TO MY FRIENDS ALL OVER THE WORLD
MY PUBLISHERS tell me that I must
write a Foreword to this book of my life. As I have put everything into
the volume that I think is worth telling about myself, my forty years in
the glare of the footlights, and my experiences in many lands, I am at
some loss just what to say here. Yet there are one or two observations
which I feel I must make even if they strike, for me at least, a very sad
note. I had more than half-finished "Roamin' In The Gloamin'" when my dear
wife was suddenly taken from me. The blow left me prostrate for many
weeks; I was like a man "in a dwam," as we say in Scotland. Nance had
meant so much to me. She was not only my wife—she was my inspiration and
my guiding star. She had as much to do with my success as I had myself.
She was my constant and loving companion on more than half a million miles
of world wanderings. She was proud of me and I worshipped her.
A month
or two after she was laid to rest in the Highland glen near our old home
in Argyllshire I remembered that she had been looking forward very much to
the publication of this book and I determined to go ahead and do my best
to finish it. This task gradually brought me back to something like an
even keel. But I simply could not bring myself to make any reference to
Lady Lauder's death; I continued the book in the same strain as I had
started it and wrote as if she were still with me, watching over, guiding,
and encouraging me. Otherwise I do not think I could ever have completed
this story of my life. For she was—' and still is—part and parcel of it.
Another thing I would like to say is that I have been blessed with some
great friendships. I do not think I have ever been what is called an "easy
man to get on with." In my heart of hearts I am
really very shy, perhaps a bit quick in the temper, perhaps, also, too
much inclined to "keep myself to myself"—in other words, slow to make
friends and rather a difficult man to understand. It is all the greater
joy to me, therefore, to know that I have succeeded in winning the sincere
affection of many good fellows at home, in America, and in the dominions
over the seas. Several of these I must mention by name.
If there is another such as Tom
Valiance anywhere else in the world the man who claims him as manager,
secretary, valet, and interesting companion over a period of thirty-five
years is indeed a lucky person! You, Tom, have been a partner in Harry
Lauder, Limited (strictly limited!) all these years! You have travelled to
the ends of the earth with me and have never once missed a train or a
steamer or been late for an "entrance." You are as faithful and loyal to
me as your dear sister Nance was, and I can say no more than that. Without
you I would be like a fish out of water. And you've had a lot to put up
with, mind I'm tellin' you! When, if ever, you throw your hand in, Tom,
I'll just creep awa' to ma bed and die!
Will Morris! The greatest, the
straightest, and the gamest Jew I have ever met. For twenty years we have
worked together in America, Will, and I never knew you do a mean or a
petty action. I'll tell the world that your word is ten times better than
your bond! No contracts in writing are necessary after Will Morris blinks
his eyes and says, "Yep, I agree!" I suppose, my dear Will, you have made
far more money out of me than I have out of you but we'll cry quits with
the remark that if you had a gold mine to work in Harry Lauder he had a
veritable Bonanza in his American manager.
And "Ted" Carroll. The man who
"put me over" in Australia, South Africa, and in a hundred cities "east of
Suez." The gentlest creature in trousers I have ever met - genuine to the
core and shrewd with an exceeding great shrewdness in all stage business
and theatrical ventures. The name of E. J. Carroll is honoured all over
the world among men who appreciate simplicity of bearing, level dealing,
and high personal character. He has a very secure corner in the heart of
Harry Lauder.
If
I have mentioned these three men first it is because they have been
intimately associated with my professional career over a long period of
years and because I have been in close touch with them continually. But
there are other friendships of an intimate and personal nature which I
have come to value even more highly since Fate robbed me first of my son
and then my wife. My brother Alec and his family have meant more to me of
late than I can find words to express. Greta, his daughter, has joined the
little household at Dunoon, and only her, sweet presence makes Laudervale
—place of delightful ghosts and fragrant memories—still habitable for her
lonely old uncle.
Then there is Donald Munro, that brawny son of Dee-
side whom I have loved as a brother for over thirty years, who fishes with
me, golfs with me, and rambles over the heather with me, whose wife knits
me socks and woollies and scarves and neither counts trouble nor cost if
it is for her one-time brother artiste of the concert platform. May Donald
and his wife live for ever! And may he still be Provost of Banchory when
it absorbs the neighbouring town of Aberdeen!
Other names which may mean
comparatively little to most people but which stand ace-high with me are
those of "Wullie" Thomson of Glasgow, Col. Duncan F. Neill Keills of
Argyllshire—the man who has sailed Sir Thomas Lipton's yachts for years
and knows more about big yachting than any amateur in the world—"Bob"
Thomson of Peckham, whose daughter Mildred would have been my son's wife
had the war not claimed him a willing victim, "Willie" Cochrane of
Manchester, Duncan MacDonald of Invercargill, New Zealand, and that
wonderful pair of Caledonian enthusiasts in New York, Colonel Walter
Scott, head of Butler Brothers in Broadway, and Duncan McInnes, who
occupies a trustworthy position under the municipality of that great city.
I have left my very dear old
friend and chum, William Blackwood, to the last because somehow I always
feel that he is in a special class all by himself. He has been chief of my
unpaid personal staff for more than twenty years; he and his wife have
been the kindest of hosts to me and mine since ever they set up house
together. Blackwood knows every detail of my life and career—in fact he
knows so much about me that the following pages are full of stories and
incidents which I would never have written had he not recalled them to my
memory and urged that they were worth the telling. Indeed, I am free to
confess that without his expert and gladly given services over many months
this volume might never have been written at all!
HARRY LAUDER |