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THE COMIC ENGLISHMAN

My own strong impression is that, just as there aro underlying national differences, a general continental way of life, a continental division of the day’s activities, a continental way of meeting one’s friends, a continental town planning, a continental tram system, a continental attitude to morals and religion, even a continental smell, which can he legitimately contrasted with their English counterparts, so there is a general continental mind to be contrasted with the English mind in its activity over ground common to both (writes Mr Orlo Williams, in the ‘ Cornhill Magazine ’). Not that every individual whom one meets on the Continent is necessarily a striking instance of this difference. A Continental friend of mine, describing a ratlier unusual meeting of men of soul in some out-of-the-way cafe in an out-of-the-way town, remarked while enumerating those present: “And, of course, there was the usual comic Englishman.” Potentially every Englishman, whatever his class or profession, is that comic one; and we may he just as well proud of him as a little apologetic. Ho turns up in the most unlikely places, he astonishes the nations with his uiiawareness- of his incongruity, lie looks on at the most improbable scenes with the least possible emotion, and he seems to understand so little of what is going on. Yet years afterwards, or it may only ho weeks, it will he revealed that, in his diary or in a letter or a book or an article, that the comic Englishman Crabb Robinson, Borrow, Samuel Butler, and many others have lent him their names—will have' given a penetrating account of the function which he seemed so little to understand, with a “ dcsinvolture ” of which none of his Continental friends would have been capable. It is only in the mass that the English are unreoeptive, and they are usually judged in the mass. Individually there aro no more receptive beings in the world, if only they do not lose their equipoise in unfamiliar circumstances,' Tlio comic Englishman, the world wanderer, the peripatetic insinuate!' of himself into the remotest and most private haunts of Europeanism, is only the other side of that stout, immovable .Tolin Bull who is apparently so unimpressionable by European suppleness.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19300308.2.8

Bibliographic details

Evening Star, Issue 20428, 8 March 1930, Page 2

Word Count
369

THE COMIC ENGLISHMAN Evening Star, Issue 20428, 8 March 1930, Page 2

THE COMIC ENGLISHMAN Evening Star, Issue 20428, 8 March 1930, Page 2

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