<h2><SPAN name="VII" id="VII"></SPAN>VII.</h2>
<p>"Well, what would you all like to do with yourselves to-day?" asked Mrs.
Windsor on the following morning after breakfast, which was over at
half-past ten, for they all got up early as a mark of respect to the
country air; and indeed, Mr. Amarinth declared that he had been awake
before five, revelling in the flame-coloured music of the farmyard
cocks.</p>
<p>"I should like to go out shopping," remarked Madame Valtesi, who was
dressed in a white serge dress, figured with innocent pink flowers.</p>
<p>"But, my dear, there are no shops!"</p>
<p>"There is always a linen-draper's in every village," said Madame
Valtesi; "and a grocer's."</p>
<p>"But what would you buy there?"</p>
<p>"That is just what I wish to know. May I have the governess cart? I want
to try and feel like a governess."</p>
<p>"Of course. I will order it. Will you drive yourself?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Oh no, I am too blind. Lady Locke, won't you come with me? I am sure
you can drive. I can always tell by looking at people what they can do.
I could pick you out a dentist from a crowd of a hundred people."</p>
<p>"Or a driver?" said Lady Locke. "I think I can manage the white pony.
Yes, I will come with pleasure."</p>
<p>"I shall go into the drawing-room and compose my anthem for Sunday,"
said Lord Reggie. "I am unlike Saint Saëns. I always compose at the
piano."</p>
<p>"And I will go into the rose-garden," said Esmé, "and eat pink roses.
There is nothing more delicious than a ripe La France. May I, Mrs.
Windsor? Please don't say 'this is liberty hall,' or I shall think of
Mr. Alexander, the good young manager who never dies—but may I?"</p>
<p>"Do. And compose some Ritualistic epigrams to say to Mr. Smith to-night.
How delightfully rustic we all are! So naïve! I am going to order
dinner, and add up the household accounts for yesterday."</p>
<p>She rustled away with weary grace, rattling delicately a large bunch of
keys that didn't open any thing in particular. They were a part of her
get up as a country hostess.</p>
<p>A few moments later some simple chords,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</SPAN></span> and the sound of a rather
obvious sequence, followed by intensely Handelian runs, announced that
Lord Reggie had begun to compose his anthem, and Madame Valtesi and Lady
Locke were mounting into the governess cart, which was rather like a
large hip bath on wheels. They sat opposite to each other upon two low
seats, and Lady Locke drove sideways.</p>
<p>As they jogged along down the dusty country road, between the sweet
smelling flowery banks, Madame Valtesi said—</p>
<p>"Do governesses always drive in tubs? Is it part of the system?"</p>
<p>"I don't know," answered Lady Locke, looking at the hunched white figure
facing her, and at the little shrewd eyes peering from beneath the shade
of the big and aggressively garden hat. "What system do you mean?"</p>
<p>"The English governess system; simple clothes, no friends, no society,
no money, no late dinner, supper at nine, all the talents, and bed at
ten whether you are inclined to sleep or not. Do they invariably go
about in tubs as well?"</p>
<p>"I suppose very often. These carts are always called governess carts."</p>
<p>Madame Valtesi nodded enigmatically.</p>
<p>"I am glad I have never had to be a govern<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</SPAN></span>ess," said Lady Locke
thoughtfully. "From a worldly point of view, I suppose I have been born
under a lucky star."</p>
<p>"There is no such thing as luck in the world," Madame Valtesi remarked,
putting up a huge white parasol that abruptly extinguished the view for
miles. "There is only capability."</p>
<p>"But some capable people are surely unlucky."</p>
<p>"They are incapable in one direction or another. Have you not noticed
that whenever a man is a failure his friends say he is an able man. No
man is able who is unable to get on, just as no woman is clever who
can't succeed in obtaining that worst, and most necessary, of evils—a
husband."</p>
<p>"You are very cynical," said Lady Locke, flicking the pony's fat white
back with the whip.</p>
<p>"All intelligent people are. Cynicism is merely the art of seeing things
as they are instead of as they ought to be. If one says that
Christianity has never converted the Christians, or that love has ruined
more women than hate, or that virtue is an accident of environment, one
is sure to be dubbed a cynic. And yet all these remarks are true to
absolute absurdity."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I scarcely think so."</p>
<p>"But, then, you have been in the Straits Settlements for eight years.
They are true in London. And there are practically not more than about
five universal truths in the world. One must always locate a truth if
one wishes to be understood. What is true in London is often a lie in
the country. I believe that there are still many good Christians in the
country, but they are only good Christians because they are in the
country—most of them. Our virtues are generally a fortunate, or
unfortunate, accident, and the same may be said of our vices. Now, think
of Lord Reggie. He is one of the most utterly vicious young men of the
day. Why? Because, like the chameleon, he takes his colour from whatever
he rests upon, or is put near. And he has been put near scarlet instead
of white."</p>
<p>Lady Locke felt a strange thrill of pain at her heart.</p>
<p>"I am sure Lord Reggie has a great deal of good in him!" she exclaimed.</p>
<p>"Not enough to spoil his charm," said Madame Valtesi. "He has no real
intention of being either bad or good. He lives like Esmé Amarinth,
merely to be artistic."</p>
<p>"But what in Heaven's name does that word mean?" asked Lady Locke. "It
seems<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</SPAN></span> almost the only modern word. I hear it everywhere like a sort of
refrain."</p>
<p>"I cannot tell you. I am too old. Ask Lord Reggie. He would tell you
anything."</p>
<p>The last words were spoken with slow intention.</p>
<p>"What do you mean?" said Lady Locke hastily.</p>
<p>"Here we are at the post-office. Would it not be the proper thing to do
to get some stamps? No? Then let us stop at the linen-draper's. I feel a
strong desire to buy some village frilling. And there are some
deliciously coarse-looking pocket-handkerchiefs in the window, about a
yard square. I must get a dozen of those."</p>
<p>At lunch that day Lord Reggie announced that he had composed a beautiful
anthem on the words—</p>
<p>"Thy lips are like a thread of scarlet, and thy speech is comely; thy
temples are like a piece of pomegranate within thy locks."</p>
<p>"They sound exactly like something of Esme's," he said, "but really they
are taken from the 'Song of Solomon.' I had no idea that the Bible was
so intensely artistic. There are passages in the Book of Job that I
should not be ashamed to have written."</p>
<p>"You remind me of a certain lady writer<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</SPAN></span> who is very popular in kitchen
circles," said Esmé, "and whose husband once told me that she had
founded her style upon Mr. Ruskin and the better parts of the Bible. She
brings out about seven books every year, I am told, and they are all
about sailors, of whom she knows absolutely nothing. I am perpetually
meeting her, and she always asks me to lunch, and says she knows my
brother. She seems to connect my poor brother with lunch in some curious
way. I shall never lunch with her, but she will always ask me."</p>
<p>"Hope springs eternal in the human breast," Mrs. Windsor said, with a
little air of aptness.</p>
<p>"That is one of the greatest fallacies of a melancholy age," Esmé
answered, arranging the huge moonstone in his tie with a plump hand;
"suicide would be the better word. 'The Second Mrs. Tanqueray' has made
suicide quite the rage. A number of most respectable ladies, without the
vestige of a past among them, have put an end to themselves lately, I am
told. To die naturally has become most unfashionable, but no doubt the
tide will turn presently."</p>
<p>"I wonder if people realise how dangerous they may be in their
writings," said Lady Locke.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"One has to choose between being dangerous and being dull. Society loves
to feel itself upon the edge of a precipice, I assure you. To be
harmless is the most deadly enemy to social salvation. Strict
respectability would even handicap a rich American nowadays, and rich
Americans are terribly respectable by nature. That is why they are
always so anxious to get into the Prince of Wales' set."</p>
<p>"I suppose Ibsen is responsible for a good deal," Mrs. Windsor said
rather vaguely. Luncheon always rendered her rather vague, and after
food her intellect struggled for egress, as the sun struggles to emerge
from behind intercepting clouds.</p>
<p>"I believe Mr. Clement Scott thinks so," said Amarinth; "but then it
does not matter very much what Mr. Clement Scott thinks, does it? The
position of the critics always strikes me as very comic. They are for
ever running at the back of public opinion, and shouting 'come on!' or
'go back!' to those who are in front of them. If half of them had their
way, our young actors and actresses would play in Pinero's pieces as
Mrs. Siddons or Charles Kean played in the pieces of Shakespeare long
ago. A good many of them found their claims to attention on the horrible
fact that they once knew Charles Dickens, a circumstance of which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</SPAN></span> they
ought rather to be ashamed. They are monotonous dwellers in an
unenlightened past like Mr. Sala, who is even more commonplace than the
books of which he is for ever talking. Mr. Joseph Knight is their oracle
at first nights, and some of them even labour under the wild impression
that Mr. Robert Buchanan can write good English, and that Mr. George R.
Sims—what would he be without the initial?—is a minor poet."</p>
<p>"Dear me! I am afraid we are all wrong," said Mrs. Windsor, still rather
vaguely; "but do you know, we ought really to be thinking of our walk up
Leith Hill. It is a lovely afternoon. Will you attempt it, Madame
Valtesi?"</p>
<p>"No, thank you. I think I must have been constructed, like Providence,
with a view to sitting down. Whoever thinks of the Deity as standing? I
will stay at home and read the last number of 'The Yellow Disaster.' I
want to see Mr. Aubrey Beardsley's idea of the Archbishop of Canterbury.
He has drawn him sitting in a wheelbarrow in the gardens of Lambeth
Palace, with underneath him the motto, 'J'y suis, j'y reste.' I believe
he has on a black mask. Perhaps that is to conceal the likeness."</p>
<p>"I have seen it," Mrs. Windsor said; "it is very clever. There are only
three lines in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</SPAN></span> whole picture, two for the wheelbarrow and one for
the Archbishop."</p>
<p>"What exquisite simplicity!" said Lord Reggie, going out into the hall
to get his straw hat.</p>
<p>In the evening, when they assembled in the drawing-room for dinner, it
was found that both Mrs. Windsor and Madame Valtesi had put on simple
black dresses in honour of the curate. Lady Locke, although she never
wore widow's weeds, had given up colours since her husband's death. As
they waited for Mr. Smith's advent there was an air of decent
expectation about the party. Mr. Amarinth looked serious to heaviness.
Lord Reggie was pale, and seemed abstracted. Probably he was thinking of
his anthem, whose tonic and dominant chords, and diatonic progressions,
he considered most subtly artistic. He would like to have written in the
Lydian mode, only he could not remember what the Lydian mode was, and he
had forgotten to bring any harmony book with him. He glanced into the
mirror over the fireplace, smoothed his pale gold hair with his hand,
and prepared to be very sweet to the curate in order to obtain
possession of the organ on the ensuing Sunday.</p>
<p>"Mr. Smith," said one of the tall footmen, throwing open the
drawing-room, and a tall,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</SPAN></span> thin, ascetic looking man, with a shaved,
dark face, and an incipient tonsure, entered the room very seriously.</p>
<p>"Dinner is served."</p>
<p>The two announcements followed one upon the other almost without a
pause. Mrs. Windsor requested the curate to take her in, after
introducing him to her guests in the usual rather muddled and
perfunctory manner. When they were all seated, and Mr. Amarinth was
beginning to hold forth over the clear soup, she murmured confidentially
to her companion—</p>
<p>"So good of you to take pity upon us. You will not find us very gay. We
are really down here to have a quiet, serious week—a sort of retreat,
you know. Mr. Amarinth is holding it. I hope nobody will have a fit this
time. Ah! of course you did not come last year. Do you like Chenecote? A
sweet village, isn't it?"</p>
<p>"Very sweet indeed, outwardly. But I fear there is a good deal to be
done inwardly; much sweeping and scouring of minds before the savour of
the place will be quite acceptable on high."</p>
<p>"Dear me! I am sorry to hear that. One can never tell, of course."</p>
<p>"I have put a stop to a good deal already,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</SPAN></span> I am thankful to say. I have
broken up the idle corners permanently, and checked the Sunday evening
rowdyism upon the common."</p>
<p>"Indeed! I am so glad. Mr. Smith has broken up the idle corners, Madame
Valtesi. Is it not a mercy?"</p>
<p>Madame Valtesi looked enigmatical, as indeed she always did when she was
ignorant. She had not the smallest idea what an idle corner might be,
nor how it could be broken up. She therefore peered through her
eyeglasses and said nothing. Mr. Amarinth was less discreet.</p>
<p>"An idle corner," he said. "What a delicious name. It might have been
invented by Izaac Walton. It suggests a picture by George Morland. I
love his canvases, rustics carousing——"</p>
<p>But before he could get any further, Reggie caught his eye and formed
silently with his lips the words, "Remember my anthem."</p>
<p>"He idealises so much," Amarinth went on easily. "Of course a real
carouse is horribly inartistic. Excess always is, although Oscar Wilde
has said that nothing succeeds like it."</p>
<p>"Excess is very evil," Mr. Smith said rather rigidly. "Excess in
everything seems to be characteristic of our age. I could wish that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</SPAN></span>
many would return to the ascetic life. No wine, thank you."</p>
<p>"Indeed, yes," said Mrs. Windsor, "that is what I always think. There is
something so beautiful in not eating and drinking, and not marrying, and
all that; but at least we must acknowledge that celibacy is quite coming
into fashion. Our young men altogether refuse to marry nowadays. Let us
hope that is a step in the right direction."</p>
<p>"If they married more and drank less, I don't fancy their morals would
suffer much," Madame Valtesi remarked with exceeding dryness, looking at
Mr. Smith's budding tonsure through her tortoise-shell eyeglass.</p>
<p>"The monastic life is very beautiful," said Lord Reggie. "I always find
when I go to a monastery, that the monks give me very excellent wine. I
suppose they keep all their hair shirts for their own private use."</p>
<p>"That is the truest hospitality, isn't it," said Lady Locke.</p>
<p>"The high church party are showing us the right way," Mr. Amarinth
remarked impressively, with a side-anthem glance at Lord Reggie which
spoke volumes. "They understand the value of æstheticism in religion.
They recognise the fact that a beautiful vestment uplifts the soul far
more than a dozen bad<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</SPAN></span> chants by Stainer, or Barnby, or any other
unmusical Christian. The average Anglican chant is one of the most
unimaginative, unpoetical things in the world. It always reminds me of
the cart-horse parade on Whit Monday. A brown Gregorian is so much more
devotional."</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon," said Mr. Smith, who had been listening to these
remarks with acquiescence, but who now manifested some obvious
confusion.</p>
<p>"A brown Gregorian," Mr. Amarinth repeated. "All combinations of sounds
convey a sense of colour to the mind. Gregorians are obviously of a rich
and sombre brown, just as a Salvation Army hymn is a violent magenta."</p>
<p>"I think the Bishops are beginning to understand Gregorian music a
little better. No plover's eggs, thank you," said Mr. Smith, who was
totally without a sense of melody, but who assumed a complete musical
authority, based on the fact that he intoned in church.</p>
<p>"The Bishops never go on understanding anything," said Mr. Amarinth.
"They conceal their intelligence, if they have any, up their lawn
sleeves. I once met a Bishop. It was at a garden party at Lambeth
Palace. He took me aside into a small shrubbery, and in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</SPAN></span>formed me that
he was really a Buddhist. He added that nearly all the Bishops were."</p>
<p>"Is it true that Mr. Haweis introduced his congregation to a Mahatma in
the vestry after service last Sunday?" said Madame Valtesi. "I heard so,
and that he has persuaded Little Tich to read the lessons for the rest
of the season. I think it is rather hard upon the music halls. There is
really so much competition nowadays!"</p>
<p>"I know nothing about Mr. Haweis," said Mr. Smith, drinking some water
from a wineglass. "I understood he was a conjurer, or an entertainer, or
something of that kind."</p>
<p>"Oh no, he is quite a clergyman," exclaimed Mrs. Windsor. "Quite; except
when he is in the pulpit, of course. And then I suppose he thinks it
more religious to drop it."</p>
<p>"Since I have been away there has been a great change in services," said
Lady Locke. "They are so much brighter and more cheerful."</p>
<p>"Yes, Christians are getting very lively," said Madame Valtesi, helping
herself to a cutlet in aspic. "They demand plenty of variety in their
devotional exercises, and what Arthur Roberts, or somebody, calls 'short
turns.' The most popular of all the London clergymen invariably has an
anthem that lasts half-an-hour,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</SPAN></span> and preaches for five minutes by a stop
watch."</p>
<p>"I scarcely think that music should entirely oust doctrine," began Mr.
Smith, refusing an entrée with a gentle wave of his hand.</p>
<p>"The clergyman I sit under," said Mrs. Windsor, "always stops for
several minutes before his sermon, so that the people can go out if they
want to."</p>
<p>"How inconsiderate," said Mr. Amarinth; "of course no one dares to move.
English people never dare to move, except at the wrong time. They think
it is less noticeable to go out at a concert during a song than during
an interval. The English labour under so many curious delusions. They
think they are respectable, for instance, if they are not noticed, and
that to be talked about is to be fast. Of course the really fast people
are never talked about at all. Half the young men in London, whose names
are by-words, are intensely and hopelessly virtuous. They know it, and
that is why they look so pale. The consciousness of virtue is a terrible
thing, is it not, Mr. Smith?"</p>
<p>"I am afraid I hardly caught what you were saying. No pudding, thank
you," said that gentleman.</p>
<p>"I was saying that we moderns are really<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</SPAN></span> all much better than we seem.
There is far more hypocrisy of vice nowadays than hypocrisy of virtue.
The amount of excellence going about is positively quite amazing, if one
only knows where to look for it; but good people in Society are so
terribly afraid of being found out."</p>
<p>"Really! Can that be the case?"</p>
<p>"Indeed, it can. Society is absolutely frank about its sins, but
absolutely secretive about its lapses into goodness, if I may so phrase
it. I once knew a young nobleman who went twice to church on Sunday—in
the morning and the afternoon. He managed to conceal it for nearly
five years, but one day, to his horror, he saw a paragraph in the
<i>Star</i>—the <i>Star</i> is a small evening paper which circulates
chiefly among members of the Conservative party who desire to know what
the aristocracy are doing—revealing his exquisite secret. He fled the
country immediately, and is now living in retirement in Buenos Ayres,
which is, I am told, the modern equivalent of the old-fashioned
purgatory."</p>
<p>"Good gracious! London must be in a very sad condition," said Mr. Smith,
in considerable excitement. "No, thank you, I never touch fruit. Things
used to be very different, I imagine, although I have never been in town
ex<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</SPAN></span>cept for the day, and then merely to call upon my dentist."</p>
<p>"Yes, this is an era of change," murmured Lord Reggie, who had spoken
little and eaten much. "Good women have taken to talking about vice,
and, in no long time, bad men will take to talking about virtue."</p>
<p>"I think you are wronging good women, Lord Reggie," said Lady Locke
rather gravely.</p>
<p>"It is almost impossible to wrong a woman now," he answered pensively.
"Women are so busy in wronging men, that they have no time for anything
else. Sarah Grand has inaugurated the Era of women's wrongs."</p>
<p>"I am so afraid that she will drive poor, dear Mrs. Lynn Linton mad,"
said Mrs. Windsor, drawing on her gloves—for she persisted in believing
that the presence of Mr. Smith constituted a dinner party. "Mrs.
Linton's articles are really getting so very noisy. Don't you think they
rather suggest Bedlam?"</p>
<p>"To me they suggest nothing whatever," said Amarinth wearily. "I cannot
distinguish one from another. They are all like sheep that have gone
astray."</p>
<p>"I must say I prefer them to Lady Jeune's," said Mrs. Windsor.</p>
<p>"Lady Jeune catches society by the throat and worries it," said Madame
Valtesi.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"She worries it very inartistically," added Lord Reggie.</p>
<p>"Ah!" said Amarinth, as the ladies rose to go into the drawing-room;
"she makes one great mistake. She judges of Society by her own parties,
and looks at life through the spectacles of a divorce court judge. No
wonder she is the bull terrier of modern London life."</p>
<p>Mrs. Windsor paused at the dining-room door and looked back.</p>
<p>"We are going to have coffee in the garden," she said. "Will you join us
there? Don't stay too long over your water, Mr. Smith," she added, with
pious archness.</p>
<p>"No; but I never take coffee, thank you," he answered solemnly.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</SPAN></span></p>
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