"I want to marry your daughter," said Mark Spayley with faltering eagerness. "I
am only an artist with an income of two hundred a year, and she is the daughter
of an enormously wealthy man, so I suppose you will think my offer a piece of
presumption."
Duncan Dullamy, the great company inflator, showed no outward sign of
displeasure. As a matter of fact, he was secretly relieved at the prospect of
finding even a two-hundred-a-year husband for his daughter Leonore. A crisis was
rapidly rushing upon him, from which he knew he would emerge with neither money
nor credit; all his recent ventures had fallen flat, and flattest of all had
gone the wonderful new breakfast food, Pipenta, on the advertisement of which he
had sunk such huge sums. It could scarcely be called a drug in the market;
people bought drugs, but no one bought Pipenta.
"Would you marry Leonore if she were a poor man's daughter?" asked the man of
phantom wealth.
"Yes," said Mark, wisely avoiding the error of over-protestation. And to his
astonishment Leonore's father not only gave his consent, but suggested a fairly
early date for the wedding.
"I wish I could show my gratitude in some way," said Mark with genuine emotion.
"I'm afraid it's rather like the mouse proposing to help the lion."
"Get people to buy that beastly muck," said Dullamy, nodding savagely at a
poster of the despised Pipenta, "and you'll have done more than any of my agents
have been able to accomplish."
"It wants a better name," said Mark reflectively, "and something distinctive in
the poster line. Anyway, I'll have a shot at it."
Three weeks later the world was advised of the coming of a new breakfast food,
heralded under the resounding name of "Filboid Studge." Spayley put forth no
pictures of massive babies springing up with fungus-like rapidity under its
forcing influence, or of representatives of the leading nations of the world
scrambling with fatuous eagerness for its possession. One huge sombre poster
depicted the Damned in Hell suffering a new torment from their inability to get
at the Filboid Studge which elegant young fiends held in transparent bowls just
beyond their reach. The scene was rendered even more gruesome by a subtle
suggestion of the features of leading men and women of the day in the portrayal
of the Lost Souls; prominent individuals of both political parties, Society
hostesses, well-known dramatic authors and novelists, and distinguished
aeroplanists were dimly recognizable in that doomed throng; noted lights of the
musical-comedy stage flickered wanly in the shades of the Inferno, smiling still
from force of habit, but with the fearsome smiling rage of baffled effort. The
poster bore no fulsome allusions to the merits of the new breakfast food, but a
single grim statement ran in bold letters along its base: "They cannot buy it
now."
Spayley had grasped the fact that people will do things from a sense of duty
which they would never attempt as a pleasure. There are thousands of respectable
middle-class men who, if you found them unexpectedly in a Turkish bath, would
explain in all sincerity that a doctor had ordered them to take Turkish baths;
if you told them in return that you went there because you liked it, they would
stare in pained wonder at the frivolity of your motive. In the same way,
whenever a massacre of Armenians is reported from Asia Minor, every one assumes
that it has been carried out "under orders" from somewhere or another; no one
seems to think that there are people who might like to kill their neighbours now
and then.
And so it was with the new breakfast food. No one would have eaten Filboid
Studge as a pleasure, but the grim austerity of its advertisement drove
housewives in shoals to the grocers' shops to clamour for an immediate supply.
In small kitchens solemn pig-tailed daughters helped depressed mothers to
perform the primitive ritual of its preparation. On the breakfast-tables of
cheerless parlours it was partaken of in silence. Once the womenfolk discovered
that it was thoroughly unpalatable, their zeal in forcing it on their households
knew no bounds. "You haven't eaten your Filboid Studge!" would be screamed at
the appetiteless clerk as he turned weariedly from the breakfast-table, and his
evening meal would be prefaced by a warmed-up mess which would be explained as
"your Filboid Studge that you didn't eat this morning." Those strange fanatics
who ostentatiously mortify themselves, inwardly and outwardly, with health
biscuits and health garments, battened aggressively on the new food. Earnest
spectacled young men devoured it on the steps of the National Liberal Club. A
bishop who did not believe in a future state preached against the poster, and a
peer's daughter died from eating too much of the compound. A further
advertisement was obtained when an infantry regiment mutinied and shot its
officers rather than eat the nauseous mess; fortunately, Lord Birrell of
Blatherstone, who was War Minister at the moment, saved the situation by his
happy epigram, that "Discipline to be effective must be optional."
Filboid Studge had become a household word, but Dullamy wisely realized that it
was not necessarily the last word in breakfast dietary; its supremacy would be
challenged as soon as some yet more unpalatable food should be put on the
market. There might even be a reaction in favour of something tasty and
appetizing, and the Puritan austerity of the moment might be banished from
domestic cookery. At an opportune moment, therefore, he sold out his interests
in the article which had brought him in colossal wealth at a critical juncture,
and placed his financial reputation beyond the reach of cavil. As for Leonore,
who was now an heiress on a far greater scale than ever before, he naturally
found her something a vast deal higher in the husband market than a two-hundred-
a-year poster designer. Mark Spayley, the brainmouse who had helped the
financial lion with such untoward effect, was left to curse the day he produced
the wonder-working poster.
"After all," said Clovis, meeting him shortly afterwards at his club, "you have
this doubtful consolation, that 'tis not in mortals to countermand success."