CHAPTER III.
1904-1905.
I am inclined to take the autumn of 1904 as the end of the first clearly marked stage in the Twins’ lives after leaving Eton. It was a transition period in which both were trying to decide what they wanted. Francis had not yet found the military groove best suited to him, but he now knew what it was, and he was on the eve of acquiring a true scientific interest in his profession. Rivy, having played about in the City for several years, had acquired a good deal of miscellaneous knowledge, which fell far short, unfortunately, of a rigorous business training. But he had learned one thing—the value of education—and he was very busy making up leeway. Indeed, he was educating himself apparently rather for Parliament than for business, for all his models were orators and statesmen. Both, too, after experimenting in many sports, had reached the conclusion that polo was the game for them, and were laboriously studying to excel.
Francis in India was wildly excited at the news of Rivy’s visit, and sketched the most far-reaching programme. The whole sporting and educational wealth of Hindustan must be at his brother’s disposal. Rivy hoped to arrive before Christmas and stay several months, and this was Francis’s scheme:—
“Go to Calcutta. Stay with Curzon as Viceroy’s guest. Deuce of a dog! Just like going to England and staying with the King. In mornings see Calcutta trade. Afternoon, racing; see hundreds of pals. Get a little pig-sticking (too early). Then go to Cawnpore—biggest trade centre in India. Then do Agra, Delhi, and on to Pindi; see F. G.; on to Peshawur and Khyber Pass. Across to Quetta and see other end of frontier. Back, play a little polo, perhaps Sialkote tournament. Go to Lucknow; play in open tournament in Civil Service Cup race week. Pig stick; arrange tiger shoot. If possible (doubtful), you have time to go to Mysore for an elephant. This tiger-shooting and pig-sticking will take you into March. Come to Patiala. If I play for 9th I shall be there practising for Inter-Regimental. Come to Meerut Inter-Regimental week. End of March, compete in Kadir Cup—pig-sticking, best sport in the world. If you only let me know in time, can buy you three good horses. Train to Bombay; arrange to see trade and town. Tip F. G., get on steamer, and leave about 1st April, having had best time in the world.”
This delirious programme was not to be fulfilled. Rivy travelled through Natal and the Transvaal, disliked Johannesburg, visited his brother John’s copper mine at Messina, north of Pietersburg, and finally reached Rhodesia, where he had a little shooting and began to enjoy himself. “Its crab is that it is full of English gentlemen instead of Jew boys; consequently everything is run very much _à la amateur_ instead of professional.” But on 24th November he sat down in Buluwayo to write Francis a melancholy letter, which is worth quoting for the light it casts on Rivy’s mind.
“I have to write a very sad letter to tell you that I cannot come to India after all. The cursed City seems to have turned round, and a small boom to be in progress. The result is that the Charter Trust want me home.... I have thoroughly thought the position over the last five days, and, greatly against my will, decided to return.
“These are the arguments:—
“In favour of staying my full time in Rhodesia and then going to India:
“(1.) I am comfortably off, and at present don’t want more money. I am far more anxious to be a clever and common-sense man with sufficient money than an ordinary rich ‘City man’; and so it is far better for me to travel and see the world and return to England in four months, which, after all, is not much time to lose, when one has the remainder of one’s life to spend in business.
“(2.) It is far easier when you are away from home to stay away, than it is when you are at home to get leave to go away.
“(3.) I went straight into the City from Eton, with the intention of travelling when I was twenty-three or twenty-four.
“(4.) I urgently want to see you and talk with you, Mate.
“(5.) You have taken enormous trouble and expense on my behalf, and bought ponies, and I have bought a dashed rifle for £60 from John which I don’t want.
“(6.) Clinton Dawkins has sent me letters which I suppose would help me to go anywhere.
“Arguments in favour of curtailing my stay here and abandoning India:
“(1.) I have worked hard for five years in the City with the idea of making business my career; and to miss ‘good times’ when you have been through the ‘bad times’ and learned fairly thoroughly your trade is the same thing as a soldier studying soldiering during a long peace and then not going to the war when the chance comes.
“(2.) The idea of my travelling in America and Africa has been, besides getting a good education, to learn the opportunities that offer in the countries, to turn them to some good. I have already lost a good chance by Americans having done well (and especially the railways I saw) since I have been in Africa.
“(3.) It has been dashed good of the Charter Trust to let me go away two years running (though without a salary) and see the world.
“(4.) In India I should be enjoying myself, and should learn nothing of business.
“(5.) There is a possibility of John and Arthur floating a Copper Co. within the next six months. Having learned all about the copper, I should look an uncommon fool if it was brought out and everybody made money except you and me, who were playing polo in India.
“With these opinions, I think it is my duty to chuck my pleasure and great desire and return at once to business. O my God, Mate, I am sick about it though, and fear you will be greatly disappointed.”
So by the end of the year Rivy was back in London, full of large schemes of reading. In South Africa he had ploughed his way through Lecky’s _History_, and Morley’s _Burke_ had whetted his interest in that great writer. So as soon as he got home he purchased Burke in twelve volumes, and Butler’s _Sermons_, this latter on the ground that it was a book “that Chatham, Pitt, and Gladstone studied.” He was very grateful for any advice which gave him a clue to help him through the labyrinth of his education. “Hugh Cecil told some one that every day of his life he reads a good speech and tries to reason out all the original ideas which must have brought the thoughts into the speaker’s mind, and studies how they begin and end their speeches.” Lord Hugh was now by way of becoming his exemplar in many things—“an absolute clinker and brilliant in every way; he makes one roar with laughter, quotes Shakespeare, etc., and makes most clever jokes.”
In January 1905 he stayed at Hatfield, and wrote to Francis a long account of his visit. The Lyttons, Lady Mabel Palmer (Countess Grey), Miss Maud Lyttelton (Mrs. Hugh Wyndham), the Harry Whites, Lady Edward Cecil, Lord Hugh, and George Peel were there.
“After dinner acted charades. They chose most difficult words—in fact, names of people that my education had never reached—yet Hugh Cecil guessed every one.... They have a most magnificent library, and a chapel bang in the centre of the house; indeed, to go from one end of the house to the other you have to pass through the chapel, only the altar being consecrated.... In a quarter of an hour one learns history by simply walking through these rooms.... It seems to me that people like the Cecils simply cannot help being clever; in each room are pictures of Prime Ministers, etc. Four of their ancestors have been Prime Ministers!... They fairly do teach their children. The Salisbury boy, aged eleven, has read nearly all the family papers. They have a little boy three years old, and I assure you he knows far more English poetry than me.”
Francis, too, was not without his taste of society. He went to Calcutta for the Viceroy’s Cup, saw the races from the Cooch Behar box, and dined with Lord Kitchener. “Bachelor dinner,” he wrote, “and played pool afterwards. Met Hood,[6] who is in command of a battleship here. He’s a proper good chap. Didn’t care a damn for Lord K.; bellowed at him as if he was Jones. Such a change after frightened soldiers.”
Rivy’s devotion to duty was to be rewarded. On his return to the City he found that he could be spared for a couple of months, and on 3rd February he was in the Dover train on his way to India, “studying Burke on American Taxation.”
Rivy’s Indian trip was one of the most successful expeditions that ever fell to a young man’s lot. Nothing happened to mar its perfection, and he returned in three months, having had his fill of every form of Indian sport, and having won the blue ribbon of a game which he had never tried before. He picked up Waldorf Astor at Brindisi, and the two of them were deathly sea-sick on the voyage to Port Said. “Went to dinner, found the captain and one other out of forty passengers, ate three courses, and was sick between each,” is an entry in his diary. He arrived at Bombay on 17th February, and on the 19th found Francis at Bareilly. Francis had grown a moustache, which just made the Twins distinguishable.
For the next month Rivy was the intelligent tourist bent on seeing as many of the sights as were consistent with polo, pig-sticking, and the persevering study of Burke. He went first to Agra; then to Meerut, where he played a good deal of polo and had his first experience of pig-sticking, riding Francis’s horse “Barmaid”; then to Umballa to stay with Eustace Crawley; then to Patiala, where the Settlement Commissioner, Major Young, instructed him in Indian problems, and he had a little pig-sticking; then to Peshawur by way of Umballa and Lahore. He was back in Lucknow by 17th March, staying with Henry Guest, and then on to Benares. At Bareilly he went to a “pig-sticking week” with Francis, Henry Guest, and Lord Charles Fitzmaurice, and had four days of it. His diary records his disappointment: “Most of us came to the conclusion that even if the pig were there it could not be compared to fox-hunting. One wants to find pig every fifteen minutes to make it really amusing. Another drawback to my mind is that when a party goes out, if one part enjoys it the other members have probably had no rides, and so been bored to death. Charlie Fitzmaurice was very fed up.” After that he returned to Agra to see the Pearl Mosque again, and then to Delhi, where he studied the battlefield of the Ridge. On 26th March he and Francis started for the ground of the Kadir Cup meeting, which that year was held in the Sherpur country.
The Kadir Cup is the Derby of the sport of pig-sticking, and is run off each spring in a selected area of jungle. Rivy had been first introduced to that noble game exactly twenty-three days previously, so his boldness in competing may be likened to that of a man who takes on the mastership of a famous pack of hounds after a few weeks in the hunting field, or a novice who leaves the jumps of a riding school to ride in the Grand National. I quote the tale of his exploit exactly as he wrote it in his diary. The field was enormous, there being over a hundred competitors.
“_26th March, Sunday._
“Got to camp about 12.30. Most delightful situation. Generals Mahon[7] and Douglas Haig there, and we made many pals. At 5 p.m. F. G. and I went out riding and schooled the horses, nearly slaying two wretched cattle in the attempt. Found a sow and galloped after her. A jolly evening, and to bed early.
“_27th March, Monday._
“Breakfast at 6.45. The first round of the Kadir was run off. I drew General Mahon and Douglas Haig, and rode ‘Cocos’ first. We were in the third heat, and got away after being one hour on the line. I was first on to the pig, being some way in front; but my horse slipped up on the flat, and so General Haig got the spear. Francis made all the running in his heat, and won. We then rode on an elephant and watched the remaining heats.
“F. G. was beaten on position in his second heat by Barrett. He was first on the pig, and did most of the riding; but it jinked, and Barrett got the spear. I was on the line for nearly three hours in my second heat. We had three false starts, and lost our pig in some very heavy goul after a short ride. At last we got away, with every one shouting at different pig from the elephants. Haig (again drawing the same heat) and I got on to a very fast sow, and had a heavy gallop; and I speared her, only to find we had gone after the wrong one, and the heat was declared off!
“_28th March, Tuesday._
“The line started at 8. Our heat was first run off. We were slipped up to an old pig, and I, getting up to him first, soon speared. Two hours after I had to run off the next round, in rather a hot heat of Last and Kennard. We got a good start to a fast pig. ‘Barmaid’ went like a gun, and soon got a long lead, and I got first spear. F. G. drew White and Learmouth. He rode ‘Recluse’ and cut out most of the work; but the pig jinked right back, and let in White, who got the spear.
“_29th March, Wednesday._
“A red-letter day for me. The line started at 8.30 for the semi-finals. Three heats were left in—two threes and a four. I was in the four heat, composed of Barrett (15th Hussars), Last, Neilson (4th Hussars), and myself. We were quite two and a half hours on the line, and had three false starts. At last we got away to a jinking pig. Last and I did most of the riding, with Barrett some way behind. Last nearly got a spear once, and we bumped unavoidably. The pig then jinked right back to Barrett, who was about to spear him, when I came up with a rush. The pig jinked across my front; he speared him very lightly behind, while I ran him through and broke my spear. The umpire said he would give it to Barrett if he could show blood, but luckily for me he couldn’t. It would have been bad luck for me if I had lost this spear, as I did most of the riding. So I qualified for the final. ‘Barmaid’ went wonderfully, but got rather beat, as it was a severe heat.
“On returning to the line I was met by F. G. and General Mahon. F. G. then became stud groom. We took ‘Barmaid’ and let her stand in the river, and then she had three good rolls in the sand. After an hour’s rest we started for the final—Pritchard (2nd Lancers) (on ‘Toffee,’ the horse which F. G. tried to get me for £100, but Pritchard would only sell ‘Barmaid’ for £40), Ritchie of the 15th, and myself. We soon got a good start on a pig, and I was on him first and drew some way to the front, and just got a spear as he jumped into a nullah. The mare jumped right over him and knocked the spear, which was smashed, out of my hand. The pig carried my spear some yards. It was a grand feeling as the spear ran into him to think I’d won the Kadir. Pritchard naturally appealed, as I’d dropped the spear, but the committee upheld the umpire’s decision.
“In the afternoon the Hog-hunter’s Cup, a point-to-point over three and a half miles, was run, and F. G. won easily on ‘Cocos,’ going a line of his own the whole way. This rather made people stare, our carrying off the two chief events of the day. F. G. and I then went out and found the pig killed in the final which had been lost, and hacked thirteen miles to Gujraula and caught the train for Calcutta.... I went round to the Viceregal Lodge, and found Nipper Poynter as A.D.C. there. I shall never forget the look of astonishment on his face when I told him I’d won the Kadir.”
So much for the interloping Rivy’s performance in a “game he did not understand.” The history of the Kadir Cup, and indeed of Indian sport, hardly contains a parallel. It was the first time that the Cup had left India. He spent the next few weeks shooting at Cooch Behar with the Maharajah and his sons, and had a variety of sport—tiger, rhino, and leopard. On the whole he thought Indian shooting overrated. “It is too civilized. ‘To have been tiger-shooting’ always sounded in my ears the same as to have gone through a battle and run great risks of one’s life. It is not so. The meanest, most diminutive person might as easily shoot twenty tigers as the boldest and the fittest. Yet it is worth a very long journey to see the immense jungle, the elephants, and all the wild and delightful surroundings of the Indian forests.” He also reflected a good deal on the difficult question of the education of Indian princes in England, and came to the conclusion that Lord Curzon’s policy of discouragement was right. On 22nd April he bade a sad farewell to Francis at Bombay, and on 5th May he was dining with Harry Rawlinson, Lord Lovat, and his brother Arthur in London.
[Illustration: THE TWINS AFTER THE KADIR CUP.]
Rivy spent most of May in his annual training with the Bucks Yeomanry. In that month of gorgeous weather he greatly enjoyed himself, and in his spare hours he started a polo club in the regiment. For the rest his main interest that summer was polo, and he and his brothers Cecil and Arthur played steadily all the season at Hurlingham and Roehampton. To tell the story of those matches would weary the reader, for of all games polo is the worst subject for the resurrectionist. An arid chronicle of strokes and goals achieved or missed cannot reproduce the glamour of those delectable days. A young man living in London and regularly playing polo recaptures the delights of school time. He is in the pink of bodily health, and, as a background to his work in office or chambers or barracks, has that happy world of greensward and glossy ponies, where of an afternoon and a Saturday he pursues a sport which combines the delicate expertness of the tennis court and the swift excitement of the hunting field. Rivy had a most successful season. “My record,” he wrote in September, “is certainly not bad, considering I have only played for three years. I have won the Novice’s Cup, the Junior Championship (besides being in the final twice), the Roehampton Cup twice, and the Rugby Open Cup, besides most of the London Handicap Tournaments.”
In May Francis attained the desire of his heart and joined the 9th Lancers. Just before leaving he had become very keen on his work with the 60th, and was busy lecturing to his company. “By Jove,” he wrote, “soldiering is interesting when you train the men yourself.... I think I know Clive nearly by heart, and if only I could get hold of a picture of him, I could imagine him walking about. I lectured the men on him, which they liked very much.” At last came the moment of parting.
“I left the regiment on Wednesday, and dined on Tuesday as a guest at a small farewell dinner. I am bound to say when the time came I was most awfully sorry to go. It seemed so funny to think that with the morrow I would be no more a Rifleman, and I fear for a while I became like Amelia and could not restrain the bitter tear. I think they were all sorry I left. It is a consolation to think I leave behind me no regrets, as I have never had words with any one.”
A few days later:—
“Here I am, R. G., at last a cavalry soldier, and as happy as any millionaire or cheery bankrupt (whichever of the two is the happiest). I am already attaining the cavalry air—slap my leg, wear spurs with no end of a rattle, and discuss the infantry rather like we Etonians used to talk of the boys at Westminster!... Of course, R. G., I know that I join on most favourable conditions, as all the men and N.C.O.’s have heard about the polo, and about the second day after my arrival every London paper contained an enormous picture of R. G. This has been a great topic here, as all the regiment think it is _me_!
“To-day the farrier-corporal of my troop, who has been shoeing my ponies, said they were the finest lot of cattle he had seen. Then says he, ‘You’ve got a terrible wonderful name for polo in the regiment, sir.’ So you see I have joined with trumpets sounding and drums beating, and already I find that my chief difficulty is not from want of feeling at home, but from being too much at home to keep a back seat. However, I mean to keep a back seat until I know my job and have got the measure of all officers.”
The Ninth at the time were commanded by Claude Willoughby, who had married Francis’s old friend, Miss Sybil Murray of Loch Carron. Francis’s squadron leader was Lord Frederick Blackwood. The change woke all his military ambitions. “I am going to try, now I am settled down, for two stages—(1) to be adjutant of this regiment; (2) to go to the Staff College.... I find my four years with the 60th have been an invaluable experience, as I have that confidence which all possess who think they have been taught in a better school. Though I have been here only a fortnight, I find there are several, who are supposed to be teaching me, that I could teach. But I am doing my utmost to keep my mouth shut and learn all I can. The N.C.O.’s and men are first class—a much better class than the infantry. Of course I find the riding chaps superior in the same way as we fox-hunters think the huntsman superior to the gamekeeper. If you can’t grasp my meaning, it would take me so much time to explain that you would become weary, so I will leave you in darkness. The difference between the cavalry and the infantry soldier is the same as the difference between Tom Firr or Thatcher and the leading gamekeeper, or between the huntsman of the O.B.H. and Tom Boon. Both, of course, do their work equally well, but one is the nicer to deal with.” And at the end he becomes humbler. “By Jove, R. G., I have never appreciated before the good fortune and kindness we receive from the Almighty. Here am I, a good rider and very fond of it, yet I ride only the best horses. But some of the men! A man is given a horse known to be next door to impossible. Some cannot ride, and are frightened to death. Yet they must ride over the jumps horses that cannot jump, pull and probably run away.”
Francis shared a house at Rawal Pindi with Lord F. Blackwood, and boasted of its comfort, its quiet, and the opulence of its chintzes. He compared it to its advantage with the Bath Club, where Rivy had now gone to live. But in July he found a crumpled leaf in his bed of roses. “R. G., you made ‘in theory’ to me, some years ago, the observation that it was in the end better to live by oneself and not share a house with a pal. What you said in theory I have been through in practice. Old Freddie has just returned. The first thing I spied among his kit was a gramophone. He turns it on morning, noon, and night. It is quite comical. Old Freddie is one of the best, but he sits, at the age of thirty, the whole day listening to the same old tune, the same old story, the same old ‘Bull and Bush.’ ... I am trying to work in spite of the heat, Freddie and his gramophone.”
He worked to some purpose. “I must say,” he wrote in August, “I like working far more than anything else when I am at it.” He stuck steadily to his books, and I find him offering to send Rivy “a clinking book of notes on strategy of Jap. War, _stolen from Lord K._” He was devoted to the Commander-in-Chief, from whom he purloined books. Reggie Barnes[8] told him of Lord Kitchener’s methods of work—information which he passed on to Rivy. “He is up at 6 every day, and writes till 8.30; then on after breakfast till 2, and then two hours in afternoon. All his correspondence is done by his A.D.C.’s, who typewrite for him—either Fitzgerald, Victor (Brooke), or Reggie; he never gives anything to a clerk, so that nothing leaks out.” In October Lord Kitchener lunched with the Ninth. “I think he likes us awfully. His first remark is always, ‘Hullo! how are the Ninth? Been killing any more black men?’” In the Curzon-Kitchener controversy Francis, of course, took the soldier’s side and upheld the military against the civil arm; but he had a great regard for the new Viceroy, Lord Minto—“a sporting fellow who has ridden three times in the Grand National, and one of the few living who has broken his neck steeplechasing.” At the end of October he had the pleasure of informing Rivy that he had come out top in the first part of his examination, and had won a certificate of distinction.
Upon this Francis, who had suffered a good deal from Rivy’s scathing comments on his lectures, especially the celebrated one on Clive, thought it was time for him to adopt the rôle of mentor. So he thus addresses his brother:—
“Now for business. What good are you doing in the City?
“I have been thinking about you and your future prospects for some time, and I have quite come to the opinion that you are wasted hunting for money. In England people are very narrow-minded, and the ruling idea (especially in our family) is that one must be rich.
“I am beginning to think otherwise. To be rich is very nice, but you are no happier, and you do your country no good. Both C. and A. have been successful, but beyond buying extra hunters, deer forests, and houses, to me they have not attained a very high position. I would rather you chucked the City. I think you should enter Parliament and work your way to the Cabinet; I would far rather you succeeded in politics than in the City.
“You know Hugh Cecil, Milner, and Co. They should all give you advice. I hope you will think this over, and that your thoughts will be guided rather by the amount you will help the nation than by the amount with which you will fill your pocket.
“As we stand at present we have not done badly:—
“The Uncle General. “Uncle Harry Admiral. “First Cousin Jack Maxwell General. “Harold Colonel. “R. G. Winner of Kadir. “F. G. ” ” Championship. “Cecil 2nd in National.
“It is about time the City chaps gingered up! Chuck the City and become Minister of War, and I will get on the Army Council to help you.”
To this flattering injunction Rivy replied:—
“You discuss in your letter my future. I, oddly enough, have been thinking this over for some months. In fact, ever since I’ve travelled and read I have more and more seen that money is not everything, and my feeling has been politics and not business. But I am convinced of one thing—that the greatest mistake one can make is to go into politics without being exceedingly well furnished, having determined absolutely on your principles, and feeling that you are prepared to back them up with all earnestness, and, so to speak, with your life. Now, many people enter Parliament as Tories because their fathers were Tories, and then find, after some years, that they did not know what Tories and Liberals were, and that their whole sentiments are really Liberal; just as you entered the infantry because your uncle was there, and found later you were born for cavalry.
“I really inwardly don’t know whether I am Tory or Liberal, Free Trader or Protectionist, and so I have decided to stay on in the City and earn a good living, but shall not do more work than I find necessary there. I have been fearfully slack about business in the last six weeks, and read history whenever I got a chance. In this way I hope in about five years to have thoroughly mastered the various opinions and principles of our political leaders, and traced through history how those opinions came to be formed, and discovered whether I agree with them. At the same time I shall have my business, which will, therefore, make my reading a hobby, and I shall be building up some capital, and shall, if I want to, enter politics well furnished and keen and prepared to join in the contest; whereas so many people who start politics at twenty-five are bored with them at thirty-three. Chamberlain never entered till he was forty.... I shall gradually try to get to know fellows of the Hugh Cecil class, but I want them to see me as an earnest, hard-working chap, not as a stupid stay-at-country-houses-go-to-balls sort of idiot.”
Rivy certainly read all that year with praiseworthy persistence. He seems to have found novels a toughish proposition, and generally notes in his diary how he set his teeth and plugged away till he finished one. For example: “I have finished _Vanity Fair_. Read like a Trojan for four days. It is a good book. I never thought Rebecca would turn out such a hot ’un.” Burke, on the other hand, had power to make him forget time and place, as witness this entry: “Wednesday I was to have gone to a ball, but after dinner began reading my Burke, and am ashamed to say that I read till 2.45 a.m.” In a letter to Francis, in which he made hay of the prose style of that laborious soldier, he bids him have recourse to Burke, “who, though elaborate, is the finest example of the English language.” Rivy, indeed, about this time had a curious passion for serious writers, and does not seem to have needed the work on “Concentration” with which Mrs. Cornwallis-West presented him. At Eaton, “where there is a fine but ugly library that no one uses but me,” he read _Venus and Adonis_, which he considered “delightful, and fine English.” He studied the _Iliad_ in Pope’s translation, largely during working hours in his City office. “It is a first-class book, full of descriptions of battles, great orations of generals, both before and during a battle, and wonderful deeds of the heroes interested, who slay everybody.” He copied extracts from Bacon’s _Essays_ to send to Francis to point his lectures to his troops. He considered Morley’s _Life of Gladstone_ “a delightful book” (an epithet almost as unexpected as Raymond Asquith’s answer to the stock question as to whether he had read that formidable work; his reply was, “Often”). At the end of December he mentions that in the previous three months he had got through “history up to 1860; _Vanity Fair_; Homer’s _Iliad_ (five volumes); _Grenville Papers_ (three volumes); _Life of Macaulay_; a fair sprinkling of Burke’s speeches and his _Life_ by Morley; Shakespeare’s _Merchant of Venice_ (twice); S.’s _Julius Cæsar_; _Europe and Asia_, by Townsend; _Oliver Twist_; a little of _Childe Harold_; a book on Napoleon’s strategy.”
In addition to this miscellaneous reading, he discovered a restless interest in military history, and worked as if he had had the Staff College in prospect. All during the autumn and winter he was coached by Dr. Miller Maguire in the strategy and tactics of famous campaigns—an arrangement in which Francis joined later, and which continued right up to the outbreak of the Great War.
But the “earnest, hard-working chap” was not averse to the country-house visits and balls from which we have seen that he desired his name to be dissociated. On 7th June he writes:—
“Went to a first-class show at Londonderry House. Talk about the Patiala jewels! One would not have noticed them. The King and Queen and King Alfonso of Spain were there. I got hold of Sybil Grey, who is just back from Canada, and we pushed our way through the people; stared at kings and queens, elbowed princes, jostled dukes, stepped on marquises, ignored earls and generals, and as for commoners we treated them like dirt. It really was capital fun. I found innumerable pals, and had a lot of chaff. The King amused me very much. He is a grand old John Bull, and had a broad grin on his face from beginning to end. The King of Spain is a nice-looking young man of nineteen. I met Miss Whitelaw Reid. Her father has just come over as American Ambassador. He has taken Dorchester House, and I fancy pays about £8,000 a year for it. She said, ‘I have not yet explored the whole house, but I guess you could just slide grandly down those stairs on a tea-tray.’”
On 9th June:—
“I met Harry Dalmeny, who amused me very much. What an extraordinary chap he is! Everybody who plays county cricket sweats blood and goes to bed about 10. Not so Harry. He went to a ball on Friday night and stayed till 3 in the morning. Next day he played against Essex, and knocked up sixty-five runs in about an hour.”
On 15th July he was staying at Buckhurst with the Robin Bensons.
“We had a jolly party—Sybil Grey, Miss Brodrick, Paul Phipps, Geoffrey Howard, Douglas Loch and his new wife, and Mr. and Mrs. Asquith, the latter a most charming lady. I asked her how Asquith spent his time, to which she replied by going into the minutest details. She told me he earned £5,000 a year at the Bar (I always thought he earned about £14,000), but he is prohibited by his Parliamentary duties from undertaking certain cases. She told me he lived entirely by rules. He gets up at 8.45, and is at his chambers or in the Courts by 10.30, and works there till 5. He then goes to the House of Commons and stays till 8, when he returns for dinner; he then goes back to the House till 12. After that, regularly for every day of his life, he reads for two hours. Supposing he goes to a party and does not return till 2, he still sits up and reads for two hours, either his briefs or some serious book, and finishes up with a novel in bed. In discussing certain people she told me that Arthur Balfour was not very well educated in the ordinary sense. I wonder what she would say about you and me, F. G. She would probably compare our brains with an Irishman’s whisky bottle—empty.”
In August he went to the Westminsters at Eaton for a polo week. The house he thought “the most enormous place I was ever in, but dreadfully ugly, just like the Natural History Museum with two wings added to it.” “G. Wyndham (War Minister) came over every day and brought Hugh Cecil. The latter was much interested, and said he ‘admired the bravery of the players, while he sat like a miserable weed in a tent.’” In the beginning of September he was in Ireland, staying with Lord Grenfell at the Royal Hospital, and playing a good deal of polo. After that he went to Ashby St. Ledgers to stay with Ivor Guest, where the conversation must have been curious. “Ivor started an argument after dinner which continued for about three and a half hours on: ‘Granted that one’s time is limited, is it better to read all the masterpieces once and then read them through again, rather than read the masterpieces and then the sidelights referring to them?’ Ivor argued that a man would do best to read the masterpieces only, whereas Winston and Lytton said it was better to read other books as well, so as to check the masterpieces, for many people learned far more from outside books than from the very highest authorities.” There is also this note: “Winston Churchill is undoubtedly exceedingly able, but if you mention a subject to him he instantly must go into an oration. We talked of the Curzon-Kitchener methods. He went into an oration about the Commander-in-Chief being an autocrat, and its danger, etc. By-and-by I discovered that neither Winston nor Ivor had read a word of any of the Blue Books on the subject.” From Ashby St. Ledgers he went to Polesden Lacey to stay with Sir Clinton Dawkins, and there he met Lord Milner, who was gradually taking place along with Lord Hugh Cecil as the chief object of his admiration in public life.
In pursuance of the political training which he had laid down for himself, Rivy began that autumn to practise speaking. There was then a great revival of interest in politics in England. Mr. Balfour’s Government was known to be on the eve of resignation, and everywhere caucuses were girding their loins and getting ready for a general election. In spite of his cross-bench professions, Rivy found himself ranging with the Unionists. Most of his friends were of that persuasion; he was an ardent Imperialist; he seems to have been a convinced, though imperfectly informed, Tariff Reformer; and he had strong views on that question of Chinese Labour in South Africa which was to play so sinister a part at the polls. His first adventure in oratory was not very successful. On 18th October he writes in his diary: “Went to a debate at the London School of Economics, and spoke for ten minutes on ‘Unpopularity of Railways’; was called to order for straying from the subject; had to read most of my speech.” His next attempt was more fortunate. “Attended meeting at Brixton, and spoke for thirty-five minutes on Imperial Responsibilities in South Africa. Biggest attempt I have yet made. Knew the speech so well I hardly had to look at my notes. George Bowles in the chair. Capital fun. A band, and a very jolly evening.” He also lectured somewhere on Conscription, and sent his MS. to Francis, who replied thus: “I have read your lecture. What must have struck all who heard it, and what struck me most when I read it, was, how you could have said so much and touched so little on the real subject.”
On 5th December, during that uneasy time when Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman was forming his new Ministry, Rivy went to stay at Hatfield. His account of his visit deserves quotation.
“_Tuesday._
“A large party, including Asquith and Mrs., Mrs. Laurence Drummond, Etty Grenfell [Lady Desborough], Revelstoke, Lord and Lady Kenmare and Lady Dorothy Browne, General Broadwood, Arthur Strutt, Lady Airlie and Lady Kitty Ogilvie, Dick Cavendish and Lady Moira, Miss Claire Stopford, Edward Packe, Micky Hicks-Beach, Hugh Cecil, and a very nice Miss Asquith. After dinner the older ones played bridge, and we played stupid games like ‘snap.’ My God! Hugh Cecil did make me laugh; he is the most amusing fellow you ever saw.
“_Wednesday._
“Most of the party went up to London, except four of us who shot partridges. I should have done better if I had thrown my gun at the birds instead of shooting at them. At dinner I took in Miss Asquith. Afterwards I had a long yarn with Hugh Cecil about politics. We discussed elections and arguing with the working man. He told me that what generally happened was that you visited the working man and employed the finest arguments for about half an hour, and the only reply you got was, ‘Oh yes, I quite understand. You have been very well educated, and I don’t believe a word you say.’ After dinner we did a sort of dumb crambo acting, and I talked politics with Miss Asquith, who is extremely clever and, of course, full of politics.
“In the smoking-room Asquith and H. Cecil discussed the various bishops!
“_Thursday._
“We went pheasant-shooting. I shot very badly. There were a lot of birds; we got 300. After tea I played bridge against the future Chancellor of the Exchequer. We dressed up for dinner in fancy dress, and had a cotillon afterwards. I went as a toreador.
“I made great pals with Mrs. Asquith. I do not know if you know her, but she is an absolute clinker. She dressed up as a Spanish dancer, and did a _pas seul_ before us all. What will people say in about twenty years when they hear this! The leading lady of the Government dancing a _pas seul_, while the Chancellor of the Exchequer looked on! Hugh Cecil said he thought he had dislocated the inner organs of his body from laughter.
“And now for secrets.... [Here follow certain matters which have long ago been made public.] Read to-day’s _Times_, F. G. There is about half a column on the political situation, which gives you much of what I have written above. Asquith was fearfully perturbed about how they got hold of it, for only six people knew the situation—himself, Grey, Haldane, C.-B., Morley, Tweedmouth, and (proclaim it to your ancestors!) R. G.
“Mrs. Asquith told me that Asquith had had a terrible two days. The Liberals, having been out for ten years, of course owe honours to a great number of people. Innumerable people had called on him and implored him to give them something—men whose whole lives have been given up to working for the party, and now there is nothing for them. This to some of them meant a career finished. So you see that even being Chancellor of the Exchequer and having the making of a Government isn’t altogether honey.
“Here is an amusing story of Lady Curzon. The day after Curzon arrived there was a bad accident at Charing Cross. Half the roof fell in, owing to a girder snapping. Lady Curzon said wittily that ‘Brodrick must have cut that girder on purpose, but—so like him—was a day late!’
“Had there not been this crisis, the party at Hatfield was to have included Austen Chamberlain and Balfour; but they had to stay in London to pack up their belongings. We had great chaff, as Austen C. was packing up to let the Asquiths in. They told me an amusing story that happened last summer. Hugh Cecil and Austen Chamberlain had a race on trays along a gallery. Cecil slipped off his tray and won without it. The judge at the end of the room said, ‘The Free Trader has won.’ ‘Yes,’ says Cecil, ‘but he has lost his seat in doing it!’”
In the same letter Rivy gives Francis a piece of advice most characteristic of the attitude of both the Twins to life. They were devotees of the “grand manner,” which appears to do things easily and without effort, however much laborious spade-work may be done in secret. Francis is adjured to study the hill tribes against a possible frontier campaign in the next two years. “Do not tell anybody what you are about. For some reason or other people are always inclined to think a person who does anything from instinct more wonderful than if he has practised at it first; just as you hear, ‘Isn’t it wonderful how So-and-so plays polo so well, and never practises at all?’—whereas, as a matter of fact, the said person has been years practising. Demosthenes was renowned for his impromptu speeches. In reality, he had an underground chamber full of looking-glasses, where he used to rehearse every single speech that he made—for weeks, and sometimes years.”