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 suffice if I say merely that J. Cuthbert Banks had a thin 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 enfeebled that, on the rare occasions when he had

time for a visit to the links, he had to take a full iron for his mashie

shots.

It was not simply the oppressive nature of the debates and lectures

that sapped his vitality. What really got right in amongst 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

endeavouring to retain the possession of his faculties 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 coverlet, through

sleepless nights, and had to have all his waistcoats taken in three

inches to keep them from sagging.

This Vladimir Brusiloff to whom I have referred was the famous Russian

novelist, and, owing to the fact of his being in the country on a

lecturing tour at the moment, there had been something of a boom 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 moujik decided to commit

suicide. It was tough going for a man whose deepest reading hitherto

had been Vardon on the Push-Shot, and there can be no greater proof of

the magic of love than the fact that Cuthbert stuck 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 internecine strife which was proceeding so briskly 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

give out.

One morning, as he tottered down the road for the short walk which was

now almost the only exercise to which he was equal, Cuthbert met

Adeline. A spasm of anguish flitted through all his nerve-centres as he

saw that she was accompanied by Raymond Parsloe Devine.

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