Little man. [Wistfully] Don’t you believe in human nature?
American. Very stimulating question.
[He looks round for opinions. The Dutch youth laughs.]
Englishman. [Holding out his half of the paper to his wife] Swap!
[His wife swaps.]
German. In human nature I believe so far as I can see him—no more.
American. Now that ‘pears to me kind o’ blasphemy. I believe in heroism. I opine there’s not one of us settin’ around here that’s not a hero—give him the occasion.
Little man. Oh! Do you believe that?
American. Well! I judge a hero is just a person that’ll help another at the expense of himself. Take that poor woman there. Well, now, she’s a heroine, I guess. She would die for her baby any old time.
German. Animals will die for their babies. That is nothing.
American. I carry it further. I postulate we would all die for that baby if a locomotive was to trundle up right here and try to handle it. [To the German] I guess you don’t know how good you are. [As the German is twisting up the ends of his moustache—to the ENGLISHWOMAN] I should like to have you express an opinion, ma’am.
ENGLISHWOMAN. I beg your pardon.
American. The English are very humanitarian; they have a very high sense of duty. So have the Germans, so have the Americans. [To the Dutch youth] I judge even in your little country they have that. This is an epoch of equality and high-toned ideals. [To the little man] What is your nationality, sir?
Little man. I’m afraid I’m nothing particular. My father was half-English and half-American, and my mother half-German and half-Dutch.
American. My! That’s a bit streaky, any old way. [The policeman passes again] Now, I don’t believe we’ve much use any more for those gentlemen in buttons. We’ve grown kind of mild—we don’t think of self as we used to do.
[The waiter has appeared in the doorway.]
German. [In a voice of thunder] ‘Cigarren! Donnerwetter’!
American. [Shaking his fist at the vanishing waiter] That flash of beer!
Waiter. ‘Komm’ gleich’!
American. A little more, and he will join George Washington! I was about to remark when he intruded: In this year of grace 1913 the kingdom of Christ is quite a going concern. We are mighty near universal brotherhood. The colonel here [He indicates the German] is a man of blood and iron, but give him an opportunity to be magnanimous, and he’ll be right there. Oh, sir! yep!
[The German, with
a profound mixture of pleasure and cynicism,
brushes up the ends
of his moustache.]