<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></SPAN>CHAPTER V.</h2>
<p class="center">"THE PRINCESS OF PORTMAN SQUARE."</p>
<p class="indent">I am an only child. I was born with a silver spoon in
my mouth, and although there was no royal crest on it, yet
no princess could be more comfortable in the purple than
I was in the ordinary trappings of babyhood. From the
cradle upwards I was surrounded with love and luxury.
My pet name "Princess" fitted me like a glove. I was
the autocrat of the nursery and my power scarce diminished
when I rose to the drawing-room. My parents were very
obedient and did not even conceal from me that I was
beautiful. In short they did their best to spoil me, though
I cannot admit that they succeeded. I lost them both
before I was sixteen. My poor mother died first and my
poor father followed within a week; whether from grief or
from a cold caught through standing bareheaded in the
churchyard, or from employing the same doctor, I cannot
precisely determine.</p>
<p class="indent">After the usual period of sorrow, I began to pick up a
bit and to go out under the care of my duenna, a faded
flower of the aristocracy whose declining years my guardian
had soothed by quartering her on me. She was a
gentle old spinster, the seventh daughter of a penniless
peer, and although she has seen hard times and has almost
been reduced to marriage, yet she has scant respect for
my ten thousand a year. She has never lost the sense of
condescension in living with me, and would be horrified
to hear she is in receipt of a salary. It is to this sense of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page51" id="page51"></SPAN>[pg 51]</span>
superiority on her part that I owe a good deal of the liberty
I enjoy under her régime. She does not expect in me that
rigid obedience to venerable forms and conventions which
she. prescribes for herself; she regards it as a privilege of
the higher gentlewoman to be bound hand and foot by
fashionable etiquette, and so long as my liberty does not
degenerate into license I am welcome to as much as I please
of it. She has continued to call me "Princess," finding
doubtless some faint reverberation of pleasure in the magnificent
syllables. I should add that her name is the
Honorable Miss Primpole and that she is not afraid of
the butler.</p>
<p class="indent">Our town-house was situated in Portman Square and my
parents tenanted it during the season. There is nothing
very poetic about the Square, perhaps, not even in the
summer, when the garden is in bloom, yet it was here that
I first learnt to love. This dull parallelogram was the
birthplace of a passion as spiritual and intangible as ever
thrilled maiden's heart. I fell in love with a Voice.</p>
<p class="indent">It was a rich, baritone Voice, with a compass of two
and a half octaves, rising from full bass organ-notes to
sweet, flute-like tenor tones. It was a glorious Voice, now
resonant with martial ecstasy, now faint with mystic
rapture. Its vibrations were charged with inexpressible
emotion, and it sang of love and death and high heroic
themes. I heard it first a few months after my father's
funeral. It was night. I had been indoors all day, torpid
and miserable, but roused myself at last and took a few
turns in the square. The air was warm and scented, a
cloudless moon flooded the roadway with mellow light and
sketched in the silhouettes of the trees in the background.
I had reached the opposite side of the square for the
second time when the Voice broke out. My heart stood
still and I with it.</p>
<p class="indent">On the soft summer air the Voice rose and fell; it was
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page52" id="page52"></SPAN>[pg 52]</span>
accompanied on the piano, but it seemed in subtler harmony
with the moonlight and the perfumed repose of the
night. It came through an open window behind which
the singer sat in the gloaming. With the first tremors of
that Voice my soul forgot its weariness in a strange sweet
trance that trembled on pain. The song seemed to draw
out all the hidden longing of my maiden soul, as secret
writing is made legible by fire. When the Voice ceased,
a great blackness fell upon all things, the air grew bleak.
I waited and waited but the Square remained silent. The
footsteps of stray pedestrians, the occasional roll of a
carriage alone fell on my anxious ear. I returned to my
house, shivering as with cold. I had never loved before.
I had read and reflected a great deal about love, and was
absolutely ignorant of the subject. I did not know that I
loved now—for that discover only came later when I
found myself wandering nightly to the other side of the
parallelogram, listening for the Voice. Rarely, very
rarely, was my pilgrimage rewarded, but twice or thrice a
week the Square became an enchanted garden, full of
roses whose petals were music. Round that baritone
Voice I had built up an ideal man—tall and straight-limbed
and stalwart, fair-haired and blue-eyed and noble-featured,
like the hero of a Northern Saga. His soul was
vast as the sea, shaken with the storms of passion, dimpled
with smiles of tenderness. His spirit was at once
mighty and delicate, throbbing with elemental forces yet
keen and swift to comprehend all subtleties of thought
and feeling. I could not understand myself, yet I felt
that he would understand me. He had the heart of a
lion and of a little child; he was as merciful as he was
strong, as pure as he was wise. To be with him were
happiness, to feel his kiss ecstasy, to be gathered to his
breast, delirium, But alas! he never knew that I was
waiting under his window.</p>
<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page53" id="page53"></SPAN>[pg 53]</span>
I made several abortive attempts to discover who he
was or to see him. According to the Directory the house
was occupied by Lady Westerton. I concluded that he
was her elder son. That he might be her husband—or
some other lady's—never even occurred to me. I do not
know why I should have attached the Voice to a bachelor,
any more than I can explain why he should be the eldest
son, rather than the youngest. But romance has a logic
of its own. From the topmost window of my house I
could see Lady Westerton's house across the trees, but I
never saw him leave or enter it. Once, a week went by
without my hearing him sing. I did not know whether to
think of him as a sick bird or as one flown to warmer
climes. I tried to construct his life from his periods of
song, I watched the lights in his window, my whole life
circled round him. It was only when I grew pale and
feverish and was forced by the doctors and my guardian
to go yachting that my fancies gradually detached themselves
from my blue-eyed hero. The sea-salt freshened
my thoughts, I became a healthy-minded girl again,
carolling joyously in my cabin and taking pleasure in
listening to my own voice. I threw my novels overboard
(metaphorically, that is) and set the Hon. Miss Primpole
chatting instead, when the seascape palled upon me. She
had a great fund of strictly respectable memories. Most
people's recollections are of no use to anybody but the
owner, but hers afforded entertainment for both of us. By
the time I was back in London the Voice was no longer
part even of my dreams, though it seemed to belong to
them. But for accident it might have remained forever
"a voice and nothing more." The accident happened at
a musical-afternoon in Kensington. I was introduced
to a tall, fair, handsome blue-eyed guardsman, Captain
Athelstan by name. His conversation was charming and
I took a lot of it, while Miss Primpole was busy flirting
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page54" id="page54"></SPAN>[pg 54]</span>
with a seductive Spaniard. You could not tell Miss
Primpole was flirting except by looking at the man. In
the course of the afternoon the hostess asked the captain
to sing. As he went to the piano my heart began to
flutter with a strange foreboding. He had no music with
him, but plunged at once into the promontory chords.
My agitation increased tenfold. He was playing the
prelude to one of the Voice's songs—a strange, haunting
song with a Schubert atmosphere, a song which I had
looked for in vain among the classics. At once he was
transfigured to my eyes, all my sleeping romantic fancies
woke to delicious life, and in the instant in which I waited,
with bated breath, for the outbreak of the Voice at the well-known
turn of the melody, it was borne in upon me that
this was the only man I had ever loved or would ever
love. My Saga hero! my Berserker, my Norse giant!</p>
<div class="image-center" style="max-width: 540px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i055.jpg" width-obs="540" height-obs="700" alt="" />
<div class="caption">
<p class="center"><i>Miss Primpole was flirting with a seductive Spaniard.</i></p>
</div>
</div>
<p class="indent">When the Voice started it was not <i>my</i> Voice. It was a
thin, throaty tenor. Compared with the Voice of Portman
Square, it was as a tinkling rivulet to a rushing full-volumed
river. I sank back on the lounge, hiding my
emotions behind my fan.</p>
<p class="indent">When the song was finished, he made his way through
the "Bravas" to my side.</p>
<p class="indent">"Sweetly pretty!" I murmured.</p>
<p class="indent">"The song or the singing?" he asked with a smile.</p>
<p class="indent">"The song," I answered frankly. "Is it yours?"</p>
<p class="indent">"No, but the singing is!"</p>
<p class="indent">His good-humor was so delightful that I forgave his not
having my Voice.</p>
<p class="indent">"What is its name?"</p>
<p class="indent">"It is anonymous—like the composer."</p>
<p class="indent">"Who is he?"</p>
<p class="indent">"I must not tell."</p>
<p class="indent">"Can you give me a copy of the song?"</p>
<p class="indent">He became embarrassed.</p>
<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page56" id="page56"></SPAN>[pg 56]</span>
"I would with pleasure, if it were mine. But the fact is—I—I—had
no right to sing it at all, and the composer
would be awfully vexed if he knew."</p>
<p class="indent">"Original composer?"</p>
<p class="indent">"He is, indeed. He cannot bear to think of his songs
being sung in public."</p>
<p class="indent">"Dear me! What a terrible mystery you are making of
it," I laughed.</p>
<p class="indent">"O r-really there is no abracadabra about it. You
misunderstand me. But I deserve it all for breaking
faith and exploiting his lovely song so as to drown my
beastly singing."</p>
<p class="indent">"You need not reproach yourself," I said. "I have
heard it before."</p>
<p class="indent">He started perceptibly. "Impossible," he gasped.</p>
<p class="indent">"Thank you," I said freezingly.</p>
<p class="indent">"But how?"</p>
<p class="indent">"A little bird sang it me."</p>
<p class="indent">"It is you who are making the mystery now."</p>
<p class="indent">"Tit for tat. But I will discover yours."</p>
<p class="indent">"Not unless you are a witch!"</p>
<p class="indent">"A what?"</p>
<p class="indent">"A witch."</p>
<p class="indent">"I am," I said enigmatically. "So you see it's of no
use hiding anything from me. Come, tell me all, or I will
belabor you with my broomstick."</p>
<p class="indent">"If you know, why should I tell you?"</p>
<p class="indent">"I want to see if you can tell the truth."</p>
<p class="indent">"No, I can't." We both laughed. "See what a cruel
dilemma you place me in!" he said beseechingly.</p>
<p class="indent">"Tell me, at least, why he won't publish his songs. Is
he too modest, too timid?"</p>
<p class="indent">"Neither. He loves art for art's sake—that is all."</p>
<p class="indent">"I don't understand."</p>
<p class="indent">"He writes to please himself. To create music is his
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page57" id="page57"></SPAN>[pg 57]</span>
highest pleasure. He can't see what it has got to do with
anybody else."</p>
<p class="indent">"But surely he wants the world to enjoy his work?"</p>
<p class="indent">"Why? That would be art for the world's sake, art
for fame's sake, art for money's sake!"</p>
<p class="indent">"What an extraordinary view!"</p>
<p class="indent">"Why so? The true artist—the man to whom creation
is rapture—surely he is his own world. Unless he is
in need of money, why should he concern himself with the
outside universe? My friend cannot understand why
Schopenhauer should have troubled himself to chisel
epigrams or Leopardi lyrics to tell people that life was not
worth living. Had either been a true artist, he would
have gone on living his own worthless life, unruffled by
the applause of the mob. My friend can understand a poet
translating into inspired song the sacred secrets of his soul,
but he cannot understand his scattering them broad-cast
through the country, still less taking a royalty on them.
He says it is selling your soul in the market-place, and
almost as degrading as going on the stage."</p>
<p class="indent">"And do you agree with him?"</p>
<p class="indent">"Not entirely, otherwise I should never have yielded to
the temptation to sing his song to-night. Fortunately he
will never hear of it. He never goes into society, and I
am his only friend."</p>
<p class="indent">"Dear me!" I said sarcastically. "Is he as careful
to conceal his body as his soul?"</p>
<p class="indent">His face grew grave. "He has an affliction," he said
in low tones.</p>
<p class="indent">"Oh, forgive me!" I said remorsefully. Tears came
into my eyes as the vision of the Norse giant gave away
to that of an English hunchback. My adoring worship
was transformed to an adoring matronly tenderness.
Divinely-gifted sufferer, if I cannot lean on thy strength,
thou shalt lean on mine! So ran my thought till the mist
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page58" id="page58"></SPAN>[pg 58]</span>
cleared from my eyes and I saw again the glorious Saga-hero
at my side, and grew strangely confused and distraught.</p>
<p class="indent">"There is nothing to forgive," answered Captain Athelstan.
"You did not know him."</p>
<p class="indent">"You forget I am a witch. But I do not know him—it
is true. I do not even know his name. Yet within a
week I undertake to become a friend of his."</p>
<p class="indent">He shook his head. "You do not know him."</p>
<p class="indent">"I admitted that," I answered pertly. "Give me a week,
and he shall not only know me, he shall abjure those sublime
principles of his at my request."</p>
<p class="indent">The spirit of mischief moved me to throw down the
challenge. Or was it some deeper impulse?</p>
<p class="indent">He smiled sceptically.</p>
<p class="indent">"Of course if you know somebody who will introduce
you," he began.</p>
<p class="indent">"Nobody shall introduce me," I interrupted.</p>
<p class="indent">"Well, he'll never speak to you first."</p>
<p class="indent">"You mean it would be unmaidenly for me to speak to
him first. Well, I will bind myself to do nothing of
which Mrs. Grundy would disapprove. And yet the result
shall be as I say."</p>
<p class="indent">"Then I shall admit you are indeed a witch."</p>
<p class="indent">"You don't believe in my power, that is. Well, what
will you wager?"</p>
<p class="indent">"If you achieve your impossibility, you will deserve
anything."</p>
<p class="indent">"Will you back your incredulity with a pair of gloves?"</p>
<p class="indent">"With a hundred."</p>
<p class="indent">"Thank you. I am not a Briareus. Let us say one
pair then."</p>
<p class="indent">"So be it."</p>
<p class="indent">"But no countermining. Promise me not to communicate
with your mysterious friend in the interval."</p>
<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page59" id="page59"></SPAN>[pg 59]</span>
"I promise."</p>
<p class="indent">"But how shall I know the result?"</p>
<p class="indent">I pondered. "I will write—no, that would be hardly
proper. Meet me in the Royal Academy, Room Six, at the
'Portrait of a Gentleman,' about noon to-morrow week."</p>
<p class="indent">"A week is a long time!" he sighed.</p>
<p class="indent">I arched my eyebrows. "A week a long time for such
a task!" I exclaimed.</p>
<p class="indent">Next day I called at the house of the Voice. A gorgeous
creature in plush opened the door.</p>
<p class="indent">"I want to see—to see—gracious! I've forgotten his
name," I said in patent chagrin. I clucked my tongue,
puckered my lips, tapped the step with my parasol, then
smiled pitifully at the creature in plush. He turned out
to be only human, for a responsive sympathetic smile
flickered across his pompous face. "You know—the
singer," I said, as if with a sudden inspiration.</p>
<p class="indent">"Oh. Lord Arthur!" he said.</p>
<p class="indent">"Yes, of course," I cried, with a little trill of laughter.
"How stupid of me! Please tell him I want to see him
on an important matter."</p>
<p class="indent">"He—he's very busy, I'm afraid, miss."</p>
<p class="indent">"Oh, but he'll see me," I said confidently.</p>
<p class="indent">"Yes, miss; who shall I say, miss?"</p>
<p class="indent">"The Princess."</p>
<p class="indent">He made a startled obeisance, and ushered me into a
little room on the right of the hall. In a few moments he
returned and said—"His lordship will be down in a second,
your highness."</p>
<p class="indent">Sixty minutes seemed to go to that second, so racked
was I with curiosity. At last I heard a step outside and
a hand on the door, and at that moment a horrible thought
flashed into my mind. What certainty was there my
singer was a hunchback? Suppose his affliction were
something more loathly. What if he had a monstrous
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page60" id="page60"></SPAN>[pg 60]</span>
wen! For the instant after his entry I was afraid to look
up. When I did, I saw a short, dark-haired young man,
with proper limbs and refined features. But his face wore
a blank expression, and I wondered why I had not divined
before that my musician was blind!</p>
<p class="indent">He bowed and advanced towards me. He came straight
in my direction so that I saw he <i>could</i> see. The blank
expression gave place to one of inquiry.</p>
<p class="indent">"I have ventured to call upon your lordship in reference
to a Charity Concert," I said sweetly; "I am one of
your neighbors, living just across the square, and as the
good work is to be done in this district, I dared to hope that
I could persuade you to take part in it."</p>
<p class="indent">I happened to catch sight of my face in the glass of a
chiffonier as I spoke, and it was as pure and candid and
beautiful as the face of one of Guido's angels. When I
ceased, I looked up at Lord Arthur's. It was spasmodically
agitated, the mouth was working wildly. A nervous
dread seized me.</p>
<p class="indent">After what seemed an endless interval, he uttered an
explosive "Put!" following it up by "f-f-f-f-f-f-f-f-or two
g-g-g-g-g-g-g-g——"</p>
<p class="indent">"It is very kind of you," I interrupted mercifully.
"But I did not propose to ask you for a subscription. I
wanted to enlist your services as a performer. But I fear
I have made a mistake. I understood you sang." Inwardly
I was furious with the stupid creature in plush for
having misled me into such an unpleasant situation.</p>
<p class="indent">"I d-d-d-o s-s-s-s-s——" he answered.</p>
<p class="indent">As he stood there hissing, the truth flashed upon me at
last. I had heard that the most dreadful stammerers enunciate
as easily as anybody else when they sing, because the
measured swing of the time keeps them steady. My heart
sank as I thought of the Voice so mutilated! Poor young
peer! Was this to be the end of all my beautiful visions?</p>
<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page61" id="page61"></SPAN>[pg 61]</span>
As cheerfully as I could I cut short his sibilations.
"Oh, that's all right, then," I said. "Then I may put
you down for a couple of items."</p>
<p class="indent">He shook his head, and held up his hands deprecatingly.</p>
<p class="indent">"Anything but that!" he stammered; "Make me a
patron, a committee-man, anything! I do not sing in
public."</p>
<p class="indent">While he was saying this I thought long and deeply.
The affliction was after all less terrible than I had a right
to expect, and I knew from the advertisement columns that
it was easily curable. Demosthenes, I remembered, had
stoned it to death. I felt my love reviving, as I looked
into his troubled face, instinct with the double aristocracy
of rank and genius. At the worst the singing Voice was
unaffected by the disability, and as for the conversational,
well there was consolation in the prospect of having the
last word while one's husband was still having the first.
<i>En attendant</i>, I could have wished him to sing his replies
instead of speaking them, for not only should I thus enjoy
his Voice but the interchange of ideas would proceed less
tardily. However that would have made him into an operatic
personage, and I did not want him to look so ridiculous
as all that.</p>
<p class="indent">It would be tedious to recount our interview at the
length it extended to. Suffice it to say that I gained my
point. Without letting out that I knew of his theories of
art for art's sake, I yet artfully pleaded that whatever one's
views, charity alters cases, inverts everything, justifies
anything. "For instance," I said with charming <i>naïveté</i>,
"I would not have dared to call on you but in its sacred
name." He agreed to sing two songs—nay, two of his
own songs. I was to write to him particulars of time and
place. He saw me to the door. I held out my hand and
he took it, and we looked at each other, smiling brightly.</p>
<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page62" id="page62"></SPAN>[pg 62]</span>
"B-but I d-d-d-don't know your n-n-name," he said suddenly.
"P-p-p-rincess what?"</p>
<p class="indent">He spoke more fluently, now he had regained his composure.</p>
<p class="indent">"Princess," I answered, my eyes gleaming merrily.
"That is all. The Honorable Miss Primpole will give
me a character, if you require one." He laughed—his
laugh was like the Voice—and followed me with his eyes
as I glided away.</p>
<p class="indent">I had won my gloves—and in a day. I thought remorsefully
of the poor Saga hero destined to wait a week in suspense
as to the result. But it was too late to remedy this,
and the organization of the Charity Concert needed all my
thoughts. I was in for it now, and I resolved to carry it
through. But it was not so easy as I had lightly assumed.
Getting the artists, of course, was nothing—there are always
so many professionals out of work or anxious to be brought
out, and so many amateurs in search of amusement. I
could have filled the Albert Hall with entertainers. Nor
did I anticipate any difficulty in disposing of the tickets.
If you are at all popular in society you can get a good deal
of unpopularity by forcing them on your friends. No, the
real difficulty about this Charity Concert was the discovery
of an object in aid of which to give it. In my innocence
I had imagined that the world was simply bustling
with unexploited opportunities for well-doing. Alas!
I soon found that philanthropy was an over-crowded profession.
There was not a single nook or corner of the universe
but had been ransacked by these restless free-lances;
not a gap, not a cranny but had been filled up. In vain I
explored the map, in the hopes of lighting on some undiscovered
hunting-ground in far Cathay or where the khamsin
sweeps the Afric deserts. I found that the wants of the
most benighted savages were carefully attended to, and
that, even when they had none, they were thoughtfully
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page63" id="page63"></SPAN>[pg 63]</span>
supplied with them. Anxiously I scanned the newspapers
in search of a calamity, the sufferers by which I might relieve,
but only one happened during that week, and that
was snatched from between my very fingers by a lady who
had just been through the Divorce Court. In my despair
I bethought myself of the preacher I sat under. He was
a very handsome man, and published his sermons by
request.</p>
<p class="indent">I went to him and I said: "How is the church?"</p>
<p class="indent">"It is all right, thank you," he said.</p>
<p class="indent">"Doesn't it want anything done to it?"</p>
<p class="indent">"No, it is in perfect repair. My congregation is so very
good."</p>
<p class="indent">I groaned aloud. "But isn't there any improvement that
you would like?"</p>
<p class="indent">"The last of the gargoyles was put up last week. Mediæval
architecture is always so picturesque. I have had
the entire structure made mediæval, you know."</p>
<p class="indent">"But isn't the outside in need of renovation?"</p>
<p class="indent">"What! When I have just had it made mediæval!"</p>
<p class="indent">"But the interior—there must be something defective
somewhere!"</p>
<p class="indent">"Not to my knowledge."</p>
<p class="indent">"But think! think!" I cried desperately. "The aisles—transept—nave—lectern—pews—chancel—pulpit—apse—porch—altar-cloths—organ—spires—is
there nothing
in need of anything?"</p>
<p class="indent">He shook his head.</p>
<p class="indent">"Wouldn't you like a colored window to somebody?"</p>
<p class="indent">"All the windows are taken up. My congregation is so
very good."</p>
<p class="indent">"A memorial brass then?"</p>
<p class="indent">He mused.</p>
<p class="indent">"There is only one of my flock who has done anything
memorable lately."</p>
<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page64" id="page64"></SPAN>[pg 64]</span>
My heart gave a great leap of joy. "Then why do you
neglect him?" I asked indignantly. "If we do not perpetuate
the memory of virtue——"</p>
<p class="indent">"He's alive," he interrupted.</p>
<p class="indent">I bit my lips in vexation.</p>
<p class="indent">"I think you need a few more choristers," I murmured.</p>
<p class="indent">"Oh no, we are sending some away."</p>
<p class="indent">"The Sunday School Fund—how is that?"</p>
<p class="indent">"I am looking about for a good investment for the surplus.
Do you know of any? A good mortgage, perhaps?"</p>
<p class="indent">"Is there none on the church?" I cried with a flicker
of hope.</p>
<p class="indent">"Heaven forbid!"</p>
<p class="indent">I cudgelled my brains frantically.</p>
<p class="indent">"What do you think of a lightning-rod!"</p>
<p class="indent">"A premier necessity. I never preach in a building
unprotected by one."</p>
<p class="indent">I made one last wild search.</p>
<p class="indent">"How about a reredos?"</p>
<p class="indent">He looked at me in awful, pained silence.</p>
<p class="indent">I saw I had stumbled. "I—I mean a new wing," I
stammered.</p>
<p class="indent">"I am afraid you are not well this morning," said the
preacher, patting my hand soothingly. "Won't you come
and talk it over, whatever it is, another time?"</p>
<p class="indent">"No, no," I cried excitedly. "It must be settled at
once. I have it. A new peal of bells!"</p>
<p class="indent">"What is the matter with the bells?" he asked anxiously.
"There isn't a single one cracked."</p>
<p class="indent">I saw his dubiety, and profited by it. I learnt afterwards
it was due to his having no ear of his own.</p>
<p class="indent">"Cracked! Perhaps not," I replied in contemptuous
accents. "But they deserve to be. No wonder the newspapers
keep correspondences going on the subject."</p>
<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page65" id="page65"></SPAN>[pg 65]</span>
"Yes, but what correspondents object to is the bells
ringing at all."</p>
<p class="indent">"I don't wonder," I said. "I don't say your bells are
worse than the majority, or that I haven't got a specially
sensitive ear for music, but I know that when I hear
their harsh clanging, I—well I don't feel inclined to go
to church and that's the truth. I am quite sure if you
had a really musical set of chimes, it would increase the
spirituality of the neighborhood."</p>
<p class="indent">"How so?" he asked sceptically.</p>
<p class="indent">"It would keep down swearing on Sunday."</p>
<p class="indent">"Oh!" He pondered a moment, then said: "But that
would be a great expense."</p>
<p class="indent">"Indeed? I thought bells were cheap."</p>
<p class="indent">"Certainly. Area bells, hand-bells, sleigh-bells. But
Church-bells are very costly. There are only a few foundries
in the kingdom. But why are you so concerned
about my church?"</p>
<p class="indent">"Because I am giving a Charity Concert, and I should
like to devote the proceeds to something."</p>
<p class="indent">"A very exemplary desire. But I fear one bell is the
most you could get out of a Charity Concert."</p>
<p class="indent">I looked disappointed. "What a pity! It would have
been such a nice precedent to improve the tone of the
Church. The 'constant readers' would have had to cease
their letters."</p>
<p class="indent">"No, no, impossible. A 'constant reader' seems to be
so called because he is a constant writer."</p>
<p class="indent">"But there might have been leaders about it."</p>
<p class="indent">"Hardly sensational enough for that! Stay I have an
idea. In the beautiful Ages of Faith, when a Church-bell
was being cast, the pious used to bring silver vessels
to be fused with the bell-metal in the furnace, so as to
give the bell a finer tone. A mediæval practice is always
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page66" id="page66"></SPAN>[pg 66]</span>
so poetical. Perhaps I could revive it. My congregation
is so very good."</p>
<p class="indent">"Good!" I echoed, clapping my hands.
"But a Concert will not suffice—we shall need a Bazaar,"
said the preacher.</p>
<p class="indent">"Oh, but I must have a Concert!"</p>
<p class="indent">"Certainly Bazaars include
Concerts."</p>
<div class="image-center" style="max-width: 329px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i066.jpg" width-obs="329" height-obs="700" alt="" />
<div class="caption">
<p class="center"><i>How the Duchess wanted
to appear.</i></p>
</div>
</div>
<p class="indent">That was how the Great
Church Bazaar originated
and how the Rev. Melitos
Smith came to resurrect
the beautiful mediæval
custom which brought him
so much kudos and extracted
such touching sentiments
from hardened
journalists. The Bazaar
lasted a week, and raised a
number of ladies in the
social scale, and married
off three of my girl-friends,
and cut me off the visiting
list of the Duchess of
Dash. She was pining for
a chance of coming out in
a comic opera chanson,
but this being a Church
Bazaar I couldn't allow her
to kick up her heels. Everything
could be bought at that Bazaar, from photographs
of the Rev. Melitos Smith to impracticable mouse-traps,
from bread-and-cheese to kisses. There were endless
side-shows, and six gipsy girls scattered about the rooms,
so that you could have your fortune told in six different
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page67" id="page67"></SPAN>[pg 67]</span>
ways. I should not like to say how much that Bazaar cost
me when the bill for the Bells came in, but then Lord Arthur
sang daily in the Concert Hall, and I could also deduct
the price of the pair of gloves Captain Athelstan gave me.
For the Captain honorably stood the loss of his wager, nay,
more, cheerfully accepted his defeat, and there on the spot—before
the "Portrait of another Gentleman"—offered
to enlist in the Bazaar. And very useful he proved, too.
We had to be together, organizing it, nearly all day and
I don't know what I should have done without him. I
don't know what his Regiment did without him, but then
I have never been able to find out when our gallant officers
do their work. They seem always to be saving it up for
a rainy day.</p>
<p class="indent">I was never more surprised in my life than when, on
the last night of the Bazaar-boom, amid the buzz of a
brisk wind-up, Lord Arthur and Captain Athelstan came
into the little presidential sanctum, which had been run
up for me, and requested a special interview.</p>
<p class="indent">"I can give you five minutes," I said, for I felt my
finger was on the pulse of the Bazaar, and my time correspondingly
important.</p>
<p class="indent">They looked grateful, then embarrassed. Captain
Athelstan opened his mouth and closed it.</p>
<p class="indent">"<i>You</i> had better tell her," he said, nervously, to Lord
Arthur.</p>
<p class="indent">"N-n-no, y-y-y-y——"</p>
<p class="indent">"What is it, Captain Athelstan?" I interrupted, pointedly,
for I had only five minutes.</p>
<p class="indent">"Princess, we both love you," began the Captain, blushing
like a hobbledehoy, and rushing <i>in medias res</i>. I
allowed them to call me Princess, because it was not my
Christian name.</p>
<p class="indent">"Is this the time—when I am busy feeling the pulse of
the Bazaar?"</p>
<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page68" id="page68"></SPAN>[pg 68]</span>
"You gave us five minutes," pleaded the Captain, determined
to do or die, now he was in the thick of it.</p>
<p class="indent">"Go on," I said, "I will forgive you everything—even
your love of me—if you are only brief."</p>
<p class="indent">"We both love you. We are great friends. We have
no secrets. We told each other. We are doubtful if you
love either—or which. We have come together."</p>
<p class="indent">He fired off the short, sharp sentences as from a six-barrelled
revolver.</p>
<p class="indent">"Captain Athelstan—Lord Arthur," I said. "I am
deeply touched by the honor you have done your friendship
and me. I will be equally frank—and brief—with
you. I cannot choose either of you, because I love you
both. Like every girl, I formed an ideal of a lover. I
have been fortunate in finding my ideal in the flesh. I
have been unfortunate in finding it in two pieces. Fate
has bisected it, and given the form to one and the voice
to the other. My ideal looks like you, Captain Athelstan,
and sings like you, Lord Arthur. It is a stupid position,
I know, and I feel like the donkey between two bundles
of hay. But under the circumstances I have no choice."</p>
<p class="indent">They looked at each other half-rapturously, half-despairingly.</p>
<p class="indent">"Then what's to be done?" cried the Captain.</p>
<p class="indent">"I don't know," I said, hopelessly. "Love seems not
only blind, but a blind alley, this time."</p>
<p class="indent">"D-do you m-m-ean," asked Lord Arthur, "'how happy
could I be with either, were t'other dear charmer away?'"</p>
<p class="indent">I was glad he sang it, because it precipitated matters.</p>
<p class="indent">"That is the precise position," I admitted.</p>
<p class="indent">"Oh, then, Arthur, my boy, I congratulate you," said
the Captain, huskily.</p>
<p class="indent">"N-n-no, I'll g-g-go away," said the singer.</p>
<p class="indent">They wrangled for full ten minutes, but the position
remained a block.</p>
<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page69" id="page69"></SPAN>[pg 69]</span></p>
<div class="image-center" style="max-width: 633px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i069.jpg" width-obs="633" height-obs="700" alt="" />
<div class="caption">
<p class="center"><i>Bazaar proposal of Marriage.</i></p>
</div>
</div>
<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page70" id="page70"></SPAN>[pg 70]</span>
"Gentlemen," I interposed, "if either of you had consented
to accept the other's sacrifice, the problem would
have been solved; only I should have taken the other.
But two self-sacrifices are as bad as none."</p>
<p class="indent">"Then let us toss up for you, Princess," said the Captain,
impulsively.</p>
<p class="indent">"Oh, no!" I cried, with a shudder. "Submit my life
to the chances of head or tail! It would make me
feel like a murderess, with you for gentlemen of the
jury."</p>
<p class="indent">A painful silence fell upon the sanctum. Unwitting of
the tragedy playing within, all the fun of the fair went on
without.</p>
<p class="indent">"Listen," I said, at last. "I will be the wife of him
who wins me. Chance shall not decide, but prowess.
Like the princesses of old, I will set you a task. Whoever
accomplishes it shall win my hand."</p>
<p class="indent">"Agreed," they said eagerly, though not simultaneously.</p>
<p class="indent">"Ay, but what shall it be?" I murmured.</p>
<p class="indent">"Why not a competition?" suggested the Captain.</p>
<p class="indent">"Very well, a competition—provided you promise to
fight fair, and not play into each other's hands."</p>
<p class="indent">They promised, and together we excogitated and rejected
all sorts of competitions. The difficulty was to
find something in which each would have a fair chance.
At length we arranged that they should play a game of
chess, the winner to be mated. They agreed it would be
a real "match game." The five minutes had by this time
lasted half an hour, so I dismissed them, and hastened to
feel the pulse of the Bazaar, which was getting more and
more feverish as the break-up drew nigh.</p>
<p class="indent">They played the game in Lord Arthur's study. Lord
Arthur was white and the Captain black. Everything was
fair and above board. But they played rather slowly.
Every evening I sent the butler over to make inquiries.</p>
<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page71" id="page71"></SPAN>[pg 71]</span>
"The Princess's compliments," he was told to say,
"and how is it to-day?"</p>
<p class="indent">"It is getting on," they told him, and he came back
with a glad face. He was a kind soul despite his calves,
and he thought there was a child dying.</p>
<p class="indent">Once a week I used to go over and look at it. Ostensibly
I called in connection with the Bazaar accounts. I
could not see any difference in the position from one
week's end to another. There seemed to be a clump of
pawns in the middle, with all the other pieces looking idly
on; there was no thoroughfare anywhere.</p>
<p class="indent">They told me it always came like that when you played
cautiously. They said it was a French opening. I could
not see any opening anywhere; it certainly was not the
English way of fighting. Picture my suspense during those
horrible weeks.</p>
<p class="indent">"Is this the way all match-games are played?" I said
once.</p>
<p class="indent">"N-n-o," admitted Lord Arthur. "We for-g-g-ot to
p-p-p-ut a t-t-t-t-t-time-limit."</p>
<p class="indent">"What's the time-limit?" I asked the Captain, wishing
my singer could learn to put one to his sentences.</p>
<p class="indent">"So many moves must be made in an hour—usually
fifteen. Otherwise the younger champion would always
win, merely by outliving the elder. We forgot to include
that condition."</p>
<p class="indent">At length our butler brought back word that "it couldn't
last much longer." His face was grave and he gave the
message in low tones.</p>
<p class="indent">"What a blessing. It's been lingering long enough!
I wish they would polish it off," I murmured fretfully.
After that I frequently caught him looking at me as if I
were Lucrezia Borgia.</p>
<p class="indent">The end came suddenly. The butler went across to make
the usual inquiry. He returned, with a foolish face of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page72" id="page72"></SPAN>[pg 72]</span>
horror and whispered, "It is all over. It has been drawn
by perpetual check!"</p>
<p class="indent">"Great Heavens!" I cried. My consternation was
so manifest that he forgave the utterance of a peevish
moment. I put on my nicest hat at once and went over.
We held a council of war afresh.</p>
<p class="indent">"Let's go by who catches the biggest trout," suggested
the Captain.</p>
<p class="indent">"No," I said. "I will not be angled for. Besides, the
biggest is not grammatical. It should be the bigger."</p>
<p class="indent">Thus reproved, the Captain grew silent and we came
to a deadlock once more. I gave up the hunt at last.</p>
<p class="indent">"I think the best plan will be for you both to go away
and travel. Go round the world, see fresh faces, try to forget
me. One of you will succeed."</p>
<p class="indent">"But suppose we both succeed?" asked the Captain.</p>
<p class="indent">"That would be more awkward than ever," I admitted.</p>
<p class="indent">"And if neither succeed?" asked Lord Arthur at some
length.</p>
<p class="indent">"I should say neither succeeds," I remarked severely.
"Neither takes a singular verb."</p>
<p class="indent">"Pardon me," said Lord Arthur with some spirit. "The
plurality is merely apparent. 'Succeed' is subjunctive
after if."</p>
<p class="indent">"Ah, true," I said. "Then suppose you go round the
world and I give my hand to whoever comes back and
proposes to me first."</p>
<p class="indent">"Something like the man in Jules Verne!" cried the
Captain. "Glorious!"</p>
<p class="indent">"Except that it can be done quicker now," I said.</p>
<p class="indent">Lord Arthur fell in joyously with the idea, which was a
godsend to me, for the worry of having about you two
men whom you love and who love you cannot be easily
conceived by those who have not been through it. They,
too, were pining away and felt the journey would do them
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page73" id="page73"></SPAN>[pg 73]</span>
good. Captain Athelstan applied for three months' furlough.
He was to put a girdle round the earth from West
to East, Lord Arthur from East to West. It was thought
this would work fairly—as whatever advantages one outgoing
route had over the other would be lost on the return.
Each drew up his scheme and prepared his equipment.
The starting-point was to be my house, and consequently
this was also the goal. After forty-eight days had passed
(the minimum time possible) I was to remain at home day
and night, awaiting the telegram which was to be sent the
moment either touched English soil again. On the receipt
of the telegram I was to take up my position at the front
window on the ground floor, with a white rose in my hair
to show I was still unwon, and to wait there day and night
for the arrival of my offer of marriage, which I was not
to have the option of refusing. During the race they were
not to write to me.</p>
<p class="indent">The long-looked-for day of their departure duly arrived.
Two hansoms were drawn up side by side, in front of the
house. A white rose in my hair, I sat at the window. A
parting smile, a wave of my handkerchief, and my lovers
were off. In an instant they were out of sight. For a
month they were out of mind, too. After the exhausting
emotions I had undergone this period of my life was truly
halcyon. I banished my lovers from my memory and enjoyed
what was left of the season and of my girlish freedom.
In two months I should be an affianced wife and
it behoved me to make the best of my short span of spinsterhood.
The season waned, fashion drifted to Cowes,
I was left alone in empty London. Then my thoughts
went back to the two travellers. As day followed day,
my anxiety and curiosity mounted proportionately. The
forty-eight days went by, but there was no wire. They
passed slowly—oh, so slowly—into fifty, while I waited,
waited, from dawn to midnight, with ears pricked up, for
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page74" id="page74"></SPAN>[pg 74]</span>
that double rat-tat which came not or which came about
something else. The sands of September dribbled out,
and my fate still hung in the balance. I went about the
house like an unquiet spirit. In imagination I was seeing
those two men sweeping towards me—one from the East
of the world, one from the West. And there I stood, rooted
to the spot, while from either side a man was speeding inevitably
towards me, across oceans and continents, through
canals and tunnels, along deserts or rivers, pressing into
his service every human and animal force and every blind
energy that man had tamed. To my fevered imagination
I seemed to be between the jaws of a leviathan, which
were closing upon me at a terrific rate, yet which took days
to snap together, so wide were they apart, so gigantic was
the monster. Which of the jaws would touch me first?</p>
<p class="indent">The fifties mounted into the sixties, but there was no
telegram. The tension became intolerable. Again and
again I felt tempted to fly, but a lingering sense of honor
kept me to my post. On the sixty-first day my patience
was rewarded. Sitting at my window one morning I
saw a telegraph-boy sauntering along. He reached the
gate. He paused. I rushed to the door and down the steps,
seized the envelope and tore it frantically open.</p>
<p class="center">"<i>Coming, but suppose all over.</i>—<span class="smcap">Arthur.</span>"</p>
<p class="indent">I leaned on the gate, half fainting. When I went to my
room, I read the wire again and noted it had been handed
in at Liverpool. In four or five hours at most I should
cease to belong to myself. I communicated the news to the
Honorable Miss Primpole who congratulated me cordially.
She made no secret of her joy that the nobleman had
won. For my part I was still torn with conflicting emotions.
Now that I knew it was to be the one, I hankered after
the other. Yet in the heart of the storm there was peace
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page75" id="page75"></SPAN>[pg 75]</span>
in the thought that the long suspense was over. I
ordered a magnificent repast to be laid for the home-coming
voyager, which would also serve to celebrate our
nuptials. The Honorable Miss Primpole consented to
grace the board and the butler to surrender the choicest
vintages garnered in my father's cellar.</p>
<p class="indent">Two hours and a half dragged by; then there came
another wire—I opened it with some curiosity, but as my
eye caught the words I almost swooned with excitement.
It ran:</p>
<p class="center">"<i>Arrived, but presume too late.</i>—<span class="smcap">Athelstan.</span>"</p>
<p class="indent">With misty vision I strove to read the place of despatch.
It was Dover. A great wave of hope surged in my bosom.
My Saga-hero might yet arrive in time. Half frenziedly I
turned over the leaves of Bradshaw. No, after sending
that wire, he would just have missed the train to Victoria!
Cruel! Cruel! But stay! there was another
route. He might have booked for Charing Cross. Yes!
Heaven be praised, if he did that, he would just catch a
train. And of course he would do that—surely he would
have planned out every possibility while crossing the
Channel, have arranged for all—my Captain, my blue-eyed
Berserker! But then Lord Arthur had had two and a
half hours' start.—I turned to Liverpool and essayed to
discover whether that was sufficient to balance the difference
of the two distances from London. Alas! my head
swam before I had travelled two stations. There were
no less than four routes to Euston, to St. Pancras, to
King's Cross, to Paddington! Still I made out that if
he had kept his head very clear, and been very, very fortunate,
he might just get level with the Captain. But
then on a longer route the chances of accidental delays
were more numerous. On the whole the odds were
decidedly in favor of the Captain. But one thing was
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page76" id="page76"></SPAN>[pg 76]</span>
certain—that they would both arrive in time for supper.
I ordered an additional cover to be laid, then I threw myself
upon a couch and tried to read. But I could not.
Terrible as was the strain, my thoughts refused to be distracted.
The minutes crawled along—gradually peace
came back as I concluded that only by a miracle could
Lord Arthur win. At last I jumped up with a start, for
the shades of evening were falling and my toilette was
yet to make. I dressed myself in a dainty robe of white,
trimmed with sprays of wild flowers, and I stuck the white
rose in my hair—the symbol that I was yet unasked in
wedlock, the white star of hope to the way-worn wanderer!
I did my best to be the fairest sight the travellers should
have seen in all the world.</p>
<p class="indent">The Honorable Miss Primpole started when she saw
me. "What have you been doing to yourself, Princess?"
she said. "You're lovelier than I ever dreamed."</p>
<p class="indent">And indeed the crisis had lent a flush to my cheek and
a flash to my eye which I would not willingly repay.
My bosom rose and fell with excitement. In half an hour
I should be in my Saga-hero's arms! I went down to the
ground-floor front and seated myself at the open window
and gazed at the Square and the fiery streaks of sunset in
the sky. The Honorable Miss Primpole lay upon an ottoman,
less excited. Every now and again she asked,</p>
<p class="indent">"Do you see anything, Princess?"</p>
<p class="indent">"Nothing," I answered.</p>
<p class="indent">Of course she did not take my answer literally. Several
times cabs and carriages rattled past the window,
but with no visible intention of drawing up. Duskier,
duskier grew the September evening, as I sat peering into
the twilight.</p>
<p class="indent">"Do you see anything, Princess?"</p>
<p class="indent">"Nothing."</p>
<p class="indent">A moment after a hansom came dashing into sight—a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page77" id="page77"></SPAN>[pg 77]</span>
head protruded from it. I uttered a cry and leant forward,
straining my eyes. Captain Athelstan. Yes! No! No!
Yes! No! <i>No!</i> Will it be believed that (such is the
heart of woman) I felt a sensation of relief on finding the
issue still postponed? For in the moment when the Captain
seemed to flash upon my vision—it was borne in
upon me like a chilling blast that I had lost my Voice.
Never would that glorious music swell for me as I sat
alone with my husband in the gloaming.</p>
<p class="indent">The streaks of sunset faded into gray ashes.</p>
<p class="indent">"Do you see anything, Princess?"</p>
<p class="indent">"Nothing."</p>
<p class="indent">Even as I spoke I heard the gallop of hoofs in the
quiet Square, and, half paralyzed by the unexpected vision,
I saw Lord Arthur dashing furiously up on horseback—Lord
Arthur, bronzed and bearded and travel-stained, but
Lord Arthur beyond a doubt. He took off his hat and
waved it frantically in the air when he caught sight of my
white figure, with the white rose of promise nestling in my
hair. My poor Saga-hero!</p>
<div class="image-center" style="max-width: 546px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i079.jpg" width-obs="546" height-obs="700" alt="" />
<div class="caption">
<p class="center"><i>At the winning Post.</i></p>
</div>
</div>
<p class="indent">He reined in his beautiful steed before my window and
commenced his proposal breathlessly.</p>
<p class="indent">"<i>W-w-w</i>——"</p>
<p class="indent">Even Mr. Gladstone, if he had been racing as madly
as Lord Arthur might well have been flustered in his
speech. The poor singer could not get out the first word,
try as he would. At last it came out like a soda-water
cork and '<i>you</i>' with it. But at the '<i>be</i>' there was—O
dire to tell!—another stoppage.</p>
<p class="indent">"<i>B-b-b-b-b</i>——"</p>
<p class="indent">"Fire! Fire! Hooray!" The dull roar of an advancing
crowd burst suddenly upon our ears, mingled with the
piercing exultation of small boys. The thunderous clatter
of the fire-engine seemed to rock the soil of the Square.</p>
<p class="indent">But neither of us took eyes off the other.</p>
<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page78" id="page78"></SPAN>[pg 78]</span>
"<i>Be!</i>" It was out at last. The end was near. In
another second I should say "Yes."</p>
<p class="indent">"Fire! Fire!" shrieked the small boys.</p>
<p class="indent">"<i>M-m-m-y</i>——"</p>
<p class="indent">Lord Arthur's gallant steed shifted uneasily. The fire-engine
was thundering down upon it.</p>
<p class="indent">"<i>W-w-w</i>——"</p>
<p class="indent">"<i>Will you be</i>——" The clarion notes of the Captain
rang out above the clatter of the fire-engine from which he
madly jumped.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"<i>Wife?</i>" }<br/>
"<i>Mine?</i>" } the two travellers exclaimed together.</p>
</blockquote>
<p class="indent">"Dead heat," I murmured, and fell back in a dead faint.
My overwrought nerves could stand no more.</p>
<hr />
<p class="indent">Nevertheless it was a gay supper-party; the air was
thick with travellers' tales, and the butler did not spare the
champagne. We could not help being tickled by the
quaint termination of the colossal globe-trotting competition,
and we soothed Lord Arthur's susceptibilities by insisting
that if he had only remembered the shorter proposal
formula employed by his rival, he would have won
by a word. It was a pure fluke that the Captain was able
to tie, for he had not thought of telegraphing for a horse,
but had taken a hansom at the station, and only exchanged
to the fire-engine when he heard people shouting there was
a fire in Seymour Street. Lord Arthur obliged five times
during the evening, and the Honorable Miss Primpole relaxed
more than ever before and accompanied him on the
banjo. Before we parted, I had been persuaded by my
lovers to give them one last trial. That night three months
I was to give another magnificent repast, to which they
were both to be invited. During the interval each was to
do his best to become famous, and at the supper-party I
was to choose the one who was the more widely known
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page80" id="page80"></SPAN>[pg 80]</span>
throughout the length and breadth of the kingdom. They
were to place before me what proofs and arguments they
pleased, and I was to decide whose name had penetrated
to the greater number of people. There was to be no
appeal from my decision, nor any limitation to what the
candidates might do to force themselves upon the universal
consciousness, so
long as they did
not merely advertise
themselves at so
much a column or
poster. They could
safely be trusted
not to do anything
infamous in the attempt
to become famous,
and so there
was no need to impose
conditions. I
had a secret hope
that Lord Arthur
might thus be induced
to bring his
talents before the
world and get over
his objection to the
degradation of public
appearances. My
hope was more than
justified.</p>
<div class="image-center" style="max-width: 439px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i080.jpg" width-obs="439" height-obs="700" alt="" />
<div class="caption">
<p class="center">"<i>Ba, ba, ba, boodle-dee.</i>"</p>
</div>
</div>
<p class="indent">I grieve to say neither strove to benefit his kind. His
lordship went on the music-hall stage, made up as a costermonger,
and devoted his wonderful voice and his musical
genius to singing a cockney ballad with a chorus consisting
merely of the words "Ba, ba, ba, boodle-dee" repeated
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page81" id="page81"></SPAN>[pg 81]</span>
sixteen times. It caught on like a first-class epidemic.
"Ba, ba, ba, boodle-dee" microbes floated in
every breeze. The cholera-chorus raged from Piccadilly
to Land's End, from Kensington to John o'Groats. The
swarthy miners hewed the coal to it. It dropped from
passing balloons, the sailors manned the capstan to it, and
the sound of it superseded fog-horns. Duchesses danced
to it, and squalid infants cried for it. Divines with difficulty
kept it out of their sermons, philosophers drew
weighty lessons from it, critics traced its history, and as
it didn't mean anything the greatest Puritans hummed it
inaccurately. "Ba, ba, ba, boodle-dee," sang Lord Arthur
nightly at six halls and three theatres, incidentally clearing
off all the debts on the family estates, and, like a flock
of sheep, the great British public took up the bleat, and in
every hall and drawing-room blossomed the big pearl
buttons of the cockney costermonger.</p>
<p class="indent">But Captain Athelstan came to the front far more easily,
if less profitably. He sent a testimonial to the Perfect
Cure Elixir. The Elixir was accustomed to testimonials
from the suffering millions. The spelling generally had to
be corrected before they were fit for publication. It also
received testimonials which were useless, such as: "I
took only one bottle of your Elixir and I got fourteen
days." But a testimonial from a Captain of the Guards
was a gold-mine. The Captain's was the best name the
Elixir had ever had, and he had enjoyed more diseases than
it had hitherto professed to cure. Astonished by its own
success the Elixir resolved to make a big spurt and kill off
all its rivals. For the next few months Captain Athelstan
was rammed down the throats of all England. He came
with the morning milk in all the daily papers, he arrived by
the first post in a circular, he stared at people from every
dead wall when they went out to business, he was with
them at lunch, in little plaques and placards in every
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page82" id="page82"></SPAN>[pg 82]</span>
restaurant, he nodded at them in every bar, rode with
them in every train and tram-car, either on the wall or on
the back of the ticket, joined them at dinner in the evening
papers and supplied the pipe lights after the meal.
You took up a magazine and found he had slipped
between the sheets, you went to bed and his diseased
figure haunted your dreams. Life lost its sweetness, literature
its charm. The loathsome phantasm of the complexly-afflicted
Captain got between you and the sunshine.
Stiff examination papers (compiled from the Captain)
were set at every breakfast-table, and you were sternly
interrogated as to whether you felt an all-gone sensation
at the tip of your nose, and you were earnestly adjured to
look at your old diseases. You began to read an eloquent
description of the Alps, and lo! there was the Captain
perched on top. You started a thrilling story of the sea,
and the Captain bobbed up from the bottom; you began
a poetical allegory concerning the Valley of the Shadow,
and you found the Captain had been living there all his
life—till he came upon the Elixir. A little innocent
child remarked, "Pater, it is almost bath-time," and you
felt for your handkerchief in view of a touching domestic
idyl, but the Captain froze your tears. "Why have sunstroke
in India?" you were asked, and the Captain supplied
the answer. Something came like a thief in the
night. It was the Captain. You were startled to see
that there was "A Blight Over All Creation," but it
turned out to be only the Captain. Everything abutted
on the Captain—Shakespeare and the musical glasses,
the Venus of Milo and the Mikado, Day and Night and
all the seasons, the potato harvest and the Durham Coal
Strike, the advantages of early rising, and the American
Copyright Act. He was at the bottom of every passage,
he lurked in every avenue, he was at the end of every
perspective. The whole world was familiar with his
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page83" id="page83"></SPAN>[pg 83]</span>
physical symptoms, and his sad history. The exploits of
Julius Cæsar were but a blur in the common mind, but
everybody knew that the Captain's skin grew Gobelin blue,
that the whites of his eyes turned green, and his tongue
stuck in his cheek, and that the rest of his organism
behaved with corresponding gruesomeness. Everybody
knew how they dropped off, "petrified by my breath," and
how his sympathetic friends told him in large capitals</p>
<p class="center">"<span class="smcap">You will never get better, Captain</span>,"</p>
<p class="indent">and how his weeping mother, anxious to soothe his last
hours, remarked in reply to a request for another box of
somebody else's pills,</p>
<p class="center">"<span class="smcap">The only box you'll ever want will be a Coffin</span>,"</p>
<p class="indent">and how</p>
<p class="center">"<span class="smcap">He thought it was only Cholera</span>,"</p>
<p class="indent">but how one dose of the Elixir (which new-born babies
clamored for in preference to their mother's milk) had
baffled all their prognostications and made him a celebrity
for life. In private the Captain said that he really had
these ailments, though he only discovered the fact when
he read the advertisements of the Elixir. But the Mess
had an inkling that it was all done for a wager, and christened
him "The Perfect Cure." To me he justified himself
on the ground that he had scrupulously described
himself as having his tongue in his cheek, and that he
really suffered from love-sickness, which was worse than
all the ills the Elixir cured.</p>
<p class="indent">I need scarcely say that I was shocked by my lovers'
practical methods of acquiring that renown for which so
many gifted souls have yearned in vain, though I must
admit that both gentlemen retained sufficient sense of
decorum to be revolted by the other's course of action.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page84" id="page84"></SPAN>[pg 84]</span>
They remonstrated with each other gently but firmly.
The result was that their friendship snapped and a week
before the close of the competition they crossed the Channel
to fight a duel. I got to hear of it in time and wired
to Boulogne that if they killed each other I would marry
neither, that if only one survived I would never marry my
lover's murderer, and that a duel excited so much gossip
that, if both survived, they would be equally famous and
the competition again a failure.</p>
<p class="indent">These simple considerations prevented any mishap.
The Captain returned to his Regiment and Lord Arthur
went on to the Riviera to while away the few remaining
days and to get extra advertisement out of not appearing
at his halls through indisposition. At Monte Carlo he
accidentally broke the bank, and explained his system to
the interviewers. To my chagrin, for I was tired of see-sawing,
this brought him level with the Captain again. I
had been prepared to adjudicate in favour of the latter,
on the ground that although "Ba, ba, ba, boodle-dee"
was better known than the Patent Cure Elixir, yet the
originator of the song remained unknown to many to
whom the Captain was a household word, and this in
despite of the extra attention secured to Lord Arthur by
his rank. The second supper-party was again sicklied
over with the pale cast of thought.</p>
<p class="indent">"No more competitions!" I said. "You seem destined
to tie with each other instead of with me. I will return
to my original idea. I will give you a task which it is not
likely both will perform. I will marry the man who asks
me, provided he comes, neither walking nor riding, neither
sailing nor driving, neither skating nor sliding nor flying,
neither by boat nor by balloon nor by bicycle, neither by
swimming nor by floating nor by anybody carrying or dragging
or pushing him, neither by any movement of hand
or foot nor by any extraordinary method whatever. Till
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page85" id="page85"></SPAN>[pg 85]</span>
this is achieved neither of you must look upon my face
again."</p>
<p class="indent">"They looked aghast when I set the task. They went
away and I have not seen them from that day to this. I
shall never marry now. So I may as well devote myself
to the cause of the Old Maids you are so nobly championing."
She rolled up the MS.</p>
<p class="indent">"But," said Lillie excitedly, breaking in for the first
time, "what is the way you want them to come?"</p>
<p class="indent">The Princess laughed a silvery laugh.</p>
<p class="indent">"No way. Don't you understand? It was a roundabout
way of saying I was tired of them."</p>
<p class="indent">"Oh!" said Lillie.</p>
<p class="indent">"You see, I got the idea from a fairy-tale," said the
Princess. "There, the doer evaded the conditions by being
dragged at a horse's tail—I have guarded against this,
so that now the thing is impossible." Again her mischievous
laughter rang out through the misanthropic room.</p>
<p class="indent">Lillie smiled, too. She felt certain Lord Silverdale would
find no flaw in the Princess's armor, and she was exultant
at so auspicious an accession. For the sake of formality,
however, she told her that she would communicate her
election by letter.</p>
<p class="indent">The next day a telegram came to the Club.</p>
<p class="indent">"<i>Compelled to withdraw candidature. Feat accomplished.</i>
<span class="smcap">Princess, Hotel Metropole, Brighton.</span>"</p>
<p class="indent">Equally aghast and excited, Lillie wired back, "<i>How?</i>"
and prepaid the reply.</p>
<p class="indent">"<i>Lover happened to be here. Came up in lift as I was
waiting to go down.</i>"</p>
<p class="indent">Still intensely piqued by curiosity and vexation, Lillie
telegraphed.</p>
<p class="indent">"<i>Which?</i>"</p>
<p class="indent">"<i>Leave you to guess</i>," answered the electric current.</p>
<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page86" id="page86"></SPAN>[pg 86]</span></p>
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