PAUL FINDS HIS WAY.
Slowly, surely, steadily I climbed,
putting aside all dreams, paying strict attention
to business. Often my other self, little Paul
of the sad eyes, would seek to lure me from my work.
But for my vehement determination never to rest for
a moment till I had purchased back my honesty, my
desire growing day by day, till it became
almost a physical hunger to feel again
the pressure of Norah’s strong white hand in
mine, he might possibly have succeeded. Heaven
only knows what then he might have made of me:
politician, minor poet, more or less able editor,
hampered by convictions something most surely
of but little service to myself. Now and again,
with a week to spare my humour making holiday,
nothing to be done but await patiently its return I
would write stories for my own pleasure. They
made no mark; but success in purposeful work is of
slower growth. Had I persisted but
there was money to be earned. And by the time
my debts were paid, I had established a reputation.
“Madness!” argued practical
friends. “You would be throwing away a
certain fortune for, at the best, a doubtful competence.
The one you know you can do, the other it
would be beginning your career all over again.”
“You would find it almost impossible
now,” explained those who spoke, I knew, words
of wisdom, of experience. “The world would
never listen to you. Once a humourist always
a humourist. As well might a comic actor insist
upon playing Hamlet. It might be the best Hamlet
ever seen upon the stage; the audience would only
laugh or stop away.”
Drawn by our mutual need of sympathy,
“Goggles” and I, seeking some quiet corner
in the Club, would pour out our souls to each other.
He would lay before me, at some length, his conception
of Romeo an excellent conception, I have
no doubt, though I confess it failed to interest me.
Somehow I could not picture him to myself as Romeo.
But I listened with every sign of encouragement.
It was the price I paid him for, in turn, listening
to me while I unfolded to him my ideas how monumental
literature, helpful to mankind, should be imagined
and built up.
“Perhaps in a future existence,”
laughed Goggles, one evening, rising as the clock
struck seven, “I shall be a great tragedian,
and you a famous poet. Meanwhile, I suppose,
as your friend Brian puts it, we are both sinning
our mercies. After all, to live is the most important
thing in life.”
I had strolled with him so far as
the cloak-room and was helping him to get into his
coat.
“Take my advice” tapping
me on the chest, he fixed his funny, fishy eyes upon
me. Had I not known his intention to be serious,
I should have laughed, his expression was so comical.
“Marry some dear little woman” (he was
married himself to a placid lady of about twice his
own weight); “one never understands life properly
till the babies come to explain it to one.”
I returned to my easy-chair before
the fire. Wife, children, home! After all,
was not that the true work of man of the
live man, not the dreamer? I saw them round me,
giving to my life dignity, responsibility. The
fair, sweet woman, helper, comrade, comforter, the
little faces fashioned in our image, their questioning
voices teaching us the answers to life’s riddles.
All other hopes, ambitions, dreams, what were they?
Phantoms of the morning mist fading in the sunlight.
Hodgson came to me one evening.
“I want you to write me a comic opera,”
he said. He had an open letter in his hand which
he was reading. “The public seem to be
getting tired of these eternal translations from the
French. I want something English, something new
and original.”
“The English is easy enough,”
I replied; “but I shouldn’t clamour for
anything new and original if I were you.”
“Why not?” he asked, looking up from his
letter.
“You might get it,” I answered. “Then
you would be disappointed.”
He laughed. “Well, you
know what I mean something we could refer
to as ‘new and original’ on the programme.
What do you say? It will be a big chance for
you, and I’m willing to risk it. I’m
sure you can do it. People are beginning to talk
about you.”
I had written a few farces, comediettas,
and they had been successful. But the chief piece
of the evening is a serious responsibility. A
young man may be excused for hesitating. It can
make, but also it can mar him. A comic opera
above all other forms of art if I may be
forgiven for using the sacred word in connection with
such a subject demands experience.
I explained my fears. I did not
explain that in my desk lay a four-act drama throbbing
with humanity, with life, with which it had been my
hope growing each day fainter to
take the theatrical public by storm, to establish
myself as a serious playwright.
“It’s very simple,”
urged Hodgson. “Provide Atherton plenty
of comic business; you ought to be able to do that
all right. Give Gleeson something pretty in waltz
time, and Duncan a part in which she can change her
frock every quarter of an hour or so, and the thing
is done.”
“I’ll tell you what,”
continued Hodgson, “I’ll take the whole
crowd down to Richmond on Sunday. We’ll
have a coach, and leave the theatre at half-past ten.
It will be an opportunity for you to study them.
You’ll be able to have a talk with them and
get to know just what they can do. Atherton has
ideas in his head; he’ll explain them to you.
Then, next week, we’ll draw up a contract and
set to work.”
It was too good an opportunity to
let slip, though I knew that if successful I should
find myself pinned down firmer than ever to my rôle
of jester. But it is remunerative, the writing
of comic opera.
A small crowd had gathered in the Strand to see us
start.
“Nothing wrong, is there?”
enquired the leading lady, in a tone of some anxiety,
alighting a quarter of an hour late from her cab.
“It isn’t a fire, is it?”
“Merely assembled to see you,”
explained Mr. Hodgson, without raising his eyes from
his letters.
“Oh, good gracious!” cried
the leading lady, “do let us get away quickly.”
“Box seat, my dear,” returned Mr. Hodgson.
The leading lady, accepting the proffered
assistance of myself and three other gentlemen, mounted
the ladder with charming hesitation. Some delay
in getting off was caused by our low comedian, who
twice, making believe to miss his footing, slid down
again into the arms of the stolid door-keeper.
The crowd, composed for the most part of small boys
approving the endeavour to amuse them, laughed and
applauded. Our low comedian thus encouraged,
made a third attempt upon his hands and knees, and,
gaining the roof, sat down upon the tenor, who smiled
somewhat mechanically.
The first dozen or so ’busses
we passed our low comedian greeted by rising to his
feet and bowing profoundly, afterwards falling back
upon either the tenor or myself. Except by the
tenor and myself his performance appeared to be much
appreciated. Charing Cross passed, and nobody
seeming to be interested in our progress, to the relief
of the tenor and myself, he settled down.
“People sometimes ask me,”
said the low comedian, brushing the dust off his knees,
“why I do this sort of thing off the stage.
It amuses me.”
“I was coming up to London the
other day from Birmingham,” he continued.
“At Willesden, when the ticket collector opened
the door, I sprang out of the carriage and ran off
down the platform. Of course, he ran after me,
shouting to all the others to stop me. I dodged
them for about a minute. You wouldn’t believe
the excitement there was. Quite fifty people
left their seats to see what it was all about.
I explained to them when they caught me that I had
been travelling second with a first-class ticket,
which was the fact. People think I do it to attract
attention. I do it for my own pleasure.”
“It must be a troublesome way
of amusing oneself,” I suggested.
“Exactly what my wife says,”
he replied; “she can never understand the desire
that comes over us all, I suppose, at times, to play
the fool. As a rule, when she is with me I don’t
do it.”
“She’s not here today?” I asked,
glancing round.
“She suffers so from headaches,”
he answered, “she hardly ever goes anywhere.”
“I’m sorry.”
I spoke not out of mere politeness; I really did feel
sorry.
During the drive to Richmond this
irrepressible desire to amuse himself got the better
of him more than once or twice. Through Kensington
he attracted a certain amount of attention by balancing
the horn upon his nose. At Kew he stopped the
coach to request of a young ladies’ boarding
school change for sixpence. At the foot of Richmond
Hill he caused a crowd to assemble while trying to
persuade a deaf old gentleman in a Bath-chair to allow
his man to race us up the hill for a shilling.
At these antics and such like our
party laughed uproariously, with the exception of
Hodgson, who had his correspondence to attend to, and
an elegant young lady of some social standing who
had lately emerged from the Divorce Court with a reputation
worth to her in cash a hundred pounds a week.
Arriving at the hotel quarter of an
hour or so before lunch time, we strolled into the
garden. Our low comedian, observing an elderly
gentleman of dignified appearance sipping a glass of
Vermouth at a small table, stood for a moment rooted
to the earth with astonishment, then, making a bee-line
for the stranger, seized and shook him warmly by the
hand. We exchanged admiring glances with one another.
“Charlie is in good form to-day,”
we told one another, and followed at his heels.
The elderly gentleman had risen; he
looked puzzled. “And how’s Aunt Martha?”
asked him our low comedian. “Dear old Aunt
Martha! Well, I am glad! You do look bonny!
How is she?”
“I’m afraid ”
commenced the elderly gentleman. Our low comedian
started back. Other visitors had gathered round.
“Don’t tell me anything
has happened to her! Not dead? Don’t
tell me that!”
He seized the bewildered gentleman
by the shoulders and presented to him a face distorted
by terror.
“I really have not the faintest
notion what you are talking about,” returned
the gentleman, who seemed annoyed. “I don’t
know you.”
“Not know me? Do you mean
to tell me you’ve forgotten ? Isn’t
your name Steggles?”
“No, it isn’t,” returned the stranger,
somewhat shortly.
“My mistake,” replied
our low comedian. He tossed off at one gulp what
remained of the stranger’s Vermouth and walked
away rapidly.
The elderly gentleman, not seeing
the humour of the joke, one of our party to soothe
him explained to him that it was Atherton, the
Atherton Charlie Atherton.
“Oh, is it,” growled the
elderly gentleman. “Then will you tell him
from me that when I want his damned tomfoolery I’ll
come to the theatre and pay for it.”
“What a disagreeable man,”
we said, as, following our low comedian, we made our
way into the hotel.
During lunch he continued in excellent
spirits; kissed the bald back of the waiter’s
head, pretending to mistake it for a face, called for
hot mustard and water, made believe to steal the silver,
and when the finger-bowls arrived, took off his coat
and requested the ladies to look the other way.
After lunch he became suddenly serious,
and slipping his arm through mine, led me by unfrequented
paths.
“Now, about this new opera,”
he said; “we don’t want any of the old
stale business. Give us something new.”
I suggested that to do so might be difficult.
“Not at all,” he answered.
“Now, my idea is this. I am a young fellow,
and I’m in love with a girl.”
I promised to make a note of it.
“Her father, apoplectic old
idiot make him comic: ‘Damme,
sir! By gad!’ all that sort of thing.”
By persuading him that I understood
what he meant, I rose in his estimation.
“He won’t have anything
to say to me thinks I’m an ass.
I’m a simple sort of fellow on the
outside. But I’m not such a fool as I look.”
“You don’t think we are
getting too much out of the groove?” I enquired.
His opinion was that the more so the better.
“Very well. Then, in the
second act I disguise myself. I’ll come
on as an organ-grinder, sing a song in broken English,
then as a policeman, or a young swell about town.
Give me plenty of opportunity, that’s the great
thing opportunity to be really funny, I
mean. We don’t want any of the old stale
tricks.”
I promised him my support.
“Put a little pathos in it,”
he added, “give me a scene where I can show
them I’ve something else in me besides merely
humour. We don’t want to make them howl,
but just to feel a little. Let’s send them
out of the theatre saying: ’Well, Charlie’s
often made me laugh, but I’m damned if I knew
he could make me cry before!’ See what I mean?”
I told him I thought I did.
The leading lady, meeting us on our
return, requested, with pretty tone of authority,
everybody else to go away and leave us. There
were cries of “Naughty!” The leading lady,
laughing girlishly, took me by the hand and ran away
with me.
“I want to talk to you,”
said the leading lady, as soon as we had reached a
secluded seat overlooking the river, “about my
part in the new opera. Now, can’t you give
me something original? Do.”
Her pleading was so pretty, there
was nothing for it but to pledge compliance.
“I am so tired of being the
simple village maiden,” said the leading lady;
“what I want is a part with some opportunity
in it a coquettish part. I can flirt,”
assured me the leading lady, archly. “Try
me.”
I satisfied her of my perfect faith.
“You might,” said the
leading lady, “see your way to making the plot
depend upon me. It always seems to me that the
woman’s part is never made enough of in comic
opera. I am sure a comic opera built round a
woman would be a really great success. Don’t
you agree with me, Mr. Kelver,” pouted the leading
lady, laying her pretty hand on mine. “We
are much more interesting than the men now,
aren’t we?”
Personally, as I told her, I agreed with her.
The tenor, sipping tea with me on the balcony, beckoned
me aside.
“About this new opera,”
said the tenor; “doesn’t it seem to you
the time has come to make more of the story that
the public might prefer a little more human interest
and a little less clowning?”
I admitted that a good plot was essential.
“It seems to me,” said
the tenor, “that if you could write an opera
round an interesting love story, you would score a
success. Of course, let there be plenty of humour,
but reduce it to its proper place. As a support,
it is excellent; when it is made the entire structure,
it is apt to be tiresome at least, that
is my view.”
I replied with sincerity that there
seemed to me much truth in what he said.
“Of course, so far as I am personally
concerned,” went on the tenor, “it is
immaterial. I draw the same salary whether I’m
on the stage five minutes or an hour. But when
you have a man of my position in the cast, and give
him next to nothing to do well, the public
are disappointed.”
“Most naturally,” I commented.
“The lover,” whispered
the tenor, noticing the careless approach towards
us of the low comedian, “that’s the character
they are thinking about all the time men
and women both. It’s human nature.
Make your lover interesting that’s
the secret.”
Waiting for the horses to be put to,
I became aware of the fact that I was standing some
distance from the others in company with a tall, thin,
somewhat oldish-looking man. He spoke in low,
hurried tones, fearful evidently of being overheard
and interrupted.
“You’ll forgive me, Mr.
Kelver,” he said “Trevor, Marmaduke
Trevor. I play the Duke of Bayswater in the second
act.”
I was unable to recall him for the
moment; there were quite a number of small parts in
the second act. But glancing into his sensitive
face, I shrank from wounding him.
“A capital performance,”
I lied. “It has always amused me.”
He flushed with pleasure. “I
made a great success some years ago,” he said,
“in America with a soda-water syphon, and it
occurred to me that if you could, Mr. Kelver, in a
natural sort of way, drop in a small part leading
up to a little business with a soda-water syphon, it
might help the piece.”
I wrote him his soda-water scene,
I am glad to remember, and insisted upon it, in spite
of a good deal of opposition. Some of the critics
found fault with the incident, as lacking in originality.
But Marmaduke Trevor was quite right, it did help
a little.
Our return journey was an exaggerated
repetition of our morning drive. Our low comedian
produced hideous noises from the horn, and entered
into contests of running wit with ’bus drivers a
decided mistake from his point of view, the score
generally remaining with the ’bus driver.
At Hammersmith, seizing the opportunity of a block
in the traffic, he assumed the rôle of Cheap Jack,
and, standing up on the back seat, offered all our
hats for sale at temptingly low prices.
“Got any ideas out of them?”
asked Hodgson, when the time came for us to say good-night.
“I’m thinking, if you
don’t mind,” I answered, “of going
down into the country and writing the piece quietly,
away from everybody.”
“Perhaps you are right,”
agreed Hodgson. “Too many cooks Be
sure and have it ready for the autumn.”
I wrote it with some pleasure to myself
amid the Yorkshire Wolds, and was able to read it
to the whole company assembled before the close of
the season. My turning of the last page was followed
by a dead silence. The leading lady was the first
to speak. She asked if the clock upon the mantelpiece
could be relied upon; because, if so, by leaving at
once, she could just catch her train. Hodgson,
consulting his watch, thought, if anything, it was
a little fast. The leading lady said she hoped
it was, and went. The only comforting words were
spoken by the tenor. He recalled to our mind
a successful comic opera produced some years before
at the Philharmonic. He distinctly remembered
that up to five minutes before the raising of the
curtain everybody had regarded it as rubbish.
He also had a train to catch. Marmaduke Trevor,
with a covert shake of the hand, urged me not to despair.
The low comedian, the last to go, told Hodgson he
thought he might be able to do something with parts
of it, if given a free hand. Hodgson and I left
alone, looked at each other.
“It’s no good,”
said Hodgson, “from a box-office point of view.
Very clever.”
“How do you know it is no good
from a box-office point of view?” I ventured
to enquire.
“I never made a mistake in my life,” replied
Hodgson.
“You have produced one or two failures,”
I reminded him.
“And shall again,” he laughed. “The
right thing isn’t easy to get.”
“Cheer up,” he added kindly,
“this is only your first attempt. We must
try and knock it into shape at rehearsal.”
Their notion of “knocking it into shape”
was knocking it to pieces.
“I’ll tell you what we’ll
do,” would say the low comedian; “we’ll
cut that scene out altogether.” Joyously
he would draw his pencil through some four or five
pages of my manuscript.
“But it is essential to the story,” I
would argue.
“Not at all.”
“But it is. It is the scene
in which Roderick escapes from prison and falls in
love with the gipsy.”
“My dear boy, half-a-dozen words
will do all that. I meet Roderick at the ball.
‘Hallo, what are you doing here?’ ’Oh,
I have escaped from prison.’ ‘Good
business. And how’s Miriam?’ ’Well
and happy she is going to be my wife!’
What more do you want?”
“I have been speaking to Mr.
Hodgson,” would observe the leading lady, “and
he agrees with me, that if instead of falling in love
with Peter, I fell in love with John ”
“But John is in love with Arabella.”
“Oh, we’ve cut out Arabella. I can
sing all her songs.”
The tenor would lead me into a corner.
“I want you to write in a little scene for myself
and Miss Duncan at the beginning of the first act.
I’ll talk to her about it. I think it will
be rather pretty. I want her the second
time I see her to have come out of her room
on to a balcony, and to be standing there bathed in
moonlight.”
“But the first act takes place in the early
morning.”
“I’ve thought of that. We must alter
it to the evening.”
“But the opera opens with a
hunting scene. People don’t go hunting by
moonlight.”
“It will be a novelty.
That’s what’s wanted for comic opera.
The ordinary hunting scene! My dear boy, it has
been done to death.”
I stood this sort of thing for a week.
“They are people of experience,” I argued
to myself; “they must know more about it than
I do.” By the end of the week I had arrived
at the conclusion that anyhow they didn’t.
Added to which I lost my temper. It is a thing
I should advise any lady or gentleman thinking of
entering the ranks or dramatic authorship to lose
as soon as possible. I took both manuscripts with
me, and, entering Mr. Hodgson’s private room,
closed the door behind me. One parcel was the
opera as I had originally written it, a neat, intelligible
manuscript, whatever its other merits. The second,
scored, interlined, altered, cut, interleaved, rewritten,
reversed, turned inside out and topsy-turvy one
long, hopeless confusion from beginning to end was
the opera, as, everybody helping, we had “knocked
it into shape.”
“That’s your opera,”
I said, pushing across to him the bulkier bundle.
“If you can understand it, if you can make head
or tail of it, if you care to produce it, it is yours,
and you are welcome to it. This is mine!”
I laid it on the table beside the other. “It
may be good, it may be bad. If it is played at
all it is played as it is written. Regard the
contract as cancelled, and make up your mind.”
He argued with force, and he argued
with eloquence. He appealed to my self-interest,
he appealed to my better nature. It occupied him
forty minutes by the clock. Then he called me
an obstinate young fool, flung the opera as “knocked
into shape” into the waste-paper basket which
was the only proper place for it, and, striding into
the middle of the company, gave curt directions that
the damned opera was to be played as it was written,
and be damned to it!
The company shrugged its shoulders,
and for the next month kept them shrugged. For
awhile Hodgson remained away from the rehearsals, then
returning, developed by degrees a melancholy interest
in the somewhat gloomy proceedings.
So far I had won, but my difficulty
was to maintain the position. The low comedian,
reciting his lines with meaningless monotony, would
pause occasionally to ask of me politely, whether
this or that passage was intended to be serious or
funny.
“You think,” the leading
lady would enquire, more in sorrow than in anger,
“that any girl would behave in this way any
real girl, I mean?”
“Perhaps the audience will understand
it,” would console himself hopefully the tenor.
“Myself, I confess I don’t.”
With a sinking heart concealed beneath
an aggressively disagreeable manner, I remained firm
in my “pigheaded conceit,” as it was regarded,
Hodgson generously supporting me against his own judgment.
“It’s bound to be a failure,”
he told me. “I am spending some twelve to
fifteen hundred pounds to teach you a lesson.
When you have learnt it we’ll square accounts
by your writing me an opera that will pay.”
“And if it does succeed?” I suggested.
“My dear boy,” replied Hodgson, “I
never make mistakes.”
From all which a dramatic author of
more experience would have gathered cheerfulness and
hope, knowing that the time to be depressed is when
the manager and company unanimously and unhesitatingly
predict a six months’ run. But new to the
business, I regarded my literary career as already
at an end. Belief in oneself is merely the match
with which one lights oneself. The oil is supplied
by the belief in one of others; if that be not forthcoming,
one goes out. Later on I might try to light myself
again, but for the present I felt myself dark and dismal.
My desire was to get away from my own smoke and smell.
The final dress rehearsal over, I took my leave of
all concerned. The next morning I would pack
a knapsack and start upon a walking tour through Holland.
The English papers would not reach me. No human
being should know my address. In a month or so
I would return, the piece would have disappeared would
be forgotten. With courage, I might be able to
forget it myself.
“I shall run it for three weeks,”
said Hodgson, “then we’ll withdraw it
quietly, ‘owing to previous arrangements’;
or Duncan can suddenly fall ill she’s
done it often enough to suit herself; she can do it
this once to suit me. Don’t be upset.
There’s nothing to be ashamed of in the piece;
indeed, there is a good deal that will be praised.
The idea is distinctly original. As a matter
of fact, that’s the fault with it,” added
Hodgson, “it’s too original.”
“You said you wanted it original,” I reminded
him.
He laughed. “Yes, but original
for the stage, I meant the old dolls in
new frocks.”
I thanked him for all his kindness,
and went home and packed my knapsack.
For two months I wandered, avoiding
beaten tracks, my only comrades a few books, belonging
to no age, no country. My worries fell from me,
the personal affairs of Paul Kelver ceasing to appear
the be all and the end all of the universe. But
for a chance meeting with Wellbourne, Deleglise’s
amateur caretaker of Gower Street fame, I should have
delayed yet longer my return. It was in one of
the dead cities of the Zuyder Zee. I was sitting
under the lindens on the grass-grown quay, awaiting
a slow, crawling boat that, four miles off, I watched
a moving speck across the level pastures. I heard
his footsteps in the empty market-place behind me,
and turned my head. I did not rise, felt even
no astonishment; anything might come to pass in that
still land of dreams. He seated himself beside
me with a nod, and for awhile we smoked in silence.
“All well with you?” I asked.
“I am afraid not,” he answered; “the
poor fellow is in great trouble.”
“I’m not Wellbourne himself,”
he went on, in answer to my look; “I am only
his spirit. Have you ever tested that belief the
Hindoos hold: that a man may leave his body,
wander at will for a certain period, remembering only
to return ere the thread connecting him with flesh
and blood be stretched to breaking point? It
is quite correct. I often lock the door of my
lodging, leave myself behind, wander a free Spirit.”
He pulled from his pocket a handful
of loose coins and looked at them. “The
thread that connects us, I am sorrow to say, is wearing
somewhat thin,” he sighed; “I shall have
to be getting back to him before long concern
myself again with his troubles, follies. It is
somewhat vexing. Life is really beautiful, when
one is dead.”
“What was the trouble?” I enquired.
“Haven’t you heard?”
he replied. “Tom died five weeks ago, quite
suddenly, of syncope. We had none of us any idea.”
So Norah was alone in the world.
I rose to my feet. The slowly moving speck had
grown into a thin, dark streak; minute by minute it
took shape and form.
“By the way, I have to congratulate
you,” said Wellbourne. “Your opera
looked like being a big thing when I left London.
You didn’t sell outright, I hope?”
“No,” I answered.
“Hodgson never expressed any desire to buy.”
“Lucky for you,” said Wellbourne.
I reached London the next evening.
Passing the theatre on my way to Queen’s Square,
it occurred to me to stop my cab for a few minutes
and look in.
I met the low comedian on his way
to his dressing-room. He shook me warmly by the
hand.
“Well,” he said, “we’re
pulling them in. I was right, you see, Give me
plenty of opportunity.’ That’s what
I told you, didn’t I? Come and see the
piece. I think you will agree with me that I have
done you justice.”
I thanked him.
“Not at all,” he returned;
“it’s a pleasure to work, when you’ve
got something good to work on.”
I paid my respects to the leading lady.
“I am so grateful to you,”
said the leading lady. “It is so delightful
to play a real live woman, for a change.”
The tenor was quite fatherly.
“It is what I have been telling
Hodgson for years,” he said, “give them
a simple human story.”
Crossing the stage, I ran against Marmaduke Trevor.
“You will stay for my scene,” he urged.
“Another night,” I answered. “I
have only just returned.”
He sank his voice to a whisper.
“I want to talk to you on business, when you
have the time. I am thinking of taking a theatre
myself not just now, but later on.
Of course, I don’t want it to get about.”
I assured him of my secrecy.
“If it comes off, I want you
to write for me. You understand the public.
We will talk it over.”
He passed onward with stealthy tread.
I found Hodgson in the front of the house.
“Two stalls not sold and six
seats in the upper circle,” he informed me;
“not bad for a Thursday night.”
I expressed my gratification.
“I knew you could do it,”
said Hodgson, “I felt sure of it merely from
seeing that comedietta of yours at the Queen’s.
I never make a mistake.”
Correction under the circumstances
would have been unkind. Promising to see him
again in the morning, I left him with his customary
good conceit of himself unimpaired, and went on to
the Square. I rang twice, but there was no response.
I was about to sound a third and final summons, when
Norah joined me on the step. She had been out
shopping and was laden with parcels.
“We must wait to shake hands,”
she laughed, as she opened the door. “I
hope you have not been kept long. Poor Annette
grows deafer every day.”
“Have you nobody in the house
with you but Annette?” I asked.
“No one. You know it was
a whim of his. I used to get quite cross with
him at times. But I should not like to go against
his wishes now.”
“Was there any reason for it?” I asked.
“No,” she answered; “if
there had been I could have argued him out of it.”
She paused at the door of the studio. “I’ll
just get rid of these,” she said, “and
then I will be with you.”
A wood fire was burning on the open
hearth, flashing alternate beams of light and shadow
down the long bare room. The high oak stool stood
in its usual place beside the engraving desk, upon
which lay old Deleglise’s last unfinished plate,
emitting a dull red glow. I paced the creaking
boards with halting steps, as through some ghostly
gallery hung with dim portraits of the dead and living.
In a little while Norah entered and came to me with
outstretched hand.
“We will not light the lamp,”
she said, “the firelight is so pleasant.”
“But I want to see you,” I replied.
She had seated herself upon the broad
stone kerb. With her hand she stirred the logs;
they shot into a clear white flame. Thus, the
light upon her face, she raised it gravely towards
mine. It spoke to me with fuller voice.
The clear grey eyes were frank and steadfast as ever,
but shadow had passed into them, deepening them, illuminating
them.
For a space we talked of our two selves,
our trivial plans and doings.
“Tom left something to you,”
said Norah, rising, “not in his will, that was
only a few lines. He told me to give it to you,
with his love.”
She brought it to me. It was
the picture he had always treasured, his first success;
a child looking on death; “The Riddle”
he had named it.
We spoke of him, of his work, which
since had come to be appraised at truer value, for
it was out of fashion while he lived.
“Was he a disappointed man, do you think?”
I asked.
“No,” answered Norah. “I am
sure not. He was too fond of his work.”
“But he dreamt of becoming a
second Millet. He confessed it to me once.
And he died an engraver.”
“But they were good engravings,” smiled
Norah.
“I remember a favourite saying
of his,” continued Norah, after a pause; “I
do not know whether it was original or not. ’The
stars guide us. They are not our goal.’”
“Ah, yes, we aim at the moon and hit
the currant bush.”
“It is necessary always to allow
for deflection,” laughed Norah. “Apparently
it takes a would-be poet to write a successful comic
opera.”
“Ah, you do not understand!”
I cried. “It was not mere ambition; cap
and bells or laurel wreath! that is small matter.
I wanted to help. The world’s cry of pain,
I used to hear it as a boy. I hear it yet.
I meant to help. They that are heavy laden.
I hear their cry. They cry from dawn to dawn
and none heed them: we pass upon the other side.
Man and woman, child and beast. I hear their
dumb cry in the night. The child’s sob
in the silence, the man’s fierce curse of wrong.
The dog beneath the vivisector’s knife, the
overdriven brute, the creature tortured for an hour
that a gourmet may enjoy an instant’s pleasure;
they cried to me. The wrong and the sorrow and
the pain, the long, low, endless moan God’s
ears are weary of; I hear it day and night. I
thought to help.”
I had risen. She took my face
between her quiet, cool hands.
“What do we know? We see
but a corner of the scheme. This fortress of
laughter that a few of you have been set apart to guard this
rallying-point for all the forces of joy and gladness!
how do you know it may not be the key to the whole
battle! It is far removed from the grand charges
and you think yourself forgotten. Trust your leader,
be true to your post.”
I looked into her sweet grey eyes.
“You always help me,” I said.
“Do I?” she answered. “I am
so glad.”
She put her firm white hand in mine.