<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p79b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="A Hen Conference" src="images/p79s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p style="text-align: right">July 16th.</p>
<p>Phœbe and I have been to a Hen Conference at
Buffington. It was for the purpose of raising the standard
of the British Hen, and our local Countess, who is much
interested in poultry, was in the chair.</p>
<p>It was a very learned body, but Phœbe had coached me so
well that at the noon recess I could talk confidently with the
members, discussing the various advantages of True and Crossed
Minorcas, Feverels, Andalusians, Cochin Chinas, Shanghais, and
the White Leghorn. (Phœbe, when she pronounces this
word, leaves out the “h” and bears down heavily on
the last syllable, so that it rhymes with begone!)</p>
<p>As I was sitting under the trees waiting for Phœbe to
finish some shopping in the village, a travelling poultry-dealer
came along and offered to sell me a silver Wyandotte pullet and
cockerel. This was a new breed to me and I asked the price,
which proved to be more than I should pay for a hat in Bond
Street. I hesitated, thinking meantime what a delightful
parting gift they would be for Phœbe; I mean if we ever
should part, which seems more and more unlikely, as I shall never
leave Thornycroft until somebody comes properly to fetch me;
indeed, unless the “fetching” is done somewhat
speedily I may decline to go under any circumstances. My
indecision as to the purchase was finally banished when the
poultryman asserted that the fowls had clear open centres all
over, black lacing entirely round the white centres, were free
from white edging, and each had a cherry-red eye. This
catalogue of charms inflamed my imagination, though it gave me no
mental picture of a silver Wyandotte fowl, and I paid the money
while the dealer crammed the chicks, squawking into my
five-o’clock tea-basket.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p81b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="Arguing questions of diet" src="images/p81s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>The afternoon session of the conference was most exciting, for
we reached the subject of imported eggs, an industry that is
assuming terrifying proportions. The London hotel egg comes
from Denmark, it seems,—I should think by sailing vessel,
not steamer, but I may be wrong. After we had settled that
the British Hen should be protected and encouraged, and agreed
solemnly to abstain from Danish eggs in any form, and made a
resolution stating that our loyalty to Queen Alexandra would
remain undiminished, we argued the subject of hen diet.
There was a great difference of opinion here and the discussion
was heated; the honorary treasurer standing for pulped mangold
and flint grit, the chair insisting on barley meal and randans,
while one eloquent young woman declared, to loud cries of
“’Ear, ’ear!” that rice pudding and bone
chips produce more eggs to the square hen than any other sort of
food. Impassioned orators arose here and there in the
audience demanding recognition for beef scraps, charcoal, round
corn or buckwheat. Foods were regarded from various
standpoints: as general invigorators, growth assisters, and egg
producers. A very handsome young farmer carried off final
honours, and proved to the satisfaction of all the feminine
poultry-raisers that green young hog bones fresh cut in the
Banner Bone Breaker (of which he was the agent) possessed a
nutritive value not to be expressed in human language.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p82b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="The afternoon session was most exciting" src="images/p82s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>Phœbe was distinctly nervous when I rose to say a few
words on poultry breeding, announcing as my topic “Mothers,
Stepmothers, Foster-Mothers, and Incubators.”
Protected by the consciousness that no one in the assemblage
could possibly know me, I made a distinct success in my maiden
speech; indeed, I somewhat overshot the mark, for the Countess in
the chair sent me a note asking me to dine with her that
evening. I suppressed the note and took Phœbe away
before the proceedings were finished, vanishing from the scene of
my triumphs like a veiled prophet.</p>
<p>Just as we were passing out the door we paused to hear the
report of a special committee whose chairman read the following
resolutions:—</p>
<p><i>Whereas</i>,—It has pleased the Almighty to remove
from our midst our greatest Rose Comb Buff Orpington fancier and
esteemed friend, Albert Edward Sheridain; therefore be it</p>
<p><i>Resolved</i>,—That the next edition of our catalogue
contain an illustrated memorial page in his honour and</p>
<p><i>Resolved</i>,—That the Rose Comb Buff Orpington Club
extend to the bereaved family their heartfelt sympathy.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p84b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="Not asked to the Conference" src="images/p84s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>The handsome young farmer followed us out to our trap, invited
us to attend the next meeting of the R. C. B. O. Club, of which
he was the secretary, and asked if I were intending to
“show.” I introduced Phœbe as the senior
partner, and she concealed the fact that we possessed but one
Buff Orpington, and he was a sad “invaleed” not
suitable for exhibition. The farmer’s expression as
he looked at me was almost lover-like, and when he pressed a bit
of paper into my hand I was sure it must be an offer of
marriage. It was in fact only a circular describing the
Banner Bone Breaker. It closed with an appeal to Buff
Orpington breeders to raise and ever raise the standard, bidding
them remember, in the midst of a low-minded and sordid
civilisation, that the rose comb should be small and neat, firmly
set on, with good working, a nice spike at the back lying well
down to head, and never, under any circumstances, never sticking
up. This adjuration somewhat alarmed us as Phœbe and
I had been giving our Buff Orpington cockerel the most drastic
remedies for his languid and prostrate comb.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p85b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="Coming home" src="images/p85s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>Coming home we alighted from the trap to gather hogweed for
the rabbits. I sat by the wayside lazily and let
Phœbe gather the appetising weed, which grows along the
thorniest hedges in close proximity to nettles and thistles.</p>
<p>Workmen were trudging along with their luncheon-baskets of
woven bulrushes slung over their shoulders. Fields of
ripening grain lay on either hand, the sun shining on their every
shade of green and yellow, bronze and orange, while the breeze
stirred the bearded barley into a rippling golden sea.</p>
<p>Phœbe asked me if the people I had left behind at the
Hydropathic were my relatives.</p>
<p>“Some of them are of remote consanguinity,” I
responded evasively, and the next question was hushed upon her
awe-stricken tongue, as I intended.</p>
<p>“They are obeying my wish to be let alone, there’s
no doubt of that,” I was thinking. “For my
part, I like a little more spirit, and a little less
‘letter’!”</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p87b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="Workmen were trudging home" src="images/p87s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>As the word “letter” flitted through my thoughts,
I pulled one from my pocket and glanced through it
carelessly. It arrived, somewhat tardily, only last night,
or I should not have had it with me. I wore the same dress
to the post-office yesterday that I wore to the Hen Conference
to-day, and so it chanced to be still in the pocket. If it
had been anything I valued, of course I should have lost or
destroyed it by mistake; it is only silly, worthless little
things like this that keep turning up and turning up after one
has forgotten their existence.</p>
<blockquote><p>“You are a mystery!” [it ran.]
“I can apprehend, but not comprehend you. I know you
in part. I understand various bits of your nature; but my
knowledge is always fragmentary and disconnected, and when I
attempt to make a whole of the mosaics I merely get a
kaleidoscopic effect. Do you know those geographical
dissected puzzles that they give to children? You remind me
of one of them.</p>
<p>“I have spent many charming (and dangerous) hours trying
to ‘put you together’; but I find, when I examine my
picture closely, that after all I’ve made a purple mountain
grow out of a green tree; that my river is running up a steep
hillside; and that the pretty milkmaid, who should be wandering
in the forest, is standing on her head with her pail in the
air</p>
<p>“Do you understand yourself clearly? Or is it just
possible that when you dive to the depths of your own
consciousness, you sometimes find the pretty milkmaid standing on
her head? I wonder!” . . .</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Ah, well, it is no wonder that he wonders! So do
I, for that matter!</p>
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