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THE PHILOSOPHER'S JOKE

By JEROME K. JEROME
Myself, I do not believe this story. Six persons are persuaded of its

truth; and the hope of these six is to convince themselves it was an
hallucination. Their difficulty is there are six of them. Each one

alone perceives clearly that it never could have been. Unfortunately,
they are close friends, and cannot get away from one another; and when

they meet and look into each other's eyes the thing takes shape again.
The one who told it to me, and who immediately wished he had not, was

Armitage. He told it to me one night when he and I were the only
occupants of the Club smoking-room. His telling me--as he explained

afterwards--was an impulse of the moment. Sense of the thing had been
pressing upon him all that day with unusual persistence; and the idea

had occurred to him, on my entering the room, that the flippant
scepticism with which an essentiallycommonplace mind like my own--he

used the words in no offensive sense--would be sure to regard the
affair might help to direct his own attention to its more absurd

aspect. I am inclined to think it did. He thanked me for dismissing
his entire narrative as the delusion of a disordered brain, and begged

me not to mention the matter to another living soul. I promised; and
I may as well here observe that I do not call this mentioning the

matter. Armitage is not the man's real name; it does not even begin
with an A. You might read this story and dine next to him the same

evening: you would know nothing.
Also, of course, I did not consider myself debarred from speaking

about it, discreetly, to Mrs. Armitage, a charming woman. She burst
into tears at the first mention of the thing. It took me all I knew

to tranquillize her. She said that when she did not think about the
thing she could be happy. She and Armitage never spoke of it to one

another; and left to themselves her opinion was that eventually they
might put remembrance behind them. She wished they were not quite so

friendly with the Everetts. Mr. and Mrs. Everett had both dreamt
precisely the same dream; that is, assuming it was a dream. Mr.

Everett was not the sort of person that a clergyman ought, perhaps, to
know; but as Armitage would always argue: for a teacher of

Christianity to withdraw his friendship from a man because that man
was somewhat of a sinner would be inconsistent. Rather should he

remain his friend and seek to influence him. They dined with the
Everetts regularly on Tuesdays, and sitting opposite the Everetts, it

seemed impossible to accept as a fact that all four of them at the
same time and in the same manner had fallen victims to the same

illusion. I think I succeeded in leaving her more hopeful. She
acknowledged that the story, looked at from the point of common sense,

did sound ridiculous; and threatened me that if I ever breathed a word
of it to anyone, she never would speak to me again. She is a charming

woman, as I have already mentioned.
By a curious coincidence I happened at the time to be one of Everett's

directors on a Company he had just promoted for taking over and
developing the Red Sea Coasting trade. I lunched with him the

following Sunday. He is an interesting talker, and curiosity to
discover how so shrewd a man would account for his connection with so

insane--so impossible a fancy, prompted me to hint my knowledge of the
story. The manner both of him and of his wife changed suddenly. They

wanted to know who it was had told me. I refused the information,
because it was evident they would have been angry with him. Everett's

theory was that one of them had dreamt it--probably Camelford--and by
hypnotic suggestion had conveyed to the rest of them the impression

that they had dreamt it also. He added that but for one slight
incident he should have ridiculed from the very beginning the argument

that it could have been anything else than a dream. But what that
incident was he would not tell me. His object, as he explained, was

not to dwell upon the business, but to try and forget it. Speaking as
a friend, he advised me, likewise, not to cackle about the matter any

more than I could help, lest trouble should arise with regard to my
director's fees. His way of putting things is occasionally blunt.

It was at the Everetts', later on, that I met Mrs. Camelford, one of
the handsomest women I have ever set eyes upon. It was foolish of me,

but my memory for names is weak. I forgot that Mr. and Mrs. Camelford
were the other two concerned, and mentioned the story as a curious

tale I had read years ago in an old Miscellany. I had reckoned on it
to lead me into a discussion with her on platonic friendship. She

jumped up from her chair and gave me a look. I remembered then, and
could have bitten out my tongue. It took me a long while to make my

peace, but she came round in the end, consenting to attribute my
blunder to mere stupidity. She was quite convinced herself, she told

me, that the thing was pure imagination. It was only when in company
with the others that any doubt as to this crossed her mind. Her own

idea was that, if everybody would agree never to mention the matter
again, it would end in their forgetting it. She supposed it was her

husband who had been my informant: he was just that sort of ass. She
did not say it unkindly. She said when she was first married, ten

years ago, few people had a more irritating effect upon her than had
Camelford; but that since she had seen more of other men she had come

to respect him. I like to hear a woman speak well of her husband. It
is a departure which, in my opinion, should be more encouraged than it

is. I assured her Camelford was not the culprit; and on the
understanding that I might come to see her--not too often--on her

Thursdays, I agreed with her that the best thing I could do would be
to dismiss the subject from my mind and occupy myself instead with

questions that concerned myself.
I had never talked much with Camelford before that time, though I had

often seen him at the Club. He is a strange man, of whom many stories
are told. He writes journalism for a living, and poetry, which he

publishes at his own expense, apparently for recreation. It occurred
to me that his theory would at all events be interesting; but at first

he would not talk at all, pretending to ignore the whole affair, as
idle nonsense. I had almost despaired of drawing him out, when one

evening, of his own accord, he asked me if I thought Mrs. Armitage,
with whom he knew I was on terms of friendship, still attached

importance to the thing. On my expressing the opinion that Mrs.
Armitage was the most troubled of the group, he was irritated; and

urged me to leave the rest of them alone and devote whatever sense I
might possess to persuading her in particular that the entire thing

was and could be nothing but pure myth. He confessed frankly that to
him it was still a mystery. He could easily regard it as chimera, but

for one slight incident. He would not for a long while say what that
was, but there is such a thing as perseverance, and in the end I

dragged it out of him. This is what he told me.
"We happened by chance to find ourselves alone in the conservatory,

that night of the ball--we six. Most of the crowd had already left.
The last 'extra' was being played: the music came to us faintly.

Stooping to pick up Jessica's fan, which she had let fall to the
ground, something shining on the tesselated pavementunderneath a

group of palms suddenly caught my eye. We had not said a word to one
another; indeed, it was the first evening we had any of us met one

another--that is, unless the thing was not a dream. I picked it up.
The others gathered round me, and when we looked into one another's

eyes we understood: it was a broken wine-cup, a curious goblet of
Bavarian glass. It was the goblet out of which we had all dreamt that

we had drunk."
I have put the story together as it seems to me it must have happened.

The incidents, at all events, are facts. Things have since occurred
to those concerned affording me hope that they will never read it. I

should not have troubled to tell it at all, but that it has a moral.
***

Six persons sat round the great oak table in the wainscoted _Speise
Saal_ of that cosy hostelry, the Kneiper Hof at Konigsberg. It was

late into the night. Under ordinary circumstances they would have

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