《dream days》

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dream days- 第23部分


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member was passing homewards down the road; singing as he went:



〃Then St。 George: ee made rev'rence: in the stable so dim;

Oo vanquished the dragon: so fearful and grim。

So…o grim: and so…o fierce: that now may we say

All peaceful is our wakin': on Chri…istmas Day!〃





The singer receded; the carol died away。  But I wondered; with my

hand on the door…latch; whether that was the song; or something

like it; that the dragon sang as he toddled contentedly up the

hill。







A DEPARTURE



It is a very fine thing to be a real Prince。  There are points

about a Pirate Chief; and to succeed to the Captaincy of a Robber

Band is a truly magnificent thing。  But to be an Heir has also

about it something extremely captivating。  Not only a long…lost

heiran heir of the melodrama; strutting into your hitherto

unsuspected kingdom at just the right moment; loaded up with the

consciousness of unguessed merit and of rights so long

feloniously withheldbut even to be a common humdrum domestic

heir is a profession to which few would refuse to be apprenticed。



To step from leading…strings and restrictions and one glass of

port after dinner; into property and liberty and due

appreciation; saved up; polished and varnished; dusted and

laid in lavender; all expressly for youwhy; even the Princedom

and the Robber Captaincy; when their anxieties and

responsibilities are considered; have hardly more to offer。  And

so it will continue to be a problem; to the youth in whom

ambition struggles with a certain sensuous appreciation of life's

side…dishes; whether the career he is called upon to select out

of the glittering knick…knacks that strew the counter had better

be that of an heir or an engine…driver。



In the case of eldest sons; this problem has a way of solving

itself。  In childhood; however; the actual heirship is apt to

work on the principle of the 〃Borough…English〃 of our happier

ancestors; and in most cases of inheritance it is the youngest

that succeeds。  Where the 〃res〃 is 〃angusta;〃 and the weekly

books are simply a series of stiff hurdles at each of which in

succession the paternal legs falter with growing suspicion

of their powers to clear the flight; it is in the affair of

CLOTHES that the right of succession tells; and 〃the hard heir

strides about the land〃 in trousers long ago framed for fraternal

limbsfrondes novas et non sua poma。  A bitter thing indeed! 

Of those pretty silken threads that knit humanity together; high

and low; past and present; none is tougher; more pervading; or

more iridescent; than the honest; simple pleasure of new clothes。



It tugs at the man as it tugs at the woman; the smirk of the

well…fitted prince is no different from the smirk of the Sunday…

clad peasant; and the veins of the elders tingle with the same

thrill that sets their fresh…frocked grandchildren skipping。 

Never trust people who pretend that they have no joy in their new

clothes。



Let not our souls be wrung; however; at contemplation of the

luckless urchin cut off by parental penury from the rapture

of new clothes。  Just as the heroes of his dreams are his

immediate seniors; so his heroes' clothes share the glamour; and

the reversion of them carries a high privilegea special thing

not sold by Swears and Wells。  The sword of Galahadand of many

another heroarrived on the scene already hoary with history;

and the boy rather prefers his trousers to be legendary; famous;

haloed by his hero's renowneven though the nap may have

altogether vanished in the process。



But; putting clothes aside; there are other matters in which this

reversed heirship comes into play。  Take the case of Toys。  It is

hardly right or fittingand in this the child quite acquiesces

that as he approaches the reverend period of nine or say ten

years; he should still be the unabashed and proclaimed possessor

of a hoop and a Noah's Ark。  The child will quite see the

reasonableness of this; and; the goal of his ambition being now a

catapult; a pistol; or even a sword…stick; will be satisfied that

the titular ownership should lapse to his juniors; so far below

him in their kilted or petticoated incompetence。  After all; the

things are still there; and if relapses of spirit occur; on wet

afternoons; one can still (nominally) borrow them and be happy on

the floor as of old; without the reproach of being a habitual

baby toy…caresser。  Also one can pretend it's being done to amuse

the younger ones。



None of us; therefore; grumbled when in the natural course of

things the nominal ownership of the toys slipped down to Harold;

and from him in turn devolved upon Charlotte。  The toys were

still there; they always had been there and always would be

there; and when the nursery door was fast shut there were no

Kings or Queens or First Estates in that small Republic on

the floor。  Charlotte; to be sure; chin…tilted; at last an owner

of real estate; might patronize a little at times; but it was

tacitly understood that her 〃title 〃 was only a drawing…room one。



Why does a coming bereavement project no thin faint voice; no

shadow of its woe; to warn its happy; heedless victims?  Why

cannot Olympians ever think it worth while to give some hint of

the thunderbolts they are silently forging?  And why; oh; why did

it never enter any of our thick heads that the day would come

when even Charlotte would be considered too matronly for toys? 

One's so…called education is hammered into one with rulers and

with canes。  Each fresh grammar or musical instrument; each new

historical period or quaint arithmetical rule; is impressed on

one by some painful physical prelude。  Why does Time; the biggest

Schoolmaster; alone neglect premonitory raps; at each stage

of his curriculum; on our knuckles or our heads?



Uncle Thomas was at the bottom of it。  This was not the first

mine he had exploded under our bows。  In his favourite pursuit of

fads he had passed in turn from Psychical Research to the White

Rose and thence to a Children's Hospital; and we were being daily

inundated with leaflets headed by a woodcut depicting Little

Annie (of Poplar) sitting up in her little white cot; surrounded

by the toys of the nice; kind; rich children。  The idea caught on

with the Olympians; always open to sentiment of a treacly;

woodcut order; and accordingly Charlotte; on entering one day

dishevelled and panting; having been pursued by yelling Redskins

up to the very threshold of our peaceful home; was curtly

informed that her French lessons would begin on Monday; that she

was henceforth to cease all pretence of being a trapper or a

Redskin on utterly inadequate grounds; and moreover that the

whole of her toys were at that moment being finally packed up in

a box; for despatch to London; to gladden the lives and bring

light into the eyes of London waifs and Poplar Annies。



Naturally enough; perhaps; we others received no official

intimation of this grave cession of territory。  We were not

supposed to be interested。  Harold had long ago been promoted to

a knifea recognized; birthday knife。  As for me; it was known

that I was already given over; heart and soul; to lawless

abandoned catapultscatapults which were confiscated weekly for

reasons of international complications; but with which Edward

kept me steadily supplied; his school having a fine old tradition

for excellence in their manufacture。  Therefore no one was

supposed to be really affected but Charlotte; and even she

had already reached Miss Yonge; and should therefore have been

more interested in prolific curates and harrowing deathbeds。



Nothwithstanding; we all felt indignant; betrayed; and sullen to

the verge of mutiny。  Though for long we had affected to despise

them; these toys; yet they had grown up with us; shared our joys

and our sorrows; seen us at our worst; and become part of the

accepted scheme of existence。  As we gazed at untenanted shelves

and empty; hatefully tidy corners; perhaps for the first time for

long we began to do them a tardy justice。



There was old Leotard; for instance。  Somehow he had come to be

sadly neglected of late yearsand yet how exactly he always

responded to certain moods!  He was an acrobat; this Leotard; who

lived in a glass…fronted box。  His loosejointed limbs were

cardboard; cardboard his slender trunk; and his hands eternally

grasped the bar of a trapeze。  You turned the box round swiftly

five or six times; the wonderful unsolved machinery worked; and

Leotard swung and leapt; backwards; forwards; now astride the

bar; now flying free; iron…jointed; supple…sinewed; unceasingly

novel in his invention of new; unguessable attitudes; while

above; below; and around him; a richly…dressed audience; painted

in skilful perspective of stalls; boxes; dress…circle; and

gallery; watched the thrilling performance with a stolidity which

seemed to mark them out as made in Germany。  Hardly versatile

e
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