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Essay(s) by Richard King
My Escape And Some Others
Richard King
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       Everybody, as I said before, has his or her own receipt for "getting away." Some find it in long "chats" over the fireside with old friends; some in reading and music and art; some in travel, some in "good works" and just a few in "bad" ones. A new hat will often lift a woman several floors nearer to the seventh heaven. A good dinner in prospect will sometimes elevate the spirit of man out of the dreary "rut" and give that _soupcon_ of something-to-live-for which can take the ordinary everyday and turn it into a day which belongs to the _extraordinary_. For myself, I like to get out into the country alone; or, if I can't do that, or the weather sees to it that I shan't, I like to get by myself--anywhere to dream, or, preferably, to explore some unknown district or street or place in my own company. Sometimes I find that to open a new book or a favourite old one, soon takes the edge off "edgyness," and makes me see that the pin-pricks of life are merely pin-pricks, from which, unless there are too many of them, I shan't die, however much I may suffer. But even when reading--I like best to read alone--I am never really at ease when at any moment a companion may suddenly break the silence and bring me back to reality by asking the unseen listening gods "if they've locked the cat out?" You condemn me? Well, perhaps I am wrong. And if you can find happiness perpetually surrounded by people, then I envy you. It is so much easier to go through life requiring nothing but food, friends, and a bank balance, than always to hide misanthropic tendencies behind a social smile. I envy you, because I realise that the fight to be alone, the fight to be yourself, is the longest fight of all--and it lays you open to suspicion, unfriendliness, even dislike, everywhere you go. But, if I must be honest, I will confess that I _hate_ social pastimes. To work and to dream, to travel, to listen to music, to be in England in the springtime, to read, to give of myself to those who most specially need me--if any there be?--that is what I now call happiness, the rest is merely boredom in varying degree. My only regret is that one has generally to live so long to discover what the constituents of happiness are, or what is worth while and what worthless; what makes you feel that the everyday is a day well spent, and not a day merely got through somehow or other. You lose so much of your youth, and the best years of your life, trying to find happiness along those paths where other people informed you that it lay. It takes so many years of experience to realise that most of the things which men call "pleasure" are but, as it were, tough dulness covered with piquant sauce--a tough mess of which, when you tire of the piquant sauce the toughness remains just so long as you go on trying to eat it.
       [The end]
       Richard King's essay: My Escape And Some Others
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The "Butters"
"Family Skeletons"
The "Glorious Dead"
Abraham Lincoln
Age That Dyes
Always The Personal Note
Aristocracy And Democracy
Autumn Determination
Autumn Sowing
Away--Far Away!
Awful Warnings
Backward And Forward
Bad-Tempered People
Beginnings
The Blind Man's Problem
Book-Borrowing Nearly Always Means Book-Stealing
Books And The Blind
Children
Christmas
Clergymen
Dreams
Dreams And Reality
The Dreariness Of One Line Of Conduct
Duty
The Enthralling Out-Of-Reach
Faith
Faith Reached Through Bitterness And Loss
Farewells!
February
The Few
The Futile Thought
The Glut Of The Ornamental
The Government Of The Future
The Great And The Really Great
The Happy Discontent
How I Came To Make "History"!
How To Help
Humanity
I Wonder If . . .
If Age Only Practised What It Preached!
The Inane And Unimaginative
It's Oh, To Be Out Of England--Now That Spring Is Here!
Life
Life's Great Adventure
The London Season
Love "Mush"
Love Of God
The Might-Have-Been
Modern Clothes
Mountain Paths
My Escape And Some Others
Mysticism And The Practical Man
The Need To Remember
The Neglected Art Of Eating Gracefully
The New Year
On Getting Away From Yourself
On Going "To The Dogs"
On Reality In People
One Of The Minor Tragedies
Other People's Books
Our "Secret Escapes"
Our Irritating Habits
Over The Fireside
Polite Conversation
Polite Masks
Pompous Pride In Literary "Lions"
The Question
Reconstruction
Relations
Responsibility
The Road To Calvary
A School For Wives
Seaside Piers
A Sense Of Universal Pity
Spiritualism
Sweeping Assertions From Particular Instances
Their Failure
The Things Which Are Not Dreamed Of In Our Philosophy
Travel (life)
Travel (life--change of scene)
Tub-Thumpers
Two Lives
The Two Passions
Types Of Tub-Thumpers
The Unholy Fear
The Unimpassioned English
Unlucky In Little Things
Visitors
Wallpapers
What You Really Reap
When?
The Will To Faith
Wives
Women In Love
Work
Work In The East-End