At Christmas time the papers seemed full of descriptions of blasé children who insisted on going to expensive shops to choose their own presents, who scoffed at fairies or Santa Claus, and scouted the idea of any sort of childlike party. I do not move in plutocratic circles, so I cannot vouch for either the truth or falsehood of these dismal revelations. But I do know that the vast majority of gently-bred children born before and during the years that followed 1914 are easily pleased, and are grateful for very small mercies in the way of amusement, because nothing else is possible to the greater part of the upper middle class for financial reasons. And no one who, in recent years, has been to “Peter Pan” and looked round the crowded theatre gloriously garlanded with chubby, rosy faces, and heard the full-throated affirmative that greets the question “Do you believe in fairies?” can doubt that children are still pretty sound on subjects of that sort.
This being so, is it incredibly bold or superlatively simple, on my part, to have ventured to collect into a little sheaf some fugitive sketches of the kind of children I have known during the last twenty-five years?
Perhaps it is, and that being so, I can only quote the lines in which Mr. Kipling has once and for all time summed up the humble plea of the free-lance:
When ’Omer smote ’is bloomin’ lyre,
He’d ’eard men sing by land an’ sea;
An’ what he thought ’e might require,
’E went an’ took—the same as me!
Cirencester
1923
CONTENTS
| PAGE | |
| Foreword | [ vii] |
| PART I—BOYS | |
| The Vagaries of Tod and Peter | [ 1] |
| “Tony” | [ 56] |
| A Square Peg | [ 64] |
| A Twentieth-century Misogynist | [ 79] |
| PART II—CHILDREN OF LAST CENTURY | |
| A Small Event | [ 105] |
| In Durance Vile | [ 126] |
| The Surrender of Lady Grizell | [ 134] |
| A Clean Pack | [ 144] |
| An Iron Seat | [ 152] |
| Léon | [ 160] |
| The Old Religion | [ 168] |
| Comrades | [ 177] |
| Little Shoes | [ 184] |
| “Passing the Love of Women” | [ 189] |
| A Throw Back | [ 197] |
| The Intervention of the Duke | [ 207] |
| PART III—CHILDREN OF THIS | |
| Jean, A Portrait | [ 253] |
| The Doll’s-house Flags (1917) | [ 264] |
| Concerning Chris and Easter (1916) | [ 280] |