(a) Trafalgar Square with the pigeons, (b) in St Mark's Square, Venice,
with the pigeons and (c) in front of the Arc de Triomphe, in Paris,
without pigeons. The idea is simply to collect documentary proof that
they have been there. The German travels to check up on his guide-
books: when he sees that the Ponte di Rial to is really at its proper
venue, that the Leaning Tower is in its appointed place in Pisa and is
leaning at the promised -angle — he ticks these things off in his guide-
book and returns home with the gratifying feeling that he has not been
swindled. But why do the English travel?
First, because their neighbour does and they have caught the bug
1
from him. Secondly, they used to be taught that travel broadens the mind
133
and although they have by now discovered the sad truth that
whatever travel may do to the mind, Swiss or German food
certainly broadens other parts of the body, the old notion still
lingers on.
2
But lastly — and perhaps mainly — they travel to
avoid foreigners. Here, in our cosmopolitan England, one is
always exposed to the danger of meeting all sorts of peculiar
aliens. Not so on one's journeys in Europe, if one manages
things intelligently. I know many English peop le who travel in
groups, stay in hotels where even the staff is English, eat roast
beef and Yorkshire pudding on Sundays and Welsh rarebit
3
and
steak-and-kidney pudding
on weekdays, all over Europe. The
main aim of the Englishman abroad is to meet people , I mean,
of course, nice English people from next door or from the next
street. Normally one avoids one's neighbour ('It is best to keep
yourself to yourself, 'We leave others alone and want to be left
alone', etc., etc.). If you meet your next door neighb our in the
High Street or at your front door you pretend not to see him or,
at best, nod coolly, but if you meet him in Capri or Granada,
you embrace him fondly and stand him a drink
4
or two, and
you may even discover that he is quite a nice chap after all and
both of you might just as well have stayed at home in Chip ping
Norton.
All this, however, refers to travelling for the general pub -
lic. If you want to avoid giving the unfortunate impression that
you belong to the lower-middle class, you must learn the
elementary snobbery o f travelling:
1) Avoid any place frequented by others. Declare: all the
hotels are full, one cannot get in anywhere. (No one will ever
remark: hotels are
full of people who actually managed to get in.)
2) Carry this a stage further and try to avoid all places
interesting enough to attract other people — or, as others
prefer to put it — you must get off the beaten track. In practice
this means that in Italy you avoid Venice and Flor ence but
visit a few filthy and poverty -stricken fishing villages no one
has ever heard of, and if your misfortune does take you to
Florence, you avoid the Uffizi Gallery and refuse to look at
Michelangelo's
David. You visit, instead, a dirty little pub on
the outskirts where Tuscan food is supposed to be divi ne and
where you can listen to a drunken and deaf accordion player.
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3) The main problem is, of course,
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