Touch and Go eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 101 pages of information about Touch and Go.

Touch and Go eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 101 pages of information about Touch and Go.

It doesn’t look much, at first sight.  After all—­people!  Yes, People!  Not the people, i.e. Plebs, nor yet the Upper Ten.  People.  Neither Piccoli nor Grandi in our republic.  People.

People, ah God!  Not mannequins.  Not lords nor proletariats nor bishops nor husbands nor co-respondents nor virgins nor adultresses nor uncles nor noses.  Not even white rabbits nor presidents.  People.

Men who are somebody, not men who are something.  Men who happen to be bishops or co-respondents, women who happen to be chaste, just as they happen to freckle, because it’s one of their innumerable odd qualities.  Even men who happen, by the way, to have long noses.  But not noses on two legs, not burly pairs of gaiters, stuffed and voluble, not white meringues of chastity, not incarnations of co-respondence.  Not proletariats, petitioners, president’s, noses, bits of fluff.  Heavens, what an assortment of bits!  And aren’t we sick of them!

People, I say.  And after all, it’s saying something.  It’s harder to be a human being than to be a president or a bit of fluff.  You can be a president, or a bit of fluff, or even a nose, by clockwork.  Given a role, a part, you can play it by clockwork.  But you can’t have a clockwork human being.

We’re dead sick of parts.  It’s no use your protesting that there is a man behind the nose.  We can’t see him, and he can’t see himself.  Nothing but nose.  Neither can you make us believe there is a man inside the gaiters.  He’s never showed his head yet.

It may be, in real life, the gaiters wear the man, as the nose wears Cyrano.  It may be Sir Auckland Geddes and Mr. J. H. Thomas are only clippings from the illustrated press.  It may be that a miner is a complicated machine for cutting coal and voting on a ballot-paper.  It may be that coal-owners are like the petit bleu arrangement, a system of vacuum tubes for whooshing Bradburys about from one to the other.

It may be that everybody delights in bits, in parts, that the public insists on noses, gaiters, white rabbits, bits of fluff, automata and gewgaws.  If they do, then let ’em.  Chu Chin Chow for ever!

In spite of them all:  A People’s Theatre.  A People’s Theatre shows men, and not parts.  Not bits, nor bundles of bits.  A whole bunch of roles tied into one won’t make an individual.  Though gaiters perish, we will have men.

Although most miners may be pick-cum-shovel-cum-ballot implements, and no more, still, among miners there must be two or three living individuals.  The same among the masters.  The majority are suction-tubes for Bradburys.  But is this Sodom of Industrialism there are surely ten men, all told.  My poor little withered grain of mustard seed, I am half afraid to take you across to the seed-testing department!

And if there are men, there is A People’s Theatre.

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Project Gutenberg
Touch and Go from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.