Part 5 (1/2)
”That is a kind speech,” she answered; ”but even if there is truth in it, I am as yet quite unrecognized. There is no other theatre open to me; you and I look upon Istein and his work from a different point of view; but even if you are right, the part of Herdrine suited me. I was beginning to get some excellent notices. If we could have kept the thing going for only a few weeks longer, I think that I might have established some sort of a reputation.”
He sighed.
”A reputation, perhaps,” he admitted; ”but not of the best order. You do not wish to be known only as the portrayer of unnatural pa.s.sions, the interpreter of diseased desires. It would be an ephemeral reputation. It might lead you into many strange byways, but it would never help you to rise. Art is above all things catholic, and universal. You may be a perfect Herdrine; but Herdrine herself is but a night weed--a thing of no account. Even you cannot make her natural.
She is the puppet of a man's fantasy. She is never a woman.”
”I suppose,” she said sorrowfully, ”that your judgment is the true one. Yet--but we will talk of something else. How strange to be walking here with you!”
Berenice was always a much-observed woman, but to-day she seemed to attract more even than ordinary attention. Her personality, her toilette, which was superb, and her companion, were all alike interesting to the slowly moving throng of men and women amongst whom they were threading their way. The att.i.tude of her s.e.x towards Berenice was in a certain sense a paradox. She was distinctly the most talented and the most original of all the ”petticoat apostles,” as the very man who was now walking by her side had scornfully described the little band of women writers who were accused of trying to launch upon society a new type of their own s.e.x. Her last novel was flooding all the bookstalls; and if not of the day, was certainly the book of the hour. She herself, known before only as a brilliant journalist writing under a curious _nom de plume_, had suddenly become one of the most marked figures in London life. Yet she had not gone so far as other writers who had dealt with the same subject. Marriage, she had dared to write, had become the whitewas.h.i.+ng of the impure, the sanctifying of the vicious! But she had not added the almost natural corollary,--therefore let there be no marriage. On the contrary, marriage in the ideal she had written of as the most wonderful and the most beautiful thing in life,--only marriage in the ideal did not exist.
She had never posed as a woman with a mission! She formulated nowhere any scheme for the re-organization of those social conditions whose bases she had very eloquently and very trenchantly held to be rotten and impure. She had written as a prophet of woe! She had preached only destruction, and from the first she had left her readers curious as to what s.e.xual system could possibly replace the old. The thing which happened was inevitable. The amazing demand for her book was exactly in inverse proportion to its popularity amongst her s.e.x. The crusade against men was well! Admittedly they were a bad lot, and needed to be told of it. A little self-a.s.sertion on behalf of his superior was a thing to be encouraged and applauded. But a crusade against marriage!
Berenice must be a most abandoned, as well as a most immoral, woman!
No one who even hinted at the doctrine of love without marriage could be altogether respectable. Not that Berenice had ever done that.
Still, she had written of marriage,--the usual run of marriages,--from a woman's point of view, as a very hateful thing. What did she require, then, of her s.e.x? To live and die old maids, whilst men became regenerated? It was too absurd. There were a good many curious things said, and it was certainly true, that since she had gone upon the stage her toilette and equipage were unrivalled. Berenice looked into the eyes of the women whom she met day by day, and she read their verdict. But if she suffered, she said not a word to any of it.
They pa.s.sed out from the glancing shadows of the trees towards the Piccadilly entrance. Here they paused for a moment and stood together looking down the drive. The sunlight seemed to touch with quivering fire the brilliant phantasmagoria. Berenice was serious. Her dark eyes swept down the broad path and her under-lip quivered.
”It is this,” she exclaimed, with a slight forward movement of her parasol, ”which makes me long for an earthquake. Can one do anything for women like that? They are not the creations of a G.o.d; they are the parasitical images of type. Only it is a very small type and a very large reproduction. Why do I say these things to you, I wonder? You are against me, too! But then you are not a woman!”
”I am not against you in your detestation of type,” he answered. ”The whole world of our s.e.x as well as yours is full of worn-out and effete reproductions of an unworthy model. It is this intolerable sameness which suffocates all thought. One meets it everywhere; the deep melancholy of our days is its fruit. But the children of this generation will never feel it. The taste of life between their teeth will be neither like ashes nor green figs. They are numbed.”
She flashed a look almost of anger upon him.
”Yet you have ranged yourself upon their side. When my story first appeared, its fate hung for days in the balance. Women had not made up their minds how to take it. It came into your hands for review. Well!
you did not spare it, did you? It was you who turned the scale. Your denunciation became the keynote of popular opinion concerning me. The women for whose sake I had written it, that they might at least strike one blow for freedom, took it with a virtuous shudder from the hands of their daughters. I was p.r.o.nounced unwholesome and depraved; even my personal character was torn into shreds. How odd it all seems!” she added, with a light, mirthless laugh. ”It was you who put into their hands the weapon with which to scourge me. Their trim, self-satisfied little sentences of condemnation are emasculated versions of your judgment. It is you whom I have to thank for the closing of the theatre and the failure of Herdrine,--you who are responsible for the fact that these women look at me with insolence and the men as though I were a courtesan. How strange it must seem to them to see us together--the wolf and the lamb! Well, never mind. Take me somewhere and give me some tea; you owe me that, at least.”
They turned and left the park. For a few minutes conversation was impossible, but as soon as they had emerged from the crowd he answered her.
”If I have ever helped any one to believe ill of you,” he said slowly, ”I am only too happy that they should have the opportunity of seeing us together. You are rather severe on me. I thought then, as I think now, that it is--to put it mildly--impolitic to enter upon a pa.s.sionate denunciation of such an inst.i.tution as marriage when any subst.i.tute for it must necessarily be another step upon the downward grade. The decadence of self-respect amongst young men, any contrast between their lives and the lives of the women who are brought up to be their wives, is too terribly painful a subject for us to discuss here. Forgive me if I think now, as I have always thought, that it is not a fitting subject for a novelist--certainly not for a woman. I may be prejudiced; yet it was my duty to write as I thought. You must not forget that! So far as your story went, I had nothing but praise for it. There were many chapters which only an artist could have written.”
She raised her eyebrows. They had turned into Bond Street now, and were close to their destination.
”You men of letters are so odd,” she exclaimed. ”What is Art but Truth? and if my book be not true, how can it know anything of art?
But never mind! We are talking shop, and I am a little tired of taking life seriously. Here we are! Order me some tea, please, and a chocolate _eclair_.”
He followed her to a tiny round table, and sat down by her side upon the cus.h.i.+oned seat. As he gave his order and looked around the little room, he smiled gravely to himself. It was the first time in his life,--at any rate since his boyhood,--that he had taken a woman into a public room. Decidedly it was a new era for him.
CHAPTER VII
An incident, which Matravers had found once or twice uppermost in his mind during the last few days, was recalled to him with sudden vividness as he took his seat in an ill-lit, shabbily upholstered box in the second tier of the New Theatre. He seemed almost to hear again the echoes of that despairing cry which had rung out so plaintively across the desert of empty benches from somewhere amongst the shadows of the auditorium. Several times during the performance he had glanced up in the same direction; once he had almost fancied he could see a solitary, bent figure sitting rigid and motionless in the first row of the amphitheatre. No man was possessed of a smaller share of curiosity in the ordinary sense of the word than Matravers; but the thought that this might be the same man come again to witness a play which had appealed to him before with such peculiar potency, interested him curiously. At the close of the second act he left his seat, and, after several times losing his way, found himself in the little narrow s.p.a.ce behind the amphitheatre. Leaning over the part.i.tion, and looking downwards, he had a good view of the man who sat there quite alone, his head resting upon his hand, his eyes fixed steadily upon a soiled and crumpled programme, which was spread out carefully before him.
Matravers wondered whether there was not in the clumsy figure and awkward pose something vaguely familiar to him.
An attendant of the place standing by his side addressed him respectfully.
”Not much of a house for the last night, sir,” he remarked.
Matravers agreed, and moved his head downwards towards the solitary figure.