Three Men on the Bummel by Jerome K. Jerome (top young adult novels .txt) đ
- Author: Jerome K. Jerome
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âAy, but yeâre a guid man when yeâre sober, Davie.â
âMaybe Iâll be that, Jennie, if Iâm nae disturbed.â
âAnâ yeâll bide wiâ me, Davie, anâ work for me?â
âI see nae reason why I shouldna bide wiâ yet Jennie; but dinna ye clack aboot work to me, for I just canna bear the thoct oât.â
âAnyhow, yeâll do your best, Davie? As the minister says, nae man can do mair than that.â
âAnâ itâs a puir best that mineâll be, Jennie, and Iâm nae sae sure yeâll hae ower muckle even oâ that. Weâre aâ weak, sinfuâ creatures, Jennie, anâ yeâd hae some deefficulty to find a man weaker or mair sinfuâ than myselâ.â
âWeel, weel, ye hae a truthfuâ tongue, Davie. Mony a lad will mak fine promises to a puir lassie, only to break âem anâ her heart wiâ âem. Ye speak me fair, Davie, and Iâm thinkinâ Iâll just tak ye, anâ see what comes oât.â
Concerning what did come of it, the story is silent, but one feels that under no circumstances had the lady any right to complain of her bargain. Whether she ever did or did notâfor women do not invariably order their tongues according to logic, nor men either for the matter of thatâDavie, himself, must have had the satisfaction of reflecting that all reproaches were undeserved.
I wish to be equally frank with the reader of this book. I wish here conscientiously to let forth its shortcomings. I wish no one to read this book under a misapprehension.
There will be no useful information in this book.
Anyone who should think that with the aid of this book he would be able to make a tour through Germany and the Black Forest would probably lose himself before he got to the Nore. That, at all events, would be the best thing that could happen to him. The farther away from home he got, the greater only would be his difficulties.
I do not regard the conveyance of useful information as my forte. This belief was not inborn with me; it has been driven home upon me by experience.
In my early journalistic days, I served upon a paper, the forerunner of many very popular periodicals of the present day. Our boast was that we combined instruction with amusement; as to what should be regarded as affording amusement and what instruction, the reader judged for himself. We gave advice to people about to marryâlong, earnest advice that would, had they followed it, have made our circle of readers the envy of the whole married world. We told our subscribers how to make fortunes by keeping rabbits, giving facts and figures. The thing that must have surprised them was that we ourselves did not give up journalism and start rabbit-farming. Often and often have I proved conclusively from authoritative sources how a man starting a rabbit farm with twelve selected rabbits and a little judgment must, at the end of three years, be in receipt of an income of two thousand a year, rising rapidly; he simply could not help himself. He might not want the money. He might not know what to do with it when he had it. But there it was for him. I have never met a rabbit farmer myself worth two thousand a year, though I have known many start with the twelve necessary, assorted rabbits. Something has always gone wrong somewhere; maybe the continued atmosphere of a rabbit farm saps the judgment.
We told our readers how many bald-headed men there were in Iceland, and for all we knew our figures may have been correct; how many red herrings placed tail to mouth it would take to reach from London to Rome, which must have been useful to anyone desirous of laying down a line of red herrings from London to Rome, enabling him to order in the right quantity at the beginning; how many words the average woman spoke in a day; and other such like items of information calculated to make them wise and great beyond the readers of other journals.
We told them how to cure fits in cats. Personally I do not believe, and I did not believe then, that you can cure fits in cats. If I had a cat subject to fits I should advertise it for sale, or even give it away. But our duty was to supply information when asked for. Some fool wrote, clamouring to know; and I spent the best part of a morning seeking knowledge on the subject. I found what I wanted at length at the end of an old cookery book. What it was doing there I have never been able to understand. It had nothing to do with the proper subject of the book whatever; there was no suggestion that you could make anything savoury out of a cat, even when you had cured it of its fits. The authoress had just thrown in this paragraph out of pure generosity. I can only say that I wish she had left it out; it was the cause of a deal of angry correspondence and of the loss of four subscribers to the paper, if not more. The man said the result of following our advice had been two pounds worth of damage to his kitchen crockery, to say nothing of a broken window and probable blood poisoning to himself; added to which the catâs fits were worse than before. And yet it was a simple enough recipe. You held the cat between your legs, gently, so as not to hurt it, and with a pair of scissors made a sharp, clean cut in its tail. You did not cut off any part of the tail; you were to be careful not to do that; you only made an incision.
As we explained to the man, the garden or the coal cellar would have been the proper place for the operation; no one but an idiot would have attempted to perform it in a kitchen, and without help.
We gave them hints on etiquette. We told them how to address peers and bishops; also how to eat soup. We instructed shy young men how to acquire easy grace in drawing-rooms. We taught dancing to both sexes by the aid of diagrams. We solved their religious doubts for them, and supplied them with a code of morals that would have done credit to a stained-glass window.
The paper was not a financial success, it was some years before its time, and the consequence was that our staff was limited. My own department, I remember, included âAdvice to MothersââI wrote that with the assistance of my landlady, who, having divorced one husband and buried four children, was, I considered, a reliable authority on all domestic matters; âHints on Furnishing and Household Decorationsâwith Designsâ a column of âLiterary Counsel to BeginnersââI sincerely hope my guidance was of better service to them than it has ever proved to myself; and our weekly article, âStraight Talks to Young Men,â signed âUncle Henry.â A kindly, genial old fellow was âUncle Henry,â with wide and varied experience, and a sympathetic attitude towards the rising generation. He had been through trouble himself in his far back youth, and knew most things. Even to this day I read of âUncle Henryâsâ advice, and, though I say it who should not, it still seems to me good, sound advice. I often think that had I followed âUncle Henryâsâ counsel closer I would have been wiser, made fewer mistakes, felt better satisfied with myself than is now the case.
A quiet, weary little woman, who lived in a bed-sitting room off the Tottenham Court Road, and who had a husband in a lunatic asylum, did our âCooking Column,â âHints on Educationââwe were full of hints,âand a page and a half of âFashionable Intelligence,â written in the pertly personal style which even yet has not altogether disappeared, so I am informed, from modern journalism: âI must tell you about the divine frock I wore at âGlorious Goodwoodâ last week. Prince C.âbut there, I really must not repeat all the things the silly fellow says; he is too foolishâand the dear Countess, I fancy, was just the weeish bit jealousââand so on.
Poor little woman! I see her now in the shabby grey alpaca, with the inkstains on it. Perhaps a day at âGlorious Goodwood,â or anywhere else in the fresh air, might have put some colour into her cheeks.
Our proprietorâone of the most unashamedly ignorant men I ever metâI remember his gravely informing a correspondent once that Ben Jonson had written Rabelais to pay for his motherâs funeral, and only laughing good-naturedly when his mistakes were pointed out to himâwrote with the aid of a cheap encyclopedia the pages devoted to âGeneral Information,â and did them on the whole remarkably well; while our office boy, with an excellent pair of scissors for his assistant, was responsible for our supply of âWit and Humour.â
It was hard work, and the pay was poor, what sustained us was the consciousness that we were instructing and improving our fellow men and women. Of all games in the world, the one most universally and eternally popular is the game of school. You collect six children, and put them on a doorstep, while you walk up and down with the book and cane. We play it when babies, we play it when boys and girls, we play it when men and women, we play it as, lean and slippered, we totter towards the grave. It never palls upon, it never wearies us. Only one thing mars it: the tendency of one and all of the other six children to clamour for their turn with the book and the cane. The reason, I am sure, that journalism is so popular a calling, in spite of its many drawbacks, is this: each journalist feels he is the boy walking up and down with the cane. The Government, the Classes, and the Masses, Society, Art, and Literature, are the other children sitting on the doorstep. He instructs and improves them.
But I digress. It was to excuse my present permanent disinclination to be the vehicle of useful information that I recalled these matters. Let us now return.
Somebody, signing himself âBalloonist,â had written to ask concerning the manufacture of hydrogen gas. It is an easy thing to manufactureâat least, so I gathered after reading up the subject at the British Museum; yet I did warn âBalloonist,â whoever he might be, to take all necessary precaution against accident. What more could I have done? Ten days afterwards a florid-faced lady called at the office, leading by the hand what, she explained, was her son, aged twelve. The boyâs face was unimpressive to a degree positively remarkable. His mother pushed him forward and took off his hat, and then I perceived the reason for this. He had no eyebrows whatever, and of his hair nothing remained but a scrubby dust, giving to his head the appearance of a hard-boiled egg, skinned and sprinkled with black pepper.
âThat was a handsome lad this time last week, with naturally curly hair,â remarked the lady. She spoke with a rising inflection, suggestive of the beginning of things.
âWhat has happened to him?â asked our chief.
âThis is whatâs happened to him,â retorted the lady. She drew from her muff a copy of our last weekâs issue, with my article on hydrogen gas scored in pencil, and flung it before his eyes. Our chief took it and read it through.
âHe was âBalloonistâ?â queried the chief.
âHe was âBalloonist,ââ admitted the lady, âthe poor innocent child, and now look at him!â
âMaybe itâll grow again,â suggested our chief.
âMaybe it will,â retorted the lady, her key continuing to rise, âand maybe it wonât. What I want to know is what you are going to do for him.â
Our chief suggested a hair wash. I thought at first she was going to fly at him; but for the moment she confined herself to words. It appears she was not thinking of a hair wash, but of compensation. She also made observations on the general character of our paper, its utility, its claim to public support, the sense and wisdom of its contributors.
âI really donât see that it is our fault,â urged the chiefâhe was a mild-mannered man; âhe asked for information, and he got it.â
âDonât you try to be funny about it,â said the lady (he had not meant to be funny, I am sure; levity was not his failing) âor youâll get something that you havenât asked for. Why, for two pins,â said the lady, with a suddenness that sent us both flying like scuttled chickens behind our respective chairs, âIâd come round and make your head like it!â I take it, she meant like the boyâs. She also added observations upon our chiefâs personal appearance, that were distinctly in bad taste. She was not a nice woman by
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