<h2> <SPAN name="article39"></SPAN> A Digression </h2>
<p>My omnibus left the broad and easy way which leads to
Victoria Station and plunged into the strait and narrow paths
which land you into the river at Vauxhall if you aren’t
careful, and I peered over the back to have another look at
its number. The road-mending season is in full swing now, but
no amount of road-mending could account for such a
comprehensive compass as we were fetching. For a moment I
thought that the revolution had begun. “’Busful
of Bourgeoisie Kidnapped” would make a good head-line
for the papers. Or perhaps it was merely a private
enterprise. We were to be held for ransom in some deserted
warehouse on the margin of the Thames, into which, if the
money were not forthcoming, we should be dropped with a
weight at the feet on some dark and lonely night....
Fortunately the conductor came up at this stage of the
journey and said “Ennimorfairplees,” whereupon I
laid my fears before him and begged him to let me know the
worst. He replied briefly, “Shorerpersher,” and
went down again. So that was it.</p>
<p>Why is the Shah of Persia so popular? Even in these days when
kings are two a penny, and there is a never-ending procession
of Napoleons and Nelsons to the Guildhall to receive swords
and freedoms and honorary degrees, the arrival of a Shah of
Persia stirs the imagination of the man in the street. He
feels something of the old thrill. But in the nineties, of
course, we talked about nothing else for weeks. “Have
you seen the Shah?” was the popular catch-phrase of the
day; there were music hall songs about him; he was almost as
important as a jubilee.</p>
<p>It is curious that this should have been so, for a Shah of
Persia is not really as important as that. There was never a
catch-phrase, “Have you seen the French
President?” or even “Have you seen the
Tsar?” both of whom one would expect to take precedence
of a Persian ruler. But they are more commonplace people. The
Shah makes his appeal, not on account of his importance but
on account of his romantic associations. He fills the mind
with thoughts of uncut rubies, diamond-studded swords, Arab
chargers, veiled houris, and the very best Persian sherbet.
One does not stand outside Victoria in the hope of seeing any
of these things in the carriage with him, but one feels that
is the sort of man he is, and that if only he could talk
English like you or me, he could tell us a story worth the
telling. “Hooray for the Shah!”</p>
<p>Seated on my omnibus, and thinking of these things--(we had
tacked by this time, and were beating up for Pimlico)--I
remembered suddenly a little personal incident in connexion
with the visit of that earlier Shah which is not without its
moral for all of us. It teaches us the lesson that--well, we
can settle this afterwards. Anyway, here is the story.</p>
<p>The Shah of Persia was in England, and all England was
talking about him. Naturally, we were talking about him at my
private school. I was about nine at the time; it is not the
age at which one knows much about high politics, but it is
almost the only age when one really knows where Persia is. I
have no doubt that we “did” Persia in that term,
out of honour to the Shah. One result of all this talk in the
school about the Persian Potentate was (as you might expect)
that a certain boy was nicknamed “The Shah,”
presumably on account of some magnificence of person or
costume. Now it happened that the school was busying itself
just then over some election--to the presidency of the
Debating Society, or membership of the Games Committee, or
something of that sort--and “The Shah” was a very
popular candidate. I was one of his humble but admiring
supporters.</p>
<p>Observe me, then, on the polling day, busily at work in a
corner of the schoolroom. I am writing in bold capitals on a
piece of exercise paper, “Vote for the shah.”
Having written it, I pinned it proudly up in a corner of the
room, and stood back awhile to look at it. My first effort at
electioneering. There was no immediate sensation, for
everybody else was too busy over his own affairs to notice my
little poster, and so I went about from one little knot of
talkers to another, hanging shyly on the outskirts in the
hope that, when it broke up, I might lead the way casually
towards my masterpiece--“VOTE FOR THE SHAH.”</p>
<p>Suddenly my attention was attracted to another boy, who, even
as I had been a few minutes ago, was now busily writing. I
kept my eye on him, and when he had finished his work, and
was walking across the room with a piece of paper in his
hand, I followed him eagerly. He was at least twelve; I was
only nine. Can you wonder that he seemed to me almost the
last word in wisdom? So I followed him. Could it really be
that my poster had forstalled his? What glory if it were so!
He pinned up his notice. He moved away, and I read it. It
said: “VOTE FOR THE SHAR.”</p>
<p>You can imagine my feelings. I went hot all over.
“Shar,” of course, not “Shah.” How
ever could I have been such an idiot as to have thought it
was “Shah”? S-h-a-h obviously spelt shash, not
shar. How nearly I had exposed my appalling ignorance to my
fellows! “Vote for the--”; I blushed again,
hardly able to think of it. And oh! how thankful I was now
that everybody else had been too busy to read my poster.
Hastily I went over to it, and tore it down; hastily I went
back to my desk and wrote another poster. Observe me now
again. I am writing in bold capitals on a piece of exercise
paper: “VOTE FOR THE SHAR.”</p>
<p>And the moral? Well, my omnibus has now; fetched its compass
round Victoria, we are back on the main route again, and I
think I must leave the moral to you.</p>
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