<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Comus</span> found his way to his seat in
the stalls of the Straw Exchange Theatre and turned to watch the
stream of distinguished and distinguishable people who made their
appearance as a matter of course at a First Night in the height
of the Season. Pit and gallery were already packed with a
throng, tense, expectant and alert, that waited for the rise of
the curtain with the eager patience of a terrier watching a
dilatory human prepare for outdoor exercises. Stalls and
boxes filled slowly and hesitatingly with a crowd whose component
units seemed for the most part to recognise the probability that
they were quite as interesting as any play they were likely to
see. Those who bore no particular face-value themselves
derived a certain amount of social dignity from the near
neighbourhood of obvious notabilities; if one could not obtain
recognition oneself there was some vague pleasure in being able
to recognise notoriety at intimately close quarters.</p>
<p>“Who is that woman with the auburn hair and a rather
effective belligerent gleam in her eyes?” asked a man
sitting just behind Comus; “she looks as if she might have
created the world in six days and destroyed it on the
seventh.”</p>
<p>“I forget her name,” said his neighbour;
“she writes. She’s the author of that book,
‘The Woman who wished it was Wednesday,’ you
know. It used to be the convention that women writers
should be plain and dowdy; now we have gone to the other extreme
and build them on extravagantly decorative lines.”</p>
<p>A buzz of recognition came from the front rows of the pit,
together with a craning of necks on the part of those in less
favoured seats. It heralded the arrival of Sherard Blaw,
the dramatist who had discovered himself, and who had given so
ungrudgingly of his discovery to the world. Lady Caroline,
who was already directing little conversational onslaughts from
her box, gazed gently for a moment at the new arrival, and then
turned to the silver-haired Archdeacon sitting beside her.</p>
<p>“They say the poor man is haunted by the fear that he
will die during a general election, and that his obituary notices
will be seriously curtailed by the space taken up by the election
results. The curse of our party system, from his point of
view, is that it takes up so much room in the press.”</p>
<p>The Archdeacon smiled indulgently. As a man he was so
exquisitely worldly that he fully merited the name of the
Heavenly Worldling bestowed on him by an admiring duchess, and
withal his texture was shot with a pattern of such genuine
saintliness that one felt that whoever else might hold the keys
of Paradise he, at least, possessed a private latchkey to that
abode.</p>
<p>“Is it not significant of the altered grouping of
things,” he observed, “that the Church, as
represented by me, sympathises with the message of Sherard Blaw,
while neither the man nor his message find acceptance with
unbelievers like you, Lady Caroline.”</p>
<p>Lady Caroline blinked her eyes. “My dear
Archdeacon,” she said, “no one can be an unbeliever
nowadays. The Christian Apologists have left one nothing to
disbelieve.”</p>
<p>The Archdeacon rose with a delighted chuckle. “I
must go and tell that to De la Poulett,” he said,
indicating a clerical figure sitting in the third row of the
stalls; “he spends his life explaining from his pulpit that
the glory of Christianity consists in the fact that though it is
not true it has been found necessary to invent it.”</p>
<p>The door of the box opened and Courtenay Youghal entered,
bringing with him subtle suggestion of chaminade and an
atmosphere of political tension. The Government had fallen
out of the good graces of a section of its supporters, and those
who were not in the know were busy predicting a serious crisis
over a forthcoming division in the Committee stage of an
important Bill. This was Saturday night, and unless some
successful cajolery were effected between now and Monday
afternoon, Ministers would be, seemingly, in danger of
defeat.</p>
<p>“Ah, here is Youghal,” said the Archdeacon;
“he will be able to tell us what is going to happen in the
next forty-eight hours. I hear the Prime Minister says it
is a matter of conscience, and they will stand or fall by
it.”</p>
<p>His hopes and sympathies were notoriously on the Ministerial
side.</p>
<p>Youghal greeted Lady Caroline and subsided gracefully into a
chair well in the front of the box. A buzz of recognition
rippled slowly across the house.</p>
<p>“For the Government to fall on a matter of
conscience,” he said, “would be like a man cutting
himself with a safety razor.”</p>
<p>Lady Caroline purred a gentle approval.</p>
<p>“I’m afraid it’s true, Archdeacon,”
she said.</p>
<p>No one can effectively defend a Government when it’s
been in office several years. The Archdeacon took refuge in
light skirmishing.</p>
<p>“I believe Lady Caroline sees the makings of a great
Socialist statesman in you, Youghal,” he observed.</p>
<p>“Great Socialist statesmen aren’t made,
they’re stillborn,” replied Youghal.</p>
<p>“What is the play about to-night?” asked a pale
young woman who had taken no part in the talk.</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” said Lady Caroline,
“but I hope it’s dull. If there is any
brilliant conversation in it I shall burst into tears.”</p>
<p>In the front row of the upper circle a woman with a restless
starling-voice was discussing the work of a temporarily
fashionable composer, chiefly in relation to her own emotions,
which she seemed to think might prove generally interesting to
those around her.</p>
<p>“Whenever I hear his music I feel that I want to go up
into a mountain and pray. Can you understand that
feeling?”</p>
<p>The girl to whom she was unburdening herself shook her
head.</p>
<p>“You see, I’ve heard his music chiefly in
Switzerland, and we were up among the mountains all the time, so
it wouldn’t have made any difference.”</p>
<p>“In that case,” said the woman, who seemed to have
emergency emotions to suit all geographical conditions, “I
should have wanted to be in a great silent plain by the side of a
rushing river.”</p>
<p>“What I think is so splendid about his
music—” commenced another starling-voice on the
further side of the girl. Like sheep that feed greedily
before the coming of a storm the starling-voices seemed impelled
to extra effort by the knowledge of four imminent intervals of
acting during which they would be hushed into constrained
silence.</p>
<p>In the back row of the dress circle a late-comer, after a
cursory glance at the programme, had settled down into a
comfortable narrative, which was evidently the resumed thread of
an unfinished taxi-drive monologue.</p>
<p>“We all said ‘it can’t be Captain Parminter,
because he’s always been sweet on Joan,’ and then
Emily said—”</p>
<p>The curtain went up, and Emily’s contribution to the
discussion had to be held over till the entr’acte.</p>
<p>The play promised to be a success. The author, avoiding
the pitfall of brilliancy, had aimed at being interesting and as
far as possible, bearing in mind that his play was a comedy, he
had striven to be amusing. Above all he had remembered that
in the laws of stage proportions it is permissible and generally
desirable that the part should be greater than the whole; hence
he had been careful to give the leading lady such a clear and
commanding lead over the other characters of the play that it was
impossible for any of them ever to get on level terms with
her. The action of the piece was now and then delayed
thereby, but the duration of its run would be materially
prolonged.</p>
<p>The curtain came down on the first act amid an encouraging
instalment of applause, and the audience turned its back on the
stage and began to take a renewed interest in itself. The
authoress of “The Woman who wished it was Wednesday”
had swept like a convalescent whirlwind, subdued but potentially
tempestuous, into Lady Caroline’s box.</p>
<p>“I’ve just trodden with all my weight on the foot
of an eminent publisher as I was leaving my seat,” she
cried, with a peal of delighted laughter. “He was
such a dear about it; I said I hoped I hadn’t hurt him, and
he said, ‘I suppose you think, who drives hard bargains
should himself be hard.’ Wasn’t it pet-lamb of
him?”</p>
<p>“I’ve never trodden on a pet lamb,” said
Lady Caroline, “so I’ve no idea what its behaviour
would be under the circumstances.”</p>
<p>“Tell me,” said the authoress, coming to the front
of the box, the better to survey the house, and perhaps also with
a charitable desire to make things easy for those who might
pardonably wish to survey her, “tell me, please, where is
the girl sitting whom Courtenay Youghal is engaged to?”</p>
<p>Elaine was pointed out to her, sitting in the fourth row of
the stalls, on the opposite side of the house to where Comus had
his seat. Once during the interval she had turned to give
him a friendly nod of recognition as he stood in one of the side
gangways, but he was absorbed at the moment in looking at himself
in the glass panel. The grave brown eyes and the mocking
green-grey ones had looked their last into each other’s
depths.</p>
<p>For Comus this first-night performance, with its brilliant
gathering of spectators, its groups and coteries of lively
talkers, even its counterfoil of dull chatterers, its pervading
atmosphere of stage and social movement, and its intruding
undercurrent of political flutter, all this composed a tragedy in
which he was the chief character. It was the life he knew
and loved and basked in, and it was the life he was
leaving. It would go on reproducing itself again and again,
with its stage interest and social interest and intruding outside
interests, with the same lively chattering crowd, the people who
had done things being pointed out by people who recognised them
to people who didn’t—it would all go on with
unflagging animation and sparkle and enjoyment, and for him it
would have stopped utterly. He would be in some unheard-of
sun-blistered wilderness, where natives and pariah dogs and
raucous-throated crows fringed round mockingly on one’s
loneliness, where one rode for sweltering miles for the chance of
meeting a collector or police officer, with whom most likely on
closer acquaintance one had hardly two ideas in common, where
female society was represented at long intervals by some
climate-withered woman missionary or official’s wife, where
food and sickness and veterinary lore became at last the three
outstanding subjects on which the mind settled or rather
sank. That was the life he foresaw and dreaded, and that
was the life he was going to. For a boy who went out to it
from the dulness of some country rectory, from a neighbourhood
where a flower show and a cricket match formed the social
landmarks of the year, the feeling of exile might not be very
crushing, might indeed be lost in the sense of change and
adventure. But Comus had lived too thoroughly in the centre
of things to regard life in a backwater as anything else than
stagnation, and stagnation while one is young he justly regarded
as an offence against nature and reason, in keeping with the
perverted mockery that sends decrepit invalids touring painfully
about the world and shuts panthers up in narrow cages. He
was being put aside, as a wine is put aside, but to deteriorate
instead of gaining in the process, to lose the best time of his
youth and health and good looks in a world where youth and health
and good looks count for much and where time never returns lost
possessions. And thus, as the curtain swept down on the
close of each act, Comus felt a sense of depression and
deprivation sweep down on himself; bitterly he watched his last
evening of social gaiety slipping away to its end. In less
than an hour it would be over; in a few months’ time it
would be an unreal memory.</p>
<p>In the third interval, as he gazed round at the chattering
house, someone touched him on the arm. It was Lady Veula
Croot.</p>
<p>“I suppose in a week’s time you’ll be on the
high seas,” she said. “I’m coming to your
farewell dinner, you know; your mother has just asked me.
I’m not going to talk the usual rot to you about how much
you will like it and so on. I sometimes think that one of
the advantages of Hell will be that no one will have the
impertinence to point out to you that you’re really better
off than you would be anywhere else. What do you think of
the play? Of course one can foresee the end; she will come
to her husband with the announcement that their longed-for child
is going to be born, and that will smooth over everything.
So conveniently effective, to wind up a comedy with the
commencement of someone else’s tragedy. And every one
will go away saying ‘I’m glad it had a happy
ending.’”</p>
<p>Lady Veula moved back to her seat, with her pleasant smile on
her lips and the look of infinite weariness in her eyes.</p>
<p>The interval, the last interval, was drawing to a close and
the house began to turn with fidgetty attention towards the stage
for the unfolding of the final phase of the play. Francesca
sat in Serena Golackly’s box listening to Colonel
Springfield’s story of what happened to a pigeon-cote in
his compound at Poona. Everyone who knew the Colonel had to
listen to that story a good many times, but Lady Caroline had
mitigated the boredom of the infliction, and in fact invested it
with a certain sporting interest, by offering a prize to the
person who heard it oftenest in the course of the Season, the
competitors being under an honourable understanding not to lead
up to the subject. Ada Spelvexit and a boy in the Foreign
Office were at present at the top of the list with five recitals
each to their score, but the former was suspected of doubtful
adherence to the rules and spirit of the competition.</p>
<p>“And there, dear lady,” concluded the Colonel,
“were the eleven dead pigeons. What had become of the
bandicoot no one ever knew.”</p>
<p>Francesca thanked him for his story, and complacently
inscribed the figure 4 on the margin of her theatre
programme. Almost at the same moment she heard George St.
Michael’s voice pattering out a breathless piece of
intelligence for the edification of Serena Golackly and anyone
else who might care to listen. Francesca galvanised into
sudden attention.</p>
<p>“Emmeline Chetrof to a fellow in the Indian Forest
Department. He’s got nothing but his pay and they
can’t be married for four or five years; an absurdly long
engagement, don’t you think so? All very well to wait
seven years for a wife in patriarchal times, when you probably
had others to go on with, and you lived long enough to celebrate
your own tercentenary, but under modern conditions it seems a
foolish arrangement.”</p>
<p>St. Michael spoke almost with a sense of grievance. A
marriage project that tied up all the small pleasant nuptial
gossip-items about bridesmaids and honeymoon and recalcitrant
aunts and so forth, for an indefinite number of years seemed
scarcely decent in his eyes, and there was little satisfaction or
importance to be derived from early and special knowledge of an
event which loomed as far distant as a Presidential Election or a
change of Viceroy. But to Francesca, who had listened with
startled apprehension at the mention of Emmeline Chetrof’s
name, the news came in a flood of relief and thankfulness.
Short of entering a nunnery and taking celibate vows, Emmeline
could hardly have behaved more conveniently than in tying herself
up to a lover whose circumstances made it necessary to relegate
marriage to the distant future. For four or five years
Francesca was assured of undisturbed possession of the house in
Blue Street, and after that period who knew what might
happen? The engagement might stretch on indefinitely, it
might even come to nothing under the weight of its accumulated
years, as sometimes happened with these protracted affairs.
Emmeline might lose her fancy for her absentee lover, and might
never replace him with another. A golden possibility of
perpetual tenancy of her present home began to float once more
through Francesca’s mind. As long as Emmeline had
been unbespoken in the marriage market there had always been the
haunting likelihood of seeing the dreaded announcement, “a
marriage has been arranged and will shortly take place,” in
connection with her name. And now a marriage had been
arranged and would not shortly take place, might indeed never
take place. St. Michael’s information was likely to
be correct in this instance; he would never have invented a piece
of matrimonial intelligence which gave such little scope for
supplementary detail of the kind he loved to supply. As
Francesca turned to watch the fourth act of the play, her mind
was singing a pæan of thankfulness and exultation. It
was as though some artificer sent by the Gods had reinforced with
a substantial cord the horsehair thread that held up the sword of
Damocles over her head. Her love for her home, for her
treasured household possessions, and her pleasant social life was
able to expand once more in present security, and feed on future
hope. She was still young enough to count four or five
years as a long time, and to-night she was optimistic enough to
prophesy smooth things of the future that lay beyond that
span. Of the fourth act, with its carefully held back but
obviously imminent reconciliation between the leading characters,
she took in but little, except that she vaguely understood it to
have a happy ending. As the lights went up she looked round
on the dispersing audience with a feeling of friendliness
uppermost in her mind; even the sight of Elaine de Frey and
Courtenay Youghal leaving the theatre together did not inspire
her with a tenth part of the annoyance that their entrance had
caused her. Serena’s invitation to go on to the Savoy
for supper fitted in exactly with her mood of exhilaration.
It would be a fit and appropriate wind-up to an auspicious
evening. The cold chicken and modest brand of Chablis
waiting for her at home should give way to a banquet of more
festive nature.</p>
<p>In the crush of the vestibule, friends and enemies, personal
and political, were jostled and locked together in the general
effort to rejoin temporarily estranged garments and secure the
attendance of elusive vehicles. Lady Caroline found herself
at close quarters with the estimable Henry Greech, and
experienced some of the joy which comes to the homeward wending
sportsman when a chance shot presents itself on which he may
expend his remaining cartridges.</p>
<p>“So the Government is going to climb down, after
all,” she said, with a provocative assumption of private
information on the subject.</p>
<p>“I assure you the Government will do nothing of the
kind,” replied the Member of Parliament with befitting
dignity; “the Prime Minister told me last night that under
no circumstances—”</p>
<p>“My dear Mr. Greech,” said Lady Caroline,
“we all know that Prime Ministers are wedded to the truth,
but like other wedded couples they sometimes live
apart.”</p>
<p>For her, at any rate, the comedy had had a happy ending.</p>
<p>Comus made his way slowly and lingeringly from the stalls, so
slowly that the lights were already being turned down and great
shroud-like dust-cloths were being swaythed over the ornamental
gilt-work. The laughing, chattering, yawning throng had
filtered out of the vestibule, and was melting away in final
groups from the steps of the theatre. An impatient
attendant gave him his coat and locked up the cloak room.
Comus stepped out under the portico; he looked at the posters
announcing the play, and in anticipation he could see other
posters announcing its 200th performance. Two hundred
performances; by that time the Straw Exchange Theatre would be to
him something so remote and unreal that it would hardly seem to
exist or to have ever existed except in his fancy. And to
the laughing chattering throng that would pass in under that
portico to the 200th performance, he would be, to those that had
known him, something equally remote and non-existent.
“The good-looking Bassington boy? Oh, dead, or
rubber-growing or sheep-farming or something of that
sort.”</p>
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