CHAPTER I
ANTHONY PATCH
IN 1913, WHEN ANTHONY Patch was twenty-five, two
years were already gone since irony, the Holy Ghost of this later
day, had, theoretically at least, descended upon him. Irony was the
final polish of the shoe, the ultimate dab of the clothes-brush, a
sort of intellectual “There!”—yet at the brink of this story he has
as yet gone no further than the conscious stage. As you first see
him he wonders frequently whether he is not without honor and
slightly mad, a shameful and obscene thinness glistening on the
surface of the world like oil on a clean pond, these occasions
being varied, of course, with those in which he thinks himself
rather an exceptional young man, thoroughly sophisticated, well
adjusted to his environment, and somewhat more significant than any
one else he knows.
This was his healthy state and it made him
cheerful, pleasant, and very attractive to intelligent men and to
all women. In this state he considered that he would one day
accomplish some quiet subtle thing that the elect would deem worthy
and, passing on, would join the dimmer stars in a nebulous,
indeterminate heaven half-way between death and immortality. Until
the time came for this effort he would be Anthony Patch—not a
portrait of a man but a distinct and dynamic personality,
opinionated, contemptuous, functioning from within outward—a man
who was aware that there could be no honor and yet had honor, who
knew the sophistry of courage and yet was brave.
A Worthy Man and His Gifted Son
Anthony drew as much consciousness of social
security from being the grandson of Adam J. Patch as he would have
had from tracing his line over the sea to the crusaders. This is
inevitable; Virginians and Bostonians to the contrary
notwithstanding, an aristocracy founded sheerly on money postulates
wealth in the particular.
Now Adam J. Patch, more familiarly known as “Cross
Patch,” left his father’s farm in Tarrytown early in sixty-one to
join a New York cavalry regiment.1 He came
home from the war a major, charged into Wall Street, and amid much
fuss, fume, applause, and ill will he gathered to himself some
seventy-five million dollars.
This occupied his energies until he was fifty-seven
years old. It was then that he determined, after a severe attack of
sclerosis, to consecrate the remainder of his life to the moral
regeneration of the world. He became a reformer among reformers.
Emulating the magnificent efforts of Anthony Comstock, after whom
his grandson was named, he levelled a varied assortment of
uppercuts and body-blows at liquor, literature, vice, art, patent
medicines, and Sunday theatres. His mind, under the influence of
that insidious mildew which eventually forms on all but the few,
gave itself up furiously to every indignation of the age. From an
armchair in the office of his Tarrytown estate he directed against
the enormous hypothetical enemy, unrighteousness, a campaign which
went on through fifteen years, during which he displayed himself a
rabid monomaniac, an unqualified nuisance, and an intolerable bore.
The year in which this story opens found him wearying; his campaign
had grown desultory; 1861 was creeping up slowly on 1895; his
thoughts ran a great deal on the Civil War, somewhat on his dead
wife and son, almost infinitesimally on his grandson Anthony.
Early in his career Adam Patch had married an
anæmic lady of thirty, Alicia Withers, who brought him one hundred
thousand dollars and an impeccable entré into the banking circles
of New York. Immediately and rather spunkily she had borne him a
son and, as if completely devitalized by the magnificence of this
performance, she had thenceforth effaced herself within the shadowy
dimensions of the nursery. The boy, Adam Ulysses Patch, became an
inveterate joiner of clubs, connoisseur of good form, and driver of
tandems—at the astonishing age of twenty-six he began his memoirs
under the title “New York Society as I Have Seen It.” On the rumor
of its conception this work was eagerly bid for among publishers,
but as it proved after his death to be immoderately verbose and
overpoweringly dull, it never obtained even a private
printing.
This Fifth Avenue Chesterfield married at
twenty-two. His wife was Henrietta Lebrune, the Boston “Society
Contralto,” and the single child of the union was, at the request
of his grandfather, christened Anthony Comstock Patch. When he went
to Harvard, the Comstock dropped out of his name to a nether hell
of oblivion and was never heard of thereafter.
Young Anthony had one picture of his father and
mother together—so often had it faced his eyes in childhood that it
had acquired the impersonality of furniture, but every one who came
into his bedroom regarded it with interest. It showed a dandy of
the nineties, spare and handsome, standing beside a tall dark lady
with a muff and the suggestion of a bustle. Between them was a
little boy with long brown curls, dressed in a velvet Lord
Fauntleroy suit. This was Anthony at five, the year of his mother’s
death.
His memories of the Boston Society Contralto were
nebulous and musical. She was a lady who sang, sang, sang, in the
music-room of their house on Washington Square—sometimes with
guests scattered all about her, the men with their arms folded,
balanced breathlessly on the edges of sofas, the women with their
hands in their laps, occasionally making little whispers to the men
and always clapping very briskly and uttering cooing cries after
each song—and often she sang to Anthony alone, in Italian or French
or in a strange and terrible dialect which she imagined to be the
speech of the Southern negro.
His recollections of the gallant Ulysses, the first
man in America to roll the lapels of his coat, were much more
vivid. After Henrietta Lebrune Patch had “joined another choir,” as
her widower huskily remarked from time to time, father and son
lived up at grampa’s in Tarrytown, and Ulysses came daily to
Anthony’s nursery and expelled pleasant, thick-smelling words for
sometimes as much as an hour. He was continually promising Anthony
hunting trips and fishing trips and excursions to Atlantic City,
“oh, some time soon now”; but none of them ever materialized. One
trip they did take; when Anthony was eleven they went abroad, to
England and Switzerland, and there in the best hotel in Lucerne his
father died with much sweating and grunting and crying aloud for
air. In a panic of despair and terror Anthony was brought back to
America, wedded to a vague melancholy that was to stay beside him
through the rest of his life.
Past and Person of the Hero
At eleven he had a horror of death. Within six
impressionable years his parents had died and his grandmother had
faded off almost imperceptibly, until, for the first time since her
marriage, her person held for one day an unquestioned supremacy
over her own drawing-room. So to Anthony life was a struggle
against death, that waited at every corner. It was as a concession
to his hypochondriacal imagination that he formed the habit of
reading in bed—it soothed him. He read until he was tired and often
fell asleep with the lights still on.
His favorite diversion until he was fourteen was
his stamp collection; enormous, as nearly exhaustive as a boy’s
could be—his grandfather considered fatuously that it was teaching
him geography. So Anthony kept up a correspondence with a
half-dozen “Stamp and Coin” companies and it was rare that the mail
failed to bring him new stamp-books or packages of glittering
approval sheets—there was a mysterious fascination in transferring
his acquisitions interminably from one book to another. His stamps
were his greatest happiness and he bestowed impatient frowns on any
one who interrupted him at play with them; they devoured his
allowance every month, and he lay awake at night musing untiringly
on their variety and many-colored splendor.
At sixteen he had lived almost entirely within
himself, an inarticulate boy, thoroughly un-American, and politely
bewildered by his contemporaries. The two preceding years had been
spent in Europe with a private tutor, who persuaded him that
Harvard was the thing; it would “open doors,” it would be a
tremendous tonic, it would give him innumerable self-sacrificing
and devoted friends. So he went to Harvard2—there was
no other logical thing to be done with him.
Oblivious to the social system, he lived for a
while alone and unsought in a high room in Beck Hall—a slim dark
boy of medium height with a shy sensitive mouth. His allowance was
more than liberal. He laid the foundations for a library by
purchasing from a wandering bibliophile first editions of
Swinburne, Meredith, and Hardy, and a yellowed illegible autograph
letter of Keats’s, finding later that he had been amazingly
overcharged. He became an exquisite dandy, amassed a rather
pathetic collection of silk pajamas, brocaded dressing-gowns, and
neckties too flamboyant to wear; in this secret finery he would
parade before a mirror in his room or lie stretched in satin along
his window-seat looking down on the yard and realizing dimly this
clamor, breathless and immediate, in which it seemed he was never
to have a part.
Curiously enough he found in senior year that he
had acquired a position in his class. He learned that he was looked
upon as a rather romantic figure, a scholar, a recluse, a tower of
erudition. This amused him but secretly pleased him—he began going
out, at first a little and then a great deal. He made the Pudding.
He drank—quietly and in the proper tradition. It was said of him
that had he not come to college so young he might have “done
extremely well.” In 1909, when he graduated, he was only twenty
years old.
Then abroad again—to Rome this time, where he
dallied with architecture and painting in turn, took up the violin,
and wrote some ghastly Italian sonnets, supposedly the ruminations
of a thirteenth-century monk on the joys of the contemplative life.
It became established among his Harvard intimates that he was in
Rome, and those of them who were abroad that year looked him up and
discovered with him, on many moonlight excursions, much in the city
that was older than the Renaissance or indeed than the republic.
Maury Noble, from Philadelphia, for instance, remained two months,
and together they realized the peculiar charm of Latin women and
had a delightful sense of being very young and free in a
civilization that was very old and free. Not a few acquaintances of
his grandfather’s called on him, and had he so desired he might
have been persona grata with the diplomatic set—indeed, he
found that his inclinations tended more and more toward
conviviality, but that long adolescent aloofness and consequent
shyness still dictated to his conduct.
He returned to America in 1912 because of one of
his grandfather’s sudden illnesses, and after an excessively
tiresome talk with the perpetually convalescent old man he decided
to put off until his grandfather’s death the idea of living
permanently abroad. After a prolonged search he took an apartment
on Fifty-second Street and to all appearances settled down.
In 1913 Anthony Patch’s adjustment of himself to
the universe was in process of consummation. Physically, he had
improved since his undergraduate days—he was still too thin but his
shoulders had widened and his brunette face had lost the frightened
look of his freshman year. He was secretly orderly and in person
spick and span—his friends declared that they had never seen his
hair rumpled. His nose was too sharp; his mouth was one of those
unfortunate mirrors of mood inclined to droop perceptibly in
moments of unhappiness, but his blue eyes were charming, whether
alert with intelligence or half closed in an expression of
melancholy humor.
One of those men devoid of the symmetry of feature
essential to the Aryan ideal, he was yet, here and there,
considered handsome—moreover, he was very clean, in appearance and
in reality, with that especial cleanness borrowed from
beauty.
The Reproachless Apartment
Fifth and Sixth Avenues, it seemed to Anthony,
were the uprights of a gigantic ladder stretching from Washington
Square to Central Park. Coming up-town on top of a bus toward
Fifty-second Street invariably gave him the sensation of hoisting
himself hand by hand on a series of treacherous rungs, and when the
bus jolted to a stop at his own rung he found something akin to
relief as he descended the reckless metal steps to the
sidewalk.
After that, he had but to walk down Fifty-second
Street half a block, pass a stodgy family of brownstone houses—and
then in a jiffy he was under the high ceilings of his great front
room. This was entirely satisfactory. Here, after all, life began.
Here he slept, breakfasted, read, and entertained.
The house itself was of murky material, built in
the late nineties; in response to the steadily growing need of
small apartments each floor had been thoroughly remodelled and
rented individually. Of the four apartments Anthony’s, on the
second floor, was the most desirable.
The front room had fine high ceilings and three
large windows that loomed down pleasantly upon Fifty-second Street.
In its appointments it escaped by a safe margin being of any
particular period; it escaped stiffness, stuffiness, bareness, and
decadence. It smelt neither of smoke nor of incense—it was tall and
faintly blue. There was a deep lounge of the softest brown leather
with somnolence drifting about it like a haze. There was a high
screen of Chinese lacquer chiefly concerned with geometrical
fishermen and huntsmen in black and gold; this made a corner alcove
for a voluminous chair guarded by an orange-colored standing lamp.
Deep in the fireplace a quartered shield was burned to a murky
black.
Passing through the dining-room, which, as Anthony
took only breakfast at home, was merely a magnificent potentiality,
and down a comparatively long hall, one came to the heart and core
of the apartment—Anthony’s bedroom and bath.
Both of them were immense. Under the ceilings of
the former even the great canopied bed seemed of only average size.
On the floor an exotic rug of crimson velvet was soft as fleece on
his bare feet. His bathroom, in contrast to the rather portentous
character of his bedroom, was gay, bright, extremely habitable and
even faintly facetious. Framed around the walls were photographs of
four celebrated thespian beauties of the day: Julia Sanderson as
“The Sunshine Girl,” Ina Claire as “The Quaker Girl,” Billie Burke
as “The Mind-the-Paint Girl,” and Hazel Dawn as “The Pink
Lady.”3 Between
Billie Burke and Hazel Dawn hung a print representing a great
stretch of snow presided over by a cold and formidable sun—this,
claimed Anthony, symbolized the cold shower.
The bathtub, equipped with an ingenious
book-holder, was low and large. Beside it a wall wardrobe bulged
with sufficient linen for three men and with a generation of
neckties. There was no skimpy glorified towel of a carpet—instead,
a rich rug, like the one in his bedroom a miracle of softness, that
seemed almost to massage the wet foot emerging from the
tub....
All in all a room to conjure with—it was easy to
see that Anthony dressed there, arranged his immaculate hair there,
in fact did everything but sleep and eat there. It was his pride,
this bathroom. He felt that if he had a love he would have hung her
picture just facing the tub so that, lost in the soothing steamings
of the hot water, he might lie and look up at her and muse warmly
and sensuously on her beauty.
Nor Does He Spin
The apartment was kept clean by an English servant
with the singularly, almost theatrically, appropriate name of
Bounds, whose technic was marred only by the fact that he wore a
soft collar. Had he been entirely Anthony’s Bounds this defect
would have been summarily remedied, but he was also the Bounds of
two other gentlemen in the neighborhood. From eight until eleven in
the morning he was entirely Anthony’s. He arrived with the mail and
cooked breakfast. At nine-thirty he pulled the edge of Anthony’s
blanket and spoke a few terse words—Anthony never remembered
clearly what they were and rather suspected they were deprecative;
then he served breakfast on a card-table in the front room, made
the bed and, after asking with some hostility if there was anything
else, withdrew.
In the mornings, at least once a week, Anthony went
to see his broker. His income was slightly under seven thousand a
year, the interest on money inherited from his mother. His
grandfather, who had never allowed his own son to graduate from a
very liberal allowance, judged that this sum was sufficient for
young Anthony’s needs. Every Christmas he sent him a
five-hundred-dollar bond,4 which
Anthony usually sold, if possible, as he was always a little, not
very, hard up.
The visits to his broker varied from semi-social
chats to discussions of the safety of eight per cent investments,
and Anthony always enjoyed them. The big trust company building
seemed to link him definitely to the great fortunes whose
solidarity he respected and to assure him that he was adequately
chaperoned by the hierarchy of finance. From these hurried men he
derived the same sense of safety that he had in contemplating his
grandfather’s money—even more, for the latter appeared, vaguely, a
demand loan made by the world to Adam Patch’s own moral
righteousness, while this money down-town seemed rather to have
been grasped and held by sheer indomitable strengths and tremendous
feats of will; in addition, it seemed more definitely and
explicitly—money.
Closely as Anthony trod on the heels of his income,
he considered it to be enough. Some golden day, of course, he would
have many millions; meanwhile he possessed a raison d’être
in the theoretical creation of essays on the popes of the
Renaissance. This flashes back to the conversation with his
grandfather immediately upon his return from Rome.
He had hoped to find his grandfather dead, but had
learned by telephoning from the pier that Adam Patch was
comparatively well again—the next day he had concealed his
disappointment and gone out to Tarrytown. Five miles from the
station his taxicab entered an elaborately groomed drive that
threaded a veritable maze of walls and wire fences guarding the
estate—this, said the public, was because it was definitely known
that if the Socialists had their way, one of the first men they’d
assassinate would be old Cross Patch.
Anthony was late and the venerable philanthropist
was awaiting him in a glass-walled sun-parlor, where he was
glancing through the morning papers for the second time. His
secretary, Edward Shuttleworth—who before his regeneration had been
gambler, saloon-keeper, and general reprobate—ushered Anthony into
the room, exhibiting his redeemer and benefactor as though he were
displaying a treasure of immense value.
They shook hands gravely. “I’m awfully glad to hear
you’re better,” Anthony said.
The senior Patch, with an air of having seen his
grandson only last week, pulled out his watch.
“Train late?” he asked mildly.
It had irritated him to wait for Anthony. He was
under the delusion not only that in his youth he had handled his
practical affairs with the utmost scrupulousness, even to keeping
every engagement on the dot, but also that this was the direct and
primary cause of his success.
“It’s been late a good deal this month,” he
remarked with a shade of meek accusation in his voice—and then
after a long sigh, “Sit down.”
Anthony surveyed his grandfather with that tacit
amazement which always attended the sight. That this feeble,
unintelligent old man was possessed of such power that, yellow
journals to the contrary, the men in the republic whose souls he
could not have bought directly or indirectly would scarcely have
populated White Plains, seemed as impossible to believe as that he
had once been a pink-and-white baby.
The span of his seventy-five years had acted as a
magic bellows—the first quarter-century had blown him full with
life, and the last had sucked it all back. It had sucked in the
cheeks and the chest and the girth of arm and leg. It had
tyrannously demanded his teeth, one by one, suspended his small
eyes in dark-bluish sacks, tweeked out his hairs, changed him from
gray to white in some places, from pink to yellow in
others—callously transposing his colors like a child trying over a
paint-box. Then through his body and his soul it had attacked his
brain. It had sent him night-sweats and tears and unfounded dreads.
It had split his intense normality into credulity and suspicion.
Out of the coarse material of his enthusiasm it had cut dozens of
meek but petulant obsessions; his energy was shrunk to the bad
temper of a spoiled child, and for his will to power was
substituted a fatuous puerile desire for a land of harps and
canticles on earth.
The amenities having been gingerly touched upon,
Anthony felt that he was expected to outline his intentions—and
simultaneously a glimmer in the old man’s eye warned him against
broaching, for the present, his desire to live abroad. He wished
that Shuttleworth would have tact enough to leave the room—he
detested Shuttleworth—but the secretary had settled blandly in a
rocker and was dividing between the two Patches the glances of his
faded eyes.
“Now that you’re here you ought to do
something,” said his grandfather softly, “accomplish
something.”
Anthony waited for him to speak of “leaving
something done when you pass on.” Then he made a suggestion:
“I thought—it seemed to me that perhaps I’m best
qualified to write—”
Adam Patch winced, visualizing a family poet with
long hair and three mistresses.
“—history,” finished Anthony.
“History? History of what? The Civil War? The
Revolution?”
“Why—no, sir. A history of the Middle Ages.”
Simultaneously an idea was born for a history of the Renaissance
popes, written from some novel angle. Still, he was glad he had
said “Middle Ages.”
“Middle Ages? Why not your own country?
Something you know about?”
“Well, you see I’ve lived so much abroad—”
“Why you should write about the Middle Ages, I
don’t know. Dark Ages, we used to call ’em. Nobody knows what
happened, and nobody cares, except that they’re over now.” He
continued for some minutes on the uselessness of such information,
touching, naturally, on the Spanish Inquisition and the “corruption
of the monasteries.” Then:
“Do you think you’ll be able to do any work in New
York—or do you really intend to work at all?” This last with soft,
almost imperceptible, cynicism.
“Why, yes, I do, sir.”
“When’ll you be done?”
“Well, there’ll be an outline, you see—and a lot of
preliminary reading.”
“I should think you’d have done enough of that
already.”
The conversation worked itself jerkily toward a
rather abrupt conclusion, when Anthony rose, looked at his watch,
and remarked that he had an engagement with his broker that
afternoon. He had intended to stay a few days with his grandfather,
but he was tired and irritated from a rough crossing, and quite
unwilling to stand a subtle and sanctimonious browbeating. He would
come out again in a few days, he said.
Nevertheless, it was due to this encounter that
work had come into his life as a permanent idea. During the year
that had passed since then, he had made several lists of
authorities, he had even experimented with chapter titles and the
division of his work into periods, but not one line of actual
writing existed at present, or seemed likely ever to exist. He did
nothing—and contrary to the most accredited copy-book logic, he
managed to divert himself with more than average content.
Afternoon
It was October in 1913, midway in a week of
pleasant days, with the sunshine loitering in the cross-streets and
the atmosphere so languid as to seem weighted with ghostly falling
leaves. It was pleasant to sit lazily by the open window finishing
a chapter of “Erewhon.” It was pleasant to yawn about five, toss
the book on a table, and saunter humming along the hall to his
bath.
“To... you ... beaut-if-ul lady,”
he was singing as he turned on the tap.
“I raise ... my ... eyes;
To... you ... beaut-if ul la-a-dy
My ... heart ... cries—”
To... you ... beaut-if ul la-a-dy
My ... heart ... cries—”
He raised his voice to compete with the flood of
water pouring into the tub, and as he looked at the picture of
Hazel Dawn upon the wall he put an imaginary violin to his shoulder
and softly caressed it with a phantom bow. Through his closed lips
he made a humming noise, which he vaguely imagined resembled the
sound of a violin. After a moment his hands ceased their gyrations
and wandered to his shirt, which he began to unfasten. Stripped,
and adopting an athletic posture like the tiger-skin man in the
advertisement, he regarded himself with some satisfaction in the
mirror, breaking off to dabble a tentative foot in the tub.
Readjusting a faucet and indulging in a few preliminary grunts, he
slid in.
Once accustomed to the temperature of the water he
relaxed into a state of drowsy content. When he finished his bath
he would dress leisurely and walk down Fifth Avenue to the Ritz,
where he had an appointment for dinner with his two most frequent
companions, Dick Caramel and Maury Noble. Afterward he and Maury
were going to the theatre—Caramel would probably trot home and work
on his book, which ought to be finished pretty soon.
Anthony was glad he wasn’t going to work on
his book. The notion of sitting down and conjuring up, not
only words in which to clothe thoughts but thoughts worthy of being
clothed—the whole thing was absurdly beyond his desires.
Emerging from his bath he polished himself with the
meticulous attention of a bootblack. Then he wandered into the
bedroom, and whistling the while a weird, uncertain melody,
strolled here and there buttoning, adjusting, and enjoying the
warmth of the thick carpet on his feet.
He lit a cigarette, tossed the match out the open
top of the window, then paused in his tracks with the cigarette two
inches from his mouth—which fell faintly ajar. His eyes were
focussed upon a spot of brilliant color on the roof of a house
farther down the alley.
It was a girl in a red negligé, silk surely, drying
her hair by the still hot sun of late afternoon. His whistle died
upon the stiff air of the room; he walked cautiously another step
nearer the window with a sudden impression that she was beautiful.
Sitting on the stone parapet beside her was a cushion the same
color as her garment and she was leaning both arms upon it as she
looked down into the sunny areaway, where Anthony could hear
children playing.
He watched her for several minutes. Something was
stirred in him, something not accounted for by the warm smell of
the afternoon or the triumphant vividness of red. He felt
persistently that the girl was beautiful—then of a sudden he
understood: it was her distance, not a rare and precious distance
of soul but still distance, if only in terrestrial yards. The
autumn air was between them, and the roofs and the blurred voices.
Yet for a not altogether explained second, posing perversely in
time, his emotion had been nearer to adoration than in the deepest
kiss he had ever known.
He finished his dressing, found a black bow tie and
adjusted it carefully by the three-sided mirror in the bathroom.
Then yielding to an impulse he walked quickly into the bedroom and
again looked out the window. The woman was standing up now; she had
tossed her hair back and he had a full view of her. She was fat,
full thirty-five, utterly undistinguished. Making a clicking noise
with his mouth he returned to the bathroom and reparted his
hair.
“To... you ... beaut-if-ul lady,”
he sang lightly,
“I raise ... my ... eyes—”
Then with a last soothing brush that left an
iridescent surface of sheer gloss he left his bathroom and his
apartment and walked down Fifth Avenue to the Ritz-Carlton.
Three Men
At seven Anthony and his friend Maury Noble are
sitting at a corner table on the cool roof. Maury Noble is like
nothing so much as a large slender and imposing cat. His eyes are
narrow and full of incessant, protracted blinks. His hair is smooth
and flat, as though it has been licked by a possible—and, if so,
Herculean—mother-cat. During Anthony’s time at Harvard he had been
considered the most unique figure in his class, the most brilliant,
the most original—smart, quiet and among the saved.
This is the man whom Anthony considers his best
friend. This is the only man of all his acquaintance whom he
admires and, to a bigger extent than he likes to admit to himself,
envies.
They are glad to see each other now—their eyes are
full of kindness as each feels the full effect of novelty after a
short separation. They are drawing a relaxation from each other’s
presence, a new serenity; Maury Noble behind that fine and absurdly
catlike face is all but purring. And Anthony, nervous as a
will-o’-the-wisp, restless—he is at rest now.
They are engaged in one of those easy short-speech
conversations that only men under thirty or men under great stress
indulge in.
ANTHONY: Seven o’clock. Where’s the Caramel?
(Impatiently) I wish he’d finish that interminable novel.
I’ve spent more time hungry—
MAURY: He’s got a new name for it. “The Demon
Lover”—not bad, eh?5
ANTHONY: (Interested) “The Demon Lover”? Oh
“woman wailing” —No—not a bit bad! Not bad at all—d’you
think?
MAURY: Rather good. What time did you say?
ANTHONY :Seven.
MAURY: (His eyes narrowing—not
unpleasantly, but to express a faint disapproval) Drove me
crazy the other day.
ANTHONY: How?
MAURY: That habit of taking notes.
ANTHONY: Me, too. Seems I’d said something night
before that he considered material but he’d forgotten it—so he had
at me. He’d say “Can’t you try to concentrate?” And I’d say “You
bore me to tears. How do I remember?”
(MAURY laughs noiselessly, by a sort of bland and
appreciative widening of his features.)
MAURY: Dick doesn’t necessarily see more than any
one else. He merely can put down a larger proportion of what he
sees.
ANTHONY: That rather impressive talent—
MAURY: Oh, yes. Impressive!
ANTHONY: And energy—ambitious, well-directed
energy. He’s so entertaining—he’s so tremendously stimulating and
exciting. Often there’s something breathless in being with
him.
MAURY: Oh, yes.
(Silence, and then:)
ANTHONY: (With his thin, somewhat uncertain face
at its most convinced) But not indomitable energy. Some day,
bit by bit, it’ll blow away, and his rather impressive talent with
it, and leave only a wisp of a man, fretful and egotistic and
garrulous.
MAURY: (With laughter) Here we sit vowing to
each other that little Dick sees less deeply into things than we
do. And I’ll bet he feels a measure of superiority on his
side—creative mind over merely critical mind and all that.
ANTHONY: Oh, yes. But he’s wrong. He’s inclined to
fall for a million silly enthusiasms. If it wasn’t that he’s
absorbed in realism and therefore has to adopt the garments of the
cynic he’d be—he’d be credulous as a college religious leader. He’s
an idealist. Oh, yes. He thinks he’s not, because he’s rejected
Christianity. Remember him in college? Just swallow every writer
whole, one after another, ideas, technic, and characters,
Chesterton, Shaw, Wells, each one as easily as the last.
MAURY: (Still considering his own last
observation) I remember.
ANTHONY: It’s true. Natural born fetich-worshipper.
Take art—
MAURY: Let’s order. He’ll be—
ANTHONY: Sure. Let’s order. I told him—
MAURY: Here he comes. Look—he’s going to bump that
waiter. (He lifts his finger as a signal—lifts it as though it
were a soft and friendly claw.) Here y’are, Caramel.
A NEW VOICE: (Fiercely) Hello, Maury. Hello,
Anthony Comstock Patch. How is old Adam’s grandson? Débutantes
still after you, eh?
In person RICHARD CARAMEL is short and
fair—he is to be bald at thirty-five. He has yellowish eyes—one of
them startlingly clear, the other opaque as a muddy pool—and a
bulging brow like a funny-paper baby. He bulges in other places—his
paunch bulges, prophetically, his words have an air of bulging from
his mouth, even his dinner-coat pockets bulge, as though from
contamination, with a dog-eared collection of time-tables,
programmes, and miscellaneous scraps—on these he takes his notes
with great screwings up of his unmatched yellow eyes and motions of
silence with his disengaged left hand.
When he reaches the table he shakes hands
with ANTHONY and MAURY. He is one of those men who
invariably shake hands, even with people whom they have seen an
hour before.
ANTHONY: Hello, Caramel. Glad you’re here. We
needed a comic relief.
MAURY: You’re late. Been racing the postman down
the block? We’ve been clawing over your character.
DICK: (Fixing ANTHONY eagerly with the
bright eye) What’d you say? Tell me and I’ll write it down. Cut
three thousand words out of Part One this afternoon.
MAURY: Noble æsthete. And I poured alcohol into my
stomach.
DICK: I don’t doubt it. I bet you two have been
sitting here for an hour talking about liquor.
ANTHONY: We never pass out, my beardless boy.
MAURY: We never go home with ladies we meet when
we’re lit.
ANTHONY: All in all our parties are characterized
by a certain haughty distinction.
DICK: The particularly silly sort who boast about
being “tanks”! Trouble is you’re both in the eighteenth century.
School of the Old English Squire. Drink quietly until you roll
under the table. Never have a good time. Oh, no, that isn’t done at
all.
ANTHONY: This from Chapter Six, I’ll bet.
DICK: Going to the theatre?
MAURY: Yes. We intend to spend the evening doing
some deep thinking over of life’s problems. The thing is tersely
called “The Woman.” I presume that she will “pay.”
ANTHONY: My God! Is that what it is? Let’s go to
the Follies again.
MAURY: I’m tired of it. I’ve seen it three times.
(To DICK) The first time, we went out after Act One and found a
most amazing bar. When we came back we entered the wrong
theatre.
ANTHONY: Had a protracted dispute with a scared
young couple we thought were in our seats.
DICK: (As though talking to himself) I
think—that when I’ve done another novel and a play, and maybe a
book of short stories, I’ll do a musical comedy.6
MAURY: I know—with intellectual lyrics that no one
will listen to. And all the critics will groan and grunt about
“Dear old Pinafore.” And I shall go on shining as a brilliantly
meaningless figure in a meaningless world.
DICK: (Pompously) Art isn’t
meaningless.
MAURY: It is in itself. It isn’t in that it tries
to make life less so.
ANTHONY: In other words, Dick, you’re playing
before a grand stand peopled with ghosts.
MAURY: Give a good show anyhow.
ANTHONY: (To MAURY) On the contrary, I’d feel that
it being a meaningless world, why write? The very attempt to give
it purpose is purposeless.
DICK: Well, even admitting all that, be a decent
pragmatist and grant a poor man the instinct to live. Would you
want every one to accept that sophistic rot?
ANTHONY: Yeah, I suppose so.
MAURY: No, sir! I believe that every one in America
but a selected thousand should be compelled to accept a very rigid
system of morals—Roman Catholicism, for instance. I don’t complain
of conventional morality. I complain rather of the mediocre
heretics who seize upon the findings of sophistication and adopt
the pose of a moral freedom to which they are by no means entitled
by their intelligences.
(Here the soup arrives and what MAURY
might have gone on to say is lost for all time.)
Night
Afterward they visited a ticket speculator and, at
a price, obtained seats for a new musical comedy called “High
Jinks.” In the foyer of the theatre they waited a few moments to
see the first-night crowd come in. There were opera-cloaks stitched
of myriad, many-colored silks and furs; there were jewels dripping
from arms and throats and ear-tips of white and rose; there were
innumerable broad shimmers down the middles of innumerable silk
hats; there were shoes of gold and bronze and red and shining
black; there were the high-piled, tight-packed coiffures of many
women and the slick, watered hair of well-kept men—most of all
there was the ebbing, flowing, chattering, chuckling, foaming,
slow-rolling wave effect of this cheerful sea of people as to-night
it poured its glittering torrent into the artificial lake of
laughter....
After the play they parted—Maury was going to a
dance at Sherry’s, Anthony homeward and to bed.
He found his way slowly over the jostled evening
mass of Times Square, which the chariot-race and its thousand
satellites made rarely beautiful and bright and intimate with
carnival. Faces swirled about him, a kaleidoscope of girls, ugly,
ugly as sin—too fat, too lean, yet floating upon this autumn air as
upon their own warm and passionate breaths poured out into the
night. Here, for all their vulgarity, he thought, they were faintly
and subtly mysterious. He inhaled carefully, swallowing into his
lungs perfume and the not unpleasant scent of many cigarettes. He
caught the glance of a dark young beauty sitting alone in a closed
taxicab. Her eyes in the half-light suggested night and violets,
and for a moment he stirred again to that half-forgotten remoteness
of the afternoon.
Two young Jewish men passed him, talking in loud
voices and craning their necks here and there in fatuous
supercilious glances. They were dressed in suits of the exaggerated
tightness then semi-fashionable; their turnover collars were
notched at the Adam’s apple; they wore gray spats and carried gray
gloves on their cane handles.
Passed a bewildered old lady borne along like a
basket of eggs between two men who exclaimed to her of the wonders
of Times Square—explained them so quickly that the old lady, trying
to be impartially interested, waved her head here and there like a
piece of wind-worried old orange-peel. Anthony heard a snatch of
their conversation:
“There’s the Astor, mama!”
“Look! See the chariot-race sign—”
“There’s where we were to-day. No,
there!”
“Good gracious! ...”
“You should worry and grow thin like a dime.” He
recognized the current witticism of the year as it issued
stridently from one of the pairs at his elbow.
“And I says to him, I says—”
The soft rush of taxis by him, and laughter,
laughter hoarse as a crow’s, incessant and loud, with the rumble of
the subways underneath—and over all, the revolutions of light, the
growings and recedings of light—light dividing like pearls—forming
and reforming in glittering bars and circles and monstrous
grotesque figures cut amazingly on the sky.
He turned thankfully down the hush that blew like a
dark wind out of a cross-street, passed a bakery-restaurant in
whose windows a dozen roast chickens turned over and over on an
automatic spit. From the door came a smell that was hot, doughy,
and pink. A drug-store next, exhaling medicines, spilt soda-water
and a pleasant undertone from the cosmetic counter; then a Chinese
laundry, still open, steamy and stifling, smelling folded and
vaguely yellow. All these depressed him; reaching Sixth Avenue he
stopped at a corner cigar-store and emerged feeling better—the
cigar-store was cheerful, humanity in a navy-blue mist, buying a
luxury....
Once in his apartment he smoked a last cigarette,
sitting in the dark by his open front window. For the first time in
over a year he found himself thoroughly enjoying New York. There
was a rare pungency in it certainly, a quality almost Southern. A
lonesome town, though. He who had grown up alone had lately learned
to avoid solitude. During the past several months he had been
careful, when he had no engagement for the evening, to hurry to one
of his clubs and find some one. Oh, there was a loneliness
here—
His cigarette, its smoke bordering the thin folds
of curtain with rims of faint white spray, glowed on until the
clock in St. Anne’s down the street struck one with a querulous
fashionable beauty. The elevated, half a quiet block away, sounded
a rumble of drums—and should he lean from his window he would see
the train, like an angry eagle, breasting the dark curve at the
corner. He was reminded of a fantastic romance he had lately read
in which cities had been bombed from aerial trains, and for a
moment he fancied that Washington Square had declared war on
Central Park and that this was a north-bound menace loaded with
battle and sudden death. But as it passed the illusion faded; it
diminished to the faintest of drums—then to a far-away droning
eagle.
There were the bells and the continued low blur of
autohorns from Fifth Avenue, but his own street was silent and he
was safe in here from all the threat of life, for there was his
door and the long hall and his guardian bedroom—safe, safe! The
arc-light shining into his window seemed for this hour like the
moon, only brighter and more beautiful than the moon.
A Flash-Back in Paradise
Beauty, who was born anew every hundred years,
sat in a sort of outdoor waiting-room through which blew gusts of
white wind and occasionally a breathless hurried star. The stars
winked at her intimately as they went by and the winds made a soft
incessant flurry in her hair. She was incomprehensible, for, in
her, soul and spirit were one—the beauty of her body was the
essence of her soul. She was that unity sought for by philosophers
through many centuries. In this outdoor waiting-room of winds and
stars she had been sitting for a hundred years, at peace in the
contemplation of herself.
It became known to her, at length, that she was
to be born again. Sighing, she began a long conversation with a
voice that was in the white wind, a conversation that took many
hours and of which I can give only a fragment here.
BEAUTY: (Her lips scarcely stirring, her eyes
turned, as always, inward upon herself) Whither shall I journey
now?
THE VOICE: To a new country—a land you have never
seen before.
BEAUTY: (Petulantly) I loathe breaking into
these new civilizations. How long a stay this time?
THE VOICE: Fifteen years.
BEAUTY: And what’s the name of the place?
THE VOICE: It is the most opulent, most gorgeous
land on earth—a land whose wisest are but little wiser than its
dullest; a land where the rulers have minds like little children
and the law-givers believe in Santa Claus; where ugly women control
strong men—
BEAUTY: (In astonishment) What?
THE VOICE: (Very much depressed) Yes, it is
truly a melancholy spectacle. Women with receding chins and
shapeless noses go about in broad daylight saying “Do this!” and
“Do that!” and all the men, even those of great wealth, obey
implicitly their women to whom they refer sonorously either as
“Mrs. So-and-so” or as “the wife.”
BEAUTY: But this can’t be true! I can understand,
of course, their obedience to women of charm—but to fat women? to
bony women? to women with scrawny cheeks?
THE VOICE: Even so.
BEAUTY: What of me? What chance shall I have?
THE VOICE: It will be “harder going,” if I may
borrow a phrase.
BEAUTY: (After a dissatisfied pause) Why not
the old lands, the land of grapes and soft-tongued men or the land
of ships and seas?
THE VOICE: It’s expected that they’ll be very busy
shortly.
BEAUTY: Oh!
THE VOICE: Your life on earth will be, as always,
the interval between two significant glances in a mundane
mirror.
BEAUTY: What will I be? Tell me?
THE VOICE: At first it was thought that you would
go this time as an actress in the motion-pictures but, after all,
it’s not advisable. You will be disguised during your fifteen years
as what is called a “susciety gurl.”
BEAUTY: What’s that?
(There is a new sound in the wind which must
for our purposes be interpreted as THE VOICE scratching its
head.)
THE VOICE: (At length) It’s a sort of bogus
aristocrat.
BEAUTY: Bogus? What is bogus?
THE VOICE: That, too, you will discover in this
land. You will find much that is bogus. Also, you will do much that
is bogus.
BEAUTY: (Placidly) It all sounds so
vulgar.
THE VOICE: Not half as vulgar as it is. You will be
known during your fifteen years as a ragtime kid, a flapper, a
jazz-baby, and a baby vamp. You will dance new dances neither more
nor less gracefully than you danced the old ones.
BEAUTY: (In a whisper) Will I be paid?
THE VOICE: Yes, as usual—in love.
BEAUTY: (With a faint laugh which disturbs only
momentarily the immobility of her lips) And will I like being
called a jazz-baby?
THE VOICE: (Soberly) You will love
it....
(The dialogue ends here, with BEAUTY still
sitting quietly, the stars pausing in an ecstasy of appreciation,
the wind, white and gusty, blowing through her hair.
All this took place seven years before
ANTHONY sat by the front windows of his apartment and listened
to the chimes of St. Anne’s.)