<h2> <SPAN name="article22"></SPAN> Wedding Bells </h2>
<p>Champagne is often pleasant at lunch, it is always delightful
at dinner, and it is an absolute necessity, if one is to talk
freely about oneself afterwards, at a dance supper. But
champagne for tea is horrible. Perhaps this is why a wedding
always finds me melancholy next morning. “She has
married the wrong man,” I say to myself. “I
wonder if it is too late to tell her.”</p>
<p>The trouble of answering the invitation and of thinking of
something to give more original than a toast rack should, one
feels, have its compensations. From each wedding that I
attend I expect an afternoon’s enjoyment in return for
my egg stand. For one thing I have my best clothes on. Few
people have seen me in them (and these few won’t
believe it), so that from the very beginning the day has a
certain freshness. It is not an ordinary day. It starts with
this advantage, that in my best clothes I am not difficult to
please. The world smiles upon me.</p>
<p>Once I am in church, however, my calm begins to leave me. As
time wears on, and the organist invents more and more tunes,
I tremble lest the bride has forgotten the day. The choir is
waiting for her; the bridegroom is waiting for her. I--I
also--wait. What if she has changed her mind at the last
minute? But no. The organist has sailed into his set piece;
the choir advances; follows the bride looking so lonely that
I long to comfort her and remind her of my egg stand; and,
last of all, the pretty bridesmaids. The clergyman begins his
drone.</p>
<p>You would think that, reassured by the presence of the bride,
I could be happy now. But there is still much to bother me.
The bridegroom is showing signs of having forgotten his part,
the bride can’t get her glove off, one of the
bridesmaids is treading on my hat. Worse than all this, there
is a painful want of unanimity among the congregation as to
when we stand up and when we sit down. Sometimes I am alone
and sitting when everybody else is standing, and that is easy
to bear; but sometimes I find myself standing when everybody
else is sitting, and that is very hard.</p>
<p>They have gone to the vestry. The choir sings an anthem to
while away the kissing-time, and, right or wrong, I am
sitting down, comforting my poor hat. There was a time when
I, too, used to go into the vestry; when I was something of
an authority on weddings, and would attend weekly in some
minor official capacity. Any odd jobs that were going seemed
to devolve on me. If somebody was wanted suddenly to sign the
register, or kiss the bride’s mother, or wind up the
going-away car, it used to be taken for granted that I was
the man to do it. I wore a white flower in my button-hole to
show that I was available. I served, I may say, in an
entirely honorary capacity, except in so far as I was
expected to give the happy pair a slightly larger present
than the others. One day I happened to suggest to an
intending groom that he had other friends more ornamental,
and therefore more suitable for this sort of work, than I; to
which he replied that they were all married, and that
etiquette demanded a bachelor for the business. Of course, as
soon as I heard this I got married too.</p>
<p>Here they come. “Doesn’t she look sweet?”
We hurry after them and rush for the carriages. I am only a
friend of the bridegroom’s; perhaps I had better walk.</p>
<p>It must be very easy to be a guest at a wedding reception,
where each of the two clans takes it for granted that all the
extraordinary strangers belong to the other clan. Indeed,
nobody with one good suit, and a stomach for champagne and
sandwiches, need starve in London. He or she can wander
safely in wherever a red carpet beckons. I suppose I must put
in an appearance at this reception, but if I happen to pass
another piece of carpet on the way to the house, and the
people going in seem more attractive than our lot, I shall be
tempted to join them.</p>
<p>This is, perhaps, the worst part of the ceremony, this three
hundred yards or so from the hymn-sheets to the champagne.
All London is now gazing at my old top-hat. When the war went
on and on and on, and it seemed as though it were going on
for ever, I looked back on peace much as those old retired
warriors at the end of last century looked back on their
happy Crimean days; and in the same spirit as that in which
they hung their swords over the baronial fireplace, I decided
to suspend my old top-hat above the mantel-piece in the
drawing-room. In the years to come I would take my
grandchildren on my knee and tell them stories of the old
days when grandfather was a civilian, of desperate charges by
church-wardens and organists, and warm receptions; and
sometimes I would hold the old top-hat reverently in my
hands, and a sudden gleam would come into my eyes, so that
those watching me would say to each other, “He is
thinking of that tea-fight at Rutland Gate in 1912.” So I
pictured the future for my top-hat, never dreaming that in
1920 it would take the air again.</p>
<p>For I went into the war in order to make the world safe for
democracy, which I understood to mean (and was distinctly
informed so by the press) a world safe for those of us who
prefer soft hats with a dent in the middle. “The
war,” said the press, “has killed the
top-hat.” Apparently it failed to do this, as it failed
to do so many of the things which we hoped from it. So the
old veteran of 1912 dares the sunlight again. We are arrived,
and I am greeted warmly by the bride’s parents. I look
at the mother closely so that I shall know her again when I
come to say good-bye, and give her a smile which tells her
that I was determined to come down to this wedding although I
had a good deal of work to do. I linger with the idea of
pursuing this point, for I want them to know that they nearly
missed me, but I am pushed on by the crowd behind me. The
bride and bridegroom salute me cordially but show no desire
for intimate gossip. A horrible feeling goes through me that
my absence would not have been commented upon by them at any
inordinate length. It would not have spoilt the honeymoon,
for instance.</p>
<p>I move on and look at the presents. The presents are numerous
and costly. Having discovered my own I stand a little way
back and listen to the opinions of my neighbours upon it. On
the whole the reception is favourable. The detective, I am
horrified to discover, is on the other side of the room,
apparently callous as to the fate of my egg stand. I cannot
help feeling that if he knew his business he would be
standing where I am standing now; or else there should be two
detectives. It is a question now whether it is safe for me to
leave my post and search for food... Now he is coming round;
I can trust it to him.</p>
<p>On my way to the refreshments I have met an old friend. I
like to meet my friends at weddings, but I wish I had not met
this one. She has sowed the seeds of disquiet in my mind by
telling me that it is not etiquette to begin to eat until the
bride has cut the cake. I answer, “Then why
doesn’t somebody tell the bride to cut the cake?”
but the bride, it seems, is busy. I wish now that I had not
met my friend. Who but a woman would know the etiquette of
these things, and who but a woman would bother about it?</p>
<p>The bride is cutting the cake. The bridegroom has lent her
his sword, or his fountain-pen, whatever is the emblem of his
trade--he is a stockbroker--and as she cuts, we buzz round
her, hoping for one of the marzipan pieces. I wish to leave
now, before I am sorry, but my friend tells me that it is not
etiquette to leave until the bride and bridegroom have gone.
Besides, I must drink the bride’s health. I drink her
health; hers, not mine.</p>
<p>Time rolls on. I was wrong to have had champagne. It
doesn’t suit me at tea. However, for the moment life is
bright enough. I have looked at the presents and my own is
still there. And I have been given a bagful of confetti. The
weary weeks one lives through without a handful of anything
to throw at anybody. How good to be young again. I take up a
strong position in the hall.</p>
<p>They come... Got him--got him! Now a long shot--got him! I
feel slightly better, and begin the search for my hostess....</p>
<p>I have shaken hands with all the bride’s aunts and all
the bridegroom’s aunts, and in fact all the aunts of
everybody here. Each one seems to me more like my hostess
than the last. “Good-bye!” Fool--of course--there
she is. “Good-Bye!”</p>
<p>My hat and I take the air again. A pleasant afternoon; and
yet to-morrow morning I shall see things more clearly, and I
shall know that the bridegroom has married the wrong girl.
But it will be too late then to save him.</p>
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