<h2><SPAN name="page91"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>ON THE PREPARATION AND EMPLOYMENT OF LOVE PHILTRES</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Occasionally</span> a friend will ask me
some such question as this, Do you prefer dark women or
fair? Another will say, Do you like tall women or
short? A third, Do you think light-hearted women, or
serious, the more agreeable company? I find myself in the
position that, once upon a time, overtook a certain charming
young lady of taste who was asked by an anxious parent, the years
mounting, and the family expenditure not decreasing, which of the
numerous and eligible young men, then paying court to her, she
liked the best. She replied, that was her difficulty.
She could not make up her mind which she liked the best.
They were all so nice. She could not possibly select one to
the exclusion of all the others. What she would have liked
would have been to marry the lot, but that, she presumed, was
impracticable.</p>
<p>I feel I resemble that young lady, not so much, perhaps, in
charm and beauty as indecision of mind, when questions such as
the above are put to me. It is as if one were asked
one’s favourite food. There are times when one
fancies an egg with one’s tea. On other occasions one
dreams of a kipper. To-day one clamours for lobsters.
To-morrow one feels one never wishes to see a lobster again; one
determines to settle down, for a time, to a diet of bread and
milk and rice-pudding. Asked suddenly to say whether I
preferred ices to soup, or beefsteaks to caviare, I should be
nonplussed.</p>
<p>I like tall women and short, dark women and fair, merry women
and grave.</p>
<p>Do not blame me, Ladies, the fault lies with you. Every
right-thinking man is an universal lover; how could it be
otherwise? You are so diverse, yet each so charming of your
kind; and a man’s heart is large. You have no idea,
fair Reader, how large a man’s heart is: that is his
trouble—sometimes yours.</p>
<p>May I not admire the daring tulip, because I love also the
modest lily? May I not press a kiss upon the sweet violet,
because the scent of the queenly rose is precious to me?</p>
<p>“Certainly not,” I hear the Rose reply.
“If you can see anything in her, you shall have nothing to
do with me.”</p>
<p>“If you care for that bold creature,” says the
Lily, trembling, “you are not the man I took you for.
Good-bye.”</p>
<p>“Go to your baby-faced Violet,” cries the Tulip,
with a toss of her haughty head. “You are just fitted
for each other.”</p>
<p>And when I return to the Lily, she tells me that she cannot
trust me. She has watched me with those others. She
knows me for a gad-about. Her gentle face is full of
pain.</p>
<p>So I must live unloved merely because I love too much.</p>
<p>My wonder is that young men ever marry. The difficulty
of selection must be appalling. I walked the other evening
in Hyde Park. The band of the Life Guards played
heart-lifting music, and the vast crowd were basking in a sweet
enjoyment such as rarely woos the English toiler. I
strolled among them, and my attention was chiefly drawn towards
the women. The great majority of them were, I suppose,
shop-girls, milliners, and others belonging to the lower
middle-class. They had put on their best frocks, their
bonniest hats, their newest gloves. They sat or walked in
twos and threes, chattering and preening, as happy as young
sparrows on a clothes line. And what a handsome crowd they
made! I have seen German crowds, I have seen French crowds,
I have seen Italian crowds; but nowhere do you find such a
proportion of pretty women as among the English
middle-class. Three women out of every four were worth
looking at, every other woman was pretty, while every fourth, one
might say without exaggeration, was beautiful. As I passed
to and fro the idea occurred to me: suppose I were an
unprejudiced young bachelor, free from predilection, looking for
a wife; and let me suppose—it is only a fancy—that
all these girls were ready and willing to accept me. I have
only to choose! I grew bewildered. There were fair
girls, to look at whom was fatal; dark girls that set one’s
heart aflame; girls with red gold hair and grave grey eyes, whom
one would follow to the confines of the universe; baby-faced
girls that one longed to love and cherish; girls with noble
faces, whom a man might worship; laughing girls, with whom one
could dance through life gaily; serious girls, with whom life
would be sweet and good, domestic-looking girls—one felt
such would make delightful wives; they would cook, and sew, and
make of home a pleasant, peaceful place. Then
wicked-looking girls came by, at the stab of whose bold eyes all
orthodox thoughts were put to a flight, whose laughter turned the
world into a mad carnival; girls one could mould; girls from whom
one could learn; sad girls one wanted to comfort; merry girls who
would cheer one; little girls, big girls, queenly girls,
fairy-like girls.</p>
<p>Suppose a young man had to select his wife in this fashion
from some twenty or thirty thousand; or that a girl were suddenly
confronted with eighteen thousand eligible young bachelors, and
told to take the one she wanted and be quick about it?
Neither boy nor girl would ever marry. Fate is kinder to
us. She understands, and assists us. In the hall of a
Paris hotel I once overheard one lady asking another to recommend
her a milliner’s shop.</p>
<p>“Go to the Maison Nouvelle,” advised the
questioned lady, with enthusiasm. “They have the
largest selection there of any place in Paris.”</p>
<p>“I know they have,” replied the first lady,
“that is just why I don’t mean to go there. It
confuses me. If I see six bonnets I can tell the one I want
in five minutes. If I see six hundred I come away without
any bonnet at all. Don’t you know a little
shop?”</p>
<p>Fate takes the young man or the young woman aside.</p>
<p>“Come into this village, my dear,” says Fate;
“into this by-street of this salubrious suburb, into this
social circle, into this church, into this chapel. Now, my
dear boy, out of these seventeen young ladies, which will you
have?—out of these thirteen young men, which would you like
for your very own, my dear?”</p>
<p>“No, miss, I am sorry, but I am not able to show you our
up-stairs department to-day, the lift is not working. But I
am sure we shall be able to find something in this room to suit
you. Just look round, my dear, perhaps you will see
something.”</p>
<p>“No, sir, I cannot show you the stock in the next room,
we never take that out except for our very special
customers. We keep our most expensive goods in that
room. (Draw that curtain, Miss Circumstance, please.
I have told you of that before.) Now, sir, wouldn’t
you like this one? This colour is quite the rage this
season; we are getting rid of quite a lot of these.”</p>
<p>“<i>No</i>, sir! Well, of course, it would not do
for every one’s taste to be the same. Perhaps
something dark would suit you better. Bring out those two
brunettes, Miss Circumstance. Charming girls both of them,
don’t you think so, sir? I should say the taller one
for you, sir. Just one moment, sir, allow me. Now,
what do you think of that, sir? might have been made to fit you,
I’m sure. <i>You prefer the shorter one</i>.
Certainly, sir, no difference to us at all. Both are the
same price. There’s nothing like having one’s
own fancy, I always say. <i>No</i>, sir, I cannot put her
aside for you, we never do that. Indeed, there’s
rather a run on brunettes just at present. I had a
gentleman in only this morning, looking at this particular one,
and he is going to call again to-night. Indeed, I am not at
all sure—Oh, of course, sir, if you like to settle on this
one now, that ends the matter. (Put those others away, Miss
Circumstance, please, and mark this one sold.) I feel sure
you’ll like her, sir, when you get her home. Thank
<i>you</i>, sir. Good-morning!”</p>
<p>“Now, miss, have <i>you</i> seen anything you
fancy? <i>Yes</i>, miss, this is all we have at anything
near your price. (Shut those other cupboards, Miss
Circumstance; never show more stock than you are obliged to, it
only confuses customers. How often am I to tell you
that?) <i>Yes</i>, miss, you are quite right, there
<i>is</i> a slight blemish. They all have some slight
flaw. The makers say they can’t help
it—it’s in the material. It’s not once in
a season we get a perfect specimen; and when we do ladies
don’t seem to care for it. Most of our customers
prefer a little faultiness. They say it gives
character. Now, look at this, miss. This sort of
thing wears very well, warm and quiet. You’d like one
with more colour in it? Certainly. Miss Circumstance,
reach me down the art patterns. <i>No</i>, miss, we
don’t guarantee any of them over the year, so much depends
on how you use them. <i>Oh yes</i>, miss, they’ll
stand a fair amount of wear. People do tell you the quieter
patterns last longer; but my experience is that one is much the
same as another. There’s really no telling any of
them until you come to try them. We never recommend one
more than another. There’s a lot of chance about
these goods, it’s in the nature of them. What I
always say to ladies is—‘Please yourself, it’s
you who have got to wear it; and it’s no good having an
article you start by not liking.’ <i>Yes</i>, miss,
it <i>is</i> pretty and it looks well against you: it does
indeed. Thank you, miss. Put that one aside, Miss
Circumstance, please. See that it doesn’t get mixed
up with the unsold stock.”</p>
<p>It is a useful philtre, the juice of that small western
flower, that Oberon drops upon our eyelids as we sleep. It
solves all difficulties in a trice. Why of course Helena is
the fairer. Compare her with Hermia! Compare the
raven with the dove! How could we ever have doubted for a
moment? Bottom is an angel, Bottom is as wise as he is
handsome. Oh, Oberon, we thank you for that drug.
Matilda Jane is a goddess; Matilda Jane is a queen; no woman ever
born of Eve was like Matilda Jane. The little pimple on her
nose—her little, sweet, tip-tilted nose—how beautiful
it is. Her bright eyes flash with temper now and then; how
piquant is a temper in a woman. William is a dear old
stupid, how lovable stupid men can be—especially when wise
enough to love us. William does not shine in conversation;
how we hate a magpie of a man. William’s chin is what
is called receding, just the sort of chin a beard looks well
on. Bless you, Oberon darling, for that drug; rub it on our
eyelids once again. Better let us have a bottle, Oberon, to
keep by us.</p>
<p>Oberon, Oberon, what are you thinking of? You have given
the bottle to Puck. Take it away from him, quick.
Lord help us all if that Imp has the bottle. Lord save us
from Puck while we sleep.</p>
<p>Or may we, fairy Oberon, regard your lotion as an eye-opener,
rather than as an eye-closer? You remember the story the
storks told the children, of the little girl who was a toad by
day, only her sweet dark eyes being left to her. But at
night, when the Prince clasped her close to his breast, lo! again
she became the king’s daughter, fairest and fondest of
women. There be many royal ladies in Marshland, with bad
complexion and thin straight hair, and the silly princes sneer
and ride away to woo some kitchen wench decked out in
queen’s apparel. Lucky the prince upon whose eyelids
Oberon has dropped the magic philtre.</p>
<p>In the gallery of a minor Continental town I have forgotten,
hangs a picture that lives with me. The painting I cannot
recall, whether good or bad; artists must forgive me for
remembering only the subject. It shows a man, crucified by
the roadside. No martyr he. If ever a man deserved
hanging it was this one. So much the artist has made
clear. The face, even under its mask of agony, is an evil,
treacherous face. A peasant girl clings to the cross; she
stands tip-toe upon a patient donkey, straining her face upward
for the half-dead man to stoop and kiss her lips.</p>
<p>Thief, coward, blackguard, they are stamped upon his face, but
<i>under</i> the face, under the evil outside? Is there no
remnant of manhood—nothing tender, nothing, true? A
woman has crept to the cross to kiss him: no evidence in his
favour, my Lord? Love is blind-aye, to our faults.
Heaven help us all; Love’s eyes would be sore indeed if it
were not so. But for the good that is in us her eyes are
keen. You, crucified blackguard, stand forth. A
hundred witnesses have given their evidence against you.
Are there none to give evidence for him? A woman, great
Judge, who loved him. Let her speak.</p>
<p>But I am wandering far from Hyde Park and its show of
girls.</p>
<p>They passed and re-passed me, laughing, smiling,
talking. Their eyes were bright with merry thoughts; their
voices soft and musical. They were pleased, and they wanted
to please. Some were married, some had evidently reasonable
expectations of being married; the rest hoped to be. And
we, myself, and some ten thousand other young men. I repeat
it—myself and some ten thousand other young men; for who
among us ever thinks of himself but as a young man? It is
the world that ages, not we. The children cease their
playing and grow grave, the lasses’ eyes are dimmer.
The hills are a little steeper, the milestones, surely, further
apart. The songs the young men sing are less merry than the
songs we used to sing. The days have grown a little colder,
the wind a little keener. The wine has lost its flavour
somewhat; the new humour is not like the old. The other
boys are becoming dull and prosy; but we are not changed.
It is the world that is growing old. Therefore, I brave
your thoughtless laughter, youthful Reader, and repeat that we,
myself and some ten thousand other young men, walked among these
sweet girls; and, using our boyish eyes, were fascinated,
charmed, and captivated. How delightful to spend our lives
with them, to do little services for them that would call up
these bright smiles. How pleasant to jest with them, and
hear their flute-like laughter, to console them and read their
grateful eyes. Really life is a pleasant thing, and the
idea of marriage undoubtedly originated in the brain of a kindly
Providence.</p>
<p>We smiled back at them, and we made way for them; we rose from
our chairs with a polite, “Allow me, miss,”
“Don’t mention it, I prefer standing.”
“It is a delightful evening, is it not?” And
perhaps—for what harm was there?—we dropped into
conversation with these chance fellow-passengers upon the stream
of life. There were those among us—bold daring
spirits—who even went to the length of mild
flirtation. Some of us knew some of them, and in such happy
case there followed interchange of pretty pleasantries.
Your English middle-class young man and woman are not adepts at
the game of flirtation. I will confess that our methods
were, perhaps, elephantine, that we may have grown a trifle noisy
as the evening wore on. But we meant no evil; we did but
our best to enjoy ourselves, to give enjoyment, to make the too
brief time, pass gaily.</p>
<p>And then my thoughts travelled to small homes in distant
suburbs, and these bright lads and lasses round me came to look
older and more careworn. But what of that? Are not
old faces sweet when looked at by old eyes a little dimmed by
love, and are not care and toil but the parents of peace and
joy?</p>
<p>But as I drew nearer, I saw that many of the faces were seared
with sour and angry looks, and the voices that rose round me
sounded surly and captious. The pretty compliment and
praise had changed to sneers and scoldings. The dimpled
smile had wrinkled to a frown. There seemed so little
desire to please, so great a determination not to be pleased.</p>
<p>And the flirtations! Ah me, they had forgotten how to
flirt! Oh, the pity of it! All the jests were bitter,
all the little services were given grudgingly. The air
seemed to have grown chilly. A darkness had come over all
things.</p>
<p>And then I awoke to reality, and found I had been sitting in
my chair longer than I had intended. The band-stand was
empty, the sun had set; I rose and made my way home through the
scattered crowd.</p>
<p>Nature is so callous. The Dame irritates one at times by
her devotion to her one idea, the propagation of the species.</p>
<p>“Multiply and be fruitful; let my world be ever more and
more peopled.”</p>
<p>For this she trains and fashions her young girls, models them
with cunning hand, paints them with her wonderful red and white,
crowns them with her glorious hair, teaches them to smile and
laugh, trains their voices into music, sends them out into the
world to captivate, to enslave us.</p>
<p>“See how beautiful she is, my lad,” says the
cunning old woman. “Take her; build your little nest
with her in your pretty suburb; work for her and live for her;
enable her to keep the little ones that I will send.”</p>
<p>And to her, old hundred-breasted Artemis whispers, “Is
he not a bonny lad? See how he loves you, how devoted he is
to you! He will work for you and make you happy; he will
build your home for you. You will be the mother of his
children.”</p>
<p>So we take each other by the hand, full of hope and love, and
from that hour Mother Nature has done with us. Let the
wrinkles come; let our voices grow harsh; let the fire she
lighted in our hearts die out; let the foolish selfishness we
both thought we had put behind us for ever creep back to us,
bringing unkindness and indifference, angry thoughts and cruel
words into our lives. What cares she? She has caught
us, and chained us to her work. She is our universal
mother-in-law. She has done the match-making; for the rest,
she leaves it to ourselves. We can love or we can fight; it
is all one to her, confound her.</p>
<p>I wonder sometimes if good temper might not be taught.
In business we use no harsh language, say no unkind things to one
another. The shopkeeper, leaning across the counter, is all
smiles and affability, he might put up his shutters were he
otherwise. The commercial gent, no doubt, thinks the
ponderous shopwalker an ass, but refrains from telling him
so. Hasty tempers are banished from the City. Can we
not see that it is just as much to our interest to banish them
from Tooting and Hampstead?</p>
<p>The young man who sat in the chair next to me, how carefully
he wrapped the cloak round the shoulders of the little milliner
beside him. And when she said she was tired of sitting
still, how readily he sprang from his chair to walk with her,
though it was evident he was very comfortable where he was.
And she! She had laughed at his jokes; they were not very
clever jokes, they were not very new. She had probably read
them herself months before in her own particular weekly
journal. Yet the harmless humbug made him happy. I
wonder if ten years hence she will laugh at such old humour, if
ten years hence he will take such clumsy pains to put her cape
about her. Experience shakes her head, and is amused at my
question.</p>
<p>I would have evening classes for the teaching of temper to
married couples, only I fear the institution would languish for
lack of pupils. The husbands would recommend their wives to
attend, generously offering to pay the fee as a birthday
present. The wife would be indignant at the suggestion of
good money being thus wasted. “No, John, dear,”
she would unselfishly reply, “you need the lessons more
than I do. It would be a shame for me to take them away
from you,” and they would wrangle upon the subject for the
rest of the day.</p>
<p>Oh! the folly of it. We pack our hamper for life’s
picnic with such pains. We spend so much, we work so
hard. We make choice pies, we cook prime joints, we prepare
so carefully the mayonnaise, we mix with loving hands the salad,
we cram the basket to the lid with every delicacy we can think
of. Everything to make the picnic a success is there except
the salt. Ah! woe is me, we forget the salt. We slave
at our desks, in our workshops, to make a home for those we love;
we give up our pleasures, we give up our rest. We toil in
our kitchen from morning till night, and we render the whole
feast tasteless for want of a ha’porth of salt—for
want of a soupcon of amiability, for want of a handful of kindly
words, a touch of caress, a pinch of courtesy.</p>
<p>Who does not know that estimable housewife, working from eight
till twelve to keep the house in what she calls order? She
is so good a woman, so untiring, so unselfish, so conscientious,
so irritating. Her rooms are so clean, her servants so well
managed, her children so well dressed, her dinners so well
cooked; the whole house so uninviting. Everything about her
is in apple-pie order, and everybody wretched.</p>
<p>My good Madam, you polish your tables, you scour your kettles,
but the most valuable piece of furniture in the whole house you
are letting to rack and ruin for want of a little pains.
You will find it in your own room, my dear Lady, in front of your
own mirror. It is getting shabby and dingy, old-looking
before its time; the polish is rubbed off it, Madam, it is losing
its brightness and charm. Do you remember when he first
brought it home, how proud he was of it? Do you think you
have used it well, knowing how he valued it? A little less
care of your pots and your pans, Madam, a little more of yourself
were wiser. Polish yourself up, Madam; you had a pretty wit
once, a pleasant laugh, a conversation that was not confined
exclusively to the short-comings of servants, the wrong-doings of
tradesmen. My dear Madam, we do not live on spotless linen,
and crumbless carpets. Hunt out that bundle of old letters
you keep tied up in faded ribbon at the back of your bureau
drawer—a pity you don’t read them oftener. He
did not enthuse about your cuffs and collars, gush over the
neatness of your darning. It was your tangled hair he raved
about, your sunny smile (we have not seen it for some years,
Madam—the fault of the Cook and the Butcher, I presume),
your little hands, your rosebud mouth—it has lost its
shape, Madam, of late. Try a little less scolding of Mary
Ann, and practise a laugh once a day: you might get back the
dainty curves. It would be worth trying. It was a
pretty mouth once.</p>
<p>Who invented that mischievous falsehood that the way to a
man’s heart was through his stomach? How many a silly
woman, taking it for truth, has let love slip out of the parlour,
while she was busy in the kitchen. Of course, if you were
foolish enough to marry a pig, I suppose you must be content to
devote your life to the preparation of hog’s-wash.
But are you sure that he <i>is</i> a pig? If by any chance
he be not?—then, Madam, you are making a grievous
mistake. My dear Lady, you are too modest. If I may
say so without making you unduly conceited, even at the
dinner-table itself, you are of much more importance than the
mutton. Courage, Madam, be not afraid to tilt a lance even
with your own cook. You can be more piquant than the sauce
<i>à la Tartare</i>, more soothing surely than the melted
butter. There was a time when he would not have known
whether he was eating beef or pork with you the other side of the
table. Whose fault is it? Don’t think so poorly
of us. We are not ascetics, neither are we all gourmets:
most of us plain men, fond of our dinner, as a healthy man should
be, but fonder still of our sweethearts and wives, let us
hope. Try us. A moderately-cooked dinner—let us
even say a not-too-well-cooked dinner, with you looking your
best, laughing and talking gaily and cleverly—as you can,
you know—makes a pleasanter meal for us, after the
day’s work is done, than that same dinner, cooked to
perfection, with you silent, jaded, and anxious, your pretty hair
untidy, your pretty face wrinkled with care concerning the sole,
with anxiety regarding the omelette.</p>
<p>My poor Martha, be not troubled about so many things.
<i>You</i> are the one thing needful—if the bricks and
mortar are to be a home. See to it that <i>you</i> are well
served up, that <i>you</i> are done to perfection, that
<i>you</i> are tender and satisfying, that <i>you</i> are worth
sitting down to. We wanted a wife, a comrade, a friend; not
a cook and a nurse on the cheap.</p>
<p>But of what use is it to talk? the world will ever follow its
own folly. When I think of all the good advice that I have
given it, and of the small result achieved, I confess I grow
discouraged. I was giving good advice to a lady only the
other day. I was instructing her as to the proper treatment
of aunts. She was sucking a lead-pencil, a thing I am
always telling her not to do. She took it out of her mouth
to speak.</p>
<p>“I suppose you know how everybody ought to do
everything,” she said.</p>
<p>There are times when it is necessary to sacrifice one’s
modesty to one’s duty.</p>
<p>“Of course I do,” I replied.</p>
<p>“And does Mama know how everybody ought to do
everything?” was the second question.</p>
<p>My conviction on this point was by no means so strong, but for
domestic reasons I again sacrificed myself to expediency.</p>
<p>“Certainly,” I answered; “and take that
pencil out of your mouth. I’ve told you of that
before. You’ll swallow it one day, and then
you’ll get perichondritis and die.”</p>
<p>She appeared to be solving a problem.</p>
<p>“All grown-up people seem to know everything,” she
summarized.</p>
<p>There are times when I doubt if children are as simple as they
look. If it be sheer stupidity that prompts them to make
remarks of this character, one should pity them, and seek to
improve them. But if it be not stupidity? well then, one
should still seek to improve them, but by a different method.</p>
<p>The other morning I overheard the nurse talking to this
particular specimen. The woman is a most worthy creature,
and she was imparting to the child some really sound
advice. She was in the middle of an unexceptional
exhortation concerning the virtue of silence, when Dorothea
interrupted her with—</p>
<p>“Oh, do be quiet, Nurse. I never get a
moment’s peace from your chatter.”</p>
<p>Such an interruption discourages a woman who is trying to do
her duty.</p>
<p>Last Tuesday evening she was unhappy. Myself, I think
that rhubarb should never be eaten before April, and then never
with lemonade. Her mother read her a homily upon the
subject of pain. It was impressed upon her that we must be
patient, that we must put up with the trouble that God sends
us. Dorothea would descend to details, as children
will.</p>
<p>“Must we put up with the cod-liver oil that God sends
us?”</p>
<p>“Yes, decidedly.”</p>
<p>“And with the nurses that God sends us?”</p>
<p>“Certainly; and be thankful that you’ve got them,
some little girls haven’t any nurse. And don’t
talk so much.”</p>
<p>On Friday I found the mother in tears.</p>
<p>“What’s the matter?” I asked.</p>
<p>“Oh, nothing,” was the answer; “only
Baby. She’s such a strange child. I can’t
make her out at all.”</p>
<p>“What has she been up to now?”</p>
<p>“Oh, she will argue, you know.”</p>
<p>She has that failing. I don’t know where she gets
it from, but she’s got it.</p>
<p>“Well?”</p>
<p>“Well, she made me cross; and, to punish her, I told her
she shouldn’t take her doll’s perambulator out with
her.”</p>
<p>“Yes?”</p>
<p>“Well, she didn’t say anything then, but so soon
as I was outside the door, I heard her talking to
herself—you know her way?”</p>
<p>“Yes?”</p>
<p>“She said—”</p>
<p>“Yes, she said?”</p>
<p>“She said, ‘I must be patient. I must put up
with the mother God has sent me.’”</p>
<p>She lunches down-stairs on Sundays. We have her with us
once a week to give her the opportunity of studying manners and
behaviour. Milson had dropped in, and we were discussing
politics. I was interested, and, pushing my plate aside,
leant forward with my elbows on the table. Dorothea has a
habit of talking to herself in a high-pitched whisper capable of
being heard above an Adelphi love scene. I heard her
say—</p>
<p>“I must sit up straight. I mustn’t sprawl
with my elbows on the table. It is only common, vulgar
people behave that way.”</p>
<p>I looked across at her; she was sitting most correctly, and
appeared to be contemplating something a thousand miles
away. We had all of us been lounging! We sat up
stiffly, and conversation flagged.</p>
<p>Of course we made a joke of it after the child was gone.
But somehow it didn’t seem to be <i>our</i> joke.</p>
<p>I wish I could recollect my childhood. I should so like
to know if children are as simple as they can look.</p>
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