登陆注册
26103300000030

第30章 Is Prohibition Coming to England?(1)

IN the United States and Canada the principal topic of polite conversation is now prohibition. At every dinner party the serving of the cocktails immediately introduces the subject: the rest of the dinner is enlivened throughout with the discussion of rum-runners, bootleggers, storage of liquor and the State constitution of New Jersey. Under this influence all social and conversational values are shifted and rearranged. A "scholarly" man no longer means a man who can talk well on literary subjects but a man who understands the eighteenth amendment and can explain the legal difference between implementing statutes such as the Volstead Act and the underlying state legislation. A "scientist" (invaluable in these conversations)

is a man who can make clear the distinction between alcoholic percentages by bulk and by weight. And a "brilliant engineer" means a man who explains how to make homebrewed beer with a kick in it.

Similarly, a "raconteur" means a man who has a fund of amusing stories about "bootleggers" and an "interesting traveller" means a man who has been to Havana and can explain how wet it is. Indeed, the whole conception of travel and of interest in foreign countries is now altered: as soon as any one mentions that he has been in a foreign country, all the company ask in one breath, "Is it dry?" The question "How is Samoa?" or "How is Turkey?" or "How is British Columbia?" no Ionger refers to the climate or natural resources: it means "Is the place dry?" When such a question is asked and the answer is "It's wet," there is a deep groan all around the table.

I understand that when the recent disarmament conference met at Washington just as the members were going to sit down at the table Monsieur Briand said to President Harding, "How dry is the United States, anyway?" And the whole assembly talked about it for half an hour. That was why the first newspaper bulletins merely said, "Conference exchanges credentials."

As a discoverer of England I therefore made it one of my chief cares to try to obtain accurate information of this topic. I was well aware that immediately on my return to Canada the first question I would be asked would be "Is England going dry?" I realised that in any report I might make to the National Geographical Society or to the Political Science Association, the members of these bodies, being scholars, would want accurate information about the price of whiskey, the percentage of alcohol, and the hours of opening and closing the saloons.

My first impression on the subject was, I must say, one of severe moral shock. Landing in England after spending the summer in Ontario, it seemed a terrible thing to see people openly drinking on an English train. On an Ontario train, as everybody knows, there is no way of taking a drink except by climbing up on the roof, lying flat on one's stomach, and taking a suck out of a flask. But in England in any dining car one actually sees a waiter approach a person dining and say, "Beer, sir, or wine?" This is done in broad daylight with no apparent sense of criminality or moral shame. Appalling though it sounds, bottled ale is openly sold on the trains at twenty-five cents a bottle and dry sherry at eighteen cents a glass.

When I first saw this I expected to see the waiter arrested on the spot. I looked around to see if there were any "spotters," detectives, or secret service men on the train. I anticipated that the train conductor would appear and throw the waiter off the car. But then I realised that I was in England and that in the British Isles they still tolerate the consumption of alcohol. Indeed, I doubt if they are even aware that they are "consuming alcohol." Their impression is that they are drinking beer.

At the beginning of my discussion I will therefore preface a few exact facts and statistics for the use of geographical societies, learned bodies and government commissions. The quantity of beer consumed in England in a given period is about 200,000,000 gallons. The life of a bottle of Scotch whiskey is seven seconds. The number of public houses, or "pubs," in the English countryside is one to every half mile. The percentage of the working classes drinking beer is 125: the percentage of the class without work drinking beer is 200.

Statistics like these do not, however, give a final answer to the question, "Is prohibition coming to England?" They merely show that it is not there now. The question itself will be answered in as many different ways as there are different kinds of people. Any prohibitionist will tell you that the coming of prohibition to England is as certain as the coming eclipse of the sun. But this is always so. It is in human nature that people are impressed by the cause they work in. I once knew a minister of the Scotch Church who took a voyage round the world: he said that the thing that impressed him most was the growth of presbyterianism in Japan. No doubt it did.

When the Orillia lacrosse team took their trip to Australia, they said on their return that lacrosse was spreading all over the world.

In the same way there is said to be a spread all over the world of Christian Science, proportional representation, militari**, peace sentiment, barbarism, altruism, psychoanalysis and death from wood alcohol. They are what are called world movements.

My own judgment in regard to prohibition in the British Isles is this: In Scotland, prohibition is not coming: if anything, it is going. In Ireland, prohibition will only be introduced when they have run out of other forms of trouble. But in England I think that prohibition could easily come unless the English people realise where they are drifting and turn back. They are in the early stage of the movement already.

同类推荐
  • History of the Peloponnesian War

    History of the Peloponnesian War

    The State of Greece from the earliest Times to the Commencement of the Peloponnesian War THUCYDIDES, an Athenian, wrote the history of the war between the Peloponnesians and the Athenians, beginning at the moment that it broke out
  • 洞真太上说智慧消魔真经

    洞真太上说智慧消魔真经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 香莲品藻

    香莲品藻

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 半九亭集

    半九亭集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 月

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 仙踪

    仙踪

    神若阻我,灭神!魔若欺我,斩魔!以武入道,神魔不侵,炼天之血,唯吾独尊!天生废柴唐诺无意中获得一把神兵利器,内藏乾坤,从此走上一条不归的路途,寻求仙之踪迹,谓之仙踪!
  • 绝世天才:邪王的宠妃

    绝世天才:邪王的宠妃

    本文已弃。如果喜欢这本文的亲,请看《绝世天才:废柴逆天大小姐》主角还是荣楚楚,讲的还是一样的内容,不过就是有些地方修改了一下。抱歉,真的很抱歉。
  • 天启代

    天启代

    “观察者”的由来,神神叨叨的老道士,主宰命运的走向。这一切,在恍惚间这些东西落到了一个少年的头上。是注定还是偶然,是选择存在还是悄无声息。寻真理,论英雄,开天启。
  • 耕耘记

    耕耘记

    穿越到古代,她的家里穷得连一根针都没有;没有爹娘,没有田地,只有两个饥瘦的兄弟。穿越回古代,要的是什么呢……一方田,一个家,再来个相互欢喜的儿郎。这就算是美满的种田人生了吧?
  • 爆萌追夫路:仙尊太傲娇

    爆萌追夫路:仙尊太傲娇

    叶狸一朝穿越成反派,从此生活就要抱大腿。偶然遇到傲娇绝美的仙尊,肿么办?一手扑倒一手脱!“墨颜相公,其实我喜欢你…”“嗯。”“墨颜相公,其实你长的很美…”“嗯。”“墨颜相公,其实春宵一刻值千金…”“滚…滚过来。”(本书封面来自于网络。)
  • 电子商务用户接受:理论和实证研究

    电子商务用户接受:理论和实证研究

    本书分为七章,内容包括用户接受研究的理论基础、电子商务的用户接受研究、电子商务网站用户接受模型的研究设计等。
  • 都市修行归来

    都市修行归来

    大道三千,小道八百,以武入道,以武成圣。
  • 日月星辰系统

    日月星辰系统

    意外获得日月星辰系统可以穿越世界。斗罗,斗破,神雕,射雕,诛仙,都不是事
  • 不及我一人

    不及我一人

    “有一种爱是放手,就像你喜欢月亮,不可能把月亮拿下来放在脸盆里,但月亮的光芒仍可照进你的房间“但她愿意愿意追随月亮,哪怕‘月亮’的生命中永不及她一人。
  • 遇见便是最美丽

    遇见便是最美丽

    遇见你的时候,我就遇到了最美丽的自己。而不管过程怎样悲欢离合,怎样欢欣鼓舞,我们终究都会分离,不论伦常,不论人为,不论生老病死。所以只要遇见了你,无论结果是喜是悲,就已经是此生最美的幸运。罗拉说:我不在乎结果,我只要过程。淼淼说:多久都没关系,只要能快乐。安妮说:你是最珍贵的财富,遇见已是一生。芷笙说:能在一起是最好,不能在一起,也感谢这一场相遇。葛溪说:我从没渴望会遇见你,可是遇见你之后,我没羡慕任何人。