<h2>REGINALD ON HOUSE-PARTIES</h2>
<p>The drawback is, one never really <i>knows</i> one’s
hosts and hostesses. One gets to know their fox-terriers
and their chrysanthemums, and whether the story about the go-cart
can be turned loose in the drawing-room, or must be told
privately to each member of the party, for fear of shocking
public opinion; but one’s host and hostess are a sort of
human hinterland that one never has the time to explore.</p>
<p>There was a fellow I stayed with once in Warwickshire who
farmed his own land, but was otherwise quite steady. Should
never have suspected him of having a soul, yet not very long
afterwards he eloped with a lion-tamer’s widow and set up
as a golf-instructor somewhere on the Persian Gulf; dreadfully
immoral, of course, because he was only an indifferent player,
but still, it showed imagination. His wife was really to be
pitied, because he had been the only person in the house who
understood how to manage the cook’s temper, and now she has
to put “D.V.” on her dinner invitations. Still,
that’s better than a domestic scandal; a woman who leaves
her cook never wholly recovers her position in Society.</p>
<p>I suppose the same thing holds good with the hosts; they
seldom have more than a superficial acquaintance with their
guests, and so often just when they do get to know you a bit
better, they leave off knowing you altogether. There was
<i>rather</i> a breath of winter in the air when I left those
Dorsetshire people. You see, they had asked me down to
shoot, and I’m not particularly immense at that sort of
thing. There’s such a deadly sameness about
partridges; when you’ve missed one, you’ve missed the
lot—at least, that’s been my experience. And
they tried to rag me in the smoking-room about not being able to
hit a bird at five yards, a sort of bovine ragging that suggested
cows buzzing round a gadfly and thinking they were teasing
it. So I got up the next morning at early dawn—I know
it was dawn, because there were lark-noises in the sky, and the
grass looked as if it had been left out all night—and
hunted up the most conspicuous thing in the bird line that I
could find, and measured the distance, as nearly as it would let
me, and shot away all I knew. They said afterwards that it
was a tame bird; that’s simply <i>silly</i>, because it was
awfully wild at the first few shots. Afterwards it quieted
down a bit, and when its legs had stopped waving farewells to the
landscape I got a gardener-boy to drag it into the hall, where
everybody must see it on their way to the breakfast-room. I
breakfasted upstairs myself. I gathered afterwards that the
meal was tinged with a very unchristian spirit. I suppose
it’s unlucky to bring peacock’s feathers into a
house; anyway, there was a blue-pencilly look in my
hostess’s eye when I took my departure.</p>
<p>Some hostesses, of course, will forgive anything, even unto
pavonicide (is there such a word?), as long as one is
nice-looking and sufficiently unusual to counterbalance some of
the others; and there <i>are</i> others—the girl, for
instance, who reads Meredith, and appears at meals with unnatural
punctuality in a frock that’s made at home and repented at
leisure. She eventually finds her way to India and gets
married, and comes home to admire the Royal Academy, and to
imagine that an indifferent prawn curry is for ever an effective
substitute for all that we have been taught to believe is
luncheon. It’s then that she is really dangerous; but
at her worst she is never quite so bad as the woman who fires
<i>Exchange and Mart</i> questions at you without the least
provocation. Imagine the other day, just when I was doing
my best to understand half the things I was saying, being asked
by one of those seekers after country home truths how many fowls
she could keep in a run ten feet by six, or whatever it
was! I told her whole crowds, as long as she kept the door
shut, and the idea didn’t seem to have struck her before;
at least, she brooded over it for the rest of dinner.</p>
<p>Of course, as I say, one never really <i>knows</i> one’s
ground, and one may make mistakes occasionally. But then
one’s mistakes sometimes turn out assets in the long-run:
if we had never bungled away our American colonies we might never
have had the boy from the States to teach us how to wear our hair
and cut our clothes, and we must get our ideas from somewhere, I
suppose. Even the Hooligan was probably invented in China
centuries before we thought of him. England must wake up,
as the Duke of Devonshire said the other day; wasn’t
it? Oh, well, it was someone else. Not that I ever
indulge in despair about the Future; there always have been men
who have gone about despairing of the Future, and when the Future
arrives it says nice, superior things about their having acted
according to their lights. It is dreadful to think that
other people’s grandchildren may one day rise up and call
one amiable.</p>
<p>There are moments when one sympathises with Herod.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />