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'_Volpone_--a comedy by Ben Jonson.'
'Oh, Ben Jonson!'
Sir Henry was depressed. He had met people before who had talked to him about the Old Dramatists.
Charles opened his portfolio.
'These are designs I have just completed. You see, cla.s.sical, like Ben's mind.'
'It looks immensely high,' said Sir Henry, his eyes twinkling.
'That,' replied Charles, 'is what I want, so that the figures are dwarfed.'
'I should have to alter my proscenium,' chuckled Sir Henry, and Charles, who missed the chuckle, continued eagerly,--
'I should like it played by dolls.'
Sir Henry turned over the drawings and played with the money in his pocket.
'You never saw my _King Lear_, did you?'
'I have seen pictures of it. Too realistic. A visit to Stonehenge would have answered the same purpose. You would have then to make such a storm as would drown the storm in _Lear_.'
Sir Henry remembered his part and fetched up an enormous voice from his stomach and roared,--
'Rage, blow and drown the steeples.' Then he kept his voice rumbling in his belly and tapped with his foot like the ba.s.s-trumpet man in a street band.
'Superb,' cried Charles.
'My voice?' asked Sir Henry, now very pleased with himself.
'My drawings,' replied Charles, rubbing his thumb along a line that especially delighted him.
'O Heavens!' Sir Henry paid no further attention to the drawings and drawled, 'Wonderful thing the theatre.' There's life in it--life! I hate leaving it. You haven't been to my room before?'
'I once waited for two hours downstairs to ask you to give me a part.
You didn't see me and I gave up acting.
'Oh! and now when I offer you a part you refuse it----'
'Things are very different now.... I have had a great welcome back to London.'
'What do you think of a national theatre?'
'Every nation, every city, ought to have its theatre.'
'Mine is the best theatre in London.'
'You won't do _Volpone_? It is one of the finest comedies ever written.'
'I never heard of its being done.'
Charles flung his drawings back into his portfolio, seized his hat, crammed it on to his head, and had reached the door when Sir Henry called him back.
'What do you say to _The Tempest_?'
'It doesn't need scenery.'
'Oh, come! The s.h.i.+p, the yellow sands. Prospero's cave--pictures all the way--and the masque.... I want to do _The Tempest_ shortly and I should be glad of your a.s.sistance.'
'I should expect you to buy my drawings and to pay me ten thousand pounds.'
Sir Henry ignored that. He knew his man by reputation. Ten thousand pounds meant no more to him than one and sixpence. He merely mentioned the first figures that came into his head. Sir Henry resumed,--
'I want _The Tempest_ to be my first Autumn production. I place my theatre at your disposal.... To be quite frank with you, that was why I offered you that part. The theatre wants something new. The Russian ballet has upset people. They are expecting something startling....
Poor old Smithson who has painted my scenery for twenty years is horrified when I suggest anything of the kind.'
'If I do _The Tempest_ for you will you join my committee?'
'Er--I--er--You must give me time to think it over. You know we managers have to think of each other.'
Charles began to wish he had not come. The suggestion of mysterious influences behind Sir Henry alarmed him, and at home was the furious energy in Clara forcing him into the embraces of this huge machine of a theatre, which discarded his _Volpone_ and required him to do something for which he had not the smallest inclination. Yet so implicit was his faith in her, so wonderful had been his life since she came into it, that he accepted the accuracy of her divination of the futility of his procedure through artists and literary persons, who would feed upon his fame and increase it to have more to devour.... He decided then to say no more about his committee for the present, to accept Sir Henry's offer, and to escape as quickly as possible from the stifling room, with its horrible drawings, and its atmosphere in which were blended a fas.h.i.+onable restaurant and a stockbroker's office. He had not felt so uncomfortable since he had been a schoolboy in the presence of his head master, and yet he enjoyed a European reputation, while outside the Anglo-Saxon world Sir Henry was hardly known.
The great actor condescendingly escorted the great artist down the heavily carpeted stairs to a private door which led to the dress circle. The theatre was in darkness. The seats were covered up in their white sheets, and Sir Henry looked round him and sighed,--
'Ah! cold, cold, a theatre soon grows cold. But it possesses you. Art is very like a woman. She only yields up her treasure to the purest pa.s.sion.'
'Art has nothing to do with women,' Charles rapped out, and, as Sir Henry had only been making a phrase, he was not offended. Charles shook the large fat hand which was held out to him, and plunged into the street.... Ah! It was good to be in the air again, to gaze up at the sky, to see the pa.s.sers-by moving about their business. There was a stillness about the theatre which made him think of Sir Henry in his room as rather like a large pale fish swimming about in a tank in a dark aquarium.... After his years of freedom in delightful countries, where people were in no hurry and were able most charmingly to do nothing in particular for weeks on end, the captivity of so eminent and powerful a person appalled and crushed him.... He had not encountered anything like it in his previous sojourn in London, and he was again possessed with the bewildered rage that had seized him when he saw the rebuilt station on his arrival. He had been out of it all for so long, yet he was of it, and he shuddered away from the increased captivity of London, yet longed to have been part of it.... It was almost bewilderingly a new city. During his absence, the immense change from horse to petrol-driven vehicles had taken place and a new style of architecture had been introduced. The air was cleaner: so were the streets. Shop windows were larger. There was everywhere more display, more colour, more and swifter movement, and yet in the theatre was that deadly stillness.
He turned into a magnificent shop, where all the flowers looked rather like little girls dressed up for a party, and ordered some roses to be sent to Clara, for whom he had begun to feel a rudimentary responsibility. It comforted him to do that. Somehow it broke the stillness which had infected him, and most profoundly shocked him, so different was it from the theatre in which he had been born and bred, the rather fatuous, very sentimental theatre which was inhabited by simple kind-hearted vagabonds, isolated from the world of morals and religion, yet pa.s.sionately proud of their calling, and setting it above both morals and religion. But this theatre, magnificent in this new magnificent London, was empty and still. So much of the theatre that had been dear to him was gone, and he mourned for it, lamented, too, over his own folly, for he was suddenly brought face to face with the fact that the theatre he proposed so light-heartedly to overthrow, the theatre of the actor, had disappeared. In attacking it he was beating the air. He had to deal with a new enemy.
As he was emerging from St James's Park into Victoria Street a woman accosted him. He looked at her, did not recognise her, and moved to pa.s.s on, for he was fastidious and took no interest in chance women.
She was a little woman, very alert, and she was rather poorly dressed.
She was young, but already her lips had stiffened into the hardness of baffled hope and pa.s.sion and her eyes smouldered with that extraordinary glow which rouses a pity as cold as ice.
'I saw you were back in the papers,' she said. 'It's a pity you can't hide yourself.'
Charles stared at her, stared and stared, cast about for some excuse for pretending not to know her but remained rooted.
'You're not so young as you were,' she went on. 'There's a lot of talk about you in the papers, but I know you; it's all talk.'
'My good woman,' said he, 'is that all you have to say?'
'It'll keep,' said she, and she turned abruptly and left him, feeling that all the strength had gone out of his legs, all the feeling from his bowels, leaving only a nauseating pity which brought up memory upon memory of horrible emotions, without any physical memory to fix them so that he was at their mercy. At last physical memories began to emerge, rather ridiculously, theatrical lodgings, provincial theatres, the arcades at Birmingham. And a blue straw hat that he had bought for her long ago; and at last her name. Kitty Messenger, and her mother, a golden-haired actress with a tongue like a flail in one temper, like the honey-seeking proboscis of a bee in another.
'I had forgotten,' said Charles to himself. 'I really had forgotten.
Well--money will settle it. I shall have to do _The Tempest_ for that fish.'
Thinking of the money restored his sense of serenity. Wonderful money that can swamp so many ills: money that means work done somewhere--work, the sole solace of human misery. But Charles had no notion of the relation between work and money, or that in using up large quant.i.ties of it he was diverting to his own uses more than his fair share of the comfort of humanity. He had so much to give if only humanity would take--and pay for it. What he had to give was beyond price, wherefore he had no qualms in setting his price high.... From _The Tempest_ boundless wealth would flow. He quickly persuaded himself of that, and by the time he reached his furnished house had lulled his alarm to sleep and had allayed the disgust and loathing of the past roused in him by the meeting with Kitty Messenger.... So rosy had the vision become under the influence of his potential wealth that he met Clara without a qualm, and forgot even that Sir Henry was like a fish in an aquarium.