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    to a sedentary
    person like myself. The horse, a dangerous animal whom, when I
    cannot avoid, I propitiate with apples and sugar, he bestrides and
    dominates fearlessly, yet with a true republican sense of the
    rights of the fourlegged fellowcreature whose martyrdom, and man's
    shame therein, he has told most powerfully in his Calvary, a tale
    with an edge that will cut the soft cruel hearts and strike fire
    from the hard kind ones. He handles the other lethal weapons as
    familiarly as the pen: medieval sword and modern Mauser are to him
    as umbrellas and kodaks are to me. His tales of adventure have the
    true Cervantes touch of the man who has been there--so
    refreshingly different from the scenes imagined by bloody-minded
    clerks who escape from their servitude into literature to tell us
    how men and cities are conceived in the counting house and the
    volunteer corps. He is, I understand, a Spanish hidalgo: hence the
    superbity of his portrait by Lavery (Velasquez being no longer
    available). He is, I know, a Scotch laird. How he contrives to be
    authentically the two things at the same time is no more
    intelligible to me than the fact that everything that has ever
    happened to him seems to have happened in Paraguay or Texas
    instead of in Spain or Scotland. He is, I regret to add, an
    impenitent and unashamed dandy: such boots, such a hat, would have
    dazzled D'Orsay himself. With that hat he once saluted me in
    Regent St. when I was walking with my mother. Her interest was
    instantly kindled; and the following conversation ensued. "Who is
    that?" "Cunninghame Graham." "Nonsense! Cunninghame Graham is one
    of your Socialists: that man is a gentleman." This is the
    punishment of vanity, a fault I have myself always avoided, as I
    find conceit less troublesome and much less expensive. Later on
    somebody told him of Tarudant, a city in Morocco in which no
    Christian had ever set foot. Concluding at once that it must be an
    exceptionally desirable place to live in, he took ship and horse:
    changed the hat for a turban; and made straight for the sacred
    city, via Mogador. How he fared, and how he fell into the hands of
    the Cadi of Kintafi, who rightly held that there was more danger
    to Islam in one Cunninghame Graham than in a thousand Christians,
    may be learnt from his account of it in Mogreb-el-Acksa, without

    which Captain Brassbound's Conversion would never have been
    written.

    I am equally guiltless of any exercise of invention concerning the
    story of the West Indian estate which so very nearly serves as a
    peg to hang Captain Brassbound. To Mr. Frederick Jackson of
    Hindhead, who, against all his principles, encourages and abets me
    in my career as a dramatist, I owe my knowledge of those main
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