The Clicking of Cuthbert
A short story by P G Wodehouse
( Mildly modernized)
The young man came into the smoking-room of the clubhouse, and flung his bag with a clatter on the floor. He sank moodily into an arm-chair and pressed the bell.
"Waiter!"
"Sir?"
The young man pointed at the bag with every evidence of distaste.
"You may have these clubs," he said. "Take them away. If you don't want them yourself, give them to one of the caddies."
Across the room the Oldest Member of the Club gazed at him with a grave sadness through the smoke of his pipe. His eye was deep and dreamy--the eye of a man who, as the poet says, has seen Golf
steadily and seen it fully.
"You are giving up golf?"
he said.
He was not altogether unprepared for such an attitude on the young man's part: for from his perch on the terrace above the ninth hole of the golf course he had observed him start out on the
afternoon's round and had seen him lose a couple of balls in the lake at the second hole after taking seven strokes at the first.
"Yes!" cried the young man fiercely. "For ever, dammit! Silly stupid game! Bloody horrible fat-headed silly ass of a game! Nothing but a waste of time."
The Sage winced.
"Don't say that, my boy."
"But I do say it. What earthly
good is golf? Life is stern and life is earnest. We live in a practical age. All round us we see foreign competition creating trouble for us. And we spend our time playing golf! What do we get out of it? Is golf any use? That's what I'm asking you. Can you name me a single case where devotion to this hopeless hobby has done a man any practical good?"
The Sage smiled gently.
"I could name a thousand."
"One will do."
"I will select," said theSage, "from the innumerable memories that rush to my mind, the story of Cuthbert Banks."
"Never heard of him."
"Be of good cheer," said the Oldest Member. "You are going to hear of him now."
It was in the picturesque little settlement of Wood Hills (said the Oldest Member) that the incidents which I am about to relate occurred. Even if you have never been in Wood Hills, that suburban
paradise is probably familiar to you by name. Situated at a convenient distance from the city, it combines nicely the advantages of city life with the pleasant surroundings and healthful air of the country. Its inhabitants live in large houses, standing in their own grounds, and enjoy so many luxuries--such as gravel soil, covered drains, electric light, telephone, baths (hot and cold), and municipal water supply, that you might be pardoned for imagining life to be so ideal for them that no possible improvement could be added to their lot.
Mrs. Willoughby Smethurst was under
no such delusion. What Wood Hills needed to make it perfect, she realized, was
Culture. Material comforts are all very well, but, if the summum bonum, the
highest good, is to be achieved, the Soul also demands a look in, and it
was Mrs. Smethurst's unfaltering resolve that never while she had her strength
should the Soul be handed the loser's end. It was her intention to make Wood
Hills a centre of all that was most cultivated and refined, and, golly! how she
had succeeded. Under her presidency the Wood Hills Literary and Debating
Society had tripled its membership.
But there is always a fly in the
ointment, a caterpillar in the salad. The local golf club, an institution to
which Mrs. Smethurst strongly objected, had also tripled its membership; and
the division of the community into two rival camps, the Golfers and the
Cultured, had become more marked than ever. This division, always sharp, had now
reached the level of a Great Divide. The rival sects treated one another with a
cold hostility.
Various incidents added to the distrust.
Mrs. Smethurst's house was next to the golf links, standing to the right of the
fourth tee: and, as the Literary Society was in the habit of entertaining
visiting lecturers, many a golfer had foozled his drive owing to sudden loud
outbursts of applause coinciding with his down-swing. And not long before this
story opens, a sliced ball, whizzing in at the open window, had come within a
whisker of disabling Raymond Parsloe Devine, the rising young novelist (who
rose at that moment a clear foot and a half) from any further attempts at writing.
Two inches, indeed, to the right and Raymond would definitely have been found
belly-up.
To make matters worse, someone rang
the front-door bell almost immediately, and the maid ushered in a young man of
pleasing appearance in a sweater and baggy knickerbockers who apologetically
but firmly insisted on playing his ball where it lay, and, what with the shock
of the lecturer's narrow escape and the spectacle of the intruder standing on
the table and swinging away with a golf club, the afternoon's session had to be
classified as a complete calamity. Mr. Devine's determination, from which nobody
could dissuade him, to deliver the rest of his lecture in the coal-cellar gave
the meeting a jolt from which it never recovered.
I have described this incident, mainly
because it introduced Cuthbert Banks to Mrs. Smethurst's niece, Adeline. It was
Cuthbert who had so nearly reduced the count of rising novelists by one. As
Cuthbert hopped down from the table after his stroke, he was suddenly aware
that a beautiful girl was looking at him intently. As a matter of fact,
everyone in the room was looking at him intently, none more so than Raymond
Parsloe Devine, but none of the others were beautiful girls. Long as the
members of Wood Hills Literary Society were on brain, they were short on looks,
and, to Cuthbert's excited eye, Adeline Smethurst stood out like a jewel in a
pile of coal.
He had never seen her before, for
she had only arrived at her aunt's house on the previous day, but he was
perfectly certain that life, even when lived in the midst of gravel soil, covered
drains, and municipal water supply, was going to be a pretty poor affair if he
did not see her again. Yes, Cuthbert was in love: and it is interesting to
record, as showing the effect of the tender emotion on a man's game, that
twenty minutes after he had met Adeline he did the short eleventh hole in one,
and almost got a three on the four-hundred-yard twelfth hole.
I will skip lightly over the
intermediate stages of Cuthbert's courtship and come to the moment when--at the
annual ball in aid of the local Cottage Hospital, the only occasion during the
year on which the lion, so to speak, lay down with the lamb, and the Golfers
and the Cultured met on terms of easy friendship, their differences temporarily
laid aside--he proposed to Adeline and was badly stymied.
That fair, soulful girl could not
see him with a telescope.
"Mr. Banks," she said,
"I will speak frankly."
"Charge right ahead,"
assented Cuthbert.
"Deeply sensible as I am
of----"
"I know. Of the honour and the
compliment and all that. But, passing lightly over all that nonsense what seems
to be the trouble? I love you to distraction----"
"Love is not everything."
"You're wrong," said
Cuthbert, earnestly. "You're right off it. Love----" And he was about
to expand on the theme when she interrupted him.
"I am a girl of ambition."
"And very nice, too," said
Cuthbert.
"I am a girl of ambition,"
repeated Adeline, "and I realize that the fulfilment of my ambitions must
come through my husband. I am very ordinary myself----"
"What!" cried Cuthbert.
"You ordinary? Why, you are a pearl among women, the queen of your gender.
You can't have been looking in a mirror lately. You stand alone. Simply alone.
You make the rest look like battered repaints."
"Well," said Adeline,
softening a trifle, "I believe I am fairly good-looking----"
"Anybody who will call you
fairly good-looking would describe the Taj Mahal as a pretty neat tomb."
"But that is not the point.
What I mean is, if I marry a nonentity I shall be a nonentity myself for ever.
And I would sooner die than be a nonentity."
"And, if I follow your thinking,
you think that that excludes me?"
"Well, really, Mr. Banks, have
you done anything, or are you likely ever to do anything worth while?"
Cuthbert hesitated.
"It's true," he said,
"I didn't finish in the first ten in the Open, and I was knocked out in
the semi-final of the Amateur, but I won the French Open last year."
"The--what?"
"The French Open Championship.
Golf, you know."
"Golf! You waste all your time
playing golf. I admire a man who is more spiritual, more intellectual."
A pang of jealousy tore Cuthbert's heart.
"Like What's-his-name
Devine?" he said, sullenly.
"Mr. Devine," replied
Adeline, blushing faintly, "is going to be a great man. Already he has
achieved much. The critics say that he is more Russian than any other young
English writer."
"And is that good?"
"Of course it's good."
"I should have thought the trick
would be to be more English than any other young English writer."
"Nonsense! Who wants an English
writer to be English? You've got to be Russian or Spanish or something to be a
real success. The torch of the great Russians has been passed to Mr.
Devine."
"From what I've heard of
Russians, I should hate to have that happen to me."
"There is no danger of
that," said Adeline scornfully.
"Oh! Well, let me tell you that
there is a lot more in me than you think."
"That might easily be so."
"You think I'm not spiritual
and intellectual," said Cuthbert, deeply moved. "Very well. Tomorrow
I join the Literary Society."
Even as he spoke the words his leg
was itching to kick himself for being such a fool, but the sudden expression of
pleasure on Adeline's face soothed him; and he went home that night with the
feeling that he had taken on something rather attractive. It was only in the
cold, grey light of the morning that he realized what he had let himself in
for.
I do not know if you have had any
experience of literary societies in small towns, but the one that flourished
under the eye of Mrs. Willoughby Smethurst at Wood Hills was rather more like
small towns than the average. With my feeble powers of description, I cannot
hope to make clear to you all that Cuthbert Banks endured in the next few
weeks. And, even if I could, I doubt if I should do so. It is all very well to
excite pity and terror, as Aristotle recommends, but there are limits. In the
ancient Greek tragedies it was an ironclad rule that all the real rough stuff
should take place off-stage, and I shall follow this admirable principle. It
will be enough if I say merely that J. Cuthbert Banks did not had a great time.
After attending eleven debates and fourteen lectures on vers libre
Poetry, the Seventeenth-Century Essayists, the Neo-Scandinavian Movement in
Portuguese Literature, and other subjects of a similar nature, he grew so weak that,
on the rare occasions when he had time for a visit to the golf course, he had to
take a big iron club for his short shots.
It was not just the boredom of the
debates and lectures that sapped his strength. What really got him was the
torture of seeing Adeline's adoration of Raymond Parsloe Devine. The man seemed
to have made the deepest possible impression upon her plastic emotions. When he
spoke, she leaned forward with parted lips and looked at him. When he was not
speaking--which was seldom--she leaned back and looked at him. And when he
happened to take the next seat to her, she leaned sideways and looked at him.
One glance at Mr. Devine would have been more than enough for Cuthbert; but
Adeline found him a spectacle that never palled. She could not have gazed at
him with a more rapturous intensity if she had been a small child and he a
saucer of ice-cream. All this Cuthbert had to witness while still trying to
retain his senses sufficiently to enable him to duck and back away if somebody
suddenly asked him what he thought of the sombre realism of Vladimir Brusiloff.
It is little wonder that he tossed in bed, picking at the bedsheet, through
sleepless nights, and had to have all his waistcoats reduced by three inches to
keep them from sagging.
This Vladimir Brusiloff to whom I
have referred was the famous Russian novelist, and, as he was at the moment in
the country on a lecturing tour, there had been something of a boom in interest
in his works. The Wood Hills Literary Society had been studying them for weeks,
and never since his first entrance into intellectual circles had Cuthbert Banks
come nearer to throwing in the towel. Vladimir specialized in grey studies of
hopeless misery, where nothing happened till page three hundred and eighty,
when the Russian farmer would decide to commit suicide. It was tough going for
a man whose deepest reading till now had been “How to play the Push-Shot” by
Harry Vardon, and
there can be no greater proof of the magic of love than the fact that Cuthbert
stuck to it without a cry. But the strain was terrible and I am inclined to
think that he must have cracked, had it not been for the daily reports in the
papers of the internal warfare in Russia. Cuthbert was an optimist at heart,
and it seemed to him that, at the rate at which the inhabitants of that
interesting country were murdering one another, the supply of Russian novelists
must eventually come to an end.
One morning, as he tottered down the
road for the short walk which was now almost the only exercise he could do,
Cuthbert met Adeline. A spasm of anguish flitted through all his nerve-centres
as he saw that she was accompanied by Raymond Parsloe Devine.
"Good morning, Mr. Banks,"
said Adeline.
"Good morning," said
Cuthbert hollowly.
"Such good news about Vladimir
Brusiloff."
"Dead?" said Cuthbert,
with a touch of hope.
"Dead? Of course not. Why
should he be? No, Aunt Emily met his manager after his lecture at Queen's Hall
yesterday, and he has promised that Mr. Brusiloff shall come to her next
Wednesday reception."
"Oh, ah!" said Cuthbert,
dully.
"I don't know how she managed
it. I think she must have told him that Mr. Devine would be there to meet
him."
"And yet, he is coming?," asked
Cuthbert.
"I shall be very glad,"
said Raymond Devine, "of the opportunity of meeting Brusiloff."
"I'm sure," said Adeline,
"he will be very glad of the opportunity of meeting you."
"Possibly," said Mr.
Devine. "Possibly. Competent critics have said that my work closely
resembles that of the great Russian Masters."
"Your psychology is so
deep."
"Yes, yes."
"And your atmosphere."
"Quite."
Cuthbert was desperate to escape from this love-feast. The sun was
shining brightly, but the world was black to him. Birds sang in the tree-tops,
but he did not hear them. He might have been one of those Russian farmers in one
of Brusiloff’s books.
"You will be there, Mr.
Banks?" said Adeline, as he turned away.
"Oh, all right," said
Cuthbert.
On the following Wednesday, Cuthbert
entered the drawing-room and took his usual place in a distant corner where,
while able to feast his gaze on Adeline, he had a sporting chance of being
overlooked or mistaken for a piece of furniture. He saw the great Russian
thinker seated in the midst of a circle of admiring females. Raymond Parsloe
Devine had not yet arrived.
His first glance at the novelist
surprised Cuthbert. Doubtless with the best motives, Vladimir Brusiloff had allowed
his face to become almost entirely hidden behind a dense bush of hair, but his
eyes were visible through the undergrowth, and it seemed to Cuthbert that there
was an expression in them not unlike that of a cat in a strange backyard
surrounded by small boys. The man looked forlorn and hopeless, and Cuthbert
wondered whether he had had bad news from home.
This was not the case. The latest
news which Vladimir Brusiloff had had from Russia had been particularly
cheering. Three of his main creditors had been killed in the last massacre in Russia, and a man whom he owed
for five years for a samovar and a pair of overshoes had fled the country, and
had not been heard of since. It was not bad news from home that was depressing
Vladimir. What was wrong with him was the fact that this was the eighty-second small
town literary reception he had been compelled to attend since he had landed in
the country on his lecturing tour, and he was sick to death of it. When his
agent had first suggested the trip, he had signed on the dotted line without an
instant's hesitation. Worked out in roubles, the fees offered had seemed just
about right. But now, as he peered through the brushwood at the faces round
him, and realized that eight out of ten of those present had manuscripts of
some sort hidden in their coats, and were only waiting for an opportunity to
whip them out and start reading, he wished that he had stayed at his quiet home
in Nijni-Novgorod, where the worst thing that could happen to a fellow was a couple
of bombs coming in through the window and mixing themselves up with his
breakfast egg.
At this point in his meditations he
was aware that his hostess was looming up before him with a pale young man in
horn-rimmed spectacles at her side. There was in Mrs. Smethurst's attitude something
of the smooth style of the master-of-ceremonies at the big fight who introduces
the enthusiastic boxer who wishes to challenge the champion.
"Oh, Mr. Brusiloff," said
Mrs. Smethurst, "I do so want you to meet Mr. Raymond Parsloe Devine,
whose work I expect you know. He is one of our younger novelists."
The distinguished visitor peered in
a wary and defensive manner through the shrubbery, but did not speak. Inwardly
he was thinking how exactly similar Mr. Devine was to the eighty-one other
younger novelists to whom he had been introduced at various hamlets throughout
the country. Raymond Parsloe Devine bowed courteously, while Cuthbert, wedged
into his corner, glowered at him.
"The critics," said Mr.
Devine, "have been kind enough to say that my poor efforts contain a good
deal of the Russian spirit. I owe much to the great Russians. I have been
greatly influenced by Sovietski."
Down in the forest something
stirred. It was Vladimir Brusiloff's mouth opening, as he prepared to speak. He
was not a man who prattled readily, especially in a foreign tongue. He gave the
impression that each word was excavated from his interior by some up-to-date
process of mining. He glared bleakly at Mr. Devine, and allowed three words to
drop out of him.
"Sovietski no good!"
He paused for a moment, set the
machinery working again, and delivered five more at the pithead.
"I spit me of Sovietski!"
There was a painful sensation. The fate
of a popular idol is in many ways an enviable one, but it has the drawback of
uncertainty. Here today and gone tomorrow. Until this moment Raymond Parsloe
Devine's stock had stood at something considerably over par in Wood Hills
intellectual circles, but now there was a rapid slump. Till now he had been
greatly admired for being influenced by Sovietski, but it appeared now that
this was not a good thing to be. It was evidently a rotten thing to be. The law
could not touch you for being influenced by Sovietski, but there is an ethical
as well as a legal code, and this it was obvious that Raymond Parsloe Devine
had crossed a line. Women drew away from him slightly, holding their skirts.
Men looked at him critically. Adeline Smethurst started violently, and dropped
a tea-cup. And Cuthbert Banks, doing his popular imitation of a sardine in his
corner, felt for the first time in months that life held something of sunshine.
Raymond Parsloe Devine was plainly
shaken, but he made a clever attempt to recover his lost prestige.
"When I say I have been
influenced by Sovietski, I mean, of course, that I was once under his spell. A
young writer commits many follies. I have long since passed through that phase.
The false glamour of Sovietski has ceased to dazzle me. I now belong
whole-heartedly to the school of Nastikoff."
There was a reaction. People nodded
at one another sympathetically. After all, we cannot expect old heads on young
shoulders, and a lapse at the outset of one's career should not be held against
one who has eventually seen the light.
"Nastikoff no good," said
Vladimir Brusiloff, coldly. He paused, listening to the machinery.
"Nastikoff worse than
Sovietski."
He paused again.
"I spit me of Nastikoff!"
he said.
This time there was no doubt about
it. The bottom had dropped out of the market, and there were no takers for Raymond
Parsloe Devine. It was clear to the entire assembled company that they had been
all wrong about Raymond Parsloe Devine. They had allowed him to play on their
innocence and sell them a dummy. They had taken him at his own valuation, and
had been cheated into admiring him as a man who amounted to something, and all
the while he had belonged to the school of Nastikoff. You never can tell. Mrs.
Smethurst's guests were well-bred, and there was consequently no violent
demonstration, but you could see by their faces what they felt. Those nearest
Raymond Parsloe jostled to get further away. Mrs. Smethurst eyed him stonily
through a raised monocle. One or two low hisses were heard, and over at the
other end of the room somebody opened the window pointedly.
Raymond Parsloe Devine hesitated for
a moment, then, realizing his situation, turned and slunk to the door. There
was an audible sigh of relief as it closed behind him.
Vladimir Brusiloff proceeded to sum
up.
"No novelists any good except
me. Sovietski--yah! Nastikoff--bah! I spit me of zem all. No novelists anywhere
any good except me. P. G. Wodehouse and Rick Riordan not bad. Not good, but not
bad. No novelists any good except me."
And, having uttered this dictum, he
removed a slab of cake from a near-by plate, steered it through the jungle, and
began to champ.
It is too much to say that there was
a dead silence. There could never be that in any room in which Vladimir
Brusiloff was eating cake. But certainly what you might call the general
chit-chat was pretty well down and out. Nobody wanted to be the first to speak.
The members of the Wood Hills Literary Society looked at one another timidly.
Cuthbert, for his part, gazed at Adeline; and Adeline gazed into space. It was
plain that the girl was deeply stirred. Her eyes were opened wide, a faint
flush crimsoned her cheeks, and her breath was coming quickly.
Adeline's mind was in a whirl. She
felt as if she had been walking gaily along a pleasant path and had stopped
suddenly on the very brink of a precipice. It would be idle to deny that
Raymond Parsloe Devine had attracted her extraordinarily. She had taken him at
his own valuation as an extremely hot potato, and her hero-worship had
gradually been turning into love. And now her hero had been shown to have feet
of clay. It was hard, I consider, on Raymond Parsloe Devine, but that is how it
goes in this world. You get a following as a celebrity, and then you run up
against another bigger celebrity and your admirers desert you. One could
moralize on this at considerable length, but better not, perhaps. Enough to say
that the glamour of Raymond Devine ceased abruptly in that moment for Adeline,
and her most coherent thought at this juncture was the resolve, as soon as she
got up to her room, to burn the three signed photographs he had sent her and to
give the autographed presentation set of his books to the grocer's boy.
Mrs. Smethurst, meanwhile, having
rallied somewhat, was trying to set the feast of reason and flow of soul going
again.
"And how do you like England,
Mr. Brusiloff?" she asked.
The celebrity paused in the act of
lowering another segment of cake.
"Dam good," he replied,
cordially.
"I suppose you have travelled
all over the country by this time?"
"You said it," agreed the
Thinker.
"Have you met many of our great
public men?"
"Yais--Yais--Quite a few of the
nibs--Lloyid Gorge, I meet him. But----" Beneath the matting a
discontented expression came into his face, and his voice took on a peevish
note. "But I not meet your real great men--your Arbmishel, your
Arreevadon--I not meet them. That's what gives me the pipovitch. Have you
ever met Arbmishel and Arreevadon?"
A strained, anguished look came into
Mrs. Smethurst's face and was reflected in the faces of the other members of
the circle. The eminent Russian had sprung two entirely new ones on them, and
they felt that their ignorance was about to be exposed. What would Vladimir
Brusiloff think of the Wood Hills Literary Society? The reputation of the Wood
Hills Literary Society was at stake, trembling in the balance, and coming up
for the third time. In dumb agony Mrs. Smethurst rolled her eyes about the room
searching for someone capable of coming to the rescue. She drew blank.
And then, from a distant corner,
there sounded a deprecating, cough, and those nearest Cuthbert Banks saw that
he had stopped twisting his right foot round his left ankle and his left foot
round his right ankle and was sitting up with a light of almost human
intelligence in his eyes.
"Er----" said Cuthbert,
blushing as every eye in the room seemed to fix itself on him, "I think he
means Abe Mitchell and Harry Vardon."
"Abe Mitchell and Harry
Vardon?" repeated Mrs. Smethurst, blankly. "I never heard
of----"
"Yais! Yais! Most! Very!"
shouted Vladimir Brusiloff, enthusiastically. "Arbmishel and Arreevadon.
You know them, yes, what, no, perhaps?"
"I've played with Abe Mitchell
often, and I was partnered with Harry Vardon in last year's Open."
The great Russian uttered a cry that
shook the chandelier.
"You play in ze Open?
Why," he demanded reproachfully of Mrs. Smethurst, "was I not been
introducted to this young man who play in opens?"
"Well, really," faltered
Mrs. Smethurst. "Well, the fact is, Mr. Brusiloff----"
She broke off. She was unequal to
the task of explaining, without hurting anyone's feelings, that she had always
regarded Cuthbert as a piece of cheese and a blot on the landscape.
"Introduct me!" thundered
the Celebrity.
"Why, certainly, certainly, of
course. This is Mr.----."
She looked appealingly at Cuthbert.
"Banks," prompted
Cuthbert.
"Banks!" cried Vladimir
Brusiloff. "Not Cootaboot Banks?"
"Is your name
Cootaboot?" asked Mrs. Smethurst, faintly.
"Well, it's Cuthbert."
"Yais! Yais! Cootaboot!"
There was a rush and swirl, as the bubbling Russian burst his way through the
throng and rushed to where Cuthbert sat. He stood for a moment eyeing him
excitedly, then, stooping swiftly, kissed him on both cheeks before Cuthbert
could get his guard up. "My dear young man, I saw you win ze French Open.
Great! Great! Grand! Superb! Hot stuff, and you can say I said so! Will you
permit one who is but eighteen at Nijni-Novgorod to salute you once more?"
And he kissed Cuthbert again. Then,
brushing aside one or two intellectuals who were in the way, he dragged up a
chair and sat down.
"You are a great man!" he
said.
"Oh, no," said Cuthbert
modestly.
"Yais! Great. Most! Very! The
way you lay your approach-putts dead from anywhere!"
"Oh, I don't know."
Mr. Brusiloff drew his chair closer.
"Let me tell you one vairy
funny story about putting. It was one day I play at Nijni-Novgorod with the
pro. against Lenin and Trotsky, and Trotsky had a two-inch putt for the hole.
But, just as he addresses the ball, someone in the crowd he tries to
assassinate Lenin with a rewolwer--you know that is our great national sport,
trying to assassinate Lenin with rewolwers--and the bang puts Trotsky off his
stroke and he goes five yards past the hole, and then Lenin, who is rather
shaken, you understand, he misses again himself, and we win the hole and match
and I clean up three hundred and ninety-six thousand roubles, or fifteen shillings
in your money. Some gameovitch! And now let me tell you one other vairy funny
story----"
Desultory conversation had begun in
murmurs over the rest of the room, as the Wood Hills intellectuals politely tried
to hide the fact that they realized that they were about as much out of it at
this reunion of twin souls as cats at a dog-show. From time to time they
started as Vladimir Brusiloff's laugh boomed out. Perhaps it was a consolation
to them to know that he was enjoying himself.
As for Adeline, how shall I describe
her emotions? She was stunned. Before her very eyes the stone which the
builders had rejected had become the main thing, the hundred-to-one shot had
walked away with the race. A rush of tender admiration for Cuthbert Banks
flooded her heart. She saw that she had been all wrong. Cuthbert, whom she had
always treated with a patronizing superiority, was really a man to be looked up
to and worshipped. A deep, dreamy sigh shook Adeline's fragile form.
Half an hour later Vladimir and
Cuthbert Banks rose.
"Goot-a-bye, Mrs.
Smet-thirst," said the Celebrity. "Zank you for a most charming
visit. My friend Cootaboot and me we go now to shoot a few holes. You will lend
me clobs, friend Cootaboot?"
"Any you want."
"The niblicksky is what I use
most. Goot-a-bye, Mrs. Smet-thirst."
They were moving to the door, when
Cuthbert felt a light touch on his arm. Adeline was looking up at him tenderly.
"May I come, too, and walk
round with you?"
Cuthbert's chest heaved.
"Oh," he said, with a
tremor in his voice, "that you would walk round with me for life!"
Her eyes met his.
"Perhaps," she whispered,
softly, "it could be arranged."
"And so," (concluded the
Oldest Member), "you see that golf can be of the greatest practical
assistance to a man in Life's struggle. Raymond Parsloe Devine, who was no
player, had to move out of the neighbourhood immediately, and is now, I
believe, writing scenarios out in California for the Flicker Film Company.
Adeline is married to Cuthbert, and it was only his earnest pleading which
prevented her from having their eldest son named Abe Mitchell Ribbed-Faced
Mashie Banks, for she is now as keen a devotee of the great game as her
husband. Those who know them say that theirs is a union so devoted,
so----"
The Sage broke off abruptly, for the
young man had rushed to the door and out into the passage. Through the open
door he could hear him crying passionately to the waiter to bring back his
clubs.
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