It was a pleasure to meet, even when
they had nothing to say, and the two men had stopped
to talk.
“Still in London, Rodney.”
“Yes, till the end of the week;
and then I go to Italy. And you? You’re
going to meet Sir Owen Asher at Marseilles.”
“I am going to Ireland,”
and, catching sight of a look of astonishment and
disapproval on Rodney’s face, Harding began to
explain why he must return to Ireland.
“The rest of your life is quite
clear,” said Rodney. “You knew from
the beginning that Paris was the source of all art,
that everyone here who is more distinguished than
the others has been to Paris. We go to Paris
with baskets on our backs, and sticks in our hands,
and bring back what we can pick up. And having
lived immersed in art till you’re forty, you
return to the Catholic Celt! Your biographer will
be puzzled to explain this last episode, and, however
he may explain it, it will seem a discrepancy.”
“I suppose one should think of one’s biographer.”
“It will be more like yourself
to get Asher to land you at one of the Italian ports.
We will go to Perugia and see Raphael’s first
frescoes, done when he was sixteen, and the town itself
climbing down into ravines. The streets are lonely
at midday, but towards evening a breeze blows up from
both seas Italy is very narrow there and
the people begin to come out; and from the battlements
one sees the lights of Assisi glimmering through the
dusk.”
“I may never see Italy.
Go on talking. I like to hear you talk about
Italy.”
“There are more beautiful things
in Italy than in the rest of the world put together,
and there is nothing so beautiful as Italy. Just
fancy a man like you never having seen the Campagna.
I remember opening my shutters one morning in August
at Frascati. The poisonous mists lay like clouds,
but the sun came out and shone through them, and the
wind drove them before it, and every moment a hill
appeared, and the great aqueducts, and the tombs,
and the wild grasses at the edge of the tombs waving
feverishly; and here and there a pine, or group of
pines with tufted heads, like Turner used to draw....
The plain itself is so shapely. Rome lies like
a little dot in the middle of it, and it is littered
with ruins. The great tomb of Cecilia Metella
is there, built out of blocks of stone as big as an
ordinary room. He must have loved her very much
to raise such a tomb to her memory, and she must have
been a wonderful woman.” Rodney paused a
moment and then he said: “The walls of
the tombs are let in with sculpture, and there are
seats for wayfarers, and they will last as long as
the world, they are ever-lasting.”
“Of one thing I’m sure,”
said Harding. “I must get out of London.
I can’t bear its ugliness any longer.”
The two men crossed Piccadilly, and
Harding told Rodney Asher’s reason for leaving
London.
“He says he is subject to nightmares,
and lately he has been waking up in the middle of
the night thinking that London and Liverpool had joined.
Asher is right. No town ought to be more than
fifty miles long. I like your description of
Perugia. Every town should be walled round, now
we trail into endless suburbs.”
“But the Green Park is beautiful,
and these evening distances!”
“Never mind the Green Park;
come and have a cup of tea. Asher has bought
a new picture. I’d like to show it to you.
But,” said Harding, “I forgot to tell
you that I met your model.”
“Lucy Delaney? Where?”
“Here, I met her here,”
said Harding, and he took Rodney’s arm so that
he might be able to talk to him more easily. “One
evening, a week ago, I was loitering, just as I was
loitering to-day, and it was at the very door of St.
James’s Hotel that she spoke to me.”
“How did she get to London?
and I didn’t know that you knew her.”
“A girl came up suddenly and
asked me the way to the Gaiety Theatre, and I told
her, adding, however, that the Gaiety Theatre was closed.
‘What shall I do?’ I heard her say, and
she walked on; I hesitated and then walked after her.
‘I beg your pardon,’ I said, ’the
Gaiety Theatre is closed, but there are other theatres
equally good. Shall I direct you?’ ’Oh,
I don’t know what I shall do. I have run
away from home.... I have set fire to my school
and have come over to London thinking that I might
go on the stage.’ She had set fire to her
school! I never saw more winning eyes. But
she’s a girl men would look after, and not liking
to stand talking to her in Piccadilly, I asked her
to come down Berkeley Street. I was very curious
to know who was this girl who had set fire to her
school and had come over to London to go on the stage;
and we walked on, she telling me that she had set fire
to her school so that she might be able to get away
in the confusion. I hoped I should not meet anyone
I knew, and let her prattle on until we got to the
Square. The Square shone like a ball-room with
a great plume of green branches in the middle and
every corner a niche of gaudy window boxes. Past
us came the season’s stream of carriages, the
women resting against the cushions looking like finely
cultivated flowers. The beauty of the Square
that afternoon astonished me. I wondered how it
struck Lucy. Very likely she was only thinking
of her Gaiety Theatre!”
“But how did you know her name?”
“You remember it was at the
corner of Berkeley Square that Evelyn Innes stood
when she went to see Owen Asher for the first time,
she used to tell me how she stood at the curb watching
London passing by her, thinking that one day London
would be going to hear her sing. As soon as there
was a break in the stream of carriages I took Lucy
across. We could talk unobserved in the Square,
and she continued her story. ’I’m
nearly seventeen,’ she said, ’and I was
sent back to school because I sat for a sculpture.’”
“What did you sit for?”
“For a statue of the Blessed Virgin, and a priest
told on me.”
“Then you’re Lucy Delaney,
and the sculptor you sat for is John Rodney, one of
my intimate friends.”
“What an extraordinary coincidence,”
said Rodney. “I never thought that Lucy
would stay in Ireland. Go on with your story.”
“When I found out who she was
there seemed no great harm in asking her in to have
some tea. Asher will forgive you anything if there’s
a woman in it; you may keep him waiting half an hour
if you assure him your appointment was with a married
woman. Well, Lucy had arrived that morning in
London with threepence in her pocket, so I told the
footman to boil a couple of eggs. I should have
liked to have offered her a substantial meal, but
that would have set the servants talking. Never
did a girl eat with a better appetite, and when she
had finished a second plateful of buttered toast she
began to notice the pictures. I could see that
she had been in a studio and had talked about art.
It is extraordinary how quick a girl is to acquire
the ideas of a man she likes. She admired Manet’s
picture of Evelyn, and I told her Evelyn’s story knowing
it would interest her. ’That such a happy
fate should be a woman’s and that she should
reject it,’ her eyes seemed to say. ’She
is now,’ I said, ’singing Ave Marias at
Wimbledon for the pecuniary benefit of the nuns and
the possible salvation of her own soul.’
Her walk tells the length of the limbs and the balance
of the body, and my eyes followed her as she moved
about the room, and when I told her I had seen the
statue and had admired the legs, she turned and said,
with a pretty pleased look, that you always said that
she had pretty legs. When I asked her if you
had made love to her, she said you had not, that you
were always too busy with your sculpture.”
“One can’t think of two
things at the same time. If I had met her in
Paris it would have been different.”
“Unfortunately I was dining
out that evening. It was hard to know what to
do. At last I thought of a lodging-house kept
by a praiseworthy person, and took her round there
and, cursing my dinner-party, I left her in charge
of the landlady.”
“Like a pot of jam left carefully
under cover... That will be all right till to-morrow,”
said Rodney.
“Very likely. It is humiliating
to admit it, but it is so; the substance of our lives
is woman; all other things are irrelevancies, hypocrisies,
subterfuges. We sit talking of sport and politics,
and all the while our hearts are filled with memories
of women and plans for the capture of women.
Consciously or unconsciously we regard every young
woman from the one point of view, ‘Will she do?’
You know the little look that passes between men and
women as their hansoms cross? Do not the eyes
say: ’Yes, yes, if we were to meet we might
come to an understanding?’ We’re ashamed
that it should be so, but it is the law that is over
us. And that night at my dinner-party, while talking
to wise mammas and their more or less guileless daughters,
I thought of the disgrace if it were found out that
I had picked up a girl in the street and put her in
charge of the landlady.”
“But one couldn’t leave her to the mercy
of the street.”
“Quite so; but I’m speaking now of what
was in the back of my mind.”
“The pot of jam carefully covered up,”
said Rodney, laughing.
“Yes, the pot of jam; and while
talking about the responsibilities of Empire, I was
thinking that I might send out for a canvas in the
morning and sketch something out on it; and when I
got home I looked out a photograph of some women bathing.
I expected her about twelve, and she found me hard
at work.
“Oh, I didn’t know that you were a painter,”
she said.
“No more I am, I used to be;
and thinking of Rodney’s statue and what I can
see of you through that dress I thought I’d try
and do something like you.”
“I’m thinner than that.”
“You’re not thin.”
“We argued the point, and I
tried to persuade her to give me a sitting. She
broke away, saying that it wasn’t the same thing,
and that she had sat for you because there were no
models in Dublin. ’You’ve been very
good to me,’ she said, ’I should have had
to sleep in the Park last night if it had not been
for you. Do continue to be good to me and get
me on the stage, for if you don’t I shall have
to go back to Dublin or to America.’ ‘America,’
I said. ‘Do you want to go to America?’
She didn’t answer, and when she was pressed
for an answer, she said: ’Well, all the
Irish go to America, I didn’t mean anything more;
I am too worried to know what I am saying,’
and then, seeing me turn round to look at my picture,
she said, ’I will sit to you one of these days,
but I am too unhappy and frightened now. I don’t
like saying no; it is always disagreeable to say no.’
And seeing it would give her no pleasure to sit, I
did not ask her again.”
“I’m sorry you missed seeing something
very beautiful.”
“I daresay she’d have
sat if I’d have pressed her, but she was under
my protection, and it seemed cowardly to press her,
for she could not refuse. Suddenly we seemed
to have nothing more to say to each other, and I asked
her if she’d like to see a manager, and as it
seemed a pity she should waste herself on the Gaiety
Theatre I took her to see Sir Edward Higgins.
The mummer was going out to lunch with a lord and could
only think of the people he was going to meet.
So we went to Dorking’s Theatre, and we found
Dorking with his acting manager. The acting manager
had been listening for a long while and wasn’t
sorry for the interruption. But we had not been
talking for more than two or three minutes when the
call-boy brought in a bundle of newspaper cuttings,
and the mummer had not the patience to wait until he
was alone one reads one’s cuttings
alone he stuck his knees together and opened
the bundle, columns of print flowed over his knees,
and after telling us what the critics were saying
about him, mention was made of Ibsen, and we wondered
if there was any chance of getting the public to come
to see a good play. You know the conversation
drifts.”
“You couldn’t get her
an engagement,” said Rodney, “I should
have thought she was suited to the stage.”
“If there had been time I could
have done something for her; she’s a pretty
girl, but you see all these things take a long time,
and Lucy wanted an engagement at once. When we
left the theatre I began to realise the absurdity
of the adventure, and the danger to which I was exposing
myself. I, a man of over forty, seeking the seduction
of a girl of seventeen for that is the
plain English of it. We walked on side by side,
and I asked myself, ’What am I to her, what is
she to me? But one may argue with one’s
self forever.”
“One may indeed,” said
Rodney, laughing, “one may argue, but the law
that is over us.”
“Well, the law that is over
us compelled me to take her to lunch, and she enjoyed
the lunch and the great restaurant. ’What
a number of butlers,’ she said. After lunch
the same problem confronted me: Was I or was
I not going to pursue the adventure? I only knew
for certain that I could not walk about the streets
with Lucy. She is a pretty girl, but she looked
odd enough in her country clothes. Suddenly it
struck me that I might take her into the country, to
Wimbledon.”
“And you took her there and
heard Evelyn Innes sing. And what did Lucy think?
A very pretty experiment in experimental psychology.”
“The voice is getting thinner.
She sang Stradella’s Chanson D’Eglise,
and Lucy could hardly speak when we came out of church.
’Oh, what a wonderful voice,’ she said,
‘do you think she regrets?’ ’Whatever
we do we regret,’ I answered, not because I
thought the observation original, but because it seemed
suitable to the occasion; ’and we regret still
more what we don’t do.’ And I asked
myself if I should write to Lucy’s people as
we walked about the Common. But Lucy wanted to
hear about Owen Asher and Evelyn, and the operas she
had sung, and I told the story of Tannhauser and Tristan.
She had never heard such stories before, and, as we
got up from the warm grass, she said that she could
imagine Evelyn standing in the nuns’ garden with
her eyes fixed on the calm skies, getting courage
from them to persevere. Wasn’t it clever
of her? We dined together in a small restaurant
and I spent the evening with her in the lodging-house;
the landlady let us her sitting-room. Lucy is
charming, and her happiness is volatile and her melancholy
too; she’s persuasive and insinuating as a perfume;
and when I left the house, it was as if I had come
out of a moonlight garden. ’Thy green eyes
look upon me... I love the moonlight of thine
eyes.’”
“Go on,” said Rodney, “what happened
after that?”
“The most disagreeable thing
that ever happened to me in my life. You don’t
know what it is to be really afraid. I didn’t
until a fellow came up to me at the club and asked
me if I had seen the detectives. Fear is a terrible
thing, Rodney; there is nothing so demoralising as
fear. You know my staid old club of black mahogany
and low ceilings, where half a dozen men sit dining
and talking about hunting and two-year-olds. There
is a man in that club who has asked me for the last
ten years what I am going to do with my two-year-olds.
He cannot remember that I never had a two-year-old.
But that night he wasn’t tipsy, and his sobriety
impressed me; he sat down at my table, and after a
while he leaned across and asked me if I knew that
two detectives had been asking after me. ’You
had better look to this. These things turn out
devilish unpleasantly. Of course there is nothing
wrong, but you don’t want to appear in the police
court,’ he said.”
“Had she told?”
“She was more frightened than
I was when I told her what had happened, but she had
done the mischief nevertheless. She had written
to her people saying that she had met a friend of
Mr. Rodney, and that he was looking after her, and
that he lived in Berkeley Square; she was quite simple
and truthful, and notwithstanding my fear I was sorry
for her, for we might have gone away together somewhere,
but, of course, that was impossible now; her folly
left no course open to me except to go to Dublin and
explain everything to her parents.”
“I don’t see,” said
Rodney, “that there was anything against you.”
“Yes, but I was judging myself
according to inward motives, and for some time I did
not see how admirable my conduct would seem to an
unintelligent jury. There is nothing to do between
London and Holyhead, and I composed the case for the
prosecution and the case for the defence and the judge’s
summing up. I wrote the articles in the newspapers
next day and the paragraphs in the evening papers:...
I had met her at the corner of Berkeley Street and
she had asked me the way to the Gaiety Theatre; and,
being anxious for her safety, I had asked her why
she wanted the Gaiety Theatre, for of course if the
case came to trial I should not have approved of the
Gaiety, and disapproval would have won all the Methodists.
The girl had told me that she had set fire to her
school, and an excitable girl like that would soon
be lost. I don’t know what expression the
newspapers would use ’in the labyrinths
of London vice,’ she was just the kind of girl
that a little good advice might save from ruin.
She had told me that she knew you, I was her only
friend, etc. What could I do better than
to take her to a lodging-house where I had lodged
myself and put her in charge of the landlady?
The landlady would be an important witness, and I think
it was at Rugby Junction that I began to hear the
judge saying I had acted with great discretion and
kindness, and left the court without a stain upon
my character. Nevertheless, I should have appeared
in a police court on a charge of abducting a girl,
a seventeen-year-old maiden; and not everyone would
be duped by outward appearances, many would have guessed
the truth, and, though we’re all the same, every
one tries to hide the secret of our common humanity.
But I had forgotten to ask Lucy for the address.
I only knew the name, and that the Delaneys were cheese-mongers,
so I had to call on every cheese-monger called Delaney.
My peregrinations were too absurd. ’Have
you got a daughter? Has she left you and gone
to London? And that all day in one form or another,
for it was not until evening that I found the Delaneys
I was seeking. The shop was shutting up, but
there was a light in the passage, and one of the boys
let me in and I went up the narrow stairs.”
“I know them,” said Rodney.
“And the room ”
“I know it,” said Rodney.
“The horse-hair chairs full of holes.”
“I know the rails,” said
Rodney, “they catch you about here, across the
thighs.”
“The table in the middle of
the room; the smell of the petroleum lamp and the
great chair ”
“I know,” said Rodney,
“the Buddah seated! An enormous head!
The smoking-cap and the tassel hanging out of it!”
“The great cheeks hanging and
the little eyes, intelligent eyes, too, under the
eyebrows, the only animation in his face. He must
be sixteen stone!”
“He is eighteen.”
“The long clay pipe and the fat hands with the
nails bitten.”
“I see you have been observing him,” said
Rodney.
“The brown waistcoat with the
white bone buttons, curving over the belly, and the
belly shelving down into the short fat thighs, and
the great feet wrapped in woollen slippers!”
“He suffers terribly, and hardly
dares to stir out of that chair on account of the
stone in the bladder, which he won’t have removed.”
“How characteristic the room
seemed to me,” said Harding. “The
piano against the wall near the window.”
“I know,” said Rodney.
“Lucy used to sit there playing. She plays
beautifully.”
“Yes, she plays very well.”
“Go on,” said Rodney, “what happened?”
“You know the mother, the thin
woman with a pretty figure and the faded hair and
the features like Lucy’s.”
“Yes.”
“I had just begun my little
explanation about the top of Berkeley Square, how
a girl came up to me and asked me the way to the Gaiety
Theatre, when this little woman rushed forward and,
taking hold of both my hands, said: ’We
are so much obliged to you; and we do not know how
much to thank you.’ A chair was pushed forward ”
“Which chair?” said Rodney.
“I know them all. Was it the one with the
hole in the middle, or was the hole in the side?”
“‘If it hadn’t been
for you,’ said Mrs. Delaney, ’I don’t
know what would have happened.’ ‘We’ve
much to thank you for,’ said the big man, and
he begged to be excused for not getting up. His
wife interrupted him in an explanation regarding his
illness, and gradually I began to see that, from their
point of view, I was Lucy’s saviour, a white
Knight, a modern Sir Galahad. They hoped I had
suffered no inconvenience when the detectives called
at the Club. They had communicated with Scotland
Yard, not because they suspected me of wishing to
abduct their daughter, but because they wished to recover
their daughter, and it was important that she should
be recovered at once, for she was engaged to be married
to a mathematical instrument maker who was on his
way from Chicago; he was expected in a few days; he
was at that moment on the Atlantic, and if it had not
been for my admirable conduct, Mrs. Delaney did not
know what story she could have told Mr. Wainscott.”
“So Lucy is going to marry a
mathematical instrument maker in Chicago?”
“Yes,” said Harding, “and
she is probably married to him by now. It went
to my heart to tell her that her mother was coming
over to fetch her, and that the mathematical instrument
maker would arrive early next week. But I had
to tell her these unpleasant things, for I could not
take her away in Owen Asher’s yacht, her age
and the circumstances forbade an agreeable episode
among the Greek Islands. She is charming....
Poor Lucy! She slipped down on the floor very
prettily and her hair fell on my knees. ’It
isn’t fair, you’re going away on a yacht,
and I am going to Chicago.’ And when I lifted
her up she sat upon my knees and wept. ‘Why
don’t you take me away?’ she said.
’My dear Lucy, I’m forty and you’re
seventeen.’ Her eyes grew enigmatic.
’I shall never live with him,’ she said.”
“Did you kiss her?”
“We spent the evening together and I was sorry
for her.”
“But you don’t know for certain that she
married Wainscott.”
“Yes. Wainscott wrote me
a letter,” and after some searching in his pockets
Harding found the letter.
“’Dear sir, Mr.
and Mrs. Delaney have told me of your kindness to
Lucy, and Lucy has told me of the trouble you took
trying to get her an engagement, and I write to thank
you. Lucy did not know at the time that I had
become a partner in the firm of Sheldon & Flint, and
she thought that she might go on the stage and make
money by singing, for she has a pretty voice, to help
me to buy a partnership in the business of Sheldon
& Flint. It was a kind thought. Lucy’s
heart is in the right place, and it was kind of you,
sir, to take her to different managers. She has
given me an exact account of all you did for her.
“’We are going to be married
to-morrow, and next week we sail for the States.
I live, sir, in Chicago City, and if you are ever in
America Lucy and myself will esteem it an honour if
you will come to see us.
“’Lucy would write to
you herself if she were not tired, having had to look
after many things.
“’I am, dear sir,
“’Very sincerely yours,
“‘James Wainscott.’”
“Lucy wanted life,” said
Rodney, “and she will find her adventure sooner
or later. Poor Lucy!”
“Lucy is the stuff the great
women are made of and will make a noise in the world
yet.”
“It is well she has gone; for
it is many years since there was honour in Ireland
for a Grania.”
“Maybe you’ll meet her
in Paris and will do another statue from her.”
“It wouldn’t be the same
thing. Ah! my statue, my poor statue. Nothing
but a lump of clay. I nearly went out of my mind.
At first I thought it was the priest who ordered it
to be broken. But no, two little boys who heard
a priest talking. They tell strange stories in
Dublin about that statue. It appears that, after
seeing it, Father McCabe went straight to Father Brennan,
and the priests sat till midnight, sipping their punch
and considering this fine point of theology if
a man may ask a woman to sit naked to him; and then
if it would be justifiable to employ a naked woman
for a statue of the Virgin. Father Brennan said,
‘Nakedness is not a sin,’ and Father McCabe
said, ’Nakedness may not be in itself a sin,
but it leads to sin, and is therefore unjustifiable.’
At their third tumbler of punch they had reached Raphael,
and at the fourth Father McCabe held that bad statues
were more likely to excite devotional feelings than
good ones, bad statues being further removed from
perilous Nature.”
“I can see the two priests,
I can hear them. If an exception be made in favour
of the Virgin, would the sculptor be justified in employing
a model to do a statue of a saint?”
“No one supposes that Rubens
did not employ a model for his descent from the Cross,”
said Rodney.
“A man is different, that’s what the priests
would say.”
“Yet, that slender body, slipping
like a cut flower into women’s hands, has inspired
more love in woman than the Virgin has in men.”
“I can see these two obtuse
priests. I can hear them. I should like to
write the scene,” said Harding.
The footman brought in the tea, and
Harding told him that if Mr. Carmady called he was
to show him in, and it was not long after that a knock
came at the front door.
“You have come in time for a
cup of tea, Carmady. You know Rodney?”
“Yes, indeed.”
“Carmady used to come to my
studio. Many’s the time we’ve had
about the possibility of a neo-pagan Celtic renaissance.
But I did not know you were in London. When did
you arrive?”
“Yesterday. I’m going
to South Africa. There’s fighting going
on there, and it is a brand new country.”
“Three Irishmen meet,”
said Rodney; “one seeking a country with a future,
one seeking a country with a past, and one thinking
of going back to a country without past or future.”
“Is Harding going back to Ireland?” said
Carmady.
“Yes,” said Rodney.
“You tried to snuff out the Catholic candle,
but Harding hopes to trim it.”
“I’m tired of talking
about Ireland. I’ve talked enough.”
“This is the last time, Carmady,
you’ll be called to talk about Ireland.
We’d like to hear you.”
“There is no free thought, and
where there is no free thought there is no intellectual
life. The priests take their ideas from Rome cut
and dried like tobacco and the people take their ideas
from the priests cut and dried like tobacco.
Ireland is a terrifying example of what becomes of
a country when it accepts prejudices and conventions
and ceases to inquire out the truth.”
“You don’t believe,”
said Harding, “in the possibility of a Celtic
renaissance that with the revival of the
languages?”
“I do not believe in Catholics.
The Catholic kneels like the camel that burdens may
be laid upon him. You know as well as I do, Harding,
that the art and literature of the fifteenth and sixteenth
centuries were due to a sudden dispersal, a sudden
shedding of the prejudices and conventions of the
middle ages; the renaissance was a joyous returning
to Hellenism, the source of all beauty. There
is as little free love in Ireland as there is free
thought; men have ceased to care for women and women
to care for men. Nothing thrives in Ireland but
the celibate, the priest, the nun, and the ox.
There is no unfaith, and the violence of the priest
is against any sensual transgression. A girl marries
at once or becomes a nun a free girl is
a danger. There is no courtship, there is no
walking out, and the passion which is the direct inspiration
of all the world’s music and art is reduced
to the mere act of begetting children.”
“Love books his passage in the
emigrant ship,” said Rodney. “You
speak truly. There are no bastards in Ireland;
and the bastard is the outward sign of inward grace.”
“That which tends to weaken
life is the only evil, that which strengthens life
the only good, and the result of this puritanical
Catholicism will be an empty Ireland.”
“Dead beyond hope of resurrection,” said
Rodney.
“I don’t say that; a wave
of paganism may arise, and only a pagan revival can
save Ireland.”
“Ah, the beautiful pagan world!”
said Rodney; “morality is but a dream, an academic
discussion, but beauty is a reality.”
“Out of the billions of men
that have been born into the world,” said Carmady,
“I am only sure that two would have been better
unborn; and the second was but a reincarnation of
the first.”
“And who were they?” said Rodney.
“St. Paul and Luther. Had
it not been for Paul, the whole ghostly theory would
have been a failure, and had it not been for Luther
the name of Christ would be forgotten now. When
the acetic monk, barefooted, ragged, with prayer-haunted
eyes, went to Rome, Rome had reverted to her ancient
paganism, statues took the place of sacraments, and
the cardinals drove about Rome with their mistresses.”
“The Pope, too,” said Rodney.
“Everything was for the best
when the pilgrim monk turned in shame and horror from
the awakening; the kingdom of the earth was cursed.
We certainly owe the last four hundred years of Christianity
to Luther.”
“I wonder if that is so,” said Rodney.
After a pause, Carmady continued,
“Belief is declining, but those who disavow
the divinity of Christ eagerly insist that they retain
his morality the cowardly morality of the
weak who demand a redeemer to redeem them. The
morality of the Ghetto prevails; Christians are children
of the Ghetto.”
“It is given to men to choose
between sacraments and statues,” said Rodney.
“Beauty is a reality, morality is a myth, and
Ireland has always struck me as a place for which
God had intended to do something, but He changed his
mind and that change of mind happened about a thousand
years ago. Quite true that the Gael was hunted
as if he were vermin for centuries, and had to think
how to save his life. But there is no use thinking
what the Gael might have done. It is quite certain
he’ll never do it now the time has
gone by; everything has been done and gloriously.”
And for a long while Rodney spoke of Italy.
“I’ll show you a city,”
he said, “no bigger than Rathmines, and in it
Michael Angelo, Donatello, Del Sarto, and Da Vinci
lived, and lived contemporaneously. Now what
have these great pagans left the poor Catholic Celt
to do? All that he was intended to do he did in
the tenth century. Since then he has produced
an incredible number of priests and policemen, some
fine prize-fighters, and some clever lawyers; but
nothing more serious. Ireland is too far north.
Sculpture does not get farther north than Paris oranges
and sculpture! the orange zone and its long cigars,
cigars eight inches long, a penny each, and lasting
the whole day. They are lighted from a taper that
is passed round in the cafes. The fruit that
one can buy for three halfpence, enough for a meal!
And the eating of the fruit by the edge of the canal seeing
beautiful things all the while. But, Harding,
you sit there saying nothing. No, you’re
not going back to Ireland. Before you came in,
Carmady, I was telling Harding that he was not acting
fairly towards his biographer. The poor man will
not be able to explain this Celtic episode satisfactorily.
Nothing short of a Balzac could make it convincing.”
Rodney laughed loudly; the idea amused
him, and he could imagine a man refraining from any
excess that might disturb and perplex or confuse his
biographer.
“How did the Celtic idea come
to you, Harding? Do you remember?”
“How do ideas come to anyone?”
said Harding. “A thought passes. A
sudden feeling comes over you, and you’re never
the same again. Looking across a park with a
view of the mountains in the distance, I perceived
a pathetic beauty in the country itself that I had
not perceived before; and a year afterwards I was
driving about the Dublin mountains, and met two women
on the road; there was something pathetic and wistful
about them, something dear, something intimate, and
I felt drawn towards them. I felt I should like
to live among these people again. There is a
proverb in Irish which says that no man ever wanders
far from his grave sod. We are thrown out, and
we circle a while in the air, and return to the feet
of the thrower. But what astonished me is the
interest that everybody takes in my departure.
Everyone seems agreed that nothing could be more foolish,
nothing more mad. But if I were to go to meet
Asher at Marseilles, and cruise with him in the Greek
Islands, and go on to Cairo, and spend the winter talking
to wearisome society, everyone would consider my conduct
most rational. You, my dear friend, Rodney, you
tempt me with Italy and conversations about yellowing
marbles; and you won’t be angry with me when
I tell you that all your interesting utterances about
the Italian renaissance would not interest me half
so much as what Paddy Durkin and Father Pat will say
to me on the roadside.”