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SEVENTH SERIES
VOLUME XLI.

No. 3356 October 31, 1908.

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FROM BEGINNING
Vol. CCLIX.

CONTENTS

II.

1. The Moderate Motorist. By J. E. Vincent CORNHILL MAGAZINE 259 From a Poor Man's House. By Stephen Reynolds. (To be continued.) ALBANY REVIEW 266 Hardy-on-the-Hill. Chapter IV. By M. E. Francis (Mrs. Francis Blundell). (To be continued.)

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IV.

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TIMES 272

The Eucharistic Congress. By the Right Reverend Monsignor
Canon Moyes, D. D.
NINETEENTH CENTURY AND AFTER 276
HIBBERT JOURNAL

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Pain. By Miss Caroline Stephen
Stumpy. By Jessie and Charles Fielding Marsh.

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283

CORNHILL MAGAZINE 289

VI.

VII.

VIII.

The American Woman. 1. By Dr. Andrew Macphail SPECTATOR 297
Bird Song in Autumn.

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FOR SIX DOLLARS, remitted directly to the Publishers, THE LIVING AGE will be punctually forwarded for a year, free of postage, to any part of the United States. To Canada the postage is 50 cents

per annum.

Remittances should be made by bank draft or check, or by post-office or express money order if possible. If neither of these can be procured, the money should be sent in a registered letter. All postmasters are obliged to register letters when requested to do so. Drafts, checks, express

and money orders should be made payable to the order of THE LIVING AGE Co.

Single Copies of THE LIVING AGE. 15 cents

THREE FROM SEDGEMOOR.

A Legend of Somerset.

"Hist!" said the Mother: "dout the light!

Kirke's Lambs are on the road to-night
A-seeking the flyers of Monmouth's
fight;

And I've three sons from Sedgemoor
That fought for the wrong King

James.

There's Jan, my eldest, and Jeremy,
And Ebenezer, big as a tree:

Lord! teake my life for the lives of the
three,

My three sons from Sedgemoor

That fought for the wrong King
James!"

Jan she set in the flour-bin wide;
Up chimney Jeremy prophesied;
But Ebenezer was hard to hide,
The biggest of all at Sedgemoor
That fought for our 'good
James.

King

Till a sudden fury shook the man,
And "Woman!" he cried, "was this
your plan,

To drown our wits in the cider-can,
The drugged cider of Sedgemoor,
You friend of the rebel James?
For this your vile conspiracy

I swear you shall hang, all four!" said
he,

"Mother and sons on one gallows-tree, With your three sons from Sedgemoor That fought for the rebel James!"

She tacked the board with her hand, and said:

"Carl thy men if thee ool! Theer they
lie, half dead;

But Sergeant, you've kep' a zober head
In spite of the liquor of Sedgemoor
That never paid nought to King James!
So take my three big lads if thee durst!
But thee must fight their mother vurst
For the children dear that my bosom
nurst,

Till she found en a nook in her faggot- My three sons from Sedgemoor

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And the luck of the two King James.
And "Was the dirty rebels beat
And the wicked Duke a-teaken yet?
And wasn't they thirsty by all this
he't?

Don't ee spare our cider of Sedgemoor
For the sake of the good King James!"
I trow she did not speak in vain:
She filled their cups again and again,
Till the liquor sang in each silly brain,
The strong liquor of Sedgemoor
That never paid tax to King James.
One loosed his stock, and one shifted
his wig;

One sank his forehead and snored like
a pig,

But the Sergeant still sat tight and
trig,

A-watching the widow of Sedgemoor.
In his duty to King James.

That fought for the kind King James."

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THE MODERATE MOTORIST.

Civilized mankind, or mankind presumed to be civilized, may be divided for our present purpose into four classes. These are motorists pure and simple, whom no other pursuit or occupation interests; motorists who own cars and use them in moderation for pleasure or for profit; non-motorists, who own no cars and seldom have the opportunity of going in a car; and antimotorists, who absolutely refuse to enter a car, and regard the very existence of cars as an intolerable outrage. To the first class it is almost idle to attempt to address any observations in print. They live and move-much too fast very often-in an automobile world; they talk of clutches, carburetters, and ignition, of driving deeds and the purblind folly of the public, from morn till eve; they rarely, in my experience of them, cast so much as a glance at a daily paper; but they immerse themselves week after week in the automobile press, and form their idea of the surrounding world of humanity from that press. That idea is curious, narrow, and inaccurate. The English community, as represented in the automobile press, consists in the main of men and women who are at once absorbed in admiring contempla tion of the "phenomenal" growth of the automobile movement, and bitterly prejudiced against all its features, separable and inseparable. Every magistrate is a probable perverter of justice, every policeman a past-master in the practice of perjury, every pedestrian is a sheer nuisance. That is the English community as it is. The community as it should be, and as, according to these prophets, it is sure to become, is one in which all things are subordinated to motoring, in which motor-cars will be free to course at all speeds over perfect and dustless roads,

uncambered or even, as Lord Montagu of Beaulieu once suggested, concave, regardless of the lives of pedestrians, who will tread these viæ sacræ-sacred to motor-cars, that is to say-at their own risk. These roads will all be straight as if drawn with a ruler on the map; they will have no hedges, no overhanging trees, no æsthetic amenities of any kind; they will be closed to the infirm and to the deaf.

It has been written already that it is almost idle to attempt to address any argument to motorists of this class. They live in a narrow environment of their own making; their idea of the state of public opinion is a dream from which there may be a rude awakening; and they would as soon think of reading the Cornhill Magazine as of attacking a philosophic treatise. Still, there is a faint chance that these words may reach their eyes, because some of them may possibly be quoted in automobile papers as an awful example of the besotted folly of the outer world; and in that faint hope the bald truth is stated. It is that the general community sees in the automobile industry a trade of some importance, the persons engaged in which suffer not a little from megalomania; that the world at large, especially that part of it which does not go much in motor-cars, is often more concerned with motor-cars as a nuisance and as a danger than as evidence of an industrial movement affording employment to many artisans; that the mass of the British public will neither put itself to great trouble for, nor allow itself to be outrageously put upon by, the owners of motor-cars. Now it is upon the opinions of this outside world, with which infatuated motorists have no communion, that the future liberties of all motorists depend. So, again in the faint hope of quotation

for purposes of scornful comment, I would remind that section of the infatuated motorists-rather a large one it is to be feared, to the better feelings of which it is useless to appeal, since they have none-that they will be well advised to take heed to their ways. Their future is in the hands of the public, and a large section of the public, including moderate motorists, is sorely angry with automobilism, as represented by the thoughtless minority of motorists, even now, although not nearly so indignant as it would have been if the summer had been less wet and more dusty. Even as matters stand, however, public opinion is in a state of angry excitement, and the Motor Union has done wisely to take steps to conciliate public opinion by attempting to persuade, and even to compel, the reckless section of motorists to conduct their journeys with some regard for decency.

From the point of view of a motorist who drives about a great deal for pleasure, combined sometimes with modest profit, I address the following words partly to my comrades, entirely to those who go less upon the roads in cars, to those who go not in cars at all, and to those who look upon the motor-car with jaundiced eyes. The frank intention is, in the first place, to persuade those of my comrades who need to be persuaded-not a large number, so far as their inclination goes, but some of them sinners from sheer lack of thought— to devote themselves steadily to the conciliation of public opinion by showing an excess rather than a deficiency of consideration for the other users of the roads. Next it is desired, and hoped, to convince the remainder of the constituency addressed that, while it is all but impossible to compel men to drive with consideration, there are men, rapidy growing in numbers, who, since they do in fact consider the comfort of those whom they pass, are

therefore deserving some consideration

in return. It is hoped, too, to convince the comrades who need conviction that the pleasures of considerate driving are incomparably greater than those of reckless rushing over roads, and to persuade the remainder of the constituency that the motor-car, rationally employed, is not only useful, but also productive of such new and intelligent pleasure that a humane man, far from desiring to curtail the enjoyment of it by others, should dream of it as a possibility for himself, or at all events should not grudge it to those who can afford it.

How best to adduce this argument, or these arugments, is the real question; and perhaps it may be most suitably answered in narrative statement, partly general and partly particular. It has been my good fortune to accompany one of the most skilful drivers of motor-cars to be found in this kingdom on a large number of expeditions in a car, the name of which shall be withheld lest the suspicion of advertisement should arise. Together we have driven over most of the Scottish roads, have made many tours in the Eastern Counties, have journeyed from London to Penzance, from Liverpool to Oxford, from London to Oxford and back often, from Oxford to Fishguard and back, from Manchester to London by night, from Glasgow to Doncaster by day, to say nothing of many shorter drives. Candor compels the admission that to the speed-limit, as defined by the law, we have never paid the least regard, except when there was reason to apprehend a police ambuscade. Yet not once, hitherto, has one of our journeys given rise to legal proceedings; and so, arguing perhaps somewhat from the particuar to the general (but "the particular" in this case is represented by many thousands of miles), I am disposed to suspect that "police traps" are not always so unreasonable as the automo

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bile papers represent them to be. At all events, we have been able to complete our journeys in reasonable time, from a motorist's point of view-that is to say, to average from twenty-five to thirty miles an hour over some hundreds of miles on many occasions without once incurring the unpleasant attentions of the police. But, in truth, I fancy the police of many countries begin to know my friend and his careasily to be distinguished from London cars, usually suspect, and not always unjustly-as being rapid when circumstances justify speed, and careful to a fault when care is necessary. For example, we have often gone through Hatfield, seeing a policeman note the number and take the time there, have known that we should be observed and timed at other towns on the Great North Road, have reached those other towns before the law permitted us to reach them, and have heard no more of the matter.

This, to my mind, is as it should be; but then, apart from disregard for the letter of the law, so is the conduct of my friend as driver. Never have I known him to hug the off-side on taking a right-hand corner, which is the surest way to the coroner's court or to the dock upon an indictment for manslaughter. Over and over again, on approaching pedestrians or other vehicles, he has looked back to see if we were raising much dust, and if we were he has slackened the pace. Never has he failed-realizing the rule of prudence that you must always act as if other users of the way were likely to lose their heads or to err in calculating distances to allow as much space as possible to others on the road. Never has he neglected to reduce the speed to a mere crawl in passing a nervous horse, whose timidity he gauges by its demeanor even at a great distance; and to such horses he always addresses a word of encouragement

when they come within earshot, so that they may know the familiar creature man to be associated with what no doubt appears to them monstrum horrendum, informe, ingens. He knows, too, the parts of the country where horses are likely to be found motor-shy, as they are to an extraordinary degree in South Wales, but not as a general rule in Devon or Cornwall. Never does he omit to approach slowly the debouching point of a cross-road, and in towns his caution is remarkable. Stupidity is impotent to annoy him; ignorant prejudice-for example, that of the horsedriver who holds up his hand to stop the car merely to aggravate, well knowing his horse to have more sense than himself is powerless against his sympathetic philosophy. Keen motorist as he is, he appreciates the feelings of others, and acts upon his appreciation. One fault of others only, so far as I have seen, rouses him to indignant remonstrance, in which I join with heart and voice. It is the inveterate practice, which prosecution might perhaps stop, of taking corners on the wrong side, which many otherwise gentlemanlike drivers of cars pursue simply because a right-hand corner can most easily be taken in that way.

Of course, I have had experience of driving of another quality at the hands of paid drivers, and of others who believed themselves to be gentlemenwith some justice apart from their behavior as drivers. Paid drivers, no doubt, vary in character and tendency, but, to use the nursery phrase, I have been spoiled by the experience above described, and, dearly as I like motorcars, I would rather not go a-motoring at all than sit behind or beside a paid driver, British or foreign. But the latter are usually the worst offenders. They keep my heart in my mouth all the time by their conceited desire to show their skill in steering to a few hairs' breadths, by their eagerness to

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