<h2>REGINALD’S DRAMA</h2>
<p>Reginald closed his eyes with the elaborate weariness of one
who has rather nice eyelashes and thinks it useless to conceal
the fact.</p>
<p>“One of these days,” he said, “I shall write
a really great drama. No one will understand the drift of
it, but everyone will go back to their homes with a vague feeling
of dissatisfaction with their lives and surroundings. Then
they will put up new wall-papers and forget.”</p>
<p>“But how about those that have oak panelling all over
the house?” said the Other.</p>
<p>“They can always put down new stair-carpets,”
pursued Reginald, “and, anyhow, I’m not responsible
for the audience having a happy ending. The play would be
quite sufficient strain on one’s energies. I should
get a bishop to say it was immoral and beautiful—no
dramatist has thought of that before, and everyone would come to
condemn the bishop, and they would stay on out of sheer
nervousness. After all, it requires a great deal of moral
courage to leave in a marked manner in the middle of the second
act, when your carriage isn’t ordered till twelve.
And it would commence with wolves worrying something on a lonely
waste—you wouldn’t see them, of course; but you would
hear them snarling and scrunching, and I should arrange to have a
wolfy fragrance suggested across the footlights. It would
look so well on the programmes, ‘Wolves in the first act,
by Jamrach.’ And old Lady Whortleberry, who never
misses a first night, would scream. She’s always been
nervous since she lost her first husband. He died quite
abruptly while watching a county cricket match; two and a half
inches of rain had fallen for seven runs, and it was supposed
that the excitement killed him. Anyhow, it gave her quite a
shock; it was the first husband she’d lost, you know, and
now she always screams if anything thrilling happens too soon
after dinner. And after the audience had heard the
Whortleberry scream the thing would be fairly
launched.”</p>
<p>“And the plot?”</p>
<p>“The plot,” said Reginald, “would be one of
those little everyday tragedies that one sees going on all round
one. In my mind’s eye there is the case of the
Mudge-Jervises, which in an unpretentious way has quite an Enoch
Arden intensity underlying it. They’d only been
married some eighteen months or so, and circumstances had
prevented their seeing much of each other. With him there
was always a foursome or something that had to be played and
replayed in different parts of the country, and she went in for
slumming quite as seriously as if it was a sport. With her,
I suppose, it was. She belonged to the Guild of the Poor
Dear Souls, and they hold the record for having nearly reformed a
washerwoman. No one has ever really reformed a washerwoman,
and that is why the competition is so keen. You can rescue
charwomen by fifties with a little tea and personal magnetism,
but with washerwomen it’s different; wages are too
high. This particular laundress, who came from Bermondsey
or some such place, was really rather a hopeful venture, and they
thought at last that she might be safely put in the window as a
specimen of successful work. So they had her paraded at a
drawing-room “At Home” at Agatha Camelford’s;
it was sheer bad luck that some liqueur chocolates had been
turned loose by mistake among the refreshments—really
liqueur chocolates, with very little chocolate. And of
course the old soul found them out, and cornered the entire
stock. It was like finding a whelk-stall in a desert, as
she afterwards partially expressed herself. When the
liqueurs began to take effect, she started to give them
imitations of farmyard animals as they know them in
Bermondsey. She began with a dancing bear, and you know
Agatha doesn’t approve of dancing, except at Buckingham
Palace under proper supervision. And then she got up on the
piano and gave them an organ monkey; I gather she went in for
realism rather than a Maeterlinckian treatment of the
subject. Finally, she fell into the piano and said she was
a parrot in a cage, and for an impromptu performance I believe
she was very word-perfect; no one had heard anything like it,
except Baroness Boobelstein who has attended sittings of the
Austrian Reichsrath. Agatha is trying the Rest-cure at
Buxton.”</p>
<p>“But the tragedy?”</p>
<p>“Oh, the Mudge-Jervises. Well, they were getting
along quite happily, and their married life was one continuous
exchange of picture-postcards; and then one day they were thrown
together on some neutral ground where foursomes and washerwomen
overlapped, and discovered that they were hopelessly divided on
the Fiscal Question. They have thought it best to separate,
and she is to have the custody of the Persian kittens for nine
months in the year—they go back to him for the winter, when
she is abroad. There you have the material for a tragedy
drawn straight from life—and the piece could be called
‘The Price They Paid for Empire.’ And of course
one would have to work in studies of the struggle of hereditary
tendency against environment and all that sort of thing.
The woman’s father could have been an Envoy to some of the
smaller German Courts; that’s where she’d get her
passion for visiting the poor, in spite of the most careful
upbringing. <i>C’est le premier pa qui compte</i>, as
the cuckoo said when it swallowed its foster-parent. That,
I think, is quite clever.”</p>
<p>“And the wolves?”</p>
<p>“Oh, the wolves would be a sort of elusive undercurrent
in the background that would never be satisfactorily
explained. After all, life teems with things that have no
earthly reason. And whenever the characters could think of
nothing brilliant to say about marriage or the War Office, they
could open a window and listen to the howling of the
wolves. But that would be very seldom.”</p>
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