Volume II Part 29 (1/2)
”But you don't get a pa.s.sport here,” Page replied. ”You must go to the Foreign Office.”
His visitor was indignant.
”Not at all,” she answered. ”I am an American: you know that I am; you knew my father. I want an American pa.s.sport.”
Page patiently explained the citizens.h.i.+p and naturalization laws and finally convinced his caller that she was now a British subject and must have a British pa.s.sport. As this American d.u.c.h.ess left the room he shook at her a menacing forefinger.
”Don't tell me,” was the Amba.s.sador's parting shot, ”that you thought that you could have your Duke and Uncle Sam, too!”
The judgments which Page pa.s.sed on men and things were quick and they were not infrequently wise. One of these judgments had historic consequences the end of which cannot even yet be foreseen. On the outbreak of hostilities, as already related, an American Relief Committee was organized in London to look out for the interests of stranded Americans. Page kept a close eye on its operations, and soon his attention was attracted by the noiseless efficiency of an American engineer of whom he had already caught a few fleeting glimpses in the period of peace. After he had finished his work with the American Committee, Mr. Herbert C. Hoover began to make his arrangements to leave for the United States. His private affairs had been disorganized; he had already sent his family home, and his one ambition was to get on the first s.h.i.+p sailing for the United States. The idea of Belgian relief, or of feeding starving people anywhere, had never occurred to him. At this moment an American, Mr. Millard K. Shaler, came from Brussels and gave the most harrowing account of conditions in Belgium. Mr. Hoover took Mr.
Shaler to Page, who immediately became sympathetic. The Amba.s.sador arranged an interview between Mr. Hoover and Sir Edward Grey, who likewise showed great interest and promised government support. Soon afterward three Belgians arrived and described the situation as immediately alarming: Brussels had only food enough to feed the people for thirty-six hours; after that, unless help were forthcoming, the greatest distress would set in. Five men--Page, the three Belgians, and Mr. Hoover--at once got together at the American Emba.s.sy. Upon the result of that meeting hung the fate of millions of people. Who before had ever undertaken a scheme for feeding an entire nation for an indefinite period? That there were great obstacles in the way all five men knew; the British Admiralty in particular were strongly opposed; there was a fear that the food, if it could be acquired and sent to Belgium, would find its way to the German Army. Unless the British Government could be persuaded that this could be prevented, the enterprise would fail at the start. How could it be done?
”There is only one way,” said Page. ”Some government must give its guarantee that this food will get to the Belgian people.” ”And, of course,” he added, ”there is only one government that can do that. It must be the American Government.”
Mr. Hoover pointed out that any such guarantee involved the management of transportation; only by controlling the railroads could the American Government make sure that this food would reach its destination.
And that, added Page, involved a director--some one man who could take charge of the whole enterprise. Who should it be?
Then Page turned quickly to the young American.
”Hoover, you're It!”
Mr. Hoover made no reply; he neither accepted nor rejected the proposal.
He merely glanced at the clock, then got up and silently left the room.
In a few minutes he returned and entered again into the discussion.
”Hoover, why did you get up and leave us so abruptly?” asked Page, a little puzzled over this behaviour.
”I saw by the clock,” came the answer--and it was a story that Page was fond of telling, as ill.u.s.trating the rapidity with which Mr. Hoover worked--”that there was an hour left before the Exchange closed in New York. So I went out and cabled, buying several millions of bushels of wheat--for the Belgians, of course.”
For what is usually known as ”society” Page had little inclination. Yet for social intercourse on a more genuine plane he had real gifts. Had he enjoyed better health, week ends in the country would have afforded him welcome entertainment. He also liked dinner parties but indulged in them very moderately. He was a member of many London clubs but he seldom visited any of them. There were a number of organizations, however, which he regularly attended. The Society of Dilettanti, a company of distinguished men interested in promoting the arts and improving the public taste, which has been continuously in existence since 1736, enrolling in each generation the greatest painters and writers of the time, elected Page to members.h.i.+p. He greatly enjoyed its dinners in the Banquet Hall of the Grafton Gallery. ”Last night,” he writes, describing his initial appearance, ”I attended my first Dilettanti dinner and was inducted, much as a new Peer is inducted into the House of Lords. Lord Mersey in the chair--in a red robe. These gay old dogs have had a fine time of it for nearly 200 years--good wine, high food, fine satisfaction. The oldest dining society in the Kingdom. The blue blood old Briton has the art of enjoying himself reduced to a very fine point indeed.” Another gathering whose meetings he seldom missed was that of the Kinsmen, an informal club of literary men who met occasionally for food and converse in the Trocadero Restaurant. Here Page would meet such congenial souls as Sir James Barrie and Sir Arthur Pinero, all of whom retain lively memories of Page at these gatherings. ”He was one of the most lovable characters I have ever had the good fortune to encounter,”
says Sir Arthur Pinero, recalling these occasions. ”In what special quality or qualities lay the secret of his charm and influence? Surely in his simplicity and transparent honesty, and in the possession of a disposition which, without the smallest loss of dignity, was responsive and affectionate. Distinguished American Amba.s.sadors will come and go, and will in their turn win esteem and admiration. But none, I venture to say, will efface the recollection of Walter Page from the minds of those who were privileged to gain his friends.h.i.+p.”
One aspect of Page that remains fixed in the memory of his a.s.sociates is his unwearied industry with the pen. His official communications and his ordinary correspondence Page dictated; but his personal letters he wrote with his own hand. He himself deplored the stenographer as a deterrent to good writing; the habit of dictating, he argued, led to wordiness and general looseness of thought. Practically all the letters published in these volumes were therefore the painstaking work of Page's own pen. His handwriting was so beautiful and clear that, in his editorial days, the printers much preferred it as ”copy” to typewritten matter. This habit is especially surprising in view of the Amba.s.sador's enormous epistolary output. It must be remembered that the letters included in the present book are only a selection from the vast number that he wrote during his five years in England; many of these letters fill twenty and thirty pages of script; the labour involved in turning them out; day after day, seems fairly astounding. Yet with Page this was a labour of love. All through his Amba.s.sadors.h.i.+p he seemed hardly contented unless he had a pen in his hand. As his secretaries would glance into his room, there they would see the Amba.s.sador bending over his desk-writing, writing, eternally writing; sometimes he would call them in, and read what he had written, never hesitating to tear up the paper if their unfavourable criticisms seemed to him well taken. The Amba.s.sador kept a desk also in his bedroom, and here his most important correspondence was attended to.
Page's all-night self-communings before his wood fire have already been described, and he had another nocturnal occupation that was similarly absorbing. Many a night, after returning late from his office or from dinner, he would put on his dressing gown, sit at his bedroom desk, and start pouring forth his inmost thoughts in letters to the President, Colonel House, or some other correspondent. His pen flew over the paper with the utmost rapidity and the Amba.s.sador would sometimes keep at his writing until two or three o'clock in the morning. There is a frequently expressed fear that letter writing is an art of the past; that the intervention of the stenographer has destroyed its spontaneity; yet it is evident that in Page the present generation has a letter writer of the old-fas.h.i.+oned kind, for he did all his writing with his own hand and under circ.u.mstances that would a.s.sure the utmost freshness and vividness to the result.
An occasional game of golf, which he played badly, a trip now and then to rural England--these were Page's only relaxations from his duties.
Though he was not especially fond of leaving his own house, he was always delighted when visitors came to him. And the American Emba.s.sy, during the five years from 1913 to 1918, extended a hospitality which was fittingly democratic in its quality but which gradually drew within its doors all that was finest in the intellect and character of England. Page himself attributed the popularity of his house to his wife. Mrs. Page certainly embodied the traits most desirable in the Amba.s.sadress of a great Republic. A woman of cultivation, a tireless reader, a close observer of people and events and a shrewd commentator upon them, she also had an un.o.btrusive dignity, a penetrating sympathy, and a capacity for human a.s.sociation, which, while more restrained and more placid than that of her husband, made her a helpful companion for a sorely burdened man. The American Emba.s.sy under Mr. and Mrs. Page was not one of London's smart houses as that word is commonly understood in this great capital. But No. 6 Grosvenor Square, in the s.p.a.ciousness of its rooms, the simple beauty of its furnis.h.i.+ngs, and especially in its complete absence of ostentation, made it the worthy abiding place of an American Amba.s.sador. And the people who congregated there were precisely the kind that appeal to the educated American. ”I didn't know I was getting into an a.s.sembly of immortals,” exclaimed Mr. Hugh Wallace, when he dropped in one Thursday afternoon for tea, and found himself foregathered with Sir Edward Grey, Henry James, John Sargent, and other men of the same type. It was this kind of person who most naturally gravitated to the Page establishment, not the ultra-fas.h.i.+onable, the merely rich, or the many t.i.tled. The formal functions which the position demanded the Pages scrupulously gave; but the affairs which Page most enjoyed and which have left the most lasting remembrances upon his guests were the informal meetings with his chosen favourites, for the most part literary men. Here Page's sheer brilliancy of conversation showed at its best. Lord Bryce, Sir John Simon, John Morley, the inevitable companions, Henry James and John Sargent--”What things have I seen done at the Mermaid”; and certainly these gatherings of wits and savants furnished as near an approach to its Elizabethan prototype as London could then present.
Besides his official activities Page performed great services to the two countries by his speeches. The demands of this kind on an American Amba.s.sador are always numerous, but Page's position was an exceptional one; it was his fortune to represent America at a time when his own country and Great Britain were allies in a great war. He could therefore have spent practically all his time in speaking had he been so disposed.
Of the hundreds of invitations received he was able to accept only a few, but most of these occasions became memorable ones. In any spectacular sense Page was not an orator; he rather despised the grand manner, with its flourishes and its tricks; the name of public speaker probably best describes his talents on the platform. Here his style was earnest and conversational: his speech flowed with the utmost readiness; it was invariably quiet and restrained; he was never aiming at big effects, but his words always went home. Of the series of speeches that stand to his credit in England probably the one that will be longest remembered is that delivered at Plymouth on August 4, 1917, the third anniversary of the war. This not only reviewed the common history of the two nations for three hundred years, and suggested a programme for making the bonds tighter yet, but it brought the British public practical a.s.surances as to America's intentions in the conflict. Up to that time there had been much vagueness and doubt; no official voice had spoken the clear word for the United States; the British public did not know what to expect from their kinsmen overseas. But after Page's Plymouth speech the people of Great Britain looked forward with complete confidence to the cooperation of the two countries and to the inevitable triumph of this cooperation.
_To Arthur W. Page_