“Let men go into concealment again. Nature gave us a natural ambush but we came out of it. And look where we are!” So Greg and Jim let their beards grow long.
By Gregory Clark, Illustrated by James Frise, January 21, 1939.
“You haven’t shaved this morning,” observed Jimmie Frise.
“I have some kind of frost-bite,” I explained, “here on the corner of my chin.”
“I bet you’d be a handsome little coot, with a square red beard,” admired Jimmie.
“It would accentuate my shortness,” I replied. “Only tall men should wear beards.”
“You’re mistaken,” stated Jim. “A little man could add tremendously to his prestige with a good big beard. A tall man doesn’t need a beard. A little man does.”
“In the army,” I recollected, “I often thought of growing a beard. We used to be sometimes a week or more without a chance to shave, and I’d have the grandest red stubble all over my face. I looked like one of the 12 apostles.”
“Judas, likely,” commented Jim.
“But the army regulations,” I went on, “forbade beards. Moustaches were encouraged.”
“It’s a long time since beards were really in fashion,” remarked Jim.
“Yes, and there is reason to believe that the world has gone to pot partly on account of the disappearance of beards,” I stated.
“It’s as good a reason as many another I’ve heard,” admitted Jim.
“As a matter of fact, it’s a better explanation of the world’s confusion,” I declared. “We always look for deep, hidden causes, when the real cause is probably right on the surface. Why did men cut off their beards, to begin with?”
“To please the ladies, I imagine,” said Jim. “What lady would like to have a huge beard stuck in her face every time Pappy wanted a kiss?”
“To please the ladies,” I repeated darkly. “I believe that was it. A thousand years ago, a beard, I imagine, was a fairly unsanitary appendage. There would be soup in it, and wassail and perhaps even a few smaller chicken bones and things caught in it.”
“Don’t forget,” said Jim, “the Romans shaved. All the statues of Caesar and the great emperors show clean-shaven men.”
“Pshaw,” I cried, “three thousand years before the Romans, the Egyptians were clean- shaven. A thousand years still further the other side of the Caesars than we are from them, men shaved.”
“Did they have razors that long ago?” asked Jim.
“Funny looking tools, too,” I said. “You can see pictures of Egyptian razors1 in the encyclopaedia. They look like a little hatchet, only all four sides of the blade were sharpened. They were bronze, and brought to at high degree of sharpness. The four or five edges were used for getting in around the corners and curves of the chin. In some ways, an Egyptian razor of the year 3,000 B.C., that is, 5,000 years ago, is better designed than the finest razors of today.”
“Well, look at Egypt,” said Jim, “just a few pyramids and pillars dug from the dust of ages. That shows you what happens to a nation when its men shave.”
“You’re right,” I agreed. “The first trouble about shaving is, that a man reveals his true character when he reveals his countenance. Behind a beard, a man could hide such weaknesses as tenderness, sympathy, humor. A man could go about the business of creating and defending an empire when his face was hidden in a beard. But the minute he shaved, all his native humanity showed and could be appealed to by his victims.”
Beards Used to Be Holy
“In the great old days,” said Jim, “beards used to be holy. Men used to swear by their beards.”
“Don’t you remember in the Bible,” I asked, “where David’s ambassadors to the enemy are humiliated by having half their beards shaved off, and David sent them the message. ‘Tarry at Jericho until your beards be grown’2?”
“Why don’t you grow a beard?” cried Jim, suddenly. “You’d have a dandy in two weeks, at the rate you show this morning.”
“It’s too late,” I pointed out. “Everybody knows my character now. My family, my friends, the office, everybody. They’ve seen my face. I am exposed. But if I ever move to another community. I’ll sure grow a beard so that nobody will ever know my true character again and, boy, will I make hay while the sun shines!”
“I’ll grow a beard if you will,” stated Jim, very concentrated.
“What’s the idea?” I demanded.
“To change our luck,” said Jim. “And maybe we could start a fashion and change the luck of the world.”
“Beards have come and beards have gone.” I informed him, “all across the history of the world. The ancient Egyptians shaved, but the Assyrian and Babylonian kings grew great beards which they oiled and curled and braided with gold wire.”
“Gold wire?” said Jim. “What a mess!”
“Oh, don’t feel so superior,” I declared. “Henry the Eighth, who was one of our craftiest and most useful kings, had his beard knotted.”
“Knotted?” gasped Jim.
“Yes, sir.” I informed him. “His barber, instead of shaving him, had to come every few days and tie little knots in the beard to take up the slack. So Henry’s beard was a beautiful little snug mass of knotted hair close up against his chin.”
“Ugh,” said Jim.
“In British history,” I enlightened, “beards came with the thoughtful kings and vanished with the battlers. The Richards were clean shaven or with mere tufts, but the Edwards were bearded. The battling Henrys wore no beards at all, or else little forked or tufted beards, fancily designed: but the thoughtful and scheming Henrys wore beards. Edward, the famous Confessor, wore a forked beard down to his girdle.”
“I suppose,” said Jim, “if you had a long beard to stroke reflectively, you would be a reflective man.”
“Correct,” I said. “We are reflective or not reflective, depending on our little habits, not our big ones. Queen Elizabeth had an ambassador named George Killingworth who had a beard five feet long.”
“Good grief,” said Jim.
“Well, you see, a bare-faced queen could not very well impress foreign powers,” I submitted. “But when her ambassador walked into the foreign court behind a colossal bunch of whiskers five feet long, by golly, the political disadvantage of a queen was balanced.”
“The more I think of it,” reflected Jim, “the more I believe there is something to beards. The late King George had a beard and Britain was a power all over the world. And the minute he died, we’ve been getting into one jam after another.”
“Look what Hitler can do,” I pointed out, “on just the least little moustache.”
A Natural Ambush
“The women,” announced Jim, “have had their way long enough. It’s time we began to take stock and put them back where they belong. The emancipation of women may be a very noble idea, but not at the price of world confusion and possible disaster. Delilah the world over, that’s what it is. Just to get a smooth kiss instead of a prickly one, women have sold out the power and strength of mankind.”
“You said it,” I agreed, rubbing my stubble, which was itchy.
“Open diplomacy, openly arrived at, to heck with it,” cried Jim. “Let men go into concealment again. Let us adopt a universal poker face. Let us get into ambush once more. Nature gave us a natural ambush, and we came out of hiding by choice, at the soft, cooing request of women. And look where we are!”
“It’s not easy to grow a beard,” I pointed out. “It takes a long time to get it out far enough to be manageable. And it’s awfully itchy for the first few weeks.”
“If you have no strength of character left,” declared Jim, leaping up, “very well, give way before the smiles of your friends, surrender to the astonished looks of strangers on the street.”
“I’m one day ahead of you, anyway,” I retorted, sticking out my chin resolutely.
“We’re just like everybody else,” said Jim, “we take the easiest way. Is nobody ever going to get his back up? Are we going to drift and drift, instead of grabbing hold of some reality, even if it is only whiskers?”
“Are you serious, Jim?” I demanded. “Do you mean it?”
“All our leaders,” said Jim solemnly, “plead and beg us to seize hold of democracy or justice or some other abstract thing that can’t be grabbed hold of, any more than the wind can be grabbed hold of. I’m tired of all this exhortation. I’m going to take my stand for mankind before it is too late, and I’m going to take my stand in some small, tangible way. First, I’ll grow a beard. And from there, the next step will be easy. I don’t know what it is, but at least I will have made a start. Freedom is at stake. Why? Because we have surrendered in little things, until, like sand slipping from under us, all things are surrendered.”
“What can one beard do?” I asked.
“Two beards, you mean,” said Jim.
So, it being Friday, we had the week-end to get things started. It caused a little trouble at home, especially for Jim; but he invented some pimples on his face as his excuse. And on the street, Sunday afternoon, when I called on Jim to go for a little walk, we met neighbors who did not conceal their astonishment and amusement, depending on how well they knew us.
One neighbor condoled with us, thinking we were ill.
“You look like a couple of galloping declines,” he said.
Jim’s beard, despite his white hair, came out nice and black, but was spotty. It grew in patches, as it were. At a little distance, it did give him a scabby look.
Mine, on the other hand, came out a sort of brindled gray and brown, with a tinge of red in it. The hairs, instead of growing out stiff and straight, like Jim’s, curled, and I had feeling that the tip of each hair was movable, and kept up a constant little tickling all the time. The frost-bite was all better, and I was able to do a little comforting scratching, but scratching seemed only to make more flexible the little curled ends, and they tickled all the more.
Monday morning, we drove down together to the office real early, not because we were afraid to arrive with the crowds, but because we really had some work to catch up on.
“And I never felt work slide so easily under me,” said Jim, about 11 o’clock. “I have a feeling of strength and determination that I never experienced before. I bet shaving takes a lot out of a man.”
“Naturally,” I explained. “It is the instinct of hair to want to grow. You can’t simply speak to your hair and tell it you don’t want it. Naturally, also, hair consumes energy out of your system, in order to grow. So here are our beards, year after year, desperately trying to do their duty. The more we cut them, the harder they struggle to perform their function. Beards were provided by nature to protect our chins and throats. So when our beard cells feel the cold, after shaving, they try all the harder. As soon as we quit shaving, even to this small extent, the slower our beards will grow and the less they will consume of our energy.”
“In other words,” said Jim, dashing off cartoons at a terrific speed, “when we get real good beards we’ll feel ten times the energy we feel this morning.”
“It stands to reason,” I agreed.
Braving the Public Eye
“Boy,” breathed Jim, filling his lungs. “I shave every day. Each day I cut off, say, one-16th inch of beard. Let’s see. One inch every 16 days. Two inches a month. I have been shaving since I was about 20. That means, mumble, mumble, times mumble, divided mumble, mumble; that means I have shaved off 60 feet of whiskers from my chin, or a beard 20 yards long! No wonder I’ve felt debilitated this last 15 years.”
“It’s a tremendous waste of energy,” I submitted. “It’s a wonder modern industry with its scientific attention to all phases of efficiency, hasn’t refused to hire any but bearded help for the past 20 years.”
So we agreed and conversed, until lunch time, and went forth to brave the public eye, which is the hardest part of growing whiskers. Fortunately it was storming and we were able to bury our chins in our mufflers and bow our heads to the blizzard. We decided to steer clear of our usual lunching place, not because we were afraid, but because of the time it would take explaining to waitresses and the manager, who is always keen about the health of his customers.
“Don’t let’s get into any of the big noisy places,” I suggested. “Let’s try one of these quiet little restaurants.”
So, after looking in the windows of three or four of the little hole-in-the-wall places, we selected one which had plenty of men in it.
As we entered, the proprietor, a Greek gentleman, was standing at the cash register and he looked at us narrowly. We smiled easily at him.
We walked down the narrow cafe and selected a table and took off our mufflers and coats, revealing ourselves brazenly.
The proprietor came walking down after us and stopped to have a good look.
“Not here,” he said, laying his hand on the back of Jimmie’s chair and starting to pull it.
“What’s that?” I demanded indignantly.
But it is difficult to look properly indignant with only stubble. With a beard, yes. You can look very indignant, because nobody can see how nervous your mouth may be.
“Not here,” said the proprietor. “Scram. We don’t serve bums.”
“What are you talking about?” stated Jim, quietly. “How dare you call us bums?”
“Look,” said the proprietor, gesturing with his open hand first at my face and then at Jim’s.
I reached into my pocket and hauled out a handful of silver and displayed it before the proprietor’s eye.
“Good pickings today, huh?” said the proprietor. “Never so, scram. No bums. It ruins my business.”
We heard a sort of quiet and glanced around the little restaurant, where a lot of earnest-looking people, the kind who eat in little places, were all paused in their eating, looking at us with obvious lack of sympathy, if not distaste.
“Quick,” said the proprietor. “No bums. Sorry. I got to think for my business.”
He rattled the chair under me, decisively.
“Just a minute,” I began.
But Jim rose abruptly from his chair, snatched his coat and muffler and started for the door.
I followed.
“So,” I said, as we emerged into the storm, “so you hadn’t even the courage to face it out.”
“As a matter of fact,” said Jim, “you do look like a bum.”
“If you want any comparisons,” I retorted, “you might take a look at your own face, all blotchy and scrofulous looking.”
We didn’t say any more, but hurried back along King St. and into a barber shop and had a quick shave, with hot towels and witch hazel, and then went and ate at our usual place, amongst our own bare-faced and cowardly kind.
Editor’s Notes:
- A sample can be seen here. ↩︎
- From 2 Samuel 10:5. ↩︎