurs to me now, looking back, that the neighbourhoods of
Covent Garden and Great Marlborough Street were ill-chosen for
sport of this nature. To bonnet a fat policeman is
excellent fooling. While he is struggling with his helmet
you can ask him comic questions, and by the time he has got his
head free you are out of sight. But the game should be
played in a district where there is not an average of three
constables to every dozen square yards. When two other
policemen, who have had their eye on you for the past ten
minutes, are watching the proceedings from just round the next
corner, you have little or no leisure for due enjoyment of the
situation. By the time you have run the whole length of
Great Titchfield Street and twice round Oxford Market, you are of
opinion that a joke should never be prolonged beyond the point at
which there is danger of its becoming wearisome; and that the
time has now arrived for home and friends. The
“Law,” on the other hand, now raised by
reinforcements to a strength of six or seven men, is just
beginning to enjoy the chase. You picture to yourself,
while doing Hanover Square, the scene in Court the next
morning. You will be accused of being drunk and
disorderly. It will be idle for you to explain to the
magistrate (or to your relations afterwards) that you were only
trying to live up to a man who did this sort of thing in a book
and was admired for it. You will be fined the usual forty
shillings; and on the next occasion of your calling at the
Mayfields’ the girls will be out, and Mrs. Mayfield, an
excellent lady, who has always taken a motherly interest in you,
will talk seriously to you and urge you to sign the pledge.</p>
<p>Thanks to your youth and constitution you shake off the
pursuit at Notting Hill; and, to avoid any chance of unpleasant
<i>contretemps</i> on the return journey, walk home to Bloomsbury
by way of Camden Town and Islington.</p>
<p>I abandoned sportive tendencies as the result of a vow made by
myself to Providence, during the early hours of a certain Sunday
morning, while clinging to the waterspout of an unpretentious
house situate in a side street off Soho. I put it to
Providence as man to man. “Let me only get out of
this,” I think were the muttered words I used, “and
no more ‘sport’ for me.” Providence
closed on the offer, and did let me get out of it. True, it
was a complicated “get out,” involving a broken
skylight and three gas globes, two hours in a coal cellar, and a
sovereign to a potman for the loan of an ulster; and when at
last, secure in my chamber, I took stock of myself—what was
left of me,—I could not but reflect that Providence might
have done the job neater. Yet I experienced no desire to
escape the terms of the covenant; my inclining for the future was
towards a life of simplicity.</p>
<p>Accordingly, I cast about for a new character, and found one
to suit me. The German professor was becoming popular as a
hero about this period. He wore his hair long and was
otherwise untidy, but he had “a heart of steel,”
occasionally of gold. The majority of folks in the book,
judging him from his exterior together with his
conversation—in broken English, dealing chiefly with his
dead mother and his little sister Lisa,—dubbed him
uninteresting, but then they did not know about the heart.
His chief possession was a lame dog which he had rescued from a
brutal mob; and when he was not talking broken English he was
nursing this dog.</p>
<p>But his speciality was stopping runaway horses, thereby saving
the heroine’s life. This, combined with the broken
English and the dog, rendered him irresistible.</p>
<p>He seemed a peaceful, amiable sort of creature, and I decided
to try him. I could not of course be a German professor,
but I could, and did, wear my hair long in spite of much public
advice to the contrary, voiced chiefly by small boys. I
endeavoured to obtain possession of a lame dog, but failed.
A one-eyed dealer in Seven Dials, to whom, as a last resource, I
applied, offered to lame one for me for an extra five shillings,
but this suggestion I declined. I came across an
uncanny-looking mongrel late one night. He was not lame,
but he seemed pretty sick; and, feeling I was not robbing anybody
of anything very valuable, I lured him home and nursed him.
I fancy I must have over-nursed him. He got so healthy in
the end, there was no doing anything with him. He was an
ill-conditioned cur, and he was too old to be taught. He
became the curse of the neighbourhood. His idea of sport
was killing chickens and sneaking rabbits from outside
poulterers’ shops. For recreation he killed cats and
frightened small children by yelping round their legs.
There were times when I could have lamed him myself, if only I
could have got hold of him. I made nothing by running that
dog—nothing whatever. People, instead of admiring me
for nursing him back to life, called me a fool, and said that if
I didn’t drown the brute they would. He spoilt my
character utterly—I mean my character at this period.
It is difficult to pose as a young man with a heart of gold, when
discovered in the middle of the road throwing stones at your own
dog. And stones were the only things that would reach and
influence him.</p>
<p>I was also hampered by a scarcity in runaway horses. The
horse of our suburb was not that type of horse. Once and
only once did an opportunity offer itself for practice. It
was a good opportunity, inasmuch as he was not running away very
greatly. Indeed, I doubt if he knew himself that he was
running away. It transpired afterwards that it was a habit
of his, after waiting for his driver outside the Rose and Crown
for what he considered to be a reasonable period, to trot home on
his own account. He passed me going about seven miles an
hour, with the reins dragging conveniently beside him. He
was the very thing for a beginner, and I prepared myself.
At the critical moment, however, a couple of officious policemen
pushed me aside and did it themselves.</p>
<p>There was nothing for me to regret, as the matter turned
out. I should only have rescued a bald-headed commercial
traveller, very drunk, who swore horribly, and pelted the crowd
with empty collar-boxes.</p>
<p>From the window of a very high flat I once watched three men,
resolved to stop a runaway horse. Each man marched
deliberately into the middle of the road and took up his
stand. My window was too far away for me to see their
faces, but their attitude suggested heroism unto death. The
first man, as the horse came charging towards him, faced it with
his arms spread out. He never flinched until the horse was
within about twenty yards of him. Then, as the animal was
evidently determined to continue its wild career, there was
nothing left for him to do but to retire again to the kerb, where
he stood looking after it with evident sorrow, as though saying
to himself—“Oh, well, if you are going to be
headstrong I have done with you.”</p>
<p>The second man, on the catastrophe being thus left clear for
him, without a moment’s hesitation, walked up a bye street
and disappeared. The third man stood his ground, and, as
the horse passed him, yelled at it. I could not hear what
he said. I have not the slightest doubt it was excellent
advice, but the animal was apparently too excited even to
listen. The first and the third man met afterwards, and
discussed the matter sympathetically. I judged they were
regretting the pig-headedness of runaway horses in general, and
hoping that nobody had been hurt.</p>
<p>I forget the other characters I assumed about this
period. One, I know, that got me into a good deal of
trouble was that of a downright, honest, hearty, outspoken young
man who always said what he meant.</p>
<p>I never knew but one man who made a real success of speaking
his mind. I have heard him slap the table with his open
hand and exclaim—</p>
<p>“You want me to flatter you—to stuff you up with a
pack of lies. That’s not me, that’s not Jim
Compton. But if you care for my honest opinion, all I can
say is, that child is the most marvellous performer on the piano
I’ve ever heard. I don’t say she is a genius,
but I have heard Liszt and Metzler and all the crack players, and
I prefer <i>her</i>. That’s my opinion. I speak
my mind, and I can’t help it if you’re
offended.”</p>
<p>“How refreshing,” the parents would say, “to
come across a man who is not afraid to say what he really
thinks. Why are we not all outspoken?”</p>
<p>The last character I attempted I thought would be easy to
assume. It was that of a much admired and beloved young
man, whose great charm lay in the fact that he was always
just—himself. Other people posed and acted. He
never made any effort to be anything but his own natural, simple
self.</p>
<p>I thought I also would be my own natural, simple self.
But then the question arose—What was my own natural, simple
self?</p>
<p>That was the preliminary problem I had to solve; I have
not solved it to this day. What am I? I am a great
gentleman, walking through the world with dauntless heart and
head erect, scornful of all meanness, impatient of all
littleness. I am a mean-thinking, little-daring
man—the type of man that I of the dauntless heart and the
erect head despise greatly—crawling to a poor end by
devious ways, cringing to the strong, timid of all pain.
I—but, dear reader, I will not sadden your sensitive ears
with details I could give you, showing how contemptible a
creature this wretched I happens to be. Nor would you
understand me. You would only be astonished, discovering
that such disreputable specimens of humanity contrive to exist in
this age. It is best, my dear sir, or madam, you should
remain ignorant of these evil persons. Let me not trouble
you with knowledge.</p>
<p>I am a philosopher, greeting alike the thunder and the
sunshine with frolic welcome. Only now and then, when all
things do not fall exactly as I wish them, when foolish, wicked
people will persist in doing foolish, wicked acts, affecting my
comfort and happiness, I rage and fret a goodish deal.</p>
<p>As Heine said of himself, I am knight, too, of the Holy Grail,
valiant for the Truth, reverent of all women, honouring all men,
eager to yield life to the service of my great Captain.</p>
<p>And next moment, I find myself in the enemy’s lines,
fighting under the black banner. (It must be confusing to
these opposing Generals, all their soldiers being deserters from
both armies.) What are women but men’s
playthings! Shall there be no more cakes and ale for me
because thou art virtuous! What are men but hungry dogs,
contending each against each for a limited supply of bones!
Do others lest thou be done. What is the Truth but an
unexploded lie!</p>
<p>I am a lover of all living things. You, my poor sister,
struggling with your heavy burden on your lonely way, I would
kiss the tears from your worn cheeks, lighten with my love the
darkness around your feet. You, my patient brother,
breathing hard as round and round you tramp the trodden path,
like some poor half-blind gin-horse, stripes your only
encouragement, scanty store of dry chaff in your manger! I
would jog beside you, taking the strain a little from your aching
shoulders; and we would walk nodding, our heads side by side, and
you, remembering, should tell me of the fields where long ago you
played, of the gallant races that you ran and won. And you,
little pinched brats, with wondering eyes, looking from
dirt-encrusted faces, I would take you in my arms and tell you
fairy stories. Into the sweet land of make-believe we would
wander, leaving the sad old world behind us for a time, and you
should be Princes and Princesses, and know Love.</p>
<p>But again, a selfish, greedy man comes often, and sits in my
clothes. A man who frets away his life, planning how to get
more money—more food, more clothes, more pleasures for
himself; a man so busy thinking of the many things he needs he
has no time to dwell upon the needs of others. He deems
himself the centre of the universe. You would imagine,
hearing him grumbling, that the world had been created and got
ready against the time when he should come to take his pleasure
in it. He would push and trample, heedless, reaching
towards these many desires of his; and when, grabbing, he misses,
he curses Heaven for its injustice, and men and women for getting
in his path. He is not a nice man, in any way. I
wish, as I say, he would not come so often and sit in my
clothes. He persists that he is I, and that I am only a
sentimental fool, spoiling his chances. Sometimes, for a
while, I get rid of him, but he always comes back; and then he
gets rid of me and I become him. It is very
confusing. Sometimes I wonder if I really am myself.</p>
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