Illustration: Portrait of a Gentleman
By William Watson
At the hushed brink of twilight,—when, as thoughSome solemn journeying phantom paused to layAn ominous finger on the awestruck day,Earth holds her breath till that great presence go,—A moment comes of visionary glow,Pendulous 'twixt the gold hour and the grey,Lovelier than these, more eloquent than theyOf memory, foresight, and life's ebb and flow.So have I known, in some fair woman's face,While viewless yet was Time's more gross imprint,The first, faint, hesitant, elusive hintOf that invasion of the vandal yearsSeem deeper beauty than youth's cloudless grace,Wake subtler dreams, and touch me nigh to tears.
At the hushed brink of twilight,—when, as thoughSome solemn journeying phantom paused to layAn ominous finger on the awestruck day,Earth holds her breath till that great presence go,—A moment comes of visionary glow,Pendulous 'twixt the gold hour and the grey,Lovelier than these, more eloquent than theyOf memory, foresight, and life's ebb and flow.
So have I known, in some fair woman's face,While viewless yet was Time's more gross imprint,The first, faint, hesitant, elusive hintOf that invasion of the vandal yearsSeem deeper beauty than youth's cloudless grace,Wake subtler dreams, and touch me nigh to tears.
No echo of man's life pursues my ears;Nothing disputes this Desolation's reign;Change comes not, this dread temple to profane,Where time by æons reckons, not by years.Its patient form one crag, sole-stranded, rears,Type of whate'er is destined to remainWhile yon still host encamped on Night's waste plainKeeps armèd watch, a million quivering spears.Hushed are the wild and wing'd lives of the moor;The sleeping sheep nestle 'neath ruined wall,Or unhewn stones in random concourse hurled:Solitude, sleepless, listens at Fate's door;And there is built and 'stablisht over allTremendous Silence, older than the world.
No echo of man's life pursues my ears;Nothing disputes this Desolation's reign;Change comes not, this dread temple to profane,Where time by æons reckons, not by years.Its patient form one crag, sole-stranded, rears,Type of whate'er is destined to remainWhile yon still host encamped on Night's waste plainKeeps armèd watch, a million quivering spears.
Hushed are the wild and wing'd lives of the moor;The sleeping sheep nestle 'neath ruined wall,Or unhewn stones in random concourse hurled:Solitude, sleepless, listens at Fate's door;And there is built and 'stablisht over allTremendous Silence, older than the world.
The Reflected Faun
By Laurence Housman
Reproduced by Messrs. Carl Hentschel & Co.
Illustration: The Reflected Faun
By George Saintsbury
[It would appear from the reference to a“Queen”that the following piece was written in or with a view to the reign of Queen Anne, though an anachronism or two (such as a reference to the '45 and a quotation from Adam Smith) may be noted. On the other hand, an occasional mixture of“you”and“thou”seems to argue a date before Johnson. It must at any rate have been composed for, or in imitation of the style of, one or other of the eighteenth-century collections of Essays.]
It chanced the other day that I had a mind to visit my old friend Falernianus. The maid who opened the door to me showed me into his study, and apologised for her master's absence by saying that he was in the cellar. He soon appeared, and I rallied him a little on the gravity of his occupation. Falernianus, I must tell you, is neither a drunkard nor a man of fortune. But he has a pretty taste in wine, indulges it rather in collection than in consumption, and arranges his cellar (or, as he sometimes calls it,“cellaret”) himself, having no butler or other man-servant. He took my pleasantry very good-humouredly; and when I asked him further if I might behold this temple of his devotions he complied at once.“'Tis rather a chantry than a temple,Eugenius,”said he,“but you are very welcome to see it if you please; and if you are minded to hear a sermon, perhaps I can preach one different from what you may expect at an Oracle of the Bottle.”
We soon reached the cavern, which, indeed, was much less magnificent than that over which Bacbuc presided; and I perused, not without interest (for I had often tasted the contents), the various bins in which bottles of different shapes and sizes were stowed away with a modest neatness. Falernianus amused himself, and did not go so far as to weary me, with some tales of luck or disappointment in his purchases, of the singular improvement of this vintage, and the mortifying conduct of that. For these wine-lovers are curious in their phrase; and it is not disgusting to hear them say regretfully that the claret of such and such a year“has not spoken yet”; or that another was long“under the curse of the seventies.”This last phrase, indeed, had a grandiloquent and romantic turn which half surprised me from my friend, a humourist with a special horror of fine speech or writing, and turning sharply I saw a smile on his lips.
“But,”said I,“my Falernianus, your sermon? For I scarce think that this wine-chat would be dignified by you with such a name.”
“You are right, Eugenius,”answered he,“but I do not quite know whether I am wise to disclose even to you the ruling fancy under which I have formed this little liquid museum, or Baccheum if you prefer it.”
“I think you may,”said I,“for in the first place we are old enough friends for such confidences, and in the second I know you to be too much given to laugh at your own foibles to be greatly afraid of another's ridicule.”
“You say well,”he said, "so mark! For if my sermon inflictswhat our toasts call ennui upon you, remember that in the words of their favourite Molière, 'You have willed it.'
"I do not, Eugenius, pretend to be indifferent to good wine in itself. But when I called this little cellar of mine just now a museum I did no dishonour to the daughters of Mnemosyne. For you will observe that wine, by the fact of its keeping powers and by the other fact of its date being known, is a sort of calendar made to the hand of whoso would commemorate, with a festive solemnity, the things that are, as Mr. Dryden says,
'Hid in the sacred treasure of the past.'
If not the mere juice of the grape (for the merit of the strongest wine after fifty or sixty years is mostly but itself a memory), strong waters brewed on the day of a man's birth will keep their fire and gain ever fresh mellowness though he were to outlive the longest lifetime; and in these little flasks here, my Eugenius, you will find a cup of Nantz that was born with me, and that will keep its virtues long after thou and I have gone to solve the great enigma. Again, thou seest those pints of red port which nestle together? Within a few days, Eugenius, of the time when that must was foaming round the Douro peasants, I made mine entrance at the University. You can imagine with what a mixture of tender and humorous feelings I quaff them now and then. When their juice was tunned, what amiable visions, what boyish hopes floated before my eyes! I was to carry off all that Cam or Isis had of honours or profit, all that either could give of learning. I was to have my choice of learned retirement on the one hand, or of ardent struggle at the hoarse bar on the other, with the prizes of the senate beyond. They were scarce throwing down their crust when that dream faded;they had scarce become drinkable by a hasty toper before I saw clearly that metaphysical aid was wanting, and that a very different fate must be mine. I make no moan over it, Eugenius, and I puff away like a worse than prostitute as she is, the demon Envy when she whispers in my ear the names of Titius or Seius, and adds, 'Had they better parts, or only better stars than you?' But as they fable that the wine itself throbs with the early movement of the sap in the vines, so, Eugenius, when I sip that cordial (and truth 'tis a noble vintage) the old hopes, the old follies, the old dreams waken in me, and I am once more eighteen.
“Look yonder again at those cobwebbed vessels of various shapes that lie side by side, although of different vineyards, in the peaceful bins. They all date from a year in which the wheel of fortune brought honest men to the top in England; and if only for a brief space, as, I am told, they sing in North Britain,‘the de'il went hame wi' a' the Whigs before him’(I must tell you, Mr. ——, that Falernianus, though a loyal subject to our good Queen, is a most malignant Tory, and indeed I have heard him impeached of Jacobitism by ill-willers). But no more of politics.”He paused a moment and then went on:“I think I see you smile again, Eugenius, and say to yourself,‘These are but dry-lipped subjects for so flowing a calendar.’And to tell the truth, my friend, the main part of my ephemerides of this kind has been filled by the aid of the goddess who was ever nearest and kindest to Bacchus. In yonder bin lie phials of the mightiest port that Lusitanian summers ever blackened, and flasks of sack from the more southern parts of that peninsula, which our Ben or his son Herrick would have loved. In the same year which saw the pressing of these generous juices the earth was made more fair by the birth of Bellamira and Candiope. The blackest purple of the Lusitanian grape is not so black as the tresses of Candiope's hair,nor doth the golden glow of the sherris approach in flame the locks of Bellamira; but if I let the sunlight play through both, Love, with fantastic triumph, shows me, as the bright motes flicker and flee through the sack, the tawny eyes of Candiope, and the stain, no longer black or purple, but rosy red, that floats from the Oportian juice on the white napery, recalls the velvet blush of Bellamira's cheek.”
“And this?”I said, pointing to a bin of Bordeaux near me.“Thou shalt try it this very day,”said Falernianus with a laugh, which I thought carried off some feelings a little overstrained;“'tis a right pleasant wine, and they made it in the year when I first saw the lips of Damaris. The flavour is not unlike theirs, and if it should fluster thine head a little, and cause thee what men call heartburn, I will not say that the effects are wholly dissimilar.”It is not like Falernianus even to jest at women, and I turned to another. His face cleared.“Many a year has passed,”he said, "since the grape that bore that juice was gathered, and even as it was ripening it chanced that I met Lalage and won her. The wine was always good and the love likewise; but in neither in their early years was there half the pleasure that there is now. But I weary you, Eugenius, and perhaps the philosopher speaks truly in saying that these things are not matters of sympathy, or, as the Scripture saith, a stranger is not partaker of them. Suffice it to say that these imprisoned rubies and topazes, amethysts and jacinths, never flash in the glass, nor collect their deeper body of colour in the flagon, without bringing a memory with them, that my lips seldom kiss them without recalling other kisses, my eye never beholds them without seeing other colours and other forms in 'the sessions of sweet silent thought.' At the refining of this elixir I assumed the virile gown; when that nectar was fit for drinking I made my first appearance in the field of letters; andthis again recalls the death of dear friends and the waning of idle hopes. When I am dead, or if any reverse of fortune makes me part with this cabinet of quintessence, it will pass to heirs or purchasers as so much good wine and nothing more. To me it is that and much more—a casket of magic liquors, a museum, as I have called it, of glasses like that of Dr. Dee, in which I see again the smile of beauty and the hope of youth, in which once more I win, lose, possess, conquer, am defeated; in which I live over again in the recesses of fantasy the vanished life of the past.
“But it is not often that I preach in this fashion. Let us take a turn in the garden while they get dinner ready, that you may taste,”and he smiled,“that you may taste—if you dare—the wine that I have likened to the lips of Damaris.”
Night Piece
By Aubrey Beardsley
Reproduced by the Swan Electric Engraving Company
Illustration: Night Piece
by Arthur Symons
Why is it I remember yetYou, of all women one has metIn random wayfare, as one meetsThe chance romances of the streets,The Juliet of a night? I knowYour heart holds many a Romeo.And I, who call to mind your faceIn so serene a pausing-place,Where the bright pure expanse of sea,The shadowy shore's austerity,Seems a reproach to you and me,I too have sought on many a breastThe ecstasy of love's unrest,I too have had my dreams, and met(Ah me!) how many a Juliet.Why is it, then, that I recallYou, neither first nor last of all?For, surely as I see to-nightThe glancing of the lighthouse light,Against the sky, across the bay,As turn by turn it falls my way,So surely do I see your eyesOut of the empty night arise,Child, you arise and smile to meOut of the night, out of the sea,The Nereid of a moment there,And is it seaweed in your hair?O lost and wrecked, how long ago,Out of the drownèd past, I know,You come to call me, come to claimMy share of your delicious shame.Child, I remember, and can tellOne night we loved each other well;And one night's love, at least or most,Is not so small a thing to boast.You were adorable, and IAdored you to infinity,That nuptial night too briefly borneTo the oblivion of morn.Oh, no oblivion! for I feelYour lips deliriously stealAlong my neck, and fasten there;I feel the perfume of your hair,And your soft breast that heaves and dips,Desiring my desirous lips,And that ineffable delightWhen souls turn bodies, and uniteIn the intolerable, the wholeRapture of the embodied soul.That joy was ours, we passed it by;You have forgotten me, and IRemember you thus strangely, wonAn instant from oblivion.And I, remembering, would declareThat joy, not shame, is ours to share,Joy that we had the will and power,In spite of fate, to snatch one hour,Out of vague nights, and days at strife,So infinitely full of life.And 'tis for this I see you rise,A wraith, with starlight in your eyes,Here, where the drowsy-minded moodIs one with Nature's solitude;For this, for this, you come to meOut of the night, out of the sea.
Why is it I remember yetYou, of all women one has metIn random wayfare, as one meetsThe chance romances of the streets,The Juliet of a night? I knowYour heart holds many a Romeo.And I, who call to mind your faceIn so serene a pausing-place,Where the bright pure expanse of sea,The shadowy shore's austerity,Seems a reproach to you and me,I too have sought on many a breastThe ecstasy of love's unrest,I too have had my dreams, and met(Ah me!) how many a Juliet.Why is it, then, that I recallYou, neither first nor last of all?For, surely as I see to-nightThe glancing of the lighthouse light,Against the sky, across the bay,As turn by turn it falls my way,So surely do I see your eyesOut of the empty night arise,Child, you arise and smile to meOut of the night, out of the sea,The Nereid of a moment there,And is it seaweed in your hair?
O lost and wrecked, how long ago,Out of the drownèd past, I know,You come to call me, come to claimMy share of your delicious shame.Child, I remember, and can tellOne night we loved each other well;And one night's love, at least or most,Is not so small a thing to boast.You were adorable, and IAdored you to infinity,That nuptial night too briefly borneTo the oblivion of morn.Oh, no oblivion! for I feelYour lips deliriously stealAlong my neck, and fasten there;I feel the perfume of your hair,And your soft breast that heaves and dips,Desiring my desirous lips,And that ineffable delightWhen souls turn bodies, and uniteIn the intolerable, the wholeRapture of the embodied soul.
That joy was ours, we passed it by;You have forgotten me, and IRemember you thus strangely, wonAn instant from oblivion.And I, remembering, would declareThat joy, not shame, is ours to share,Joy that we had the will and power,In spite of fate, to snatch one hour,Out of vague nights, and days at strife,So infinitely full of life.And 'tis for this I see you rise,A wraith, with starlight in your eyes,Here, where the drowsy-minded moodIs one with Nature's solitude;For this, for this, you come to meOut of the night, out of the sea.
A Study
By Sir Frederic Leighton, P.R.A.
Reproduced by the Swan Electric Engraving Company
Illustration: A Study
By Henry Harland
When I was a child some one gave me a family of white mice. I don't remember how old I was, I think about ten or eleven; but I remember very clearly the day I received them. It must have been a Thursday, a half-holiday, for I had come home from school rather early in the afternoon. Alexandre, dear old ruddy round-faced Alexandre, who opened the door for me, smiled in a way that seemed to announce,“There's a surprise in store for you, sir.”Then my mother smiled too, a smile, I thought, of peculiar promise and interest. After I had kissed her she said,“Come into the dining-room. There's something you will like.”Perhaps I concluded it would be something to eat. Anyhow, all agog with curiosity, I followed her into the dining-room—and Alexandre followedme, anxious to take part in the rejoicing. In the window stood a big cage, enclosing the family of white mice.
I remember it as a very big cage indeed; no doubt I should find it shrunken to quite moderate dimensions if I could see it again. There were three generations of mice in it: a fat old couple, the founders of the race, dozing phlegmatically on theirlaurels in a corner; then a dozen medium-sized, slender mice, trim and youthful-looking, rushing irrelevantly hither and thither, with funny inquisitive little faces; and then a squirming mass of pink things, like caterpillars, that were really infant mice, newborn. They didn't remain infants long, though. In a few days they had put on virile togas of white fur, and were scrambling about the cage and nibbling their food as independently as their elders. The rapidity with which my mice multiplied and grew to maturity was a constant source of astonishment to me. It seemed as if every morning I found a new litter of young mice in the cage—though how they had effected an entrance through the wire gauze that lined it was a hopeless puzzle—and these would have become responsible, self-supporting mice in no time.
My mother told me that somebody had sent me this soul-stirring present from the country, and I dare say I was made to sit down and write a letter of thanks. But I'm ashamed to own I can't remember who the giver was. I have a vague notion that it was a lady, an elderly maiden-lady—Mademoiselle ... something that began with P—who lived near Tours, and who used to come to Paris once or twice a year, and always brought me a box of prunes.
Alexandre carried the cage into my play-room, and set it up against the wall. I stationed myself in front of it, and remained there all the rest of the afternoon, gazing in, entranced. To watch their antics, their comings and goings, their labours and amusements, to study their shrewd, alert physiognomies, to wonder about their feelings, thoughts, intentions, to try to divine the meaning of their busy twittering language—it was such keen, deep delight. Of course I was an anthropomorphist, and read a great deal of human nature into them; otherwise it wouldn't have been such fun. I dragged myself reluctantly away when I wascalled to dinner. It was hard that evening to apply myself to my school-books. Before I went to bed I paid them a parting visit; they were huddled together in their nest of cotton-wool, sleeping soundly. And I was up at an unheard-of hour next morning, to have a bout with them before going to school. I found Alexandre, in his nightcap and long white apron, occupied with thesoins de propreté, as he said. He cleaned out the cage, put in fresh food and water, and then, pointing to the fat old couple, the grandparents, who stopped lazily abed, sitting up and rubbing their noses together, whilst their juniors scampered merrily about their affairs,“Tiens! On dirait Monsieur et Madame Denis,”he cried. I felt the appositeness of his allusion; and the old couple were forthwith officially denominated Monsieur and Madame Denis, for their resemblance to the hero and heroine of the song—though which was Monsieur, and which Madame, I'm not sure that I ever clearly knew.
It was a little after this that I was taken for the first time in my life to the play. I fancy the theatre must have been the PorteSt.Martin; at any rate, it was a theatre in the Boulevard, and towards the East, for I remember the long drive we had to reach it. And the piece wasThe Count of Monte Cristo. In my memory the adventure shines, of course, as a vague blur of light and joy; a child's first visit to the play, and that playThe Count of Monte Cristo! It was all the breath-taking pleasantness of romance made visible, audible, actual. A vague blur of light and joy, from which only two details separate themselves. First, the prison scene, and an aged man, with a long white beard, moving a great stone from the wall; then—the figure of Mercedes. I went home terribly in love with Mercedes. Surely there are no suchgrandes passionsin maturer life as those helpless, inarticulate ones we burn in secret with before our teens; surely we never loveagain so violently, desperately, consumedly. Anyhow, I went home terribly in love with Mercedes. And—do all children lack humour?—I picked out the prettiest young ladyish-looking mouse in my collection, cut off her moustaches, adopted her as my especial pet, and called her by the name of mydea certè.
All of my mice by this time had become quite tame. They had plenty to eat and drink, and a comfortable home, and not a care in the world; and familiarity with their master had bred assurance; and so they had become quite tame and shamefully, abominably lazy. Luxury, we are taught, was ever the mother of sloth. I could put my hand in amongst them, and not one would bestir himself the littlest bit to escape me. Mercedes and I were inseparable. I used to take her to school with me every day; she could be more conveniently and privately transported than a lamb. Eachlycéenhad a desk in front of his form, and she would spend the school-hours in mine, I leaving the lid raised a little, that she might have light and air. One day, the usher having left the room for a moment, I put her down on the floor, thereby creating a great excitement amongst my fellow-pupils, who got up from their places and formed an eager circle round her. Then suddenly the usher came back, and we all hurried to our seats, while he, catching sight of Mercedes, cried out,“A mouse! A white mouse! Who dares to bring a white mouse to the class?”And he made a dash for her. But she was too quick, too 'cute, for“the likes of”Monsieur le Pion. She gave a jump, and in the twinkling of an eye had disappeared up my leg, under my trousers. The usher searched high and low for her, but she prudently remained in her hiding-place; and thus her life was saved, for when he had abandoned his ineffectual chase, he announced,“I should have wrung her neck.”I turned pale to imagine the doom she had escaped as by a hair's breadth.“It is useless to ask whichof you brought her here,”he continued.“But mark my words: if ever I find a mouse again in the classI will wring her neck!”And yet, in private life, this bloodthirstypionwas a quite gentle, kindly, underfed, underpaid, shabby, struggling fellow, with literary aspirations, who would not have hurt a fly.
The secrets of a schoolboy's pocket! I once saw a boy surreptitiously angling in Kensington Gardens, with a string and a bent pin. Presently he landed a fish, a fish no bigger than your thumb, perhaps, but still a fish. Alive and wet and flopping as it was, he slipped it into his pocket. I used to carry Mercedes about in mine. One evening, when I put in my hand to take her out, I discovered to my bewilderment that she was not alone. There were four little pink mites of infant mice clinging to her.
I had enjoyed my visit to the theatre so much that at thejour de l'anmy father included a toy-theatre among my presents. It had a real curtain of green baize, that would roll up and down, and beautiful coloured scenery that you could shift, and footlights, and a trap-door in the middle of the stage; and indeed it would have been altogether perfect, except for the Company. I have since learned that this is not infrequently the case with theatres. My company consisted of pasteboard men and women who, as artists, struck me as eminently unsatisfactory. They couldn't move their arms or legs, and they had such stolid, uninteresting faces. I don't know how it first occurred to me to turn them all off, and fill their places with my mice. Mercedes, of course, was leading lady; Monsieur and Madame Denis were the heavy parents; and a gentlemanlike young mouse named Leander wasjeune premier. Then, in my leisure, they used to act the most tremendous plays. I was stage-manager, prompter, playwright, chorus, and audience, placing the theatre before a looking-glass, so that, though my duties kept me behind, I could peer round theedge, and watch the spectacle as from the front. I would invent the lines and deliver them, but, that my illusion might be the more complete, I would change my voice for each personage. The lines tried hard to be verses; no doubt they werevers libres. At any rate, they were mouth-filling and sonorous. The first play we attempted, I need hardly say, wasLe Comte de Monte Cristo, such version of it as I could reconstruct from memory. That had rather a long run. Then I dramatisedAladdin and the Wonderful Lamp,Paul et Virginie,Quentin Durward, andLa Dame de Monsoreau. Mercedes made a charming Diane, Leander a brilliant and dashing Bussy; Monsieur Denis was cast for the rôle of Frère Gorenflot; and a long, thin, cadaverous-looking mouse, Don Quichotte by name, somewhat inadequately represented Chicot. We began, as you see, with melodrama; presently we descended to light comedy, playingLes Mémoires d'un Ane,Jean qui rit, and other works of the immortal Madame de Ségur. And then at last we turned a new leaf, and became naturalistic. We had never heard of the naturalist school, though Monsieur Zola had already published some volumes of theRougon-Macquart; but ideas are in the air; and we, for ourselves, discovered the possibilities of naturalism simultaneously, as it were, with the acknowledged apostle of that form of art. We would impersonate the characters of our own world—our schoolfellows and masters, our parents, servants, friends—and carry them through experiences and situations derived from our impressions of real life. Perhaps we rather led them a dance; and I dare say those we didn't like came in for a good deal of retributive justice. It was a little universe, of which we were the arch-arbiters, our will the final law.
I don't know whether all children lack humour; but I'm sure no grown-up author-manager can take his business more seriouslythan I took mine. Oh, I enjoyed it hugely; the hours I spent at it were enraptured hours; but it was grim, grim earnest. After a while I began to long for a less subjective public, a more various audience. I would summon the servants, range them in chairs at one end of the room, conceal myself behind the theatre, and spout the play with fervid solemnity. And they would giggle, and make flippant commentaries, and at my most impassioned climaxes burst into guffaws. My mice, as has been said, were overfed and lazy, and I used to have to poke them through their parts with sticks from the wings; but this was a detail which a superior imagination should have accepted as one of the conventions of the art. It made the servants laugh, however; and when I would step to the front in person, and, with tears in my eyes, beseech them to be sober, they would but laugh the louder.“Bless you, sir, they're only mice—ce ne sont que des souris,”the cook called out on one such occasion. She meant it as an apology and a consolation, but it was the unkindest cut of all. Only mice, indeed! To me they had been a young gentleman and lady lost in the Desert of Sahara, near to die for the want of water, and about to be attacked, captured, and sold into slavery, by a band of Bedouin Arabs. Ah, well, the artist must steel himself to meet with indifference or derision from the public, to be ignored, misunderstood, or jeered at; and to rely for his real, his legitimate, reward on the pleasure he finds in his work.
And now there befell a great change in my life. Our home in Paris was broken up, and we moved toSt.Petersburg. It was impossible to take my mice with us; their cage would have hopelessly complicated our impedimenta. So we gave them to the children of our concierge. Mercedes, however, I was resolved I would not part with, and I carried her all the way to the Russian capital by hand. In my heart I was looking to her to foundanother family—she had so frequently become a mother in the past. But month succeeded month, and she forever disappointed me, and at last I abandoned hope. In solitude and exile Mercedes degenerated sadly; got monstrously fat; too indolent to gnaw, let her teeth grow to a preposterous length; and in the end died of a surfeit ofsmetana.
When I returned to Paris, at the age of twenty, tofaire mon droitin the Latin Quarter, I paid a visit to our old house, and discovered the same old concierge in theloge. I asked her about the mice, and she told me her children had found the care of them such a bother that at first they had neglected them, and at last allowed them to escape.“They took to the walls, and for a long time afterwards, Monsieur, the mice of this neighbourhood were pied. To this day they are of a paler hue than elsewhere.”
He climbed the three flights of stone stairs, and put his key into the lock; but before he turned it, he stopped—to rest, to take breath. On the door his name was painted in big white letters, Mr. Richard Dane. It is always silent in the Temple at midnight; to-night the silence was dense, like a fog. It was Sunday night; and on Sunday night, even within the hushed precincts of the Temple, one is conscious of a deeper hush.
When he had lighted the lamp in his sitting-room, he let himself drop into an arm-chair before the empty fireplace. He was tired, he was exhausted. Yet nothing had happened to tire him. He had dined, as he always dined on Sundays, with the Rodericks, in Cheyne Walk; he had driven home in a hansom. There wasno reason why he should be tired. But he was tired. A deadly lassitude penetrated his body and his spirit, like a fluid. He was too tired to go to bed.
“I suppose I am getting old,”he thought.
To a second person the matter would have appeared one not of supposition but of certainty, not of progression but of accomplishment. Getting old indeed? But hewasold. It was an old man, grey and wrinkled and wasted, who sat there, limp, sunken upon himself, in his easy-chair. In years, to be sure, he was under sixty; but he looked like a man of seventy-five.
“I am getting old, I suppose I am getting old.”
And vaguely, dully, he contemplated his life, spread out behind him like a misty landscape, and thought what a failure it had been. What had it come to? What had it brought him? What had he done or won? Nothing, nothing. It had brought him nothing but old age, solitude, disappointment, and, to-night especially, a sense of fatigue and apathy that weighed upon him like a suffocating blanket. On a table, a yard or two away, stood a decanter of whisky, with some soda-water bottles and tumblers; he looked at it with heavy eyes, and he knew that there was what he needed. A little whisky would strengthen him, revive him, and make it possible for him to bestir himself and undress and go to bed. But when he thought of rising and moving to pour the whisky out, he shrunk from that effort as from an Herculean labour; no—he was too tired. Then his mind went back to the friends he had left in Chelsea half an hour ago; it seemed an indefinably long time ago, years and years ago; they were like blurred phantoms, dimly remembered from a remote past.
Yes, his life had been a failure; total, miserable, abject. It had come to nothing; its harvest was a harvest of ashes. If it had been a useful life, he could have accepted its unhappiness; if ithad been a happy life, he could have forgotten its uselessness; but it had been both useless and unhappy. He had done nothing for others, he had won nothing for himself. Oh, but he had tried, he had tried. When he had left Oxford people expected great things of him; he had expected great things of himself. He was admitted to be clever, to be gifted; he was ambitious, he was in earnest. He wished to make a name, he wished to justify his existence by fruitful work. And he had worked hard. He had put all his knowledge, all his talent, all his energy, into his work; he had not spared himself; he had passed laborious days and studious nights. And what remained to show for it? Three or four volumes upon Political Economy, that had been read in their day a little, discussed a little, and then quite forgotten—superseded by the books of newer men.“Pulped, pulped,”he reflected bitterly. Except for a stray dozen of copies scattered here and there—in the British Museum, in his College library, on his own bookshelves—his published writings had by this time (he could not doubt) met with the common fate of unsuccessful literature, and been“pulped.”
“Pulped—pulped; pulped—pulped.”The hateful word beat rhythmically again and again in his tired brain; and for a little while that was all he was conscious of.
So much for the work of his life. And for the rest? The play? The living? Oh, he had nothing to recall but failure. It had sufficed that he should desire a thing, for him to miss it; that he should set his heart upon a thing, for it to be removed beyond the sphere of his possible acquisition. It had been so from the beginning; it had been so always. He sat motionless as a stone, and allowed his thoughts to drift listlessly hither and thither in the current of memory. Everywhere they encountered wreckage, derelicts: defeated aspirations, broken hopes. Languidlyhe envisaged these. He was too tired to resent, to rebel. He even found a certain sluggish satisfaction in recognising with what unvarying harshness destiny had treated him, in resigning himself to the unmerited.
He caught sight of his hand, lying flat and inert upon the brown leather arm of his chair. His eyes rested on it, and for the moment he forgot everything else in a sort of torpid study of it. How white it was, how thin, how withered; the nails were parched into minute corrugations; the veins stood out like dark wires; the skin hung loosely on it, and had a dry lustre: an old man's hand. He gazed at it fixedly, till his eyes closed and his head fell forward. But he was not sleepy, he was only tired and weak.
He raised his head with a start, and changed his position. He felt cold; but to endure the cold was easier than to get up, and put something on, or go to bed.
How silent the world was; how empty his room. An immense feeling of solitude, of isolation, fell upon him. He was quite cut off from the rest of humanity here. If anything should happen to him, if he should need help of any sort, what could he do? Call out? But who would hear? At nine in the morning the porter's wife would come with his tea. But if anything should happen to him in the meantime? There would be nothing for it but to wait till nine o'clock.
Ah, if he had married, if he had had children, a wife, a home of his own, instead of these desolate bachelor chambers!
If he had married, indeed! It was his sorrow's crown of sorrow that he had not married, that he had not been able to marry, that the girl he had wished to marry wouldn't have him. Failure? Success? He could have accounted failure in other things a trifle, he could have laughed at what the world calls failure, if ElinorLynd had been his wife. But that was the heart of his misfortune, she wouldn't have him.
He had met her for the first time when he was a lad of twenty, and she a girl of eighteen. He could see her palpable before him now: her slender girlish figure, her bright eyes, her laughing mouth, her warm brown hair curling round her forehead. Oh, how he had loved her. For twelve years he had waited upon her, wooed her, hoped to win her. But she had always said,“No—I don't love you. I am very fond of you; I love you as a friend; we all love you that way—my mother, my father, my sisters. But I can't marry you.”However, she married no one else, she loved no one else; and for twelve years he was an ever-welcome guest in her father's house; and she would talk with him, play to him, pity him; and he could hope. Then she died. He called one day, and they said she was ill. After that there came a blank in his memory—a gulf, full of blackness and redness, anguish and confusion; and then a sort of dreadful sudden calm, when they told him she was dead.
He remembered standing in her room, after the funeral, with her father, her mother, her sister Elizabeth. He remembered the pale daylight that filled it, and how orderly and cold and forsaken it all looked. And there was her bed, the bed she had died in; and there her dressing-table, with her combs and brushes; and there her writing-desk, her bookcase. He remembered a row of medicine bottles on the mantelpiece; he remembered the fierce anger, the hatred of them, as if they were animate, that had welled up in his heart as he looked at them, because they had failed to do their work.
“You will wish to have something that was hers, Richard,”her mother said.“What would you like?”
On her dressing-table there was a small looking-glass in anivory frame. He asked if he might have that, and carried it away with him. She had looked into it a thousand times, no doubt; she had done her hair in it; it had reflected her, enclosed her, contained her. He could almost persuade himself that something of her must remain in it. To own it was like owning something of herself. He carried it home with him, hugging it to his side with a kind of passion.
He had prized it, he prized it still, as his dearest treasure; the looking-glass in which her face had been reflected a thousand times; the glass that had contained her, known her; in which something of herself, he felt, must linger. To handle it, look at it, into it, behind it, was like holding a mystic communion with her; it gave him an emotion that was infinitely sweet and bitter, a pain that was dissolved in joy.
The glass lay now, folded in its ivory case, on the chimney-shelf in front of him. That was its place; he always kept it on his chimney-shelf; so that he could see it whenever he glanced round his room. He leaned back in his chair, and looked at it; for a long time his eyes remained fixed upon it.“If she had married me, she wouldn't have died. My love, my care, would have healed her. She could not have died.”Monotonously, automatically, the phrase repeated itself over and over again in his mind, while his eyes remained fixed on the ivory case into which her looking-glass was folded. It was an effect of his fatigue, no doubt, that his eyes, once directed upon an object, were slow to leave it for another; that a phrase once pronounced in his thought had this tendency to repeat itself over and over again.
But at last he roused himself a little, and leaning forward, put his hand out and up, to take the glass from the shelf. He wished to hold it, to touch it and look into it. As he lifted it towards him, it fell open, the mirror proper being fastened to a leatherback, which was glued to the ivory, and formed a hinge. It fell open; and hisgrasp had been insecure; and the jerk as it opened was enough. It slipped from his fingers, and dropped with a crash upon the hearthstone.
The sound went through him like a physical pain. He sank back into his chair, and closed his eyes. His heart was beating as after a mighty physical exertion. He knew vaguely that a calamity had befallen him; he could vaguely imagine the splinters of shattered glass at his feet. But his physical prostration was so great as to obliterate, to neutralise, emotion. He felt very cold. He felt that he was being hurried along with terrible speed through darkness and cold air. There was the continuous roar of rapid motion in his ears, a faint, dizzy bewilderment in his head. He felt that he was trying to catch hold of things, to stop his progress, but his hands closed upon emptiness; that he was trying to call out for help, but he could make no sound. On—on—on, he wasbeing whirled through some immeasurable abyss of space.
“Ah, yes, he's dead, quite dead,”the doctor said.“He has been dead some hours. He must have passed away peacefully sitting here in his chair.”
“Poor gentleman,”said the porter's wife.“And a broken looking-glass beside him. Oh, it's a sure sign, a broken looking-glass.”
Portrait of a Lady
By Will Rothenstein
Reproduced by the Swan Electric Engraving Company