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IMPRESSIONS OF A FIRST VISIT

Arnold Bennett

1912

 

I. THE FIRST NIGHT
II. STREETS
III. THE CAPITOL AND OTHER SITES
IV. SOME ORGANIZATIONS
V. TRANSIT AND HOTELS
VI. SPORT AND THE THEATER
VII. EDUCATION AND ART
VIII. CITIZENS

I. THE FIRST NIGHT

I sat with a melting ice on my plate, and my gaze on a very distant swinging door, through which came
and went every figure except the familiar figure I desired. The figure of a woman came. She wore a

pale-blue dress and a white apron and cap, and carried a dish in uplifted hands, with the gesture of an

acolyte. On the bib of the apron were two red marks, and as she approached, tripping, scornful,

unheeding, along the interminable carpeted aisle, between serried tables of correct diners, the vague blur

of her face gradually developed into features, and the two red marks on her stomacher grew into two

rampant lions, each holding a globe in its ferocious paws; and she passed on, bearing away the dish and

these mysterious symbols, and lessened into a puppet on the horizon of the enormous hall, and finally

vanished through another door. She was succeeded by men, all bearing dishes, but none of them so

inexorably scornful as she, and none of them disappearing where she had disappeared; every man

relented and stopped at some table or other. But the figure I desired remained invisible, and my ice

continued to melt, in accordance with chemical law. The orchestra in the gallery leaped suddenly into the

rag-time without whose accompaniment it was impossible, anywhere in the civilized world, to dine

correctly. That rag-time, committed, I suppose, originally by some well-intentioned if banal composer in

the privacy of his study one night, had spread over the whole universe of restaurants like a pest, to the

exasperation of the sensitive, but evidently to the joy of correct diners. Joy shone in the elated eyes of the

four hundred persons correctly dining together in this high refectory, and at the end there was honest

applause!... And yet you never encountered a person who, questioned singly, did not agree and even

assert of his own accord that music at meals is an outrageous nuisance!...

However, my desired figure was at length manifest. The man came hurrying and a little breathless, with
his salver, at once apologetic and triumphant. My ice was half liquid. Had I not the right to reproach him,

in the withering, contemptuous tone which correct diners have learned to adopt toward the alien serfs

who attend them? I had not. I had neither the right nor the courage nor the wish. This man was as

Anglo-Saxon as myself. He had, with all his deference, the mien of the race. When he dreamed of

paradise, he probably did not dream of the caisse of a cosmopolitan Grand Hotel in Switzerland.

When he spoke English he was not speaking a foreign language. And this restaurant was one of the

extremely few fashionable Anglo-Saxon restaurants left in the world, where an order given in English is

understood at the first try, and where the English language is not assassinated and dismembered by

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