our pleasure in the hum of insects is also, I think,
a pleasure of reminiscence. It reminds us of
other springs and summers in other gardens. It
reminds us of the infinite peace of childhood when
on a fine day the world hardly existed beyond the
garden-gate. We can smell moss-roses—how
we loved them as children!—as a bee swings
by. Insect after insect dances through the air,
each dying away like a note of music, and we see again
the border of pinks and the strawberries, and the
garden paths edged with box, and the old dilapidated
wooden seat under the tree, and an apple-tree in the
long grass, and a stream beyond the apple-tree, and
all those things that made us infinitely happy as
children when we were in the country—happier
than we were ever made by toys, for we do not remember
any toys so intensely as we remember the garden and
the farm. We had the illusion in those days that
it was going to last for ever. There was no past
or future. There was nothing real except the
present in which we lived—a present in
which all the human beings were kind, in which a dim-sighted
grandfather sang songs (especially a song in which
the chorus began “Free and easy"), in which
aunts brought us animal biscuits out of town, in which
there was neither man-servant nor maid-servant, neither
ox nor ass, that did not seem to go about with a bright
face. It was a present that overflowed with kindness,
though everybody except the ox and the ass believed
that it was only by the skin of our teeth that any
of us would escape being burnt alive for eternity.
Perhaps we thought little enough about it except on
Sundays or at prayers. Certainly no one was gloomy
about it before children. William John McNabb,
the huge labourer who looked after the horses, greeted
us all as cheerfully as if we had been saved and ready
for paradise.
It would be unfair to human beings, however, to suggest
that they are less lavish with their smiles than they
were thirty years or so ago. Everybody—or
almost everybody—still smiles. We can
hardly stop to talk to a man in the street without
a duet of smiles. The Prince of Wales smiles
across the world from left to right, and the Crown
Prince of Japan smiles across the world from right
to left. We cannot open an illustrated paper
without seeing smiling statesmen, cricketers, jockeys,
oarsmen, bridegrooms, clergymen, actresses and undergraduates.
Yet somehow we are no longer made happy by a smile.
We no longer take it, as we used to take it, as evidence
that the person smiling is either happy or kind.
It then seemed to come from the heart. It now
seems a formula. It is, we may admit, a pleasant
and useful formula. But a man might easily be
a burglar or a murderer or a Cabinet Minister and
smile. Some people are supposed to smile merely
in order to show what good teeth they have. William
John McNabb, I am sure, never did that.