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ON THE PLAYING OF MARCHES AT THE FUNERALS OF MARIONETTES
HE began the day badly. He
took
me out and lost me. It would be so much better would he consent to the
usual
arrangement, and allow me to take him out. I am far the abler leader; I
say it
without conceit. I am older than he is, and I am less excitable. I do
not stop
and talk with every person I meet, and. then forget where I am. I do
less to
distract myself: I rarely fight; I never feel I want to run after cats;
I take
but little pleasure in frightening children. I have nothing to think
about but
the walk and the getting home again. If, as I say, he would give up
taking me
out, and let me take him out, there would be less trouble all round.
But into
this I have never been able to persuade him.
He had mislaid me once or
twice, but in Sloane Square he lost me entirely. When he loses me he
stands and
barks for me. If only he would remain where he first barked, I might
find my
way to him; but before I can cross the road, he is barking halfway down
the
next street. I am not so young as I was; and I sometimes think he
exercises me
more than is good for me. I could see him from where 1 was standing in
the
King's road. Evidently he was most indignant. I was too far off to
distinguish
the barks, but I could guess what he was saying, –
"Damn that man! he's
off again."
He made inquiries of a
passing dog, –
"You haven't smelt my
man about anywhere, have you?"
(A dog, of course, would
never speak of seeing
anybody or
anything, smell being his leading sense. Reaching the top of a hill, he
would
say to his companion, "Lovely smell from here, I always think; I could
sit
and sniff here all the afternoon." Or, proposing a walk, he
would say, "I
like the road by the canal, don't you? There's something interesting to
catch
your nose at every turn.")
"No, I haven't smelt
any man in particular," answered the other dog. "What sort of
a
smelling man is yours?"
"Oh, an egg-and-bacony sort
of a man, with a dash of soap about him."
"That's nothing to go
by," retorted the other; "most men would answer to that description,
this time of the morning. Where were you when you last noticed him?"
At this moment he caught
sight of me, and came up, pleased to find me, but vexed with me for
having got
lost.
"Oh, here you
are," he barked; "didn't you see me go round the corner? Do keep
closer. Bothered if half my time isn't taken up finding you and losing
you
again."
The incident appeared to
have made him bad-tempered; he was just in the humour for a row of any
sort. At
the top of Sloane Street, a stout military-looking gentleman started
running
after the Chelsea 'bus. With a "Hooroo" William Smith was after him.
Had the old gentleman taken no notice, all would have been well. A
butcher boy,
driving just behind, would – I could read it in his eye
– have caught Smith a
flick as he darted into the road, which would have served him right;
the old
gentleman would have captured his 'bus; and the affair would have been
ended.
Unfortunately, he was that type of retired military man all gout and
curry and
no sense. He stopped to swear at the dog. That, of course, was what
Smith
wanted. It is not often he gets a scrimmage with a full-grown man.
"They're a poor-spirited lot, most of them," he thinks; "they
won't even answer you back. I like a man who shows a bit of pluck." He
was
frenzied with delight at his success. He flew round his victim, weaving
whooping circles and curves that paralysed the old gentleman as though
they had
been the mystic figures of a Merlin. The colonel clubbed his umbrella,
and
attempted to defend himself. I called to the dog, I gave good advice to
the
colonel (I judged him to be a colonel; the louder he spoke, the less
one could
understand him), but both were too excited to listen to me. A
sympathetic 'bus
driver leaned over and whispered hoarse counsel.
"Ketch 'im by the tail,
sir," he advised the old gentleman; "don't you be afraid of him; you
ketch 'im firmly by the tail."
A milkman, on the other
hand, sought rather to encourage Smith, shouting as he passed,
–
"'Good dog, kill
him!"
A child, brained within an
inch by the old gentleman's umbrella, began to cry. The nurse told the
old
gentleman he was a fool, – a remark which struck me as
singularly apt. The old
gentleman gasped back that perambulators were illegal on the
pavement, and,
between his exercises, inquired after myself. A crowd began to collect,
and a
policeman strolled up.
It was not the right thing:
I do not defend myself; but, at this point, the temptation
came to me to
desert William Smith. He likes a street row; I don't. These things are
matters
of temperament. I have also noticed that he has the happy instinct of
knowing
when to disappear from a crisis, and the ability to do so; mysteriously
turning
up, quarter of a mile off, clad in a peaceful and preoccupied air, and
to all
appearances another and a better dog.
Consoling myself with the
reflection that I could be of no practical assistance to him, and
remembering
with some satisfaction that, by a fortunate accident, he was without
his
collar, which bears my name and address, I slipped round the off side
of a Vauxhall
'bus, making no attempt at ostentation, and worked my way home through
Lowndes
Square and the Park.
Five minutes after I had sat
down to lunch, he flung open the dining-room door and marched in. It is
his
customary "entrance." In a previous state of existence, his soul was
probably that of an Actor-Manager.
From his exuberant
self-satisfaction, I was inclined to think he must have succeeded in
following
the milkman's advice; at all events, I have not seen the colonel since.
His bad
temper had disappeared, but his "uppishness" had, if possible,
increased. Previous to his return, I had given The O'Shannon a biscuit.
The
O'Shannon had been insulted; he did not want a dog biscuit; if he could
not
have a grilled kidney he did not want anything. He had thrown the
biscuit on
the floor. Smith saw it and made for it. Now Smith never eats biscuits.
I give
him one occasionally, and he at once proceeds to hide it. He is a
thrifty dog;
he thinks of the future. "You never know what may happen," he
says;
"suppose the Guv'nor dies, or goes mad, or bankrupt, I may be glad even
of
this biscuit; I'll put it under the door-mat – no, I won't,
somebody will find
it there; I'll scratch a hole in the tennis lawn and bury it there.
That's a
good idea; perhaps it'll grow." Once I caught him hiding it in my
study,
behind the shelf devoted to my own books. It offended me, his doing
that; the
argument was so palpable. Generally, wherever he hides it
somebody finds it.
We find it under our pillows, inside our boots; no place seems safe.
This time
he had said to himself, "By Jove! a whole row of the Guv'nor's books.
Nobody will ever want to take these out: I'll hide it here." One feels
a
thing like that from one's own dog.
But The O'Shannon's biscuit
was another matter. Honesty is the best policy; but dishonesty is the
better
fun. He made a dash for it and commenced to devour it greedily; you
might have
thought he had not tasted food for a week.
The indignation of The
O'Shannon
was a sight for the gods. He has the good nature of his race: had Smith
asked
him for the biscuit, he would probably have given it to him; it was the
insult,
the immorality of the proceeding, that maddened The O'Shannon.
For a moment he was
paralysed.
"Well, of all the
– Did
ye see that now?" he said to me with his eyes. Then he made a rush and
snatched the biscuit out of Smith's very jaws. "Ye onprincipled black
Saxon thief," growled The O'Shannon, "how dare ye take my
biscuit?"
"You miserable Irish
cur," growled Smith, "how was I to know it was your biscuit? Does
everything on the floor belong to you? Perhaps you think I belong to
you; I'm
on the floor. I don't believe it is your biscuit, you long-eared,
snubbed-nosed
bog-trotter; give it me back."
"I don't require any of
your argument, you flop-eared son of a tramp with half a tail," replied
The O'Shannon. "You come and take it, if you think you are dog
enough."
He did think he was dog
enough. He is half the size of The O'Shannon, but such considerations
weigh not
with him. His argument is, if a dog is too big for you to fight the
whole of
him, take a bit of him and fight that. He generally gets licked, but
what is
left of him invariably swaggers about afterwards under the impression
it is the
victor. When he is dead, he will say to himself, as
he settles himself in his
grave, "Well, I flatter myself I've laid out that old world at last. It
won't trouble me any more, I'm thinking."
On this occasion, I
took a hand in the fight. It becomes necessary at intervals to remind
Master
Smith that the man, as the useful and faithful friend of dog, has his
rights. I
deemed such interval had arrived. He flung himself on to the sofa,
muttering.
It sounded like, "Wish I'd never got up this morning. Nobody
understands
me."
Nothing, however, sobers him
for long. Half-an-hour later, he was killing the nextdoor cat.
He will never
learn sense; he has been killing that cat for the last three months.
Why the
next morning his nose is invariably twice its natural size, while for
the next
week he can see objects on one side of his head only, he never seems to
grasp;
I suppose he attributes it to change in the weather.
He ended up the afternoon
with what he no doubt regarded as a complete and satisfying
success. Dorothea had
invited a lady to take tea with her that day. I heard the sound of
laughter,
and, being near the nursery, I looked in to see what was the joke.
Smith was
worrying a doll. I have rarely seen a more worried-looking doll. Its
head was
off, and its sawdust strewed the floor. Both the children were crowing
with
delight; Dorothea, in particular, was in an ecstasy of amusement.
"Whose doll is it?"
I asked.
"Eva's," answered Dorothea,
between her peals of laughter.
"Oh, no, it isn't,"
explained Eva, in a tone of sweet content; "Here's my doll." She had
been sitting on it, and now drew it forth, warm but whole. "That's
Dorry's
doll."
The change from joy to grief
on the part of Dorothea was distinctly dramatic. Even Smith, accustomed
to
storm, was nonplussed at the suddenness of the attack upon him.
Dorothea's sorrow lasted
longer than I had expected. I promised her another doll. But it seemed
she did
not want another; that was the only doll she would ever care for so
long as
life lasted; no other doll could ever take its place; no other doll
would be to
her what that doll had been. These little people are so absurd: as if
it could
matter whether you loved one doll or another, when all are so much
alike! They
have curly hair and pink-and-white complexions, big eyes that open and
shut, a
little red mouth, two little hands. Yet these foolish little people!
they will
love one, while another they will not look upon. I find the best plan
is not to
reason with them, but to sympathise. Later on – but not too
soon – introduce to
them another doll. They will not care for it at first, but in time they
will come to
take an interest in it. Of course it cannot make them forget the first
doll; no
doll ever born in Lowther Arcadia could be as that, but still
– It is many
weeks before they forget entirely the first love.
We buried Dolly in the
country under the yew-tree. A friend of mine who plays the fiddle came
down on
purpose to assist. We buried her in the hot spring sunshine, while the
birds
from shady nooks sang joyously of life and love. And our chief mourner
cried
real tears, just for all the world as though it were not the fate of
dolls,
sooner or later, to get broken, – the little fragile things,
made for an hour,
to be dressed and kissed; then, paintless and stript, to be thrown
aside on the
nursery floor. Poor little dolls! I wonder do they take themselves
seriously,
not knowing the springs that stir their sawdust bosoms are but
clockwork, not
seeing the wires to which they dance. Poor little marionettes! do they
talk
together, I wonder, when the lights of the booth are out.
You, little sister doll,
were the heroine. You lived in the whitewashed cottage, all honeysuckle
and
clematis without, – ear-wiggy and damp within, maybe. How
pretty you always
looked in your simple, neatlyfitting print dress! How good you
were! How nobly
you bore your poverty! How patient you were under your many wrongs! You
never
harboured an evil thought, a revengeful wish – never, little
doll? Were there
never moments when you longed to play the wicked woman's part, live in
a room
with many doors, beclad in furs and jewels, with lovers galore at your
feet? In
those long winter evenings? the household work is done, – the
greasy dishes
washed, the floor scrubbed; the excellent child is asleep in the
corner; the one-and-eleven-penny
lamp sheds its dismal light on the darned table-cloth; you sit, busy at
your
coarse sewing, waiting for Hero Dick, knowing, guessing, at least,
where he is
–! Yes, dear, I remember your fine speeches, when you told
her, in stirring
language the gallery cheered to the echo, what you thought of her and
of such
women as she; when, lifting your hand to Heaven, you declared you were
happier
in your attic, working your fingers to the bone, than she in her gilded
salon –
I think "gilded salon" was the term, was it not? – furnished
by sin.
But speaking of yourself, weak little sister doll, not of your fine
speeches,
the gallery listening, did you not in your secret heart envy her? Did
you
never, before blowing out the one candle, stand for a minute in front
of the
cracked glass, and think to yourself that you, too, would look well in
low-cut
dresses from Paris, the diamonds flashing on your white smooth skin ?
Did you
never, toiling home through the mud, bearing your bundle of needlework,
feel
bitter with the wages of virtue, as she splashed you, passing by in her
carriage? Alone, over your cup of weak tea, did you never feel tempted
to pay
the price for champagne suppers and gaiety and admiration? Ah, yes, it
is easy for folks who have had their good time to prepare
copy-books for weary
little ink-stained fingers longing for play. The fine maxims sound such
cant
when we are in that mood, do they not? You, too, were young and
handsome: did
the author of the play think you were never hungry for the good things
of life?
Did he think that reading tracts ta crotchety old
women was joy
to a fullblooded girl in her twenties? Why should she
have
all the love and all the laughter? How fortunate that the
villain, the Wicked Baronet, never opened the cottage door at
that moment, eh,
dear? He always came when you were strong, when you felt that you could
denounce him, and scorn his temptations. Would that the
villain came to all of
us at such time; then we would all, perhaps, be heroes and heroines.
Ah, well, it was only a play: it
is over now. You and I, little tired dolls, lying here side by side,
waiting to
know our next part, we can look back and laugh. Where is she, this
wicked
dolly, that made such a stir on our tiny stage? Ah, here you are, Madam; I
thought you could not be far; they have thrown us all into this corner
together.
But how changed you are, Dolly, your paint rubbed off, your golden hair
worn to
a wisp! No wonder; it was a trying part you had to play. How tired you
rnust have
grown of the glare and the glitter! And even hope was denied you. The
peace you
so longed for you knew you had lost the power to enjoy. Like the girl
bewitched
in the fairy tale, you knew you must dance ever faster and faster, with
limbs
growing palsied, with face growing ashen and hair growing grey, till
Death
should come to release you; and your
only prayer was he might come ere your dancing
grew comic.
Like the smell of the roses
to Nancy, hawking them through the hot streets, must the stifling
atmosphere of
love have been to you. The song of passion, how monotonous in your
ears, sung
now by the young and now by the old; now shouted, now whined, now
shrieked; but
ever the one strident tune. Do you remember when first you heard it?
You dreamt
it the morning hymn of Heaven. You came to think it the
dancemusic of Hell,
ground out of a cracked hurdy-gurdy, lent out by the Devil on hire.
An evil race we must have
seemed to you, Dolly Faustine, as to some Old Bailey lawyer. You saw
but one
side of us. You lived in a world upside down, where the leaves and the
blossoms
were hidden, and only the roots saw your day. You imagined the
wormbeslimed fibres
the plant, and all things beautiful you deemed cant. Chivalry, love,
honour!
how you laughed at the lying words! You knew the truth – as
you thought: aye, half the truth. We were
swine while your spell was upon us, Daughter of Circe, and you, not
knowing
your island secret, deemed it our natural shape.
No wonder, Dolly, your
battered waxen face is stamped with an angry sneer. The Hero, who
eventually
came into his estates amid the plaudits of the Pit, while you were left
to die
in the streets, you remembered, but the house had forgotten those
earlier
scenes in always wicked Paris. The good friend of the family, the
breezy man of
the world, the Deus
ex Machina
of the play, who was so good
to everybody, whom everybody loved! aye, you loved him once –
but that was in
the Prologue. In the Play proper, he was respectable. (How you loathed
that
word, that meant to you all you vainly longed for!) To him the Prologue
was a
period past and dead; a memory, giving flavour to his life. To you, it
was the
First Act of the Play, shaping all the others. His sins the house had
forgotten;
at yours, they held up their hands in horror. No wonder the sneer lies
on your
waxen lips.
Never mind, Dolly; it was a
stupid house. Next time, perhaps, you will play a better part; and then
they
will cheer, instead of hissing you. You were wasted, I am
inclined to think,
on modern comedy. You should have been cast for the heroine of some
old-world
tragedy. The strength of character, the courage, the power of
selfforgetfulness,
the enthusiasm, were yours: it was the part that was lacking. You might
have
worn the mantle of a Judith, a Boadicea, or a Jeanne
d'Arc, had such
plays been popular in your time. Perhaps they, had they played in your
day,
might have had to be content with such a part as yours. They could not
have
played the meek heroine, and what else would there have been for them
in modern
drama? Catherine of Russia! had she been a waiter's daughter in the
days of the
Second Empire, should we have called her Great? The Magdalene! had her
lodging
in those days been in some bye-street of Rome instead of in
Jerusalem, should
we mention her name in our churches?
You were necessary, you see,
Dolly, to the piece. We cannot all play heroes and heroines. There must
be
wicked people in the play, or it would not interest. Think of it,
Dolly, a play
where all the women were virtuous, all the men honest! We might close
the booth;
the world would be as dull as an oyster-bed. Without you wicked folk
there
would be no good. How should we have known and honoured the heroine's
worth,
but by contrast with your worthlessness? Where would have been her fine
speeches, but for you to listen to them? Where lay the hero's strength,
but in
resisting temptation of you? Had not you and the Wicked Baronet between
you
robbed him of his estates, falsely accused him of crime, he would have
lived to
the end of the play an idle, unheroic, incomplete existence.
You brought him
down to poverty; you made him earn his own bread, – a most
excellent thing for
him; gave him the opportunity to play the man. But for your
conduct in the
Prologue, of what value would have been that fine scene at the end of
the Third
Act, that stirred the house to tears and laughter. You and your
accomplice, the
Wicked Baronet, made the play possible. How would Pit and Gallery have
known
they were virtuous, but for the indignation that came to them,
watching your
misdeeds? Pity, sympathy, excitement, all that goes to the making of a
play,
you were necessary for. It was ungrateful of the house to hiss you.
And you, Mr. Merryman, the
painted grin worn from your pale lips, you too were dissatisfied, if I
remember
rightly, with your part. You wanted to make the people cry, not laugh.
Was it a
higher ambition? The poor tired people! so much happens outside the
booth to
make them weep, is it not good sport to make them merry for awhile? Do
you
remember that old soul in the front row of the Pit? How she laughed
when you
sat down on the pie! I thought she would have to be carried out. I
heard her
talking to her companion as they passed the stagedoor on their
way home. "I
have not laughed, my dear, till to-night," she was saying, the
good, gay
tears still in her eyes, "since the day poor Sally died." Was not
that alone worth the old stale tricks you so hated? Aye, they were
commonplace
and conventional, those antics of yours that made us laugh;
are not the antics
that make us weep commonplace and conventional also? Are not all the
plays,
played since the booth was opened, but of one pattern, the plot
oldfashioned now,
the scenes now commonplace? Hero, villain, cynic, – are their
parts so much the
fresher? The love duets, are they so very new? The death-bed scenes,
would you
call them uncommonplace?
Hate and
Anger and Wrong, – are their
voices
new to the booth? What are you waiting for, people? a play with a plot
that is
novel, with characters that have never strutted before? It will be
ready for
you, perhaps, when you are ready for it, with new tears and new
laughter.
You, Mr. Merryman, were the
true philosopher. You saved us from forgetting the reality
when the friction
grew somewhat strenuous. How we all applauded your gag in answer to the
hero,
when, bewailing his sad fate, he demanded of heaven how much longer he
was to suffer evil
fortune. "Well, there cannot be much more of it in store
for you," you answered him; "it's nearly nine o'clock already, and
the show closes at ten." And, true to your prophecy, the curtain fell
at
the time appointed, and his troubles were of the past. You showed us
the truth
behind the mask. When pompous Lord Shallow, in ermine and wig, went to
take his
seat amid the fawning crowd, you pulled the chair from under him, and
down he
sat plump on the floor. His robe flew open; his wig flew off. No longer
he awed
us. His aped dignity fell from him; we saw him a stupid-eyed, bald
little man;
he imposed no longer upon us. It is your fool who is the only true wise
man.
Yours was the best part in
the play, Brother Merryman, had you and the audience but known
it. But you
dreamt of a showier part, where you loved and fought. I have heard you
now and
again, when you did not know I was near, shouting with sword in hand
before
your looking-glass. You had thrown your motley aside to don a dingy red
coat;
you were the hero of the play; you performed the gallant deeds; you
made the
noble speeches. I wonder what the play would be like, were we all to
write our
own parts. There would be no clowns, no singing chambermaids. We would
all be
playing lead in the centre of the stage, with the lime-light
exclusively
devoted to ourselves. Would it not be so?
What grand acting parts they
are, these characters we write for ourselves alone in our
dressing-rooms. We
are always brave and noble, – wicked sometimes, but if so, in
a great,
high-minded way; never in a mean or little way. What wondrous deeds we
do,
while the house looks on and marvels! Now we are soldiers, leading
armies to
victory. What if we die! it is in the hour of triumph, and a nation is
left to
mourn. Not in some forgotten skirmish do we ever fall; not for some
"affair
of outposts" do we give our blood, our very name unmentioned in the
despatches
home. Now we are passionate lovers, well losing a world for love,
– a very
different thing to being a laughter-provoking co-respondent in a sordid
divorce
case.
And the house is always
crowded when we play. Our fine speeches always fall on sympathetic
ears; our
brave deeds are noted and applauded. It is so different in the real
performance. So often we play our parts to empty benches, or if a thin
house be
present, they misunderstand, and laugh at the pathetic passages. And
when our
finest opportunity comes, the royal box, in which he or
she should
be
present to watch us, is vacant.
Poor little doll's how
seriously we take ourselves, not knowing the springs that stir our
bosoms are
but clockwork, not seeing the wires to which we dance! Poor little marionettes! shall
we talk together, I wonder, when the lights of the booth are out?
We are little wax dollies
with hearts. We are little tin soldiers with souls. Oh, King of many
toys, are
you merely playing with us? Is
it only clockwork within us, this thing
that throbs and aches? Have you wound us up but to let us run down?
Will you
wind us again to-morrow, or leave us here to rust? Is
it only clockwork
to which we respond and quiver? Now we laugh, now we cry, now we dance;
our
little arms go out to clasp one another, our little lips kiss, then say
good-bye. We strive, and we strain, and we struggle. We reach now for
gold, now
for laurel. We call it desire and ambition: are they only wires that
you play?
Will you throw the clockwork aside, or use it again, O Master?
The lights of the booth grow
dim. The springs are broken that kept our eyes awake. The wire that
held us
erect is snapped, and helpless we fall in a heap on the stage. Oh,
brother and
sister dollies that we played beside, where are you? Why is it
so dark and
silent? Why are we being put into this black box? And hark! the little
doll orchestra
– how far away
the music sounds! – what
is it they are playing? –