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Neither Here Nor There - Oliver Herford
Herford
Table of Contents
THE SECRET
OUR LEISURE CLASS
CONCERNING REVOLVING DOORS.
BOLSHEVISM FOR BABIES
THE TUTTI-FRUTTI TREE
THOSE BILL-BOARDS
THE LURE OF THE AD
LOOK BEFORE SHE LEAPS
THE LOW COST OF CABBING
THE GREAT MATCH-BOX MYSTERY
PART ONE
PART TWO
ARE CATS PEOPLE?
MLLE. FAUTEUIL
MONEY AND FIREFLIES
CONCERNING THE TROUSER-CREASE
AN OLD-FASHIONED HEAVEN
ANOTHER LOST ART
MR. CHESTERTON AND THE SOLILOQUY
BUNK
THE COST OF A PYRAMID
WALTZING MICE AND DANCING MEN
THE HOBGOBLIN
THE VOICE OF THE PUSSY-WILLOW
PERNICIOUS PEACHES
SECOND CHILDHOOD’S HAPPY HOUR
PITY THE POOR GUEST OF HONOR
A NEW MONROE DOCTRINE
DO CATS COME BACK?
THE RUTHLESSNESS OF MR. COBB
MY LAKE
THE HUNDREDTH AMENDMENT
SAY IT WITH ASTERISKS
A MIRROR OF FRIVOLITY
THE SECRET
Eve was bored. She confided the fact to the Serpent.
Tell me something new!
she wailed, and the Serpent—he had never seen a lady cry before—was deeply moved (the Serpent has always been misjudged) and—there being no National Board of Censors—told her everything he knew.
When he had finished, Eve yawned and looked boreder than ever. Is that all?
she said.
The Dramatic Critic asks the same question on the first night of a new Play—Will there never be an end to these Dormitory Farces,
he moans, pondering darkly thewhile how he may transmute its leaden dullness to the precious gold of a scintillating paragraph.
Father Time has nothing to say on the matter. If you ask him to show you a new thing, he shrugs his wings and growls, You can search me.
Things old and things new are all alike to Father Time.
Peradventure, in the uttermost recess of the Great Pyramid lies a hair of an unknown color, or a blueprint of the fourth dimension, or better still the ms. of a new play, or a joke that has never been cracked.
When a Roman bath is unearthed in Kent or a milliner’s shop in Pompeii we wait breathless to hear of the discovery of a new story, or a new dress pattern, but always it is the same old skull, the same old amphora.
Even the newness of Fashion is a jest of antiquity.
In an Italian book printed in the sixteenth century is a story of a fool who went about the streets naked, carrying a piece of cloth upon his shoulders. He was asked by some one why he did not dress himself, since he had the materials. ‘Because’ replied he, ‘I wait to see in what manner the fashions will end. I do not like to use my cloth for a dress which in a little time will be of no use to me, on account of some new fashion.’
There may be a newer version of this story in the ashes of the Alexandrian library or beneath the ruins of Babylon, but this has at least the freshness and luster of its four-hundred years. Also it throws a light, a very searchlight, on the translucent demoiselles of today (see them shyly run to cover at the mere mention of a searchlight.)
Now we know their guilty secret. Each of them has, hoarded away in a secret drawer (as money in panicky times) a roll of fine silk or voile, or panne velvet, or crepe de chine which she is sparing from the scissors till the Wheel of Fashion shall oscillate with less fury. Then she will put away the skimpy, flimsy makeshift garments of transformed window curtains and bath towels, converted robes de nuit and remnants of net or chiffon she has been vainly trying to hide behind—and then—then alas, we shall see her no more!
OUR LEISURE CLASS
Once—and not so terribly long ago at that—we used to be very fond of telling ourselves (and our visitors from Europe) that in America we have no Leisure Class.
That there were people of leisure in our midst, we could not deny, though we preferred to call them idle rich, but as for a special class whose whole business in life was to abstain from all useful activity—oh, no!
Even our idle rich, unblest as they are with the hereditary gift for idling, and untaught save by a brief generation or two of acquired experience, find the profession of Leisure a strenuous not to say noisy task, for while those to the leisure born know by the very feel of it that the habit of idleness is a perfect fit, the newly-idle must look for confirmation in the mirror of public admiration; hence Publicity, the blare of the Sunday Supplement.
But taken as a class our idle rich (though it is being rapidly licked or lick-spittled into shape) is at best an amateur aristocracy of leisure. For the real thing, for the genuine hunting, sporting, leisure-loving American aristocracy, we must go back to the aboriginal Red Man.
And how the busybody Puritan hated the Indian! With his air of well-bred taciturnity, his love of sport, of rest, of nature, and his belief in a happy Hereafter, the noble Red Man was in every respect his hateful opposite, yet if any Pilgrim brother had dared even to hint that the Indian might have points of superiority it would have been the flaming woodpile for him, or something equally disagreeable in the purifying way.
How different it might have been!
If only the Puritan had been less stuck up and self-righteous, the Red Man less reserved! If they could but have understood that Nature intended them for each other, these opposites, these complements of each other.
Why else had Nature brought them together from the ends of the earth?
But alas, Eugenics had not yet been invented and the Puritan and the Indian just naturally hated each other at first sight and so (like many another match-maker) Mother Nature slipped up in her calculations, and a wonderful flower of racial possibility was forever nipped in the bud.
If the Puritan, with his piety and thrift and domesticity and his doctrine of election and the Noble Red Man, with his love of paint and syncopated music and dancing and belief in a happy Hereafter, had overcome their mutual prejudices and instead of warring with flintlocks and tomahawks, had pursued each other with engagement rings and marriage licenses, what a grand and glorious race we might be today!
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