HONGKONG WEEKLY PRESS.
THE
HONGKONGTM DAILY
PRESS SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1925
WHY EVE LAUGHS AT ADAM'S APPLE.
[BY STÅGT ATMONIER.]
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To read the newspapera ons" might sometimes imagine that wars, rumours of. wars, policies, education, progress, and international rivalries occupied the vast bulk of public interest. But everyong knows that all these things are so much window-dressing. The only thing that really interests people permanently is men and women and their relationships to each other. For this reason life, as presented by what is known as "nowa” has a hollow ring.
Adam only half swallowed that story would probably have seemed less attrac Eve told him about the apple. It stuck șsive to him/ in his throat. You can see it there now. It is called Adam's Apple. It should really be called Eve's Apple. Owing to his physical construction he can never see it himself. Bu: Eve can see it, and overy time she sees it it makest her laugh It is perhaps a pleasant reminder of his gullibility. He is like an ostrich in this reapret that because he can't see his own apple he thinks it isn't there
Man regards woman with patronising indulgence, dear little creature! Ho is bigger and stronger than she, and he A parliament, for example, is repre- struts the earth with the conscious por sented as a body of men dealing with ture of the "dominant male. It in astmctions. One comes in time to re amazing illusion that seldom gets chal Ichged. As a contention it doesn't bear gard all those men as puppets, entirely thinking about perhaps that is why it concerned with pet principles and mea- is seldom thought about. As an article: Bures One hears, perhaps, that So-and- Ise is married or has a grown-up daugh of faith, it is worthy of Dayton, Tenter, but this does not seem any mere significant than a statement that the new Man seems incapable of realising that novel by Mr. Galsworthy is in a green his position in the social scuffle is purely cover. Wives and daughters are natural executive and decorative. He is naturally accessories. It omes sometimes as a stag: a lazy, pour-loving animal. He just wants to sit about and smokey and talk gering surprise to find that the wives and daughters and sons--the inner sentient and play games. He doesn't want to life of this pappet-come first, and that work, and struggle, and go to war the abstractions, are the real nccessories
woman who has to key him up to these Indeed, if the true story of these abstrac- Activities. Being the custodian of the tions could be set down, how amazed we race she has to protect the race-in her
should be to find that great movements, own way and at her own time.
upheavals, wars, reforms, and estas- trophes owned their inception and their accomplishment to some waywardim- pulse in the secret emotional experiences of some men and some women.
2108802.
WOMAN'S THOUGHTS.
SYMBOL OF THE CHASE.
While the man is always consciously thinking of the present and the past, the woman is always subconsciously think-Trae history can never be written be ing of the future. And the realm of her cause the historian has only had necess physical and spiritual activities requires to appearances, and, moreover, it has so constant enlargement. She bears child-far only been written by men.. History ren, which demand more and more is rather like a newspaper reporter's ac
demands cont of the emotions of n woman in material sustenance She beauty; health, security, and her rightfall child-birth, written from hearsay. share of the fun of life. She herself is too occupied in the controlling cham- her of this creativehive to expend her' force on the enlargement. Neither does she say anything to man. She just looks at his Adam's apple, and smiles inward- ly. And he because he loves her con i found it and these marsupials who are the spit and image of himself, he grum- bles, goes out into the hall, takes down his gun, aod wanders "forth into the jungle.
"But of all these relationships between men and women one of the most striking and ironic is that which might be called These 30- the relationship of " jewels." called precious stones (which have in any case an entirely fictitious value), bave come to be regarded as symbols of posses- sion. No man, even in the most free and easy set, would think of giving another man's wife a pearl necklace. It is the prerogative of the possessor."
He thinks it's all his own idea, and that he is being augnanimous and self- "And so one day, his wounds being sacrificing. He thinks everything he cold, and his bleed hot, Adam brings her does is very important. And it is, to her home this crowning symbol of the the same extent that a battle flect is imchase. Probably after a good dinner, portant to an island empire. But no-when the time has passed, he places i thing that he does is racially so import around her neck as though he had lassoed He' regards that little glitter of aat as what she does. What is the im- her. portance of his bullying the., office-boy gratitude and adm.ration which leaps or selling so many crates of some absurd into her eyes 'as the ultimate tribute to tinned rabbit in the city compared with his possessive sense. And as he stands the importance of seeing that the young there in front of the hearth-rug, with his est son washes behind his cars or feeds chest thrust out, boasting of his struggles bis pets regularly One, is the creative, and his triumphs, his Adam's apple going up and down, he looks so pathetic, such the other only the executive side of lite
This finely adjusted inter-reliance ben baby, such a thing eternally craving' tween the sexes is the one absorbing sub-to be mothered, that Eve turns away and ject that may always be relied upon to intrigue us. The fact that it is always being abused makes it none the less intriguing. If Adam had completely swallowed ber story about the apple, Eve
OUR COMIC YOUNG MEN. SAID TO HAVE LOST ALL SENSE OF OCCASION.
The young
man of to-day not only wears. strange trousers and cultivates a wap-like waist, writes a correspondent in a Home paper. He has lost all sense of occasion.
One night recently at the theatre. I sat next to a young man in plus fours. The regulations about evening dress were re- laxed in the theatre during the war and have never been reimposed, but there is something incongruous about a man_in golfing kit in the stalls of a theatre. The incongruity was all the more marked bes cause if the young man in question had been playing golf and had not time to change his suit he had found time to pat on dancing shoes. No doubt he was going on to a night club.""
Often at dances at clubs and restaur ante I have seen men in similarly un- suitable attire such as Fair isle jumpers, tennis clothes, and even shouting kit. At clubs you may often ece the samo thing. Young men lounge in and dine In all sorts..of eccentric costumes, to the annoyamot of the older members,
buries her face in a bowl of roses. And when she looks up it is difficult for the poor man to know whether she has been weeping with him or laughing at him.-- Evening Standard.
VOGUE OF THE VALSE,
DANCE RETURNS TO GRACEFUL
FAVOUR.
BY LADY KORALL DENTINCE. Į
No time is so fascinating as three-time, because it is the catural time. No matter how savage the breast, most human beings will respond to it. If they have: any sense of rhythun in them at all.
Few can sit quite unmoved, or unde sirous of movement, while the strains of a good valse—I hate “waltz-sound in their cars. There is something so cap uvating, so lilting, and so romantic in
real valse tune that the feet refuse to be still when it is played.
And now-little by little-the valso is returning to its own. More and more often its banished name is seen on pro- grammes, oftener and oftener its strains are heard in ballrooms.
Since it was introduced into England, the valse has been, on and off, the ac cepted step of European society, just as the jazz steps are the natural movement at the Negro and the country dances the pier ones of the persant And thus we got the three great divisions of music: thretimo, syncopation, and two- or four time, the latter beard to per fection in Furcell's exquisite "Nymphs and Shepherds."
No one has any objection to a busy man who comes on in his offer.clothes to dine at the club, because he has not the time to go home and change. But this is quite different from appearing in sporting attire. The man who has leisure for games should have leisure The first is always elegant and often enough to make himself presentable and, amorous, the second is sometimes plain- to observe the converanses, tive and strongly characteristic of the
robust, happy, and rustic, typical of what England is said to have been in the days when she was Merria.” ***
I do not object to new fashion. Latton-European native, and the third is un move with the times. But I object to mixed fashions. To quote Carlyle, Clothes give us individuality, distino tions, social polity. No one would play golf in an evening dress suit and a white waistcoat, or ge shooting in a frock-pont and a top hat. Therefore why dance and dine in plus fours ?
in Vienna they have a particular way of their own of treating three-time tunes, which is to remain half a beat longer on a second note of the bar, and thus leave only a quarter of a beat for the last note. This gives it the swing and. lils rarely seen anywhere else
The young man in riding breeches who has never been astride a horse and the yachtsman complete without a yacht afo familier objects of the seaside promen No sight was more entrancing than to ade. But these are harmless compared watch the Viennese dancing in the days with those strange creatures you see in when the valse held aupreme sway. The Hyde Park on Sundays weirdly and whole room seemed to be moving rhyth- wonderfully dressed, blatantly conspicu mically up and down hike a billowing ons by the style and unsuitability of their | ocean to the strains of the most clothing.
languorous or the most finry music, play Unconventionality is all very well ined with a passion - and an abandon ite place, but you can over do fancy seldom heard west of the Danube
dress. W
Clothes which began in foolishort love of Ornament, what have they not beeniné 1
The valso is the Queen of Dances Her reign may be interrupted, she may be shrived for a bit, but her turn is sure to come again.,
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