Not that it Matters eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 181 pages of information about Not that it Matters.

Not that it Matters eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 181 pages of information about Not that it Matters.

He had a dicky on!  Without his coat, he would discover the dicky to the one person of all from whom he wished to hide it.  Yet if he kept his coat on, she might die.  A truly horrible dilemma.  I forget which horn he impaled himself upon, but I expect you and I would have kept the secret of the Richard at all costs.  And what really is wrong with a false shirt-front?  Nothing except that it betrays the poverty of the wearer.  Laundry bills don’t worry us, bless you, who have a new straw hat every day; but how terrible if it was suspected that they did.

Our gentlemanly objection to the made-up tie seems to rest on a different foundation; I am doubtful as to the psychology of that.  Of course it is a deception, but a deception is only serious when it passes itself off as something which really matters.  Nobody thinks that a self-tied tie matters; nobody is really proud of being able to make a cravat out of a length of silk.  I suppose it is simply the fact that a made-up tie saves time which condemns it; the safety razor was nearly condemned for a like reason.  We of the leisured classes can spend hours over our toilet; by all means let us despise those who cannot.

As far as dress goes, a man only knows the things which a man mustn’t do.  It would be interesting if women would tell us what no real lady ever does.  I have heard a woman classified contemptuously as one who does her hair up with two hair-pins, and no doubt bad feminine form can be observed in other shocking directions.  But again it seems to be that the semblance of poverty, whether of means or of leisure, is the one thing which must be avoided.

Why, then, should the wasp gun be considered bad form?  I don’t know, but I have an instinctive feeling that it will be.  Perhaps a wasp gun indicates a lack of silver spoons suitable for lethal uses.  Perhaps it shows too careful a consideration of the marmalade.  A man of money drowns his wasp in the jar with his spoon, and carelessly calls for another pot to be opened.  The poor man waits on the outskirts with his gun, and the marmalade, void of corpses, can still be passed round.  Your gun proclaims your poverty; then let it be avoided.

All the same I think I shall have one.  I have kept clear of hat-guards and Richards and made-up ties without quite knowing why, but honestly I have not felt the loss of them.  The wasp gun is different; having seen it, I feel that I should be miserable without it.  It is going to be excellent sport, wasp-shooting; a steady hand, a good eye, and a certain amount of courage will be called for.  When the season opens I shall be there, good form or bad form.  We shall shoot the apple-quince coverts first.  “Hornet over!”

A Slice of Fiction

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Not that it Matters from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.