The Flying Inn. G. K. Chesterton

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The Flying Inn - G. K. Chesterton


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       G. K. Chesterton

      The Flying Inn

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664647795

       CHAPTER I A SERMON ON INNS

       CHAPTER II THE END OF OLIVE ISLAND

       CHAPTER III THE SIGN OF “THE OLD SHIP”

       CHAPTER IV THE INN FINDS WINGS

       CHAPTER V THE ASTONISHMENT OF THE AGENT

       CHAPTER VI THE HOLE IN HEAVEN

       CHAPTER VII THE SOCIETY OF SIMPLE SOULS

       CHAPTER VIII VOX POPULI VOX DEI

       CHAPTER IX THE HIGHER CRITICISM AND MR. HIBBS

       CHAPTER X THE CHARACTER OF QUOODLE

       CHAPTER XI VEGETARIANISM IN THE DRAWING-ROOM

       CHAPTER XII VEGETARIANISM IN THE FOREST

       CHAPTER XIII THE BATTLE OF THE TUNNEL

       CHAPTER XIV THE CREATURE THAT MAN FORGETS

       CHAPTER XV THE SONGS OF THE CAR CLUB

       CHAPTER XVI THE SEVEN MOODS OF DORIAN

       CHAPTER XVII THE POET IN PARLIAMENT

       CHAPTER XVIII THE REPUBLIC OF PEACEWAYS

       CHAPTER XIX THE HOSPITALITY OF THE CAPTAIN

       CHAPTER XX THE TURK AND THE FUTURISTS

       CHAPTER XXI THE ROAD TO ROUNDABOUT

       CHAPTER XXII THE CHEMISTRY OF MR. CROOKE

       CHAPTER XXIII THE MARCH ON IVYWOOD

       CHAPTER XXIV THE ENIGMAS OF LADY JOAN

       CHAPTER XXV THE FINDING OF THE SUPERMAN

      THE FLYING INN

       A SERMON ON INNS

       Table of Contents

      The sea was a pale elfin green and the afternoon had already felt the fairy touch of evening as a young woman with dark hair, dressed in a crinkly copper-coloured sort of dress of the artistic order, was walking rather listlessly along the parade of Pebblewick-on-Sea, trailing a parasol and looking out upon the sea’s horizon. She had a reason for looking instinctively out at the sea-line; a reason that many young women have had in the history of the world. But there was no sail in sight.

      On the beach below the parade were a succession of small crowds, surrounding the usual orators of the seaside; whether niggers or socialists, whether clowns or clergymen. Here would stand a man doing something or other with paper boxes; and the holiday makers would watch him for hours in the hope of some time knowing what it was that he was doing with them. Next to him would be a man in a top hat with a very big Bible and a very small wife, who stood silently beside him, while he fought with his clenched fist against the heresy of Milnian Sublapsarianism so wide-spread in fashionable watering-places. It was not easy to follow him, he was so very much excited; but every now and then the words “our Sublapsarian friends” would recur with a kind of wailing sneer. Next was a young man talking of nobody knew what (least of all himself), but apparently relying for public favour mainly on having a ring of carrots round his hat. He had more money lying in front of him than the others. Next were niggers. Next was a children’s service conducted by a man with a long neck who beat time with a little wooden spade. Farther along there was an atheist, in a towering rage, who pointed every now and then at the children’s service and spoke of Nature’s fairest things being corrupted with the secrets of the Spanish Inquisition—by the man with the little spade, of course. The atheist (who wore a red rosette) was very withering to his own audience as well. “Hypocrites!” he would say; and then they would throw him money. “Dupes and dastards!” and then they would throw him more money. But between the atheist and the children’s service was a little owlish man in a red fez, weakly waving a green gamp umbrella. His face was brown and wrinkled like a walnut, his nose was of the sort we associate with Judæa, his beard was the sort of black wedge we associate rather with Persia. The young woman had never seen him before; he was a new exhibit in the now familiar museum of cranks and quacks. The young woman was one of those people in whom a real sense of humour is always at issue with a certain temperamental tendency to boredom or melancholia; and she lingered a moment, and leaned on the rail to listen.

      It was fully four minutes before she could understand a word the man was saying; he spoke English with so extraordinary an accent that she supposed at first that he was talking in his own oriental tongue. All the noises of that articulation were odd; the most marked was an extreme prolongation of the short “u” into “oo”; as in “poo-oot” for “put.” Gradually the girl got used to the dialect, and began to understand the words; though some time elapsed even then before she could form any conjecture of their subject matter. Eventually it appeared to her that he had some fad about English civilisation having been founded by the Turks; or, perhaps by the Saracens after their victory in the Crusades. He also seemed to think that Englishmen would soon return to this way of thinking; and seemed to be urging the spread of teetotalism as an evidence of it. The girl was the only person listening to him.

      “Loo-ook,” he said, wagging a curled brown finger, “loo-ook at your own inns” (which he pronounced as “ince”). “Your inns of which you write in your boo-ooks! Those inns were not poo-oot up in the beginning to sell ze alcoholic Christian drink. They were put up to


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