<h2><SPAN name="page144"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>XVI.<br/> <i>BLUEBEARD’S CUPBOARD</i>.</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Augustus Lincoln</span> was the
manager of the Theatre Royal, Sheppey Island. He was an
actor of the old school, and illustrated with great success the
charnel house department of dramatic literature. Regarded
simply from an artistic point of view, the performances given at
the Theatre Royal may be described as fine and even formidable
representations, but commercially considered they could scarcely
be regarded as triumphs. The Sheppey Islanders were, at the
time of which we are writing, people of a low and degraded taste,
and showed a grovelling preference for the entertainments given
at the music-halls. The permission to indulge in beer and
tobacco, which is accorded in Caves of Harmony, may <SPAN name="page145"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>have had
something to do with this preference; but it must be admitted
that the Islanders considered “Hamlet,” “The
Stranger,” and “The Iron Chest,” a trifle
gloomy, even when illuminated by the genius of Mr. Augustus
Lincoln. Indeed, had it not been for an accident, this
enterprising lessee and manager would have been obliged, long
before the incidents about to be related, to shut up his theatre
and appear in a highly popular <i>rôle</i> on the stage of
the Bankruptcy Court.</p>
<p>Mr. Lincoln’s accident was the Amateur. That most
industrious and most sanguine of mortals, having hawked his
comedies, melodramas, and romantic plays to all the London
managers with all the customary want of success, determined that
Something must be Done. If caterers in the West End, blind
to their own interests, and careless of the intellectual
elevation of their patrons, refused to give him a show, as the
bald phraseology of the stage has it, the amateur, with fine
philanthropic feeling, determined to give himself a show.
Now the Theatre Royal, Sheppey Island, was very often closed, and
on such occasions, when he could raise a <SPAN name="page146"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>sufficient
sum to pay for the advertisement, the circumstance was duly
announced in the <i>Era</i>. It was through the medium of
that highly diverting miscellany that Lincoln and the Amateur
were brought together. And from the moment that
introduction was effected, Lincoln never knew what it was to have
the brokers in the house, an incident which, up to that time, was
of not unfrequent occurrence.</p>
<p>The manager was an enthusiast in his way, and threw his whole
heart and soul into playing the leading characters in the amateur
comedies, melodramas, and romantic plays which he placed on his
stage. And the ambitious authors who resorted to this means
of publicity, were as a rule, so extremely pleased with the
histrionic efforts of Mr. Lincoln, that in addition to the sum
agreed upon for the representation, most of the mute inglorious
ones would insist on making a little present to the conscientious
manager-actor. But Mr. Lincoln was as proud as an Elliston,
and carried himself with as much dignity. So that whenever
the token of the Amateur’s gratitude was offered in the
shape of money, the offended manager would draw himself grandly
up and <SPAN name="page147"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
147</span>say, “Sir, I cannot accept a gift of money;
though should you like to present me with a new hat, I shall not
say you nay.” The Amateur usually took the hint, and
in a few days a band-box containing a hat, was duly delivered at
the stage door of the Theatre Royal. Yet strange to say, no
Sheppey Islander had ever seen Mr. Lincoln in a new hat.
Indeed, they had never seen him except in a very old one, which
by a judicious use of oil and a silk handkerchief, showed bravely
enough when cocked on the side of Mr. Lincoln’s head.</p>
<p>It is, of course, easy to guess the reason of this. The
Amateur donors never thought of consulting their benefactor as to
the size of his head, or as to the peculiar shape which he most
affected. And so it happened, that not one of the
head-dresses sent to him was of any practical benefit. For
if it happened to be anything like a fit, it was sure to be of a
shape to which Mr. Lincoln would not condescend. He had
not, however, discarded them, but had placed them carefully in a
cupboard in his bedroom, which cupboard he always kept carefully
locked, carrying the key <SPAN name="page148"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>of it on his bunch. At rare
intervals he would exhibit his collection to some old
crony—just as a collector would show his pictures, or a
connoisseur his cellar. Connected with each hat was a
memory. The entire assortment was a sort of history of the
Theatre Royal, Sheppey Island, and as he pointed out the trophies
he would couple with each the name of the amateur drama, the
triumphant success of which it was intended to commemorate.
Thus he would point to a tall beaver, with preposterous brim,
such as comic artists place on the head of John Bull, and
say,—“That is my Queen of Circassia’s
hat;” or he would exhibit a light gossamer of most
undoubtedly dandaical proportions, saying,—“That is
my Murdered Monk’s hat;”—so on through the
collection. There was a “Prodigal Son’s”
hat, and an “Act on the Square” hat. The hat of
the “Pilgrim Fathers—a Nautical Drama,” and the
hat of “The Little Pig that Paid the Rent; an Irish
Tragedy.”</p>
<p>Mr. Lincoln was more proud of his hats than of any other
circumstance connected with his theatrical career—save one,
and that <SPAN name="page149"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
149</span>was, that Mr. Gladstone had seen him play Hamlet and
had expressed himself entirely satisfied with the
performance.</p>
<p>In an evil moment, and at the mature age of fifty-two, Mr.
Augustus Lincoln fell in love, and as often happens with the
intellectually great, he fell in love with the very last person
in the world whom he ought to have sought. Milly Brassey
was a pert, pink-cheeked, saucy-eyed beauty, who played
chamber-maid parts in his company. The Amateurs thought
very much of Milly, and as she was not proud in the matter of
receiving presents, it may be taken for granted that the sealskin
jacket and diamond rings came from the gifted creatures whose
works she had helped to illustrate. Off the stage she was a
giddy, giggling little woman, always ready for a flirtation, and
was madly loved by the <i>jeune premier</i>, and the low comedian
of the company. Indeed, it is a matter of notoriety that a
hostile meeting would have taken place between these jealous
lovers had it not transpired that Milly was about to be led to
the altar by the manager himself. So instead of meeting in
Greenwich Park over the murderous muzzles of revolvers, they met
<SPAN name="page150"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>in the
“Goat and Compasses” over two glasses of cold
gin.</p>
<p>Lincoln’s wedding was a very quiet affair. After
all, no such very great change was to take place in the life of
the bride. She was already a member of Lincoln’s
company. She had now become a member of his household as
well. Milly was a clever little actress, and if she did not
really love her husband, she made that devoted man think that she
did. His faith in her was unlimited, and although others
thought that she flirted alternately with Philip Beresford, the
<i>jeune premier</i>, and with Alf. Wild, the low comedian,
Lincoln with a firm belief in his wife’s honesty and a
still firmer belief in his own charms, saw nothing
whatever. He was perfectly contented, and the amateurs,
increasing in perseverance and impatience, brought him month
after month new dramas for illustration, and new hats in token of
esteem.</p>
<p>All might have gone well had it not been for the hats.
Everybody in Lincoln’s company wanted a hat. Neither
a <i>jeune premier</i>, nor a low comedian, can afford an
unstinted indulgence in hats on two pounds <SPAN name="page151"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>a week,
even when that modest stipend is regularly paid. Actors
usually carry large ulster-cloaks that cover a multitude of
sins. But a bad hat or a bad boot is always <i>en
évidence</i>. To say that Milly was gifted with
curiosity is simply to say that Milly was a woman. That she
soon began to question her husband as to the contents of the
locked cupboard, therefore goes without saying. But
although Lincoln would have trusted her with almost any other
secret, he was reticent concerning this. He had a sort of
prescience that the volatile Milly might turn his collection into
ridicule, and merely observing in answer to his wife’s
queries that it was “Bluebeard’s Cupboard,”
refused to be further cross-examined on the subject. Milly
promised not to annoy him any more in the matter, and religiously
kept her promise; only when he was out she tried every key in the
house on the lock that kept her from a delightful mystery, and at
last she found one that fitted, and opening
“Bluebeard’s Cupboard” found it full,—not
of heads without hats, but of hats without heads. So full
was the cupboard of these samples of the hatter’s art, that
she selected two, feeling <SPAN name="page152"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>confident, that from so large a bag,
a brace would never be missed. These she secreted, and when
her husband returned (he had gone to meet an Amateur, who was big
with a tragedy called “The Paralytic”), she met him
with a kiss, and they were quite happy till it was time to go to
the theatre.</p>
<p>A week afterwards another Amateur wanted to see Mr.
Lincoln. On this occasion the appointment was made at a
Club in Adelphi Terrace. The interview was a short one, and
Mr. Lincoln was able to bend his steps eastward some two hours
before the time he had mentioned to Milly. He had to make a
call in Greenwich, and in the Main Street of that
highly-depressing village, he happened to look over the blind in
a pastrycook’s window. He stopped suddenly, and
shouted in a tone of the utmost consternation, “My
‘Murdered Monk’s’ hat!” And then
after a pause, “My ‘Prodigal Son’s’
hat.” He looked again, and saw that the hats covered
the empty heads of Philip Beresford and Alf. Wild, between whom
sat his wife devouring open tarts, and laughing consumedly at her
own jokes. He entered stealthily, and soon heard enough to
<SPAN name="page153"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>show
that he, her husband, was the subject of her witticisms. He
strode up to them, and smashed the hats over the heads of the
wearers, calling them varlets and minions. The Amateur of
Adelphi Terrace had been good. So he was enabled to put his
hand in his waistcoat pocket, and withdraw six sovereigns.
Handing two to each, he said solemnly, “In lieu of a
week’s notice. Begone!” and then on his wife
making a gesture of remonstrance, he said, in louder tones,
“D’ye hear. <i>All</i> of ye.
Begone!” They went. And he has never seen any
of them since.</p>
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