Page:Out-door Games Cricket and Golf (1901).djvu/233

194 and not have feelings of scorn for the golfer who has allowed every absurd fad to take such possession of him that he is a slave to them, and an annoyance to himself and a nuisance to his fellow-creatures. But I suppose such things will always be. One bit of advice may finish this chapter—let faddists play each other and leave the non-faddists to enjoy their game in their own way.