that does not begin, "I say, do you remember old 
JACK WILLIAMS." This does not entertain the beauty, who sits next 
him. 
A Dowager Duchess, she knows none of the other people and wonders 
audibly (to me) who they are. A clever young man, whose language is 
the language of the future, and whose humour is of a date to which I 
humbly hope my own days may not be prolonged. A Psychical 
Researcher, with a note-book; he gets at the Duchess at once, and 
cross-examines her about a visionary Piper who plays audible pibrochs 
through Castle Blawearie, her ancestral home. Does she think the 
pibroch could be taken down in a phonograph. Could the Piper be 
snapped in a kodak? The Duchess does not know what a phonograph is; 
never heard of a kodak. She does not like the note-book any more than 
_Mr. Pickwick's_ cabman liked it. She is afraid of getting into print. 
Then there is the Warden of St. Jude's, a great scholar; he pricks up his 
ears, not the keenest, at the word kodak, and begins to talk about a 
newly-discovered Codex of PODONIAN the Elder. Nobody knows 
what a Codex is. There is a School-board Lady, but, alas, she is next the 
Warden of St. Jude's, not next the enthusiastic Clergyman, who proses 
about a Club for Milliners. There is GRIGSBY, who develops an 
undesirable interest in the Milliners' Club. Have they a Strangers' Room? 
Do they give suppers? Are they Friendly Girls? Everyone thinks 
GRIGSBY flippant and coarse; I wish I had not asked him to come. 
There is a Positivist, who sneers at the Clergyman; there are a Squire
and his wife from Rutlandshire: she is next the Radical Candidate for 
the Isle of Dogs. They do not seem to get on well together. GRIGSBY 
and the humorist of the future are chaffing each other across the table: 
nobody understands them; I don't know whether they are quarrelling or 
not. Miss JONES, the authoress of Melancholy Moods (in a Greek 
dress, with a _pince-nez_: a woman should not combine these attributes) 
is next the Squire: he has never heard of any of her friends the Minor 
Poets: she takes no interest in Hay, nor in Tithes. I see the Guardsman 
and the Beauty looking at each other across the flowers and things: the 
language of their eyes is not difficult, nor pleasant, to read. Why is the 
champagne so hot, and why are the ices so salt and hard? I know 
something is the matter with the claret: something is always the matter 
with the claret. It has been iced, and the champagne has been standing 
for days in an equable temperature of 65°. 
[Illustration: "It is midnight; I am tired to death. Yes, Bielby will have 
something to drink, and another cigar--a very large one."] 
When they want to go away, it is a wet night, and those who have come 
in cabs cannot get cabs to go back in. The Duchess's coachman lost his 
way, coming here, she was half-an-hour late: she is anxious about his 
finding his way home. GRIGSBY has got at the Psychical-Researcher, 
and I hear him telling stories, as personal experiences, which I know 
are not true. Psychical-Researchers have no sense of humour. "S.P.R.," 
why not "S.P.Q.R.?" I hear GRIGSBY asking, and suggesting "Society 
for Propagating Rubbish." It is very rude of him, and not at all funny. 
However, they do go away at last, that advantage a dinner at home has 
over a dinner at the Club, there they often seem as if they would never 
go away at all. 
On the other hand, the wine is all right at the Club, I believe, for I know 
nothing about wine myself. Some men talk of nothing else, and seem to 
know the vintages without looking at the names on the bottles. 
The worst of giving a dinner at the Club is, that I never know how 
many men I have asked, nor even who they are. It is enough if I 
remember the date. It might be a good thing to write these matters
down in a Diary, or on a big sheet of paper, pinned up in one's room. I 
know I have written to ask some Americans whom I have not seen: 
they brought letters of introduction. I forget their names--there is a 
Professor who has written a novel, there is a General, I think, and a 
Mad Doctor. 
My best plan will be to stand about in the drawing-room, and try to 
select them as they come in. Here is WILKINSON, who was at St. 
Jude's with me: I shake hands with him warmly. He looks blank. It is 
not WILKINSON, after all; it is a stranger, he is dining with somebody 
else. Some    
    
		
	
	
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