Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 153, October 3, 1917 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 47 pages of information about Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 153, October 3, 1917.

Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 153, October 3, 1917 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 47 pages of information about Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 153, October 3, 1917.

At the Imperial table, it will be observed, they put the horse before the carte.

* * * * *

    “He held several Court appointments, including those of Keeper of
    the Privy PuPrse to the Prince”—­The Star.

It is not every Keeper of the Privy Purse who thus manages to double the initial capital.

* * * * *

THE P.-P.-D.

Henry is in the War Office, where he takes a hand in the Direction of Military Aeronautics.  To meet him you might almost think that Military Aeronautics was a one-man show.  He has, at any rate in the eyes of the layman, an encyclopaedic knowledge of aircraft and all appertaining thereto.  When he is out for a walk on Sunday with his wife and daughter, and a British aeroplane passes over them with the usual fascinating roar, Henry is very superior.  Mummy (who is of coarse clay) and Betty (aged 11/2, and coarser still) are frankly excited every time.

“Look at the pretty airship!” says Mummy.

“Oo-ah!” says Betty.

“B.  E. 4 X.,” snaps Henry, without looking at it.
       * * * * *
Or rather this is what Henry used to do; but now things are different.  It was Betty who, so to speak, brought him down to earth again.  He had great ambitions for Betty, whom he fondly believed to be possessed of intelligence above the lot of woman, and he always laboured prodigiously to advance her education.  Betty took to it philosophically, however, and refused to be hurried; and Henry almost despaired of getting her beyond two syllables.  The “Common Objects of the Farmyard” were rapidly assimilated, and all the world of mechanical traction was comprehended in the generic “puff-puff.”  But Henry wouldn’t be satisfied with this very creditable repertoire.  “Out of respect for her father, if for no other reason,” he would insist, “she must learn to say ‘aeroplane.’”

“How ridiculous!” said Mummy, who always called them “airships,” to annoy Henry; “and anyhow it’s no use going on at her; she never will say things to order.  If you’ll only leave her alone for a bit she’ll probably say it, and then your sordid ambition will be gratified.”

But Henry cared for none of these things, and when Sunday came, and with it Sunday’s promenade and Sunday’s aeroplane, he went at it as hard as ever.

“Say ‘air-ye-play,’” he commanded, as the pram was brought to a standstill and the droning monster passed overhead.

Betty gazed raptly at the entrancing thing.  Then suddenly she raised a fat hand and pointed.  “Oo-ah!” she said, “puff-puff-dicky!”

* * * * * And nowadays Henry’s omniscience is decently obscured under a capacious bushel.  If you meet an aeroplane when you are walking with him and ask humbly for his verdict thereon, in the expectation of an explosion of clipped technical jargon, he will stop and study its outline with great attention, and will eventually inform you, to your respectful mystification, that it is a “P.-P.-D.”  Thereafter he will chuckle most unofficially.

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Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 153, October 3, 1917 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.