<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
<p>I <span class="smcap">fancy</span> Veronica is going to be an
authoress. Her mother thinks this may account for many
things about her that have been troubling us. The story
never got far. It was laid aside for the more alluring work
of play-writing, and apparently forgotten. I came across
the copy-book containing her “Rough Notes” the other
day. There is decided flavour about them. I
transcribe selections; the spelling, as before, being my own.</p>
<p>“The scene is laid in the Moon. But everything is
just the same as down here. With one exception. The
children rule. The grown-ups do not like it. But they
cannot help it. Something has happened to them. They
don’t know what. And the world is as it used to
be. In the sweet old story-books. Before sin
came. There are fairies that dance o’ nights.
And Witches. That lure you. And then turn you into
things. And a dragon who lives in a cave. And springs
out at people. And eats them. So that you have to be
careful. And all the animals talk. And there are
giants. And lots of magic. And it is the children who
know everything. And what to do for it. And they have
to teach the grown-ups. And the grown-ups don’t
believe half of it. And are far too fond of arguing.
Which is a sore trial to the children. But they have
patience, and are just.</p>
<p>“Of course the grown-ups have to go to school.
They have much to learn. Poor things! And they hate
it. They take no interest in fairy lore. And what
would happen to them if they got wrecked on a Desert Island they
don’t seem to care. And then there are
languages. What they will need when they come to be
children. And have to talk to all the animals. And
magic. Which is deep. And they hate it. And say
it is rot. They are full of tricks. One catches them
reading trashy novels. Under the desk. All about
love. Which is wasting their children’s money.
And God knows it is hard enough to earn. But the children
are not angry with them. Remembering how they felt
themselves. When they were grown up. Only firm.</p>
<p>“The children give them plenty of holidays.
Because holidays are good for everyone. They freshen you
up. But the grown-ups are very stupid. And do not
care for sensible games. Such as Indians. And
Pirates. What would sharpen their faculties. And so
fit them for the future. They only care to play with a
ball. Which is of no help. To the stern realities of
life. Or talk. Lord, how they talk!</p>
<p>“There is one grown-up. Who is very clever.
He can talk about everything. But it leads to
nothing. And spoils the party. So they send him to
bed. And there are two grown-ups. A male and a
female. And they talk love. All the time. Even
on fine days. Which is maudlin. But the children are
patient with them. Knowing it takes all sorts. To
make a world. And trusting they will grow out of it.
And of course there are grown-ups who are good. And a
comfort to their children.</p>
<p>“And everything the children like is good. And
wholesome. And everything the grown-ups like is bad for
them. <i>And they mustn’t have it</i>. They
clamour for tea and coffee. What undermines their nervous
system. And waste their money in the tuck shop. Upon
chops. And turtle soup. And the children have to put
them to bed. And give them pills. Till they feel
better.</p>
<p>“There is a little girl named Prue. Who lives with
a little boy named Simon. They mean well. But
haven’t much sense. They have two grown-ups. A
male and a female. Named Peter and Martha.
Respectively. They are just the ordinary grown-ups.
Neither better nor worse. And much might be done with
them. By kindness. But Prue and Simon <i>go the wrong
way to work</i>. It is blame blame all day long. But
as for praise. Oh never!</p>
<p>“One summer’s day Prue and Simon take Peter for a
walk. In the country. And they meet a cow. And
they think this a good opportunity. To test Peter’s
knowledge. Of languages. So they tell him to talk to
the cow. And he talks to the cow. And the cow
don’t understand him. And he don’t understand
the cow. And they are mad with him. ‘What is
the use,’ they say. ‘Of our paying expensive
fees. To have you taught the language. By a
first-class cow. And when you come out into the
country. You can’t talk it.’ And he says
he did talk it. But they will not listen to him. But
go on raving. And in the end it turns out. <i>It was
a Jersey cow</i>! What talked a dialect. So of course
he couldn’t understand it. But did they
apologise? Oh dear no.</p>
<p>“Another time. One morning at breakfast.
Martha didn’t like her raspberry vinegar. So she
didn’t drink it. And Simon came into the
nursery. And he saw that Martha hadn’t drunk her
raspberry vinegar. And he asked her why. And she said
she didn’t like it. Because it was nasty. And
he said it wasn’t nasty. And that she <i>ought</i> to
like it. And how it was shocking. The way grown-ups
nowadays grumbled. At good wholesome food. Provided
for them by their too-indulgent children. And how when
<i>he</i> was a grown-up. He would never have dared.
And so on. All in the usual style. And to prove it
wasn’t nasty. He poured himself out a cupful.
And drank it off. In a gulp. And he said it was
delicious. And turned pale. And left the room.</p>
<p>“And Prue came into the nursery. And she saw that
Martha hadn’t drunk her raspberry vinegar. And she
asked her why. And Martha told her how she didn’t
like it. Because it was nasty. And Prue told her she
ought to be ashamed of herself. For not liking it.
Because it was good for her. And really very nice.
And anyhow she’d <i>got</i> to like it. And not get
stuffing herself up with messy tea and coffee. Because she
wouldn’t have it. And there was an end of it.
And so on. And to prove it was all right. She poured
herself out a cupful. And drank it off. In a
gulp. And she said there was nothing wrong with it.
Nothing whatever. And turned pale. And left the
room.</p>
<p>“And it wasn’t raspberry vinegar. But just
red ink. What had got put into the raspberry vinegar
decanter. By an oversight. And they needn’t
have been ill at all. If only they had listened. To
poor old Martha. But no. That was their fixed
idea. That grown-ups hadn’t any sense. At
all. What is a mistake. As one perceives.”</p>
<p>Other characters had been sketched, some of them to be
abandoned after a few bold touches: the difficulty of avoiding
too close a portraiture to the living original having apparently
proved irksome. Against one such, evidently an attempt to
help Dick see himself in his true colours, I find this marginal,
note in pencil: “Better not. Might make him
ratty.” Opposite to another—obviously of Mrs.
St. Leonard, and with instinct for alliteration—is
scribbled; “Too terribly true. She’d twig
it.”</p>
<p>Another character is that of a gent: “With a certain
gift. For telling stories. Some of them <i>not
bad</i>.” A promising party, on the whole.
Indeed, one might say, judging from description, a quite rational
person: “<i>When not on the rantan</i>. But
inconsistent.” He is the grown-up of a little girl:
“Not beautiful. But strangely attractive. Whom
we will call Enid.” One gathers that if all the children
had been Enids, then surely the last word in worlds had been
said. She has only this one grown-up of her very own; but
she makes it her business to adopt and reform all the
incorrigible old folk the other children have despaired of.
It is all done by kindness. “She is <i>ever</i>
patient. And just.” Prominent among her
numerous <i>protégées</i> is a military man, an
elderly colonel; until she took him in hand, the awful example of
what a grown-up might easily become, left to the care of
incompetent infants. He defies his own child, a virtuous
youth, but “lacking in sympathy;” is rude to his
little nephews and nieces; a holy terror to his governess.
He uses wicked words, picked up from retired pirates.
“Of course without understanding. Their terrible
significance.” He steals the Indian’s
fire-water. “What few can partake of. With
impunity.” Certainly not the Colonel.
“Can this be he! This gibbering wreck!”
He hides cigars in a hollow tree, and smokes on the sly. He
plays truant. Lures other old gentlemen away from their
lessons to join him. They are discovered in the woods, in a
cave, playing whist for sixpenny points.</p>
<p>Does Enid storm and bullyrag; threaten that if ever she
catches him so much as looking at a card again she will go
straight out and tell the dragon, who will in his turn be so
shocked that in all probability he will decide on coming back
with her to kill and eat the Colonel on the spot? No.
“Such are not her methods.” Instead she smiles:
“indulgently.” She says it is only natural for
grown-ups to like playing cards. She is not angry with
him. And there is no need for him to run away and hide in a
nasty damp cave. “<i>She herself will play whist with
him</i>.” The effect upon the Colonel is immediate:
he bursts into tears. She plays whist with him in the
garden: “After school hours. When he has been
<i>good</i>.” Double dummy, one presumes. One
leaves the Colonel, in the end, cured of his passion for
whist. Whether as the consequence of her play or her
influence the “Rough Notes” give no indication.</p>
<p>In the play, I am inclined to think, Veronica received
assistance. The house had got itself finished early in
September. Young Bute has certainly done wonders. We
performed it in the empty billiard-room, followed by a one-act
piece of my own. The occasion did duty as a
house-warming. We had quite a crowd, and ended up with a
dance. Everybody seemed to enjoy themselves, except young
Bertie St. Leonard, who played the Prince, and could not get out
of his helmet in time for supper. It was a good helmet, but
had been fastened clumsily; and inexperienced people trying to
help had only succeeded in jambing all the screws. Not only
wouldn’t it come off, it would not even open for a
drink. All thought it an excellent joke, with the exception
of young Herbert St. Leonard. Our Mayor, a cheerful little
man and very popular, said that it ought to be sent to
<i>Punch</i>. The local reporter reminded him that the late
John Leech had already made use of precisely the same incident
for a comic illustration, afterwards remembering that it was not
Leech, but the late Phil May. He seemed to think this ended
the matter. St. Leonard and the Vicar, who are rival
authorities upon the subject, fell into an argument upon armour
in general, with special reference to the fourteenth
century. Each used the boy’s head to confirm his own
theory, passing it triumphantly from one to the other. We
had to send off young Hopkins in the donkey-cart for the
blacksmith. I have found out, by the way, how it is young
Hopkins makes our donkey go. Young Hopkins argues it is far
less brutal than whacking him, especially after experience has
proved that he evidently does not know why you are whacking
him. I am not at all sure the boy is not right.</p>
<p>Janie played the Fairy Godmamma in a white wig and
panniers. She will make a beautiful old lady. The
white hair gives her the one thing that she lacks:
distinction. I found myself glancing apprehensively round
the room, wishing we had not invited so many eligible
bachelors. Dick is making me anxious. The sense of
his own unworthiness, which has come to him quite suddenly, and
apparently with all the shock of a new discovery, has completely
unnerved him. It is a healthy sentiment, and does him
good. But I do not want it carried to the length of losing
her. The thought of what he might one day bring home has
been a nightmare to me ever since he left school. I suppose
it is to most fathers. Especially if one thinks of the
women one loved oneself when in the early twenties. A large
pale-faced girl, who served in a bun-shop in the Strand, is the
first I can recollect. How I trembled when by chance her
hand touched mine! I cannot recall a single attraction
about her except her size, yet for nearly six months I lunched
off pastry and mineral waters merely to be near her. To
this very day an attack of indigestion will always recreate her
image in my mind. Another was a thin, sallow girl, but with
magnificent eyes, I met one afternoon in the South Kensington
Museum. She was a brainless, vixenish girl, but the memory
of her eyes would always draw me back to her. More than
two-thirds of our time together we spent in violent quarrels; and
all my hopes of eternity I would have given to make her my
companion for life. But for Luck, in the shape of a
well-to-do cab proprietor, as great an idiot as myself I might
have done it. The third was a chorus girl: on the whole,
the best of the bunch. Her father was a coachman, and she
had ten brothers and sisters, most of them doing well in
service. And she was succeeded—if I have the order
correct—by the ex-wife of a solicitor, a sprightly lady;
according to her own account the victim of complicated
injustice. I daresay there were others, if I took the time
to think; but not one of them can I remember without returning
thanks to Providence for having lost her. What is one to
do? There are days in springtime when a young man ought not
to be allowed outside the house. Thank Heaven and
Convention it is not the girls who propose! Few women, who
would choose the right moment to put their hands upon a young
man’s shoulders, and, looking into his eyes, ask him to
marry them next week, would receive No for an answer. It is
only our shyness that saves us. A wise friend of mine, who
has observed much, would have all those marrying under
five-and-twenty divorced by automatic effluxion of time at forty,
leaving the few who had chosen satisfactorily to be reunited if
they wished: his argument being that to condemn grown men and
women to abide by the choice of inexperienced boys and girls is
unjust and absurd. There were nice girls I could have
fallen in love with. They never occurred to me. It
would seem as if a man had to learn taste in women as in all
other things, namely, by education. Here and there may
exist the born connoisseur. But with most of us our first
instincts are towards vulgarity. It is Barrie, I think, who
says that if only there were silly women enough to go round, good
women would never get a look in. It is certainly
remarkable, the number of sweet old maids one meets. Almost
as remarkable as the number of stupid, cross-grained wives.
As I tell Dick, I have no desire for a daughter-in-law of whom he
feels himself worthy. If he can’t do better than that
he had best remain single. Janie and he, if I know anything
of life, are just suited for one another. Helpful people
take their happiness in helping. I knew just such another,
once: a sweet, industrious, sensible girl. She made the
mistake of marrying a thoroughly good man. There was
nothing for her to do. She ended by losing all interest in
him, devoting herself to a Home in the East End for the
reformation of newsboys. It was a pitiful waste: so many
women would have been glad of him; while to the ordinary sinful
man she would have been a life-long comfort. I must have a
serious talk to Dick. I shall point out what a good thing
it will be for her. I can see Dick keeping her busy and
contented for the rest of her days.</p>
<p>Veronica played the Princess,—with little boy
Foy—“Sir Robert of the Curse”—as her
page. Anything more dignified has, I should say, rarely
been seen upon the English stage. Among her wedding
presents were: Two Votes for Women, presented by the local Fire
Brigade; a Flying Machine of “proved stability. Might
be used as a bathing tent;” a National Theatre, “with
Cold Water Douche in Basement for reception of English
Dramatists;” Recipe for building a Navy, without paying for
it, “Gift of that great Financial Expert, Sir Hocus
Pocus;” one Conscientious Income Taxpayer, “has been
driven by a Lady;” two Socialists in agreement as to what
it means, “smaller one slightly damaged;” one
Contented Farmer, “Babylonian Period;” and one
extra-sized bottle, “Solution of the Servant
Problem.”</p>
<p>Dick played the “Dragon without a Tail.” We
had to make him without a tail owing to the smallness of the
stage. He had once had a tail. But that was a long
story: added to which there was not time to tell it. Little
Sally St. Leonard played his wife, and Robina was his
mother-in-law. So much depends upon one’s mood.
What an ocean of boredom might be saved if science could but give
us a barometer foretelling us our changes of temperament!
How much more to our comfort we could plan our lives, knowing
that on Monday, say, we should be feeling frivolous; on Saturday
“dull to bad-tempered.”</p>
<p>I took a man once to see <i>The Private Secretary</i>. I
began by enjoying myself, and ended by feeling ashamed of myself
and vexed with the scheme of creation. That authors should
write such plays, that actors should be willing to degrade our
common nature by appearing in them was explainable, he supposed,
by the law of supply and demand. What he could not
understand was how the public could contrive to extract amusement
from them. What was there funny in seeing a poor gentleman
shut up in a box? Why should everybody roar with laughter
when he asked for a bun? People asked for buns every
day—people in railway refreshment rooms, in aerated bread
shops. Where was the joke? A month later I found
myself by chance occupying the seat just behind him at the
pantomime. The low comedian was bathing a baby, and tears
of merriment were rolling down his cheeks. To me the whole
business seemed painful and revolting. We were being asked
to find delight in the spectacle of a father—scouring down
an infant of tender years with a scrubbing-brush. How
women—many of them mothers—could remain through such
an exhibition without rising in protest appeared to me an
argument against female suffrage. A lady entered, the wife,
so the programme informed me, of a Baron! All I can say is
that a more vulgar, less prepossessing female I never wish to
meet. I even doubted her sobriety. She sat down plump
upon the baby. She must have been a woman rising sixteen
stone, and for one minute fifteen seconds by my watch the whole
house rocked with laughter. That the thing was only a stage
property I felt was no excuse. The humour—heaven save
the mark—lay in the supposition that what we were
witnessing was the agony and death—for no child could have
survived that woman’s weight—of a real baby.
Had I been able to tap myself beforehand I should have learned
that on that particular Saturday I was going to be
“set-serious.” Instead of booking a seat for
the pantomime I should have gone to a lecture on Egyptian pottery
which was being given by a friend of mine at the London Library,
and have had a good time.</p>
<p>Children could tap their parents, warn each other that father
was “going down;” that mother next week was likely to
be “gusty.” Children themselves might hang out
their little barometers. I remember a rainy day in a
country house during the Christmas holidays. We had among
us a Member of Parliament: a man of sunny disposition, extremely
fond of children. He said it was awfully hard lines on the
little beggars cooped up in a nursery; and borrowing his
host’s motor-coat, pretended he was a bear. He
plodded round on his hands and knees and growled a good deal, and
the children sat on the sofa and watched him. But they
didn’t seem to be enjoying it, not much; and after a
quarter of an hour or so he noticed this himself. He
thought it was, maybe, that they were tired of bears, and fancied
that a whale might rouse them. He turned the table upside
down and placed the children in it on three chairs, explaining to
them that they were ship-wrecked sailors on a raft, and that they
must be careful the whale did not get underneath it and upset
them. He draped a sheet over the towel-horse to represent
an iceberg, and rolled himself up in a mackintosh and flopped
about the floor on his stomach, butting his head occasionally
against the table in order to suggest to them their danger.
The attitude of the children still remained that of polite
spectators. True, the youngest boy did make the suggestion
of borrowing the kitchen toasting-fork, and employing it as a
harpoon; but even this appeared to be the outcome rather of a
desire to please than of any warmer interest; and, the whale
objecting, the idea fell through. After that he climbed up
on the dresser and announced to them that he was an
ourang-outang. They watched him break a soup-tureen, and
then the eldest boy, stepping out into the middle of the room,
held up his arm, and the Member of Parliament, somewhat
surprised, sat down on the dresser and listened.</p>
<p>“Please, sir,” said the eldest boy,
“we’re awfully sorry. It’s awfully good
of you, sir. But somehow we’re not feeling in the
mood for wild beasts this afternoon.”</p>
<p>The Member of Parliament brought them down into the
drawing-room, where we had music; and the children, at their own
request, were allowed to sing hymns. The next day they came
of their own accord, and asked the Member of Parliament to play
at beasts with them; but it seemed he had letters to write.</p>
<p>There are times when jokes about mothers-in-law strike me as
lacking both in taste and freshness. On this particular
evening they came to me bringing with them all the fragrance of
the days that are no more. The first play I ever saw dealt
with the subject of the mother-in-law—the
“Problem” I think it was called in those days.
The occasion was an amateur performance given in aid of the local
Ragged School. A cousin of mine, lately married, played the
wife; and my aunt, I remember, got up and walked out in the
middle of the second act. Robina, in spectacles and an
early Victorian bonnet, reminded me of her. Young Bute
played a comic cabman. It was at the old Haymarket, in
Buckstone’s time, that I first met the cabman of art and
literature. Dear bibulous, becoated creature, with
ever-wrathful outstretched palm and husky
“’Ere! Wot’s this?” How good
it was to see him once again! I felt I wanted to climb over
the foot-lights and shake him by the hand. The twins played
a couple of Young Turks, much concerned about their
constitutions; and made quite a hit with a topical duet to the
refrain: “And so you see The reason he Is not the Boss for
us.” We all agreed it was a pun worthy of Tom Hood
himself. The Vicar thought he had heard it before, but this
seemed improbable. There was a unanimous call for Author,
giving rise to sounds of discussion behind the curtain.
Eventually the whole company appeared, with Veronica in the
centre. I had noticed throughout that the centre of the
stage appeared to be Veronica’s favourite spot. I can
see the makings of a leading actress in Veronica.</p>
<p>In my own piece, which followed, Robina and Bute played a
young married couple who do not know how to quarrel. It has
always struck me how much more satisfactorily people quarrel on
the stage than in real life. On the stage the man, having
made up his mind—to have it out, enters and closes the
door. He lights a cigarette; if not a teetotaller mixes
himself a brandy-and-soda. His wife all this time is
careful to remain silent. Quite evident it is that he is
preparing for her benefit something unpleasant, and chatter might
disturb him. To fill up the time she toys with a novel or
touches softly the keys of the piano until he is quite
comfortable and ready to begin. He glides into his subject
with the studied calm of one with all the afternoon before
him. She listens to him in rapt attention. She does
not dream of interrupting him; would scorn the suggestion of
chipping in with any little notion of her own likely to
disarrange his train of thought. All she does when he
pauses, as occasionally he has to for the purpose of taking
breath, is to come to his assistance with short encouraging
remarks, such, for instance, as: “Well.”
“You think that.” “And if I
did?” Her object seems to be to help him on.
“Go on,” she says from time to time, bitterly.
And he goes on. Towards the end, when he shows signs of
easing up, she puts it to him as one sportsman to another: Is he
quite finished? Is that all? Sometimes it
isn’t. As often as not he has been saving the pick of
the basket for the last.</p>
<p>“No,” he says, “that is not all. There
is something else!”</p>
<p>That is quite enough for her. That is all she wanted to
know. She merely asked in case there might be. As it
appears there is, she re-settles herself in her chair and is
again all ears.</p>
<p>When it does come—when he is quite sure there is nothing
he has forgotten, no little point that he has overlooked, she
rises.</p>
<p>“I have listened patiently,” she begins, “to
all that you have said.” (The devil himself could not
deny this. “Patience” hardly seems the
word. “Enthusiastically” she might almost have
said). “Now”—with rising
inflection—“you listen to me.”</p>
<p>The stage husband—always the
gentleman—bows;—stiffly maybe, but quite politely;
and prepares in his turn to occupy the <i>rôle</i> of dumb
but dignified defendant. To emphasise the coming change in
their positions, the lady most probably crosses over to what has
hitherto been his side of the stage; while he, starting at the
same moment, and passing her about the centre, settles himself
down in what must be regarded as the listener’s end of the
room. We then have the whole story over again from her
point of view; and this time it is the gentleman who would bite
off his tongue rather than make a retort calculated to put the
lady off.</p>
<p>In the end it is the party who is in the right that
conquers. Off the stage this is more or less of a toss-up;
on the stage, never. If justice be with the husband, then
it is his voice that, gradually growing louder and louder, rings
at last triumphant through the house. The lady sees herself
that she has been to blame, and wonders why it did not occur to
her before—is grateful for the revelation, and asks to be
forgiven. If, on the other hand, it was the husband who was
at fault, then it is the lady who will be found eventually
occupying the centre of the stage; the miserable husband who,
morally speaking, will be trying to get under the table.</p>
<p>Now, in real life things don’t happen quite like
this. What the quarrel in real life suffers from is want of
system. There is no order, no settled plan. There is
much too much go-as-you-please about the quarrel in real life,
and the result is naturally pure muddle. The man, turning
things over in the morning while shaving, makes up his mind to
have this matter out and have done with it. He knows
exactly what he is going to say. He repeats it to himself
at intervals during the day. He will first say This, and
then he will go on to That; while he is about it he will perhaps
mention the Other. He reckons it will take him a quarter of
an hour. Which will just give him time to dress for
dinner.</p>
<p>After it is over, and he looks at his watch, he finds it has
taken him longer than that. Added to which he has said next
to nothing—next to nothing, that is, of what he meant to
say. It went wrong from the very start. As a matter
of fact there wasn’t any start. He entered the room
and closed the door. That is as far as he got. The
cigarette he never even lighted. There ought to have been a
box of matches on the mantelpiece behind the photo-frame.
And of course there were none there. For her to fly into a
temper merely because he reminded her that he had spoken about
this very matter at least a hundred times before, and accuse him
of going about his own house “stealing” his own
matches was positively laughable. They had quarrelled for
about five minutes over those wretched matches, and then for
another ten because he said that women had no sense of humour,
and she wanted to know how he knew. After that there had
cropped up the last quarter’s gas-bill, and that by a
process still mysterious to him had led them into the subject of
his behaviour on the night of the Hockey Club dance. By an
effort of almost supernatural self-control he had contrived at
length to introduce the subject he had come home half an hour
earlier than usual on purpose to discuss. It didn’t
interest her in the least. What she was full of by this
time was a girl named Arabella Jones. She got in quite a
lot while he was vainly trying to remember where he had last seen
the damned girl. He had just succeeded in getting back to
his own topic when the Cuddiford girl from next door dashed in
without a hat to borrow a tuning-fork. It had been quite a
business finding the tuning-fork, and when she was gone they had
to begin all over again. They had quarrelled about the
drawing-room carpet; about her sister Florrie’s birthday
present; and the way he drove the motor-car. It had taken
them over an hour and a half, and rather than waste the tickets
for the theatre, they had gone without their dinner. The
matter of the cold chisel still remained to be thrashed out.</p>
<p>It had occurred to me that through the medium of the drama I
might show how the domestic quarrel could so easily be
improved. Adolphus Goodbody, a worthy young man deeply
attached to his wife, feels nevertheless that the dinners she is
inflicting upon him are threatening with permanent damage his
digestive system. He determines, come what may, to insist
upon a change. Elvira Goodbody, a charming girl, admiring
and devoted to her husband, is notwithstanding a trifle <i>en
tête</i>, especially when her domestic arrangements happen
to be the theme of discussion. Adolphus, his courage
screwed to the sticking-point, broaches the difficult subject;
and for the first half of the act my aim was to picture the
progress of the human quarrel, not as it should be, but as it
is. They never reach the cook. The first mention of
the word “dinner” reminds Elvira (quick to perceive
that argument is brewing, and alive to the advantage of getting
in first) that twice the month before he had dined out, not
returning till the small hours of the morning. What she
wants to know is where this sort of thing is going to end?
If the purpose of Freemasonry is the ruin of the home and the
desertion of women, then all she has to say—it turns out to
be quite a good deal. Adolphus, when able to get in a word,
suggests that eleven o’clock at the latest can hardly be
described as the “small hours of the morning”: the
fault with women is that they never will confine themselves to
the simple truth. From that point onwards, as can be
imagined, the scene almost wrote itself. They have passed
through all the customary stages, and are planning, with
exaggerated calm, arrangements for the separation which each now
feels to be inevitable, when a knock comes to the front-door, and
there enters a mutual friend.</p>
<p>Their hasty attempts to cover up the traces of mental disorder
with which the atmosphere is strewed do not deceive him.
There has been, let us say, a ripple on the waters of perfect
agreement. Come! What was it all about?</p>
<p>“About!” They look from one to the
other. Surely it would be simpler to tell him what it had
<i>not</i> been about. It had been about the parrot, about
her want of punctuality, about his using the butter-knife for the
marmalade, about a pair of slippers he had lost at Christmas,
about the education question, and her dressmaker’s bill,
and his friend George, and the next-door dog—</p>
<p>The mutual friend cuts short the catalogue. Clearly
there is nothing for it but to begin the quarrel all over again;
and this time, if they will put themselves into his hands, he
feels sure he can promise victory to whichever one is in the
right.</p>
<p>Elvira—she has a sweet, impulsive nature—throws
her arms around him: that is all she wants. If only
Adolphus could be brought to see! Adolphus grips him by the
hand. If only Elvira would listen to sense!</p>
<p>The mutual friend—he is an old
stage-manager—arranges the scene: Elvira in easy-chair by
fire with crochet. Enter Adolphus. He lights a
cigarette; flings the match on the floor; with his hands in his
pockets paces up and down the room; kicks a footstool out of his
way.</p>
<p>“Tell me when I am to begin,” says Elvira.</p>
<p>The mutual friend promises to give her the right cue.</p>
<p>Adolphus comes to a halt in the centre of the room.</p>
<p>“I am sorry, my dear,” he says, “but there
is something I must say to you—something that may not be
altogether pleasant for you to hear.”</p>
<p>To which Elvira, still crocheting, replies, “Oh,
indeed. And pray what may that be?”</p>
<p>This was not Elvira’s own idea. Springing from her
chair, she had got as far as: “Look here. If you have
come home early merely for the purpose of making a
row—” before the mutual friend could stop her.
The mutual friend was firm. Only by exacting strict
obedience could he guarantee a successful issue. What she
had got to say was, “Oh, indeed.
Etcetera.” The mutual friend had need of all his tact
to prevent its becoming a quarrel of three.</p>
<p>Adolphus, allowed to proceed, explained that the subject about
which he wished to speak was the subject of dinner. The
mutual friend this time was beforehand. Elvira’s
retort to that was: “Dinner! You complain of the
dinners I provide for you?” enabling him to reply,
“Yes, madam, I do complain,” and to give
reasons. It seemed to Elvira that the mutual friend had
lost his senses. To tell her to “wait”; that
“her time would come”; of what use was that!
Half of what she wanted to say would be gone out of her
head. Adolphus brought to a conclusion his criticism of
Elvira’s kitchen; and then Elvira, incapable of restraining
herself further, rose majestically.</p>
<p>The mutual friend was saved the trouble of suppressing
Adolphus. Until Elvira had finished Adolphus never got an
opening. He grumbled at their dinners. He! who can
dine night after night with his precious Freemasons. Does
he think she likes them any better? She, doomed to stay at
home and eat them. What does he take her for? An
ostrich? Whose fault is it that they keep an incompetent
cook too old to learn and too obstinate to want to? Whose
old family servant was she? Not Elvira’s. It
has been to please Adolphus that she has suffered the
woman. And this is her reward. This! She breaks
down. Adolphus is astonished and troubled. Personally
he never liked the woman. Faithful she may have been, but a
cook never. His own idea, had he been consulted, would have
been a small pension. Elvira falls upon his neck. Why
did he not say so before? Adolphus presses her to his
bosom. If only he had known! They promise the mutual
friend never to quarrel again without his assistance.</p>
<p>The acting all round was quite good. Our curate, who is
a bachelor, said it taught a lesson. Veronica had tears in
her eyes. She whispered to me that she thought it
beautiful. There is more in Veronica than people think.</p>
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