The Green Overcoat

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The Green Overcoat (1912)
by Hilaire Belloc
3123804The Green Overcoat1912Hilaire Belloc


The
Green Overcoat

By
HILAIRE BELLOC

With Illustrations by
G. K. CHESTERTON

NEW YORK
McBride, Nast & Company
1912


All rights reserved


Dedicated to
MAURICE BARING.

DEDICATION.



My dear Maurice,

You wrote something called The Green Elephant, and I have written something called The Green Overcoat.

It is on this account that I dedicate to you my work The Green Overcoat, although (and I take this opportunity of reproaching you for the same) you did not dedicate to me your work The Green Elephant.

An overcoat and an elephant have much in common, and also, alas! much in which they differ. An elephant can be taken off, and so can an overcoat; but, on the other hand, an overcoat can be put on, and an elephant can not. I understand that your elephant was not a real elephant; similarly my overcoat is not a real overcoat, but only an overcoat in a book. An overcoat is the largest kind of garment, and an elephant is the largest kind of beast, unless we admit the whale, which is larger than the elephant, just as a dressing-gown is larger than an overcoat; but this would lead me far! Then, again, the elephant does not eat meat, or bite; nor does an overcoat. He is most serviceable to man; so is an overcoat. There are, however, rogue elephants which are worse than useless, and give less profit to their owner than if he had no elephant at all. The same is true of overcoats, notably of those which have got torn in the lining of the left armpit, so that the citizen on shoving his left arm therein gets it into a sort of cul-de-sac, which is French for blind-alley.

The elephant is expensive, so is the overcoat. The elephant is of a grave and settled expression, so is an overcoat. An overcoat hanging by itself upon a peg is a grave and sensible object, which in the words of the philosopher "neither laughs nor is the cause of laughter." So is an elephant encaged.

Again, man in conjunction with the elephant is ennobled by that conjunction, whether he ride upon its back or upon its neck or walk by its side, as does the keeper at the Zoo. The same is true of overcoats, which, whether we have them upon our backs or carry them over our arms, add something to our appearance. I could suggest many other points in common were this part of my work lucrative, and, as it were, in the business; but it is not, and I must end. I might remind you that elephants probably grow old (though no man has lived to see it), that overcoats certainly do; that elephants are of divers sex, and this is true also of the overcoat. On the other hand, an overcoat has no feet and it has two tails or none, whereas the elephant has four feet and but one tail, and that a very little one.

I must wind up by telling you why I have written of an "overcoat" and not a "greatcoat." "Greatcoat" is the more vernacular; "overcoat" I think the more imperial. But that was not my reason. I wrote "overcoat" because it was a word similar in scansion and almost equivalent in stress-scheme (wow!) to the word "elephant." Of course, if I had considered length of syllable and vowel-value it would have been another matter, for "elephant" consists in three shorts, "overcoat" in a long, short and long. The first is a what-you-may-call-'um, and the second a thingumbob.

But I did not consider vowel sounds, and I was indifferent to longs and shorts. My endeavour was to copy you, and to have a title which would get people mixed up, so that the great hordes of cultivated men and women desiring to see your play should talk by mistake of The Green Overcoat.

And then their aunts, or perhaps a prig-visitor, would say: "Oh, no, that is the book!" In this way the book would be boomed. That was my game.

If people had done this sort of thing before it would not work now; but they haven't.

Now, Maurice, I end this preface, for I cannot think of anything more to write.

H. BELLOC.

CONTENTS


  1. .page
  2. In which the Green Overcoat takes a Journey 13
  3. In which a Philosopher wrestles with the Problem of Identity 29
  4. In which the Green Overcoat appears as a Point of religion by not being there 46
  5. In which it is seen that University training fits one for a business career 67
  6. In which Solitude is unable to discover the charms which Sages have seen in her face 84
  7. In which Professor Higginson begins to taste the sweets of fame 1O4
  8. In which Professor Higginson goes on tasting them 135
  9. In which Professor Higginson gets those sweets by the wagon-load, and also hears how Men are Made 158
  10. In which the Green Overcoat begins to assert itself 175
  11. In which a Descendant of the Crusaders refuses to harbour stolen goods 186
  12. In which a Pole is less scrupulous 204
  13. In which the Readerkin will, if he has an ounce OF brains, begin to catch the inevitable Denoumong of the Imbroglio 215
  14. In which the Subliminal Consciousness gives itself away 243
  15. In which, incredible as it may seem, a non-Pole has the better of a Pole 264
  16. In which three young men eat, and not only eat, but drink 274
  17. In which Cross-Examination is Conducted "en échelon," and if you don't know what that means I can't help you 287
  18. In which a Professor professes nothing, a Lecture is not delivered, and yet something happens 298
  19. In which the Green Overcoat triumphs and comes home 321

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published before January 1, 1929.


The longest-living author of this work died in 1953, so this work is in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 70 years or less. This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.

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