Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 100, February 14, 1891 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 40 pages of information about Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 100, February 14, 1891.

Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 100, February 14, 1891 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 40 pages of information about Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 100, February 14, 1891.

MODERN TYPES.

(BY MR. PUNCH’S OWN TYPE WRITER.)

No.  XXIII.—­The tolerated husband.

It is customary for the self-righteous moralists who puff themselves into a state of Jingo complacency over the failings of foreign nations, to declare with considerable unction that the domestic hearth, which every Frenchman habitually tramples upon, is maintained in unviolated purity in every British household.  The rude shocks which Mr. Justice Butt occasionally administers to the national conscience are readily forgotten, and the chorus of patriotic adulation is stimulated by the visits which the British censor finds it necessary to pay (in mufti) to the courts of wickedness in continental capitals.  It may be that among our unimaginative race the lack of virtue is not presented in the gaudy trappings that delight our neighbours.  Our wickedness is coarser and less attractive.  It gutters like a cheap candle when contrasted with the steady brilliancy of the Parisian article.  Public opinion, too, holds amongst us a more formidable lash, and wields it with a sterner and more frequent severity.  But it is impossible to deny that our society, however strict its professed code may be, can and does produce examples of those lapses from propriety which the superficial public deems to be typically and exclusively continental.  Not only are they produced, but their production and their continuance are tolerated by a certain class, possibly limited, but certainly influential.

[Illustration]

Amongst these examples, both of lapse and of toleration, the Tolerated Husband holds a foremost place.  Certain conditions are necessary for his proper production.  He must be not only easy-going, but unprincipled,—­unprincipled, that is, rather in the sense of having no particular principles of any kind than in that of possessing and practising notoriously bad ones.  He must have a fine contempt for steady respectability, and an irresistible inclination to that glittering style of untrammelled life which is believed by those who live it to be the true Bohemianism.  He should be weak in character, he may be pleasant in manner and appearance, and he must be both poor and extravagant.  If to these qualities be added, first a wife, young, good-looking, and in most respects similar to her husband, though of a stronger will, and secondly a friend, rich, determined, strictly unprincipled, and thoroughly unscrupulous, the conditions which produce the Tolerated Husband may be said to be complete.

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Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 100, February 14, 1891 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.