Walking-Stick Papers | Page 2

Robert Cortes Holliday
has ever been the symbol of a
superior caste.
A man cannot do manual labour carrying a cane. And it would be a
moral impossibility for one of servile state--a butler, for instance, or a
ticket-chopper--to present himself in the role of his occupation
ornamented with a cane. One held in custody would not be permitted to

appear before a magistrate flaunting a cane. Until the stigma which
attaches to his position may be erased he would be shorn of this mark
of nobility, the cane.
Canes are now carried mostly by the very youthful and the very aged,
the powerful, the distinguished, the patrician, the self-important, and
those who fancy to exalt themselves. Some, to whom this privilege is
denied during the week by their fear of adverse public opinion, carry
canes only on Sundays and holidays. By this it is shown that on these
days they are their own masters.
Custom as to carrying canes varies widely in different parts of the
world; but it may be taken as a general maxim that the farther west you
go the less you see of canes. The instinct for carrying a cane is more
natural in old civilisations, where the tradition is of ancient growth,
than in newer ones, where frequently a cane is regarded as the sign of
an effete character. As we have been saying, canes, we all feel, have an
affinity with the idea of an aristocracy. If you do not admit that the idea
of an aristocracy is a good one, then doubtless you are down on canes.
It is interesting to observe that canes have flourished at all especially
chivalrous periods and in all especially chivalrous communities. No
illustrator would portray a young planter of the Old South without his
cane; and that fragrant old-school figure, a southern "Colonel," without
his cane is inconceivable. Canes connote more or less leisure. They
convey a subtle insinuation of some degree of culture.
They always are a familiar article of a gentleman's dress in warm
climates. The cane, quite strictly speaking, in fact has its origin in
warm countries. For properly speaking, the word cane should be
restricted in its application to a peculiar class of palms, known as ratans,
included under the closely allied genera Calamus and Daemonorops, of
which there are a large number of species. These plants, the
Encyclopedia tells us, are found widely extended throughout the islands
of the Indian Archipelago, the Malay Peninsula, China, India and
Ceylon; and examples have also been found in Australia and Africa.
The learned Rumphius describes them, under the name of Palmijunci,
as inhabitants of dense forests into which the rays of the sun scarce can

penetrate, where they form spiny bushes, obstructing the passage
through the jungle. They rise to the top of the tallest trees and fall again
so as to resemble a great length of cable, adorned, however, with the
most beautiful leaves, pinnated or terminating in graceful tendrils. The
plants creep or trail along to an enormous length, sometimes, it is said,
reaching five hundred feet. Two examples of Calamus verus,
measuring respectively two hundred and seventy feet and two hundred
and thirty feet, were exhibited in the Paris exhibition of 1855.
The well-known Malacca canes are obtained from Calamus Scipionum,
the stems of which are much stouter than is the case with the average
species of Calamus. Doubtless to the vulgar a Malacca cane is merely a
Malacca cane. There are, however, in this interesting world choice
spirits who make a cult of Malacca canes, just as some dog fanciers are
devotees of the Airedale terrier. Such as these know that inferior
Malacca canes are, as the term in the cane trade is, "shaved"; that is, not
being of the circumference most coveted, but too thick, they have been
whittled down in bulk. A prime Malacca cane is, of course, a natural
stem, and it is a nice point to have a slight irregularity in its symmetry
as evidence of this. The delicious spotting of a Malacca cane is due to
the action of the sun upon it in drying. As the stems are dried in
sheaves, those most richly splotched are the ones that have been at the
outside of the bundle. What new strength to meet life's troubles, what
electric expansion of soul, come to the initiated upon the feel of the
vertebra of his Malacca cane!
The name of cane is also applied to many plants besides the Calamus,
which are possessed of long, slender, reed-like stalks or stems, as, for
instance, the sugar-cane, or the reed-cane. From the use as
walking-sticks to which many of these plants have been applied, the
name cane has been given generally to "sticks" irrespective of the
source from which they are derived.
Our distinguished grandfathers
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