r the world and its lords, Ringed round with a flame of fair faces, And splendid with swords,” were with carnal lions all aromp, shall vegetarianism alone wax and rage? “Tempora mutantur, nos et mutamur in illis." New dishes, new appetites. Money talks. Well, they have set up their standard. What will come of it Peterkin is not yet in a position to state. But, as The Stocky Emperor, The Glorious Epileptic, falsely observed: "God sticks with the heavier battalions.” And one hundred thousand dollars! And in Italian money! O Hieronimo! Robert Menzies McAlmon, 1 The four ciphers of our 10000 readers not in on this aesthetic know must permit me to remind them (vide Dr Samuel Johnson) that Dr Williams and Mr McAlmon together publish a local magazine, that Mr McAlmon recently took to wife a young British woman, that he recently conceived it is not yet established, I am in honour bound to state, whether or no this conception actually did (as I do imply in the text) antedate matrimony- the notion of buying print-paper in her country cheap, that he forthwith dispatched himself and her to the British capital, and that by now he is in a position to know the price of paper in his wife's home-town. It is, not surprisingly, the same there as here. COMMENT 609 where are you now? Matrimony always was a roundabout way to arrive at anything. In Italy, so I've been told, paper has of late taken a leaf from Wild Nature and now (right in between basilicas and dovecots and aqueducts) just sprouts. St John Lateran is positively reported to have come out in paper pantalettes. Like a great turkey. Corporal Heap (at steak and oysters) was overheard generously to apportion Mr Kreymborg the space of ninety days wherein to do his goose. This veteran has been there before. For my un- seasoned part, I merely hope Mr Loeb does not bite off more than I he can conveniently—and with continence-chew. Oh—as to that proposition of printing abroad-we home-keeping fellows will profit too. The Dial is pleased to be able to an- nounce (Telling Tales and Breezy Stories desire to be included in this announcement) that The Dial gardener (the one with the trowel in the right hip-pocket) will look upon it at once as a duty and a privilege to walk through every number of The Broom. Whenever he comes on anything really choice or novel, anything adapted to the American sweet-tooth, he will not, massaging his chin, permit the grass to grow beneath his dew-beaters. Rather will he, unsheathing his trowel, dig up the pertinent blossom (the fortunate bulb) and, without fuss or nonsense, quietly transplant to a more domestic, if homely, sod. Americanization is, I believe, the new word. Certain of our more revered publishers, men of substance and of parts, are, the birds say, peaked and peeved. The fact is there has of late been, on the part of certain of the younger stags, alto- gether too much cutting in—too much for bon ton, too much for Major Putnam. Now, you see, the tables will, appropriately, be turned. Or don't you? Why, not only journals of anthological bent, like The Dial, but bona fide book publishers too, will find it to their purpose to finger The Broom. Where young publishers have been cutting out old-seducing their favourite authors—now old publishers shall cut out-shears in hand—the brand-wet sheets of the youngest publisher of them all. The Golden Age does indeed begin anew: there shall be lifting and with innocence: old publishers shall fatten upon young writers and young writers shall go supperless rejoicing. For these latter shall know the satisfaction, hitherto unguessed at, of being fathered 610 COMMENT by a Wilfred Funk, by a Willis Wagnalls, or, better yet, by a Harper Brother. For them that is enough. And as to innocence, of course Shepherd Kreymborg is aware—it is not for me to teach my grandmother to suck eggs-no gentle copyright will protect his flock? He and they and I and Major Putnam and the American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures should worry! “ 'It's all happened so exactly right.' “ 'It does sometimes,' said Jenny.” Courtesy of the W'ildenstein Galleries VOLUPTÉ. BY ARTHUR LEE THE INDIAL VA IX OXXIII JUNE 1921 FOUR YEARS 1887-1891 BY WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS T the end of the 'eighties my father and mother, my brother and sisters and myself, all newly arrived from Dublin, were settled in Bedford Park in a red-brick house with several mantel- pieces of wood, copied from marble mantelpieces designed by the brothers Adam, a balcony and a little garden shadowed by a great horse-chestnut tree. Years before we had lived there, when the crooked ostentatiously picturesque streets with great trees casting great shadows had been a new enthusiasm: the Pre-Raphaelite movement at last affecting life. But now exaggerated criticism had taken the place of enthusiasm, the tiled roofs, the first in modern London, were said to leak, which they did not, and the drains to be bad, though that was no longer true; and I imagine that houses were cheap. I remember feeling disappointed because the co-operative stores, with their little seventeenth century panes, had lost the romance they had when I had passed them still un- finished on my way to school; and because the public house, called The Tabard after Chaucer's Inn, was so plainly a common public house; and because the great sign of a trumpeter designed by Rooke, the Pre-Raphaelite artist, had been freshened by some in- ferior hand. The big red-brick church had never pleased me, and I was accustomed, when I saw the wooden balustrade that ran along the slanting edge of the roof where nobody ever walked or could walk, to remember the opinion of some architect friend of my father's, that it had been put there to keep the birds from falling 612 FOUR YEARS off. Still, however, it had some village characters and helped us to feel not wholly lost in the metropolis. I no longer went to church as a regular habit, but go I sometimes did for one Sunday morning I saw these words painted on a board in the porch: "The congregation are requested to kneel during prayers; the kneelers are afterwards to be hung upon pegs provided for the purpose.” In front of every seat hung a little cushion and these cushions were called "kneelers.” Presently the joke ran through the com- munity, where there were many artists who considered religion at best an unimportant accessory to good architecture and who disliked that particular church. II I could not understand where the charm had gone that I had felt, when as a school-boy of twelve or thirteen I had played among the unfinished houses, once leaving the marks of my two hands, blacked by a fall among some paint, upon a white balustrade. Sometimes I thought it was because these were real houses, while my play had been among toy-houses some day to be inhabited by imaginary people full of the happiness that one can see in picture books. I was in all things Pre-Raphaelite. When I was fifteen or six- teen my father had told me about Rossetti and Blake and given me their poetry to read; and once at Liverpool on my way to Sligo I had seen Dante's Dream in the gallery there, a picture painted when Rossetti had lost his dramatic power and to-day not very pleasing to me, and its colour, its people, its romantic architecture had blotted all other pictures away. It was a perpetual bewilder- ment that my father, who had begun life as a Pre-Raphaelite painter, now painted portraits of the first comer, children selling newspapers, or a consumptive girl with a basket of fish upon her head, and that when, moved perhaps by some memory of his youth, he chose some theme from poetic tradition, he would soon weary and leave it unfinished. I had seen the change coming bit by bit and its defence elaborated by young men fresh from the Paris art- schools. “We must paint what is in front of us," or "A man must be of his own time,” they would say, and if I spoke of Blake or Rossetti they would point out his bad drawing and tell me to > WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS 613 that power. admire Carolus Duran and Bastien-Lepage. Then, too, they were very ignorant men; they read nothing, for nothing mattered but “knowing how to paint,” being in reaction against a generation that seemed to have wasted its time upon so many things. I thought myself alone in hating these young men, now indeed getting towards middle life, their contempt for the past, their monopoly of the future, but in a few months I was to discover others of my own age, who thought as I did, for it is not true that youth looks before it with the mechanical gaze of a well-drilled soldier. Its quarrel is not with the past, but with the present, where its elders are so obviously powerful and no cause seems lost if it seem to threaten Does cultivated youth ever really love the future, where the eye can discover no persecuted Royalty hidden among oak leaves, though from it certainly does come so much proletarian rhetoric? I was unlike others of my generation in one thing only. I am very religious, and deprived by Huxley and Tyndall, whom I de- tested, of the simple-minded religion of my childhood, I had made a new religion, almost an infallible church out of poetic tradition: a fardel of stories, and of personages, and of emotions, inseparable from their first expression, passed on from generation to generation by poets and painters with some help from philosophers and theolo- gians. I wished for a world, where I could discover this tradition perpetually, and not in pictures and in poems only, but in tiles round the chimney-piece and in the hangings that kept out the draught. I had even created a dogma: “Because those imaginary people are created out of the deepest instinct of man, to be his measure and his norm, whatever I can imagine those mouths speak- ing may be the nearest I can go to truth.” When I listened they seemed always to speak of one thing only: they, their loves, every incident of their lives, were steeped in the supernatural. Could even Titian's Ariosto that I loved beyond other portraits have its grave look, as if waiting for some perfect final event, if the painters before Titian had not learned portraiture, while painting into the corner of compositions full of saints and Madonnas, their kneeling patrons ? At seventeen years old I was already an old-fashioned brass cannon full of shot, and nothing had kept me from going off but a doubt as to my capacity to shoot straight. a 614 FOUR YEARS III I was not an industrious student and knew only what I had found by accident and I found nothing I cared for after Titian, and Titian I knew chiefly from a copy of the Supper of Emmaus in Dub- lin, till Blake and the Pre-Raphaelites; and among my father's friends were no Pre-Raphaelites. Some indeed had come to Bedford Park in the enthusiasm of the first building and others to be near those that had. There was Todhunter, a well-off man who had bought my father's pictures while my father was still Pre-Raphael- ite; once a Dublin doctor he was now a poet and a writer of poetical plays; a tall, sallow, lank, melancholy man, a good scholar and a good intellect; and with him my father carried on a warm exaspera- ted friendship, fed I think by old memories and wasted by quarrels over matters of opinion. Of all the survivors he was the most de- jected and the least estranged, and I remember encouraging him, with a sense of worship shared, to buy a very expensive carpet de- signed by Morris. He displayed it without strong liking and would have agreed had there been any to find fault. If he had liked any- think strongly he might have been a famous man, for a few years la- ter he was to write, under some casual patriotic impulse, certain ex- cellent verses now in all Irish anthologies; but with him every book was a new planting, and not a new bud on an old bough. He had I think no peace in himself. But my father's chief friend was York Powell, a famous Oxford Professor of history, a broad-built, broad-headed, brown-bearded man clothed in heavy blue cloth and looking, but for his glasses and the dim sight of a student, like some captain in the merchant service. One often passed with pleasure from Todhunter's company to that of one who was almost ostenta- tiously at peace. He cared nothing for philosophy, nothing for eco- nomics, nothing for the policy of nations; for history, as he saw it, was a memory of men who were amusing or exciting to think about. He impressed all who met him, and seemed to some a man of genius, but he had not enough ambition to shape his thought, or conviction to give rhythm to his style and remained always a poor writer. I was too full of unfinished speculations and premature convictions to value rightly his conversation, informed by a vast erudition, which would give itself to every casual association of speech and company, precisely because he had neither cause nor design. My a WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS 615 father, however, found Powell's concrete narrative manner in talk a necessary completion of his own, and when I asked him in a letter many years later where he got his philosophy replied “from York Powell” and thereon added, no doubt remembering that Powell was without ideas, "by looking at him.” Then there was a good listener, a painter in whose hall hung a big picture painted in his student days of Ulysses sailing home from the Phaeacian court, an orange and a skin of wine at his side, blue mountains towering behind; but who lived by drawing domestic scenes and lovers' meetings for a weekly magazine that had an immense circulation among the imperfectly educated. To escape the boredom of work, which he never turned to but under pressure of necessity and usually late at night, with the publisher's messenger in the hall, he had half-filled his studio with mechanical toys, of his own in- vention, and perpetually increased their number. A model railway train at intervals puffed its way along the walls, passing several railway stations and signal boxes; and on the floor lay a camp with attacking and defending soldiers and a fortification that blew up when the attackers fired a pea through a certain window; while a large model of a Thames barge hung from the ceiling. Opposite our house lived an old artist who worked also for the illustrated papers for a living, but painted landscapes for his pleasure, and of him I remember nothing except that he had outlived ambition, was a good listener, and that my father explained his gaunt ap- pearance by his descent from Pocahontas. If all these men were a little like becalmed ships, there was certainly one man whose sails were full. Three or four doors off on our side of the road lived a decorative artist in all the naïve confidence of popular ideals and the public approval. He was our daily comedy. "I myself and Sir Frederick Leighton are the greatest decorative artists of the age,” was among his sayings, and a great Lych-gate, bought from some country church-yard, reared its thatched roof, meant to shelter bearers and coffin, above the entrance to his front garden to show that he at any rate knew nothing of discouragement. In this fairly numerous company—there were others though no other face rises before me-my father and York Powell found listeners for a con- versation that had no special loyalties, or antagonisms; while I could only talk upon set topics, being in the heat of my youth, and the topics that filled me with excitement were never spoken of. a 616 FOUR YEARS IV Some quarter of an hour's walk from Bedford Park, out on the high road to Richmond, lived W. E. Henley, and I, like many others, began under him my education. His portrait, a lithograph by Rothenstein, hangs over my mantelpiece among portraits of other friends. He is drawn standing, but because doubtless of his crippled legs he leans forward, resting his elbows upon some slightly suggested object—a table or a window-sill. His heavy figure and powerful head, the disordered hair standing upright, his short ir- regular beard and moustache, his lined and wrinkled face, his eyes steadily fixed upon some object, in complete confidence and self- possession, and yet as in half-broken reverie, all are there exactly as I remember him. I have seen other portraits and they too show him exactly as I remember him, as though he had but one appear- ance and that seen fully at the first glance and by all alike. He was most human-human I used to say like one of Shakespeare's characters—and yet pressed and pummelled, as it were, into a single attitude, almost into a gesture and a speech as by some over- whelming situation. I disagreed with him about everything, but I admired him beyond words. With the exception of some early poems founded upon old French models I disliked his poetry, mainly because he wrote in vers libre, which I associated with Tyndall and Huxley, and Bastien-Lepage's clownish peasant star- ing with vacant eyes at her great boots; and filled it with unim- passioned description of an hospital ward where his leg had been amputated. I wanted the strongest passions, passions that had nothing to do with observation, sung in metrical forms that seemed old enough to be sung by men half-asleep or riding upon a journey. Furthermore, Pre-Raphaelism affected him as some people are affected by a cat in the room, and though he professed himself at our first meeting without political interests or convictions, he soon grew into a violent unionist and imperialist. I used to say when I spoke of his poems: "He is like a great actor with a bad part; yet who would look at Hamlet in the grave scene if Salvini played the grave-digger ?” and I might so have explained much that he said and did. I meant that he was like a great actor of passion- character-acting meant nothing to me for many years—and an actor of passion will display some one quality of soul, personified again and again, just as a great poetical painter, Titian, Botticelli, WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS 617 Rossetti, may depend for his greatness upon a type of beauty which presently we call by his name. Irving, the last of the sort on the English stage, and in modern England and France it is the rarest sort, never moved me but in the expression of intellectual pride and though I saw Salvini but once I am convinced that his genius was a kind of animal nobility. Henley, half inarticulate"I am very costive,” he would say—beset with personal quarrels, built up an image of power and magnanimity till it became, at moments, when seen as it were by lightning, his true self. Half his opinions were the contrivance of a sub-consciousness that sought always to bring life to the dramatic crisis and expression to that point of artifice where the true self could find its tongue. Without opponents there had been no drama, and in his youth Ruskinism and Pre-Raphaelit- ism, for he was of my father's generation, were the only possible opponents. How could one resent his prejudice when, that he him- self might play a worthy part, he must find beyond the common rout, whom he derided and flouted daily, opponents he could imagine moulded like himself? Once he said to me in the height of his imperial propaganda, “Tell those young men in Ireland that this great thing must go on. They say Ireland is not fit for self- government, but that is nonsense. It is as fit as any other Euro- pean country, but we cannot grant it.” And then he spoke of his desire to found and edit a Dublin newspaper. It would have expounded the Gaelic propaganda then beginning, though Dr Hyde had, as yet, no league, our old stories, our modern literature -everything that did not demand any shred or patch of govern- ment. He dreamed of a tyranny, but it was that of Cosimo de' Medici. V We gathered on Sunday evenings in two rooms, with folding doors between, and hung, I think, with photographs from Dutch masters, and in one room there was always, I think, a table with cold meat. I can recall but one elderly man-Dunn his name was -rather silent and full of good sense, an old friend of Henley's. We were young men, none as yet established in his own, or in the world's opinion, and Henley was our leader and our confidant. One evening, I found him alone amused and exasperated: “Young A-” he cried “has just been round to ask my advice. Would 618 FOUR YEARS a I think it a wise thing if he bolted with Mrs B-? Have you quite determined to do it?' I asked him. 'Quite. Well,' I said, ‘in that case I refuse to give you any advice.'” Mrs B was a beautiful talented woman, who, as the Welsh Triad said of Guinie- vere, “was much given to being carried off.” I think we listened to him, and often obeyed him, partly because he was quite plainly not upon the side of our parents. We might have a different . ground of quarrel, but the result seemed more important than the ground, and his confident manner and speech made us believe, per- haps for the first time, in victory. And besides, if he did denounce, and in my case he certainly did, what we held in secret reverence, he never failed to associate it with things or persons that did not move us to reverence. Once I found him just returned from some art congress in Liverpool or in Manchester. “The salvation army- ism of art,” he called it, and gave a grotesque description of some city councillor he had found admiring Turner. Henley, who hated all that Ruskin praised, thereupon derided Turner, and find- ing the city councillor the next day on the other side of the gallery, admiring some Pre-Raphaelite there, derided that Pre-Raphaelite. The third day Henley discovered the poor man on a chair in the middle of the room staring disconsolately upon the floor. He terri- fied us also and certainly I did not dare, and I think none of us dared, to speak our admiration for book or picture he condemned, but he made us feel always our importance, and no man among us could do good work, or show the promise of it, and lack his praise. I can remember meeting of a Sunday night Charles Whibley, Kenneth Grahame, author of The Golden Age, Barry Pain, now a well-known novelist, R. A. M. Stevenson, art critic and a famous talker, George Wyndham, later on a cabinet minister and Irish chief secretary, and now or later Oscar Wilde, who was some ten years older than the rest of us. But faces and names are vague to me and while faces that I met but once may rise clearly before me, a face met on many a Sunday has perhaps vanished. Kipling came sometimes, I think, but I never met him; and Stepniak, the nihilist, whom I knew well elsewhere but not there, said "I cannot go more than once a year, it is too exhausting.” Henley got the best out of us all, because he had made us accept him as our judge and we knew that his judgement could neither sleep, nor be softened, nor changed, nor turned aside. When I think of him, the antithesis , WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS 619 that is the foundation of human nature being ever in my sight, I see his crippled legs as though he were some Vulcan perpetually forging swords for other men to use; and certainly I always thought of C—, a fine classical scholar, a pale and seemingly gentle man, as our chief swordsman and bravo. When Henley founded his weekly newspaper, first the Scots' afterwards the National Ob- server, this young man wrote articles and reviews notorious for savage wit; and years afterwards when the National Observer was dead, Henley dying, and our cavern of outlaws empty, I met him in Paris very sad and I think very poor. “Nobody will employ me now,” he said. “Your master is gone,” I answered, “and you are like the spear in an old Irish story that had to be kept dipped in poppy-juice that it might not go about killing people on its own account.” I wrote my first good lyrics and tolerable essays for the National Observer, and as I always signed my work could go my own road in some measure. Henley often revised my lyrics, cross- ing out a line or a stanza and writing in one of his own, and I was comforted by my belief that he also rewrote Kipling then in the first flood of popularity. At first, indeed, I was ashamed of being rewritten and thought that others were not, and only began in- vestigation when the editorial characteristics-epigrams, archaisms, and all-appeared in the article upon Paris fashions and in that upon opium by an Egyptian Pasha. I was not compelled to full conformity for verse is plainly stubborn; and in prose, that I might avoid unacceptable opinions, I wrote nothing but ghost or fairy stories, picked up from my mother or some pilot at Rosses Point and Henley saw that I must needs mix a palette fitted to my subject matter. But if he had changed every "has” into "hath” I would have let him, for had not we sunned ourselves in his gen- erosity? "My young men outdo me and they write better than I,” he wrote in some letter praising Charles Whibley's work, and to another friend with a copy of my Man Who Dreamed of Fairy- land: "See what a fine thing has been written by one of my lads.” VI My first meeting with Oscar Wilde was an astonishment. I never before heard a man talking with perfect sentences, as if he had written them all over night with labour and yet all spon- 620 FOUR YEARS taneous. There was present that night at Henley's, by right of propinquity or of accident, a man full of the secret spite of dulness, who interrupted from time to time, and always to check or disorder thought; and I noticed with what mastery he was foiled and thrown. I noticed, too, that the impression of artificiality that I think all Wilde's listeners have recorded came from the perfect rounding of the sentences and from the deliberation that made it possible. That very impression helped him, as the effect of metre, or of the antithetical prose of the seventeenth century, which is itself a true metre, helped its writers, for he could pass without in- congruity from some unforeseen, swift stroke of wit to elaborate reverie. I heard him say a few nights later: "Give me The Winter's Tale, ‘Daffodils that come before the swallow dare' but not King Lear. What is King Lear but poor life staggering in the fog?” and the slow cadence, modulated with so great precision, sounded natural to my ears. That first night he praised Walter Pater's Essays on the Renaissance: "It is my golden book; I never I travel anywhere without it; but it is the very flower of de- cadence: the last trumpet should have sounded the moment it was written.” “But,” said the dull man, "would you not have given us time to read it?" "Oh no," was the retort, "there would have been “ plenty of time afterwards—in either world.” I think he seemed to us, baffled as we were by youth, or by infirmity, a triumphant figure, and to some of us a figure from another age, an audacious Italian fifteenth century figure. A few weeks before I had heard one of my father's friends, an official in a publishing firm that had employed both Wilde and Henley as editors, blaming Henley who was "no use except under control” and praising Wilde, “so indolent but such a genius”; and now the firm became the topic of our talk. "How often do you go to the office?” said Henley. "I used to go three times a week,” said Wilde, "for an hour a day but I have since struck off one of the days." "My God,” said Henley, “I went five times a week for five hours a day and when I wanted to strike off a day they had a special committee meeting.” “Furthermore,” was Wilde's answer, "I never answered their letters. I have known men come to London full of bright prospects and seen them com- plete wrecks in a few months through a habit of answering letters.” He too knew how to keep our elders in their place, and his method was plainly the more successful, for Henley had been dismissed. a > WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS 621 “No he is not an aesthete,” Henley commented later, being some- what embarrassed by Wilde's Pre-Raphaelite entanglement; "one soon finds that he is a scholar and a gentleman.” And when I dined with Wilde a few days afterwards he began at once, “I had to strain every nerve to equal that man at all”; and I was too loyal to speak my thought: “You and not he said all the brilliant things.” He like the rest of us had felt the strain of an intensity ” that seemed to hold life at the point of drama. He had said on that first meeting “The basis of literary friendship is mixing the poisoned bowl”; and for a few weeks Henley and he became close friends till, the astonishment of their meeting over, diversity of character and ambition pushed them apart, and, with half the cavern helping, Henley began mixing the poisoned bowl for Wilde. Yet Henley never wholly lost that first admiration, for after Wilde's downfall he said to me: "Why did he do it? I told my lads to attack him and yet we might have fought under his banner.” a VII It became the custom, both at Henley's and at Bedford Park, to say that R. A. M. Stevenson, who frequented both circles, was the better talker. Wilde had been trussed up like a turkey by under- graduates, dragged up and down a hill, his champagne emptied into the ice tub, hooted in the streets of various towns, and I think stoned, and no newspaper named him but in scorn; his manner had hardened to meet opposition and at times he allowed one to see an unpardonable insolence. His charm was acquired and systema- tized, a mask which he wore only when it pleased him, while the charm of Stevenson belonged to him like the colour of his hair. If Stevenson's talk became monologue we did not know it, because our one object was to show by our attention that he need never leave off. If thought failed him we would not combat what he had said, or start some new theme, but would encourage him with a question; and one felt that it had been always so from childhood up. His mind was full of phantasy for phantasy's sake and he gave as good entertainment in monologue as his cousin Robert Louis in poem or story. He was always "supposing"; "Suppose you ' had two millions what would you do with it?" and "Suppose you were in Spain and in love how would you propose ?” I recall him 622 FOUR YEARS one afternoon at our house at Bedford Park, surrounded by my brother and sisters and a little group of my father's friends, describ- ing proposals in half a dozen countries. There your father did it, dressed in such and such a way with such and such words, and there a friend must wait for the lady outside the chapel door, sprinkle her with holy water and say, “My friend Jones is dying for love of you.” But when it was over those quaint descriptions, so full of laughter and sympathy, faded or remained in the memory as something alien from one's own life, like a dance I once saw in a great house, where beautifully dressed children wound a long ribbon in and out as they danced. I was not of Stevenson's party and mainly I think because he had written a book in praise of Velasquez, praise at that time universal wherever Pre-Raphaelism was accurst, and to my mind, that had to pick its symbols where its ignorance permitted, Velasquez seemed the first bored celebrant of boredom. I was convinced from some obscure meditation that Stevenson's conversational method had joined him to my elders and to the indifferent world, as though it were right for old men, and unambitious men and all women, to be content with charm and humour. It was the prerogative of youth to take sides and when Wilde said: “Mr Bernard Shaw has no enemies but is intensely disliked by all his friends,” I knew it to be a phrase I should never forget, and felt revenged upon a notorious hater of romance, whose generosity and courage I could not fathom. VIII I saw a good deal of Wilde at that time—was it 1887 or 1888?- I have no way of fixing the date except that I had published my first book The Wanderings of Usheen and that Wilde had not yet pub- lished his Decay of Lying. He had, before our first meeting, re- viewed my book and despite its vagueness of intention, and the inexactness of its speech, praised without qualification; and what was worth more than any review he had talked about it and now he asked me to eat my Christmas dinner with him believing, I imagine, that I was alone in London. He had just renounced his velveteen, and even those cuffs turned backward over the sleeves, and had begun to dress very carefully in the fashion of the moment. He lived in a little house at Chelsea that the architect Godwin had WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS 623 decorated with an elegance that owed something to Whistler. There was nothing mediaeval, nor Pre-Raphaelite, no cupboard door with figures upon flat gold, no peacock blue, no dark back- ground. I remember vaguely a white drawing room with Whistler etchings, "let in” to white panels, and a dining room all white, chairs, walls, mantelpiece, carpet, except for a diamond-shaped piece of red cloth in the middle of the table under a terra-cotta statuette, and I think a red shaded lamp hanging from the ceiling to a little above the statuette. It was perhaps too perfect in its unity, his past of a few years before had gone too completely, and I remember thinking that the perfect harmony of his life there, with his beautiful wife and his two young children, suggested some deliberate artistic composition. He commended and dispraised himself during dinner by attribu- ting characteristics like his own to his country: “We Irish are too poetical to be poets; we are a nation of brilliant failures, but we are the greatest talkers since the Greeks.” When dinner was over he read me from the proofs of The Decay of Lying and when he came to the sentence: "Schopenhauer has analysed the pessimism that characterises modern thought, but Hamlet invented it. The world has become sad because a puppet was once melancholy,” I said, "Why do you change 'sad' to 'melancholy'?” He replied that he wanted a full sound at the close of his sentence, and I thought it no excuse and an example of the vague impressiveness that spoilt his writing for me. Only when he spoke, or when his writing was the mirror of his speech, or in some simple fairy tale, had he words exact enough to hold a subtle ear. He alarmed me, though not as Henley did, for I never left his house thinking myself fool or dunce. He flattered the intellect of every man he liked; he made me tell him long Irish stories and compared my art of story-telling to Homer's; and once when he had described himself as writing in the census paper “age 19, profession genius, infirmity talent” the other guest, a young journalist fresh from Oxford or Cambridge, said, “What should I have written?” and was told that it should have been “profession talent, infirmity genius.” When, how- ever, I called, wearing shoes a little too yellow-unblackened leather had just become fashionable— I realized their extravagance when I saw his eyes fixed upon them; and another day Wilde asked me to tell his little boy a fairy story, and I had but got as far as 624 FOUR YEARS a "Once upon a time there was a giant” when the little boy screamed and ran out of the room. Wilde looked grave and I was plunged into the shame of clumsiness that afflicts the young. When I asked for some literary gossip for some provincial newspaper, that paid me a few shillings a month, he explained very explicitly that writ- ing literary gossip was no job for a gentleman. Though to be compared to Homer passed the time pleasantly, I had not been greatly perturbed had he stopped me with: "Is it a long story?” as Henley would certainly have done. I was abashed before him as wit and man of the world alone. I remember that he deprecated the very general belief in his success or his efficiency, and I think with sincerity. One form of success had gone: he was no more the lion of the season and he had not discovered his gift for writing comedy, yet I think I knew him at the happiest moment of his life. No scandal had touched his name, his fame as a talker was growing among his equals, and he seemed to live in the enjoy- ment of his own spontaneity. One day he began: "I have been inventing a Christian heresy,” and he told a detailed story, in the style of some early father, of how Christ recovered after the Cruci- fixion, and escaping from the tomb, lived on for many years, the one man upon earth who knew the falsehood of Christianity. Once St Paul visited his town and he alone in the carpenters' quarter did not go to hear him preach. The other carpenters noticed that henceforth, for some unknown reason, he kept his hands covered. A few days afterwards I found Wilde with smock frocks in various colours spread out upon the floor in front of him, while a missionary explained that he did not object to the heathen going naked upon week days, but insisted upon clothes in church. He had brought , the smock frocks in a cab that the only art-critic whose fame had reached Central Africa might select a colour; so Wilde sat there weighing all with a conscious ecclesiastic solemnity. IX Of late years I have often explained Wilde to myself by his fam- ily history. His father was a friend or acquaintance of my father's father and among my family traditions there is an old Dublin riddle: “Why are Sir William Wilde's nails so black ?" Answer, “Because he has scratched himself.” And there is an old story still WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS 625 6 current in Dublin of Lady Wilde saying to a servant, “Why do you put the plates on the coal-scuttle? What are the chairs meant for?” They were famous people and there are many like stories; and even a horrible folk story, the invention of some Connaught peasant, that tells how Sir William Wilde took out the eyes of some men, who had come to consult him as an oculist, and laid them upon a plate, intending to replace them in a moment, and how the eyes were eaten by a cat. As a certain friend of mine, who has made a prolonged study of the nature of cats, said when he first heard the tale, "Cats love eyes.” The Wilde family was clear- ly of the sort that fed the imagination of Charles Lever, dirty, un- tidy, daring, and what Charles Lever, who loved more normal activities, might not have valued so highly, very imaginative and learned. Lady Wilde, who when I knew her received her friends with blinds drawn and shutters closed that none might see her withered face, longed always perhaps, though certainly amid much self-mockery, for some impossible splendour of character and cir- cumstance. She lived near her son in level Chelsea, but I have heard her say, "I want to live on some high place, Primrose Hill or Highgate, because I was an eagle in my youth.” I think her son lived with no self-mockery at all an imaginary life; perpetu- ally performed a play which was in all things the opposite of all that he had known in childhood and early youth; never put off completely his wonder at opening his eyes every morning on his own beautiful house, and in remembering that he had dined yesterday with a duchess, and that he delighted in Flaubert and Pater, read Homer in the original and not as a schoolmaster reads him for the grammar. I think, too, that because of all that half-civilized blood in his veins he could not endure the sedentary toil of creative art and so remained a man of action, exaggerating, for the sake of immediate effect, every trick learned from his masters, turning their easel painting into painted scenes. He was a parvenu, but a parvenu whose whole bearing proved that if he did dedicate every story in The House of Pomegranates to a lady of title, it was but to show that he was Jack and the social ladder his pantomime beanstalk. “Did you ever hear him "Did you ever hear him say 'Marquess of Dimmesdale'?” a friend of his once asked me. “He does not say 'the Duke of York' with any pleasure.” He told me once that he had been offered a safe seat in Parlia- a a 626 AUTUMN ment and, had he accepted, he might have had a career like that of Beaconsfield, whose early style resembles his, being meant for crowds, for excitement, for hurried decisions, for immediate triumphs. Such men get their sincerity, if at all, from the contact of events; the dinner table was Wilde's event and made him the greatest talker of his time, and his plays and dialogues have what merit they possess from being now an imitation, now a record, of his talk. Even in those days I would often defend him by say- ing that his very admiration for his predecessors in poetry, for Browning, for Swinburne and Rossetti, in their first vogue while he was a very young man, made any success seem impossible that could satisfy his immense ambition: never but once before had the artist seemed so great, never had the work of art seemed so difficult. I would then compare him with Benvenuto Cellini who, coming after Michael Angelo, found nothing left to do so satisfactory as to turn bravo and assassinate the man who broke Michael Angelo's nose. To be continued AUTUMN 1 BY PADRAIC COLUM A good stay-at-home season is Autumn: then there's work to be done by all: Speckled fawns, where the brackens make covert, range away unde- terred; And stags that were seen upon hillocks now give heed to the call, To the bellowing call of the hinds, and they draw back to the herd. A good stay-at-home season is Autumn: the brown world's striped into fields; The corn is up to its growth; there are acorns in the deep wood; By the side of a down-fallen fort even the thorn-bush yields A crop, and there by the rath the hazel nuts drop from a load. From The Middle Irish: founded on a prose version by the late Professor Kuno Meyer. . ant ELEPHANTASTIC. BY C. BERTRAM HARTMAN JOY RIDE. BY C. BERTRAM HARTMAN THE SINGING FURIES (To M. B.) BY RICHARD HUGHES The yellow sky grows vivid as the sun: The sea glittering, and the hills dun. The stones quiver. Twenty pounds of lead . Fold upon fold, the air enlaps my head. Both eyes scorch: tongue stiff and bitter. Flies buzz, but no birds twitter; Slow bullocks stand with stinging feet,' And naked fishes scarcely stir, for heat. White as smoke, As jetted steam, dead clouds awoke And quivered on the Western rim. Then the singing started: dim And sibilant as rime-stiff reeds That whistle as the wind leads. The North answered, low and clear; The South whispered hard and sere, And thunder muffled up like drums Beat, whence the East-wind comes. The heavy sky that could not weep Is loosened: rain falls steep, And thirty singing furies ride To crack the sky from side to side. They sing, and lash the wet-flanked wind: Sing, from Col to Hafod Mynd And Aling their voices half a score Of miles along the mounded shore: Whip loud music from the trees 628 THE SINGING FURIES Tuned to the echo's harmonies, And roll their paean out to sea Where crowded breakers Aling and leap, And strange things throb five fathoms deep. The sudden tempest roared and died: The singing furies muted ride Down wet and slippery roads to hell; And, silent in their captors' train Two fishers, storm-caught on the main; A shepherd, battered with his flocks; A pit-boy tumbled from the rocks, A dozen back-broke gulls, and hosts Of shadowy, small, pathetic ghosts, -Of mice and leverets caught by flood; Their beauty shrouded in cold mud. THE COMIC MASK BY G. SANTAYANA THE а HE clown is the primitive comedian. Sometimes in the ex- uberance of animal life, a spirit of riot and frolic comes over a man; he leaps, he dances, he tumbles head over heels, he grins, shouts, or leers, possibly he pretends to go to pieces suddenly, and blubbers like a child. A moment later he may look up wreathed in smiles, and hugely pleased about nothing. All this he does hysteri- cally, without any reason, by a sort of mad inspiration and irresist- ible impulse. He may easily, however, turn his absolute histrionic impulse, his pure fooling, into mimicry of anything or anybody that at the moment happens to impress his senses; he will crow like a cock, simper like a young lady, or reel like a drunkard. Such mimicry is virtual mockery, because the actor is able to revert from those assumed attitudes to his natural self; whilst his models, as he thinks, have no natural self save that imitable attitude, and can never disown it; so that the clown feels himself immensely superior, in his rôle of universal satirist, to all actual men, and belabours and rails at them unmercifully. He sees everything in caricature, be- cause he sees the surface only, with the lucid innocence of a child; and all these grotesque personages stimulate him, not to moral sym- pathy, nor to any consideration of their fate, but rather to boisterous sallies, as the rush of a crowd, or the hue and cry of a hunt, or the contortions of a jumping-jack might stimulate him. He is not at all amused intellectually, he is not rendered wiser or tenderer by knowing the predicaments into which people inevitably fall; he is merely excited, flushed, and challenged by an absurd spectacle. Of course this rush and suasion of mere existence must never fail on the stage, nor in any art; it is to the drama what the hypnotizing stone block is to the statue, or shouts and rhythmic breathing to the bard; but such primary magical influences may be qualified by re- flection, and then rational and semi-tragic unities will supervene. When this happens the histrionic impulse creates the idyl or the tragic chorus; henceforth the muse of reflection follows in the train of Dionysus, and the revel or the rude farce passes into humane comedy. a 630 THE COMIC MASK Paganism was full of scruples and superstitions in matters of be- haviour or of cultus, since the cultus too was regarded as a business or a magic craft; but in expression, in reflection, paganism was frank and even shameless; it felt itself inspired, and revered this inspira- tion. It saw nothing impious in inventing or recasting a myth about no matter how sacred a subject. Its inspiration, however, soon fell into classic moulds, because the primary impulses of na- ture, though intermittent, are monotonous and clearly defined, as are the gestures of love and of anger. A man who is unaffectedly himself turns out to be uncommonly like other people. Simple sin- cerity will continually rediscover the old right ways of thinking and speaking and will be perfectly conventional without suspecting it. This classic iteration comes of nature, it is not the consequence of any revision or censorship imposed by reason. Reason, not being responsible for any of the facts or passions that enter into human life, has no interest in maintaining them as they are; any novelty, even the most revolutionary, would merely afford reason a fresh occasion for demanding a fresh harmony. But the Old Adam is conservative; he repeats himself mechanically in every child who cries and loves sweets and is imitative and jealous. Reason, with its tragic discoveries and restraints, is a far more precarious and per- sonal possession than the trite animal experience and the ancestral grimaces on which it supervenes; and automatically even the phi- losopher continues to cut his old comic capers, as if no such thing as reason existed. The wiseacres too are comic, and their mask is one of the most harmlessly amusing in the human museum; for reason, taken psychologically, is an old inherited passion like any other, the passion for consistency and order; and it is just as prone as the other passions to overstep the modesty of nature and to regard its own aims as alone important. But this is ridiculous; because impor- tance springs from the stress of nature, from the cry of life, not from reason and its pale prescriptions. Reason cannot stand alone; brute habit and blind play are at the bottom of art and morals, and unless irrational impulses and fancies are kept alive, the life of reason collapses for sheer emptiness. What tragedy could there be, or what sublime harmonies rising out of tragedy, if there were no spontaneous passions to create the issue, no wild voices to be re- duced to harmony? Moralists have habitually aimed at suppres- sion, wisely perhaps at first, when they were preaching to men of a G. SANTAYANA 631 spirit; but why continue to harp on propriety and unselfishness and labour, when we are little but labour- machines already, and have hardly any self or any passions left to indulge? Perhaps the time has come to suspend those exhortations, and to encourage us to be sometimes a little lively, and see if we can invent something worth saying or doing. We should then be living in the spirit of comedy, and the world would grow young. Every occasion would don its comic mask, and make its bold grimace at the world for a moment. We should be constantly original without effort and without shame, somewhat as we are in dreams, and consistent only in sincerity; and we should gloriously emphasize all the poses we fell into, without seeking to prolong them. Objections to the comic mask—to the irresponsible, complete, ex- treme expression of each moment-cut at the roots of all expression. Pursue this path, and at once you do away with gesture: we must not point, we must not pout, we must not cry, we must not laugh aloud; we must not only avoid attracting attention, but our atten- tion must not be obviously attracted; it is silly to gaze, says the nursery-governess, and rude to stare. Presently words, too, will be reduced to a telegraphic code. A man in his own country will talk like the laconic tourist abroad; his whole vocabulary will be Où? Combien? All right! Dear Me! Conversation in the quiet home will dispense even with these phrases; nothing will be required but a few pragmatic grunts and signals for action. Where the spirit of comedy has departed, com- pany becomes constraint, reserve eats up the spirit, and people fall into a penurious melancholy in their scruple to be always exact, sane, and reasonable, never to mourn, never to glow, never to betray a passion or a weakness, or venture to utter a thought they might not wish to harbour for ever. Yet the irony of fate pursues these enemies of comedy, and for fear of wearing a mask for a moment they are hypocrites all their lives. Their very reserve becomes a pose, a convention imposed externally, and their mincing speech Sometimes this evasion of impulsive sentiment fos- ters a poignant sentimentality beneath. The comedy goes on silent- ly behind the scenes, until perhaps it gets gets the upper hand and becomes positive madness; or else it breaks out in some shy, indirect fashion, as among Americans with their perpetual joking. Where there is no habitual art and no moral liberty, the instinct for direct turns to cant. 632 THE COMIC MASK . expression is atrophied for want of exercise; and then slang and a humorous perversity of phrase or manner act as safety-valves to sanity: and you manage to express yourself in spite of the censor by saying something grotesquely different from what you mean. That is a long way round to sincerity, and an ugly one. What, on the contrary, could be more splendidly sincere than the impulse to play in real life, to rise on the rising wave of every feeling and let it burst, if it will, into the foam of exaggeration? Life is not a means, the mind is not a slave nor a photograph: it has a right to enact a pose, to assume a panache, and to create what prodigious al- legories it will for the mere sport and glory of it. Nor is this art of innocent make-believe forbidden in the decalogue, although bible- reading Anglo-Saxondom might seem to think so. On the contrary, the bible and the decalogue are themselves instances of it. To embroider upon experience is not to bear false witness against one's neighbour, but to bear true witness to oneself. Fancy is playful and may be misleading to those who try to take it for literal fact; but literalness is impossible in any utterance of spirit, and if it were pos- sible it would be deadly. Why should we quarrel with human nature, with metaphor, with myth, with impersonation? The fool- ishness of the simple is delightful; only the foolishness of the wise is exasperating TWO POEMS BY ALFRED KREYMBORG MONOCLES Reducing the universe to one round view, and terming it religion, is truly beyond my capacity: compressing one's view, like a hoop, for other folk to be whipped through- squeezing the rim so tight that not even a gnat could manage the hole- requires more strength than I have the pincers for: beholding what one is pleased to call, God, and greeting Him exclusively through the monocle of one's own righteousness- that eye suffers astigmatism, I prefer to try the other. 634 TWO POEMS TURTLES Orrick, poet-laureate of St Louis, and Albert, king of Belgium, are stopping at the Waldorf-Astoria. This could only happen in New York, and the people packing Fifth Avenue, sidewalks, windows, house-tops, flag-poles, waiting for the king, not the poet, to emerge- this could only happen in people- for a king, not a poet, has to do with heads, and an appeal to heads makes people emerge, wary as turtles. Is it feet carry them? ร THE BATH OF THE AIR. BY REX SLINKARD HORSES AND FIGURES. BY REX SLIVKARD 1 THE PRISONER WHO SANG BY JOHAN BOJER V THE HE world is by no means an ideal dwelling place, and a year afterwards Andreas was a remanded prisoner expecting to be transferred to the county jail. Bad people had prosecuted him once more, because in all innocence he had gone the round of the inner country districts receiving payment in advance on the sale of a new sort of plough that would be sent from the firm of Hau- gen and Dahl a few days later. Sentence had been pronounced the day before and there were free board and lodging to be had for quite a long while to come. The door was opened and the warder entered accompanied by a stoutish iron-grey gentleman with gold-rimmed spectacles. "Yes,” said the stranger, “it is he right enough.—Thank you, Mr Warder, only a moment you know.” The warder went out and the stout gentleman wiped his glasses, smiled benevolently, sat down, and started a conversation. “I am Dr Jenson, and I was one of those present at your trial yesterday. I don't know whether you noticed me?" M-ye-es, Andreas thought he had. He stroked his stubble with a sidelong glance at his visitor. “It was a very interesting case, really.” The doctor nursed his knees, smiling as if at pleasant memories. “Ahem. We all agreed that you are a devil of a fellow and I have hardly slept all night for thinking of you. . Will you permit me to examine your head a little ?" He produced an apparatus which he placed round the prisoner's head. He felt it carefully with his finger tips, breathing asth- matically all the time. Then he stared out of the window, stuck out his blue chin and said "ahem” several times. Finally he paced up and down the floor, his boots creaking and his gold watch chain dangling over his prominent stomach. "Exactly, my friend, exactly what I expected.” His fat hand 9 a 636 THE PRISONER WHO SANG with a big red signet ring made gestures in the air. “I say, my man, has it never occurred to you that this sort of thing is not good enough for you?'' Andreas, sighing, murmured something about his own innocence. "M-yes, you are no ordinary criminal, my friend, you have gifts, not only the very devil of a brain, but special gifts—up to now misapplied, that is why you are here. I have theories of my own on these things. I say, do you know what a theatre is ?” , Andreas guessed he knew that much. He had been to see a play once or twice. "I might ask whether you have ever felt a desire to become an a actor, but-no, please don't put on that face, it is not your own at all-ha-ha-ha." The doctor had to take off his glasses in order to wipe his eyes with his handkerchief. “Oh, at the trial yesterday -ha-ha, you were really too wonderful.” Andreas laughed too. "Well,” the stout gentleman put his glasses on again and re- sumed his pacing of the floor, playing with his handkerchief all the while. "Well, you are a peasant lad, you have had very little “ education, and you are in prison. That is all very satisfactory. If it is possible in prison to educate oneself into a missionary bishop, it should also be possible to be educated for a stage career. I will see to it that you have books enough, and when you have finished your six months of repentance, you come to me my man. I am considered a close-fisted miser, but even I have whims. We'll try to make a great man of you.” When the prison chaplain saw Andreas he stroked his grey beard saying “Ah, here you are, back again.” The next day, however, he was very kind and helpful, and wanted to give him lessons in history, English, and German. Six months later Andreas went with the doctor to the tiny local theatre. They entered a dark passage and crossed a big floor where two men in white jackets were very busy with some furni- ture. Finally they reached a small office, and after a while a fair, beardless, slightly-built man rushed in and bowed to them both. “Good-morning, Mr Manager,” said the doctor. "Well, here we are." "Hm-is that he?' His brown eyes measured Andreas. “Your theories, doctor, concerning genius and—and" JOHAN BOJER 637 “We have discussed that already,” the doctor interrupted, plac- ing one hand on each knee. “If it were only as easy as you think. But it is difficult, dd difficult I assure you.' "We had another meeting last night,” the doctor continued, “and we all agreed that if you wish to replace the Danish actors by Norwegians you may reckon on our support and your company might become the nucleus of a permanent theatre in this town.” “I like that—Norwegians! Norwegians! We can't pick up your damned Norwegians from the gutter or from-er-public in- stitutions and shoot them on to the stage. I beg your pardon,” he made a slight movement of the head towards Andreas. The doctor made as if to leave. But the manager asked him into the next room, and they went on talking, the doctor's voice becom- ing more and more shrill. At last they returned. “Bless my soul, let the man come here to-morrow at twelve. I am too busy now, it is an absolute impossibility. And that re- minds me—” the manager's face suddenly changed to a look of misery, “I remember now—you have waited—” The doctor clapped his shoulder smiling subtly. "You arrange that when it suits you,” he said. The next day Andreas was in for a new kind of trial. He was asked to recite Terje Viken (by Ibsen) and thought nothing could be easier. He knew all the thirty-five long verses by heart. The doctor and the manager stared at him from their comfortable arm- chairs. “That will do,” said the manager jumping out of his chair. “My dear man you recite as if you were a lay missionary at a prayer meeting. Try telling the story as if you had been there yourself and seen everything—something like this—” and the manager started reciting. Andreas was dumbfounded. That fellow surely knew how to read out of a book! What a gift! Andreas had a lump in his throat. “Now try.” Andreas tried_hard. He assumed the manager's voice, and his mannerism, and his gestures until he saw that the two men in the armchairs were laughing outright. “That will do,” the manager said shaking his head with a glance at the doctor. 638 THE PRISONER WHO SANG “Let him try something else,” the doctor insisted eagerly. “Let him try a real part—say Bishop Nicholas.” “What? What did you say he was to try?” The manager looked ready to faint. "You let him try Bishop Nicholas in The Pretenders, and if I am not right I shall thank God I never was an actor." “He can darned well try anything as far as I am concerned. Why not Hamlet straight away?” The manager rushed off to re- turn with an elegantly bound volume, which he handed to Andreas. Then the doctor button-holed his pupil and lectured him for a while, explaining that they were in the great hall of a king's castle. Sunburnt men in breast-plates and with spears lined the walls. There was King Haakon who was such and such a man, and on the other side was the Duke Skule who was something quite different, and he, Andreas, was the old fiend of a Bishop. “Mercy upon us,” Andreas exclaimed, "was the Bishop that a sort ?! Then he read the part of the Bishop, while the doctor was both Duke and King. Suddenly understanding broke in on Andreas' mind. He knew in a flash how Nicholas looked, and he assumed his likeness, growing old and stooping and hoarse of voice. Once more he had to conceal his inward laughter, not from the eyes of the parson, or of old Romer this time, but from the eyes of a king and a duke and mailed knights. "That is better," said the manager, "you go on, you keep on.” At last he jumped up, and tore the book out of Andreas' hand. “That'll do,” he cried, “that will do ten thousand times over. Possibly you may be a hidden genius, but at present you are a very rough diamond indeed, needing both scraping and cutting. Got any money to keep alive with ?” Andreas could not answer at once, needing a breathing space to change from the Bishop into his ordinary self. "Keep alive?” the doctor said, he was out of breath with acting both Duke and King at once, but he radiated triumph. “Keep alive? We must see to that of course.' It was arranged that Andreas should receive a small sum monthly from the theatre and another from the doctor, otherwise taking les- sons of all sorts and working industriously. The doctor attended to everything. He found board and lodging for his protégé in a a JOHAN BOJER 639 a nice family, where they all washed their hands half a dozen times a day. He had lessons with one actor and the other, and Andreas took the line of least resistance, working at everything. He never imagined before that it was an art to go in and out of a door, to place his feet correctly when bowing, to laugh so as not to frighten gentlefolk and to speak so as to show education. There were a thousand things for him to learn. He frequently dined with the doctor who expounded to him the great poets of the world and taught him to read critically. “Have you no other clothes than those ?” the doctor asked one day. Andreas had not. “Then come along to my tailor's.” And he was measured for several suits. Another day the doctor remarked at table, “You begin to look a gentleman but your nails—” and he took him into his bedroom ex- plaining the care of the human civilized nails. Another day his tie was attended to. "You must tie it thus," the doctor said, teaching Andreas before the looking glass. Who would have imagined it of the doctor, the cynic, the mis- ogynist and hermit, that he nursed a secret dream, which at last he was about to realize? The stage had been closed to him in the days long ago, and now he tried to create in Andreas the great actor he himself had never had a chance of becoming. He walked around Andreas as a sculptor goes round the lump of clay out of which he will create an immortal statue. He would not have look- ed twice at a young man with an education or even half an educa- tion. He wanted the original material, virgin to the moulding hand. Was he not entitled to have whims? At last Andreas was given a real part. The local papers pub- lished the startling news that the débutant hailed from their own town, and that he was a young man with a remarkable life's history. He was to act a head bank clerk, who in his old age steals from the bank in order to satisfy his daughters' vanity. Andreas thought that the author made the old man say rather stupid things, and would have liked to substitute his own words, but he was not allowed to do so. The curtain rose. Andreas was quite used to acting before the parish at church, and he felt the same sensation face to face with the present audience. They applauded down there, and he felt the same inward glow as when God-fearing people at church stared at him, blessing themselves. Once between acts he met the doctor in а 640 THE PRISONER WHO SANG the wings. The worthy man was pale with excitement, and kept on saying, “It is excellent. You carry the audience with you. Nobody knew what this man with the mask of cynicism experienced that night. He felt as if he, himself, were on the stage, as if his life's dream had been realized. Andreas was recalled several times and the manager shook hands, saying, “That is all right,” and promised him a rise in salary. The three local expert dramatic critics were a printer, a bankrupt busi- ness man, and a veterinary surgeon. The doctor provided drinks, and next morning the papers declared that the evening was unfor- gettable. ndreas cut out the reviews, and sent them to Jonetta. He experienced the sensation of walking in the streets of a small town, in the splendour of brand-new fame. Several times he passed the great Romer and the old man seemed to remember that they had met before. Anyhow he lifted his top-hat and Andreas con- descended to return the salute. The doctor invited him to a dinner party, and he was toasted as the young hope of the town, and every morning when dressing he felt as if he were mounting a golden cloud. He was given new parts. The company went touring, and on the steamer Andreas' proper place was no longer amongst the cases and barrels on the foredeck. He had his meals in the first-class dining-room, gave tips to the waiter, and could talk to ladies in the saloon. He was everybody's equal and his only regret was that he could not be seen by the lensmand. He had great parts and changed himself into the most incredible persons, kings and knights, mur- derers and old drunkards, young men pining, and sighing lovers, and sad fathers. The theatre was sometimes a small meeting house, sometimes a trades union clubroom, the stage as large as a kitchen table, where one ran the risk of the scenery collapsing over one's head while kneeling at the feet of some fair damsel. Life was all excitement. No one knew what might happen next. One lived at hotels and had to sneak away without paying. That was fair enough when the town did not properly appreciate one's efforts. At one place you risked being refused a shelter and at the next you would be fêted by the best people and toasted in champagne. Life was a fairy tale and days flew by and vanished like a dream. Some members of the company came of good stock, one or two had passed a JOHAN BOJER 641 examinations and could teach the others. All were thrown inti- mately together in the daily round of striving and quarrelling, festivities and depression. Each one's good or bad qualities influ- enced all the others, through rehearsals, performances, travelling, meals, in the common life of fate commonly shared and hopes jointly indulged in. The members of the company intrigued a little against each other, criticized each other, praised each other, helped each other, and were traitors to each other. You might come off the stage elated by the applause from the audience and be met with a colleague's icy remark on your wretched acting—or on the other hand a woman might embrace you in an ecstasy of admiration. All agreed that Andreas surpassed his colleagues in one thing- in making up. No one could equal his skill in creating a perfectly new face with a few strokes of grease paint. More than a year went by in this way; then Andreas began to feel an increasing dissatisfaction. Acting was after all only make-believe. The audience were fully aware of the fact that nothing was real. Nobody was de- ceived. There grew a longing in his soul to act outside the stage, in the streets, in people's houses, on the high road everywhere, to change into incredible persons and stand before honest unsuspicious people, making them stare at him, and deceiving them. Some people took strong drinks. He did not. Others had to have tobacco or go mad. He did not need it. Others sought women and lost sense and reason over them—Andreas laughed at them. All the same he had his own peculiar craving. He could not endure the life any longer, to be himself and no other, deceiv- ing nobody One fine morning the craving got the upper hand and he disap- peared taking with him nothing but some grease paint and a few wigs. They might come handy some day. He returned to the town where the doctor lived and learnt that his friend was away, travelling. An hour later he was inside a bank handing in a slip of paper bearing the name of his benefactor. The manager glanced at him over his glasses. What name? Well, yes, he remembered. The place was small enough for the bank manager to know what all the world knew, how this young man had been helped and supported by the doctor. Only the amount was considerable. 642 THE PRISONER WHO SANG Andreas shivered. This was acting! This was excitement. He knew that he might lose all by the slightest mistake on his part, in the quivering of an eyelid. This was art. It was poetry "Wait a moment,” the bank manager said, going out. “He is going to telephone to the doctor,” thought Andreas. “They often play cards together at the club. But the doctor is not at home to-day." The pale, bald-headed man returned, evidently still in doubt. The next moment meant either money or prison. The bank manager looked at him, twisting the slip of paper be- tween long white fingers. Finally a movement showed that he had made up his mind. Some line, or some fleeting shadow of expres- sion in the face of the younger man, had decided him. The slip of paper was passed to other desks and the cashier pres- ently pronounced his name. Andreas counted the big bundle of notes with deliberate care before placing them in his pocket-book. Then he took a look around, and finally left very deliberately, whilst through the whole of his being there ran a fierce delight as if he held a lovely woman in his embrace. Once more he found lodgings and went to bed, drunk with achievement in a state of incomprehensible bliss, which once more found expression in the humming of a hymn tune. What childish pranks were the tricks he had once played in the home valley. He really ought to try and make amends for them. Shutting his eye he could visualize Mr Kaalseth on his farm, and Mr Bergheim on his. Supposing he did try and make amends, in such a way, and such a manner. A few days later Mr Kaalseth was inspecting his farmyard rather aimlessly when the local postman opened the gate to hand him a letter. The old man wiped his glasses in order to have a good look at it. Then he touched his shaggy white head. "Oline,” he called . finally, "there is a letter for you. Come here.” Fair Oline came running, her slippers clattering, while she wiped her hands on a blue-checked apron. The letter was from Andreas. He asked her pardon for what he once did concerning a clean shirt and the Conciliation Board, and he hoped she would kindly accept a small souvenir, for which, perhaps, she might be able to find a place in the spare bedroom. Mr Kaalseth and his wife looked at one another. JOHAN BOJER 643 “What does the fool mean this time ?" she asked lifting the fair hair from her forehead. Mr Kaalseth smiled reflectively. Whilst thus standing in doubt they heard the noise of wheels and a big cartload of furniture came to a standstill before them. “It came by to-day's steamer,” observed the agent who was driv- ing the precious load in person, “with orders to bring it here straight away.” Mrs Kaalseth stared. Her husband had to wipe his right eye- glass, in order to see better, being blind in his left eye. The farm boy came up, and one by one six upholstered chairs came down, with a grand polished woodwork couch, and twelve pictures for the walls. True enough the spare bedroom had been empty these many years, but Mr Kaalseth did not recover his senses until every article was in its proper place. Then he came to the conclusion that he would rather not accept the gift. He was sit- ting in one chair and his wife in another, staring at each other. Things happened at Mr Bergheim's farm, too, on the very same day. A sealed parcel arrived by post just when everyone was at breakfast, and the whole household fixed its attention on the open- ing of it. First there was a letter from Andreas. He wrote say- ing that he had forgiven Mr Bergheim for those ten kroner, and asked him to accept a small souvenir. “The darned fool,” the old man hissed making a ball of the letter and throwing it out of the window. "What!" He looked at them not sure whether he wanted to sob or laugh, all the others laughing derisively. “Look here, there is more,” said his wife, Marit, unwrapping lay- ers of tissue paper until she held a gold watch in her hand. Every- one stared agape. Mr Bergheim caught hold of the watch and was for sending it after the letter, but his wife restrained him. She opened the lid of the watch and read aloud the inscription. There was Mr Bergheim's full name and furthermore "to remind you of a friend.” Even then the old man wanted to throw it out of the window, but gold is gold and the watch he had already was only silver. He was quite overpowered, his wife and household all around him. There was nothing for him to do but accept the present and bite his beard, staring. In the course of time the doctor returned from his journey, and at the club card-table when his friend the bank manager mentioned a 644 THE PRISONER WHO SANG the big cheque, he let his cards drop to the floor. What? He re- adjusted his glasses and refused to believe it. But next day in the bank he was allowed to hold the pretty little bit of paper in his own hands and he was so intensely moved that he sank into an armchair. He realized that hitherto he had not been sufficient of a cynic, and remained staring before him like one who had lost his only illusion. "Well,” he said at last, stroking his beard, "well, well.” He informed the police, and they followed what they supposed to be Andreas' track as far as a distant inland village. There all traces disappeared, for the only stranger in those parts was a lay missionary, black-haired and black-bearded, who traded in bibles and conducted prayer meetings, and aroused a wave of revivalism within the parish. But Andreas was not to be found. VI a His new life was full of excitement. Mr Sorensen, lay mission- ary, was a great part for an actor and at last he was allowed to choose words for himself. People singing hymns around him there had no thought of play-acting, they looked at him, believing, they were alive and were deceived. He had listened to lay preachers and parsons and clergymen without end, and could undertake to impersonate a bishop if need be. But now he created a figure to suit the country people in that little valley so far from the rest of the world. There was more edge to his excitement in standing at the end of a long deal table facing rows and rows of intent eyes, than he had ever experienced facing the most enthusiastic applause from a the- atre audience. He could sway all these people. A few words were sufficient to draw a new line in an old man's face or to make a toothless mouth droop deeper. He could change a self-assertive mien into one showing fear and sorrow, and he could even taste the pleasure of coaxing the sunshine of joy into the harrowed face of some poverty-crushed man. Then there were the young girls. It was easy enough to fill their eyes with tears, but to show them bright hope afterwards and con- jure up beautiful visions in their minds was like transforming them into angels, and at the same time getting wings for himself. The thing grew on him. He no longer saw faces only, he felt himself JOHAN BOJER 645 playing on a great and wonderful instrument. What was God to him? A violin bow with which he touched the minds of men, and he perceived a rare and powerful tone swelling within himself. "Brethren, let us pray.” It was miraculous. As yet it was still only a part that he played. Soon, however, the rôle grew beyond all bounds. He never knew what the next min- ute might bring. He would be called to a deathbed in the middle of the night. A young girl would come to him with her sad love story, a mother with her heart full of sorrow for the son who was a drunkard. He no longer read faces, but souls, who trusting him opened their holy of holies to him. Whilst to himself he thought, "This then is what it means to be a missionary, I am living through the life of one now.” To begin with, it was a relief to doff the false beard behind well- drawn blinds in his locked bedroom. He would draw a deep breath. At last he dared to unmask, becoming his real self. Should he laugh or cry. “What are you doing? What is happen- ing to you? Is this really you?" After a while, however, he un- masked his face reluctantly. It grew painful to part with Mr Sor- ensen, the lay preacher, who was so superior to Mr Berget. Who was this Andreas? He became a stranger who could be kept at a distance all day, but whom he had to meet at night. He more and more lost his respect for that wild fellow, whom he began to view with the eyes of the lay preacher. God be praised, he was no longer the same man. Vague visions floated in his mind of the apostles and prophets of whom he had read so much. He felt him- self living through a little of their experience, and covering days long gone by with his own days. This was art, life, poetry. One day he was summoned to the bed of an old woman who was dying, and he felt a curious sensation when he noticed her humped back. It was a tiny workman's cottage and suddenly Andreas seemed to be at home sitting by his mother's bed. "Do you think there is salvation for me?" the old woman asked looking at him with dimmed eyes. Andreas was strangely moved. He saw himself in his relation to the home valley. There he was a pariah, an ex-convict, and here now he was to decide whether a soul should be saved. a a 646 THE PRISONER WHO SANG How could she doubt God's grace? he asked, stroking the sunken cheeks, and comforting the troubled old woman till she died smiling. As he left he hummed a hymn tune as in the days of old. He was no longer the wandering lay preacher, he was Andreas. The day had given him back some respect for his own youth. Not Mr Sorensen but Andreas had visited the dying woman, the lad from the forest cottage had shown his hunch-backed mother the way to the gates of Paradise. Weeks went by. It happened even then that behind all his sol- emnity he could feel laughter welling up inside him. But the laughter was no longer malicious. It was a feeling of freedom, of joy at the thought that he was in a way apart from his own fate, a spectator. He was not so immutably bound to be and remain one person that he could not, to-morrow, become another. One evening he paced up and down his room behind drawn blinds and locked doors, mechanically taking off his false beard and putting it on again. “It cannot go on,” he said, again and again. “You are in love, and you can win her. But whom shall she marry? Andreas Ber- get or Mr Sorensen the lay preacher? You are two persons, and you must go away from here.” The real fact was that he had out-played his part. He knew by that time to the smallest detail how to be an apostle so well that after that the life would be nothing but repetition. There was a festive gathering in his honour at the meeting house when he left. The next day a number of revivalists followed his hired buggy up the hill road, singing hymns as they went. When finally they left him alone with the driver he stopped the horse, paid his man, and continued his journey on foot, valise in hand. He looked back for a last view at the valley around the blue lake in its summer loveliness. The lay preacher was left behind down there. "Good-bye,” he said. He had been, as it were, visiting a strange personality for a time. Now the two took leave of each other. "Good-bye.” He turned off from the road, found a brook, placed his beard in his valise and washed his hair until it was fair once again. Then he made use of a small looking glass. “Good-morning, Andreas," he murmured, “it is quite a long while since we met in broad day- light.” > a JOHAN BOJER 647 E. He walked on, his valise over his shoulder, his hat well back on his head, singing to himself. He thus obtained a few hours of liberty. He would have to as- sume a fresh face before venturing down amongst people again. A week later he was in Christiania. To him it was a great city and the street traffic seemed nearly bewildering. “Excuse me,” he said lifting his hat to a policeman, "could you recommend me a cheap place for board and lodging ?” The policeman stroked his ruddy moustache in a most friendly manner. Certainly he could and would. His sister kept a board- ing house in a small way. “You come with me”; Andreas followed a him. Andreas' name was now Mr Sendstad, a farm bailiff without em- ployment for the moment. His hair was a fiery red, so were his small whiskers, and he was just a little lame in one foot. The boarding-house was situated in a sombre dirty street. The stairs were dark, there was a bad smell in the hall, and the telephone seemed to be the only bright thing in the whole place. The par- lour was low-ceilinged. A grey film of dust lay over the red plush of the furniture, and a parrot in a cage started swearing when they entered. A white-haired lady with an ear trumpet entered the > room. a “What did you say, Kristian? What? Yes, certainly we have a room. My daughter will be here directly." He was given a dark little hole overlooking the court-yard; when he was alone he flung himself down on the couch. “Why am I here? Well, one ought to see the Capital of one's country-and- perhaps—who knows” “Mr Sendstad, dinner is ready, please.” A small company had assembled in the dark little dining-room where odours from the kitchen pervaded the atmosphere. He was introduced to an old grey-bearded captain, two telegraph office- girls, two university students as thin as rakes, and a sallow-faced young office-girl who had one shoulder higher than the other. To Andreas, accustomed to fresh air in the country, this mixture of smells of washing, soot, gas, and dust was sufficient to kill all ap- petite before the meal had begun. "So you are an agriculturist,” the captain began in a friendly manner across his plate of soup, "and your name is Sendstad--per- 648 THE PRISONER WHO SANG haps then you are related to my old friend Sendstad at Inderya ?” "He is my uncle,” Andreas replied, “but he has been bedridden of late.” “Well-yes-one grows old. He must be over eighty by now.” “Eighty-five,” Andreas said, who had no idea of whom he was speakin. During the meal an old bent man entered the room. He wore a brown wig and his eyes were red-rimmed and watery. An elderly woman accompanied him, she was the landlady. Her eyes also were red. The old man's hands trembled and he and the old lady with the ear trumpet sat down at a separate table, after the land- lady had introduced him to Andreas as her father, Mr Iversen, Bank Messenger. Andreas viewed the old man with special interest. “Could I “ manage to impersonate him, so that people would be deceived?" was his involuntary thought. “And how many millions have you carried from one bank to another to-day, Mr Iversen ?” the captain asked. “Oh, I won't say millions,” the old man said turning his red eyes towards the company, "but I will confess to hundreds of thousands.” At coffee afterwards Andreas entered into conversation with the Bank Messenger who told him where he was employed and what the nature of his work was. He went to the various banks with bills of exchange and carried money back, or he took money some- where to buy bills, carrying bills and money alike in his leather bag. Oh! it was responsible work. Andreas also learnt something about the firms with whom his employers most often had dealings. He asked no more questions after that, but the old man was quite touched by the young gentleman's interest in his concerns. The days passed. Andreas sauntered about in the town sight- seeing. One day the captain offered to show him round. "I hear it is your first visit to Christiania,” he said. “Go with me up Carl Johan Street, and you shall see all our famous men. At this time of the day old Ibsen usually leaves his café, and if we are lucky we may even meet the Prime Minister on his way home from his office." They were lucky. First they met a very old little man, who wore a black silk hat and spectacles, whose frock coat was tightly buttoned, and who walked along with quick short steps. Andreas > JOHAN BOJER 649 remembered all the Ibsen rôles he had acted, more especially Eng- strand, the joiner in Ghosts, which was his very best. After a while, however, he began to imagine the life of this man. How did his brain work? What were his reminiscences, memories, dreams, visions? “Could I assume his likeness?" Involuntarily "? he felt in a vision as if he were the great author, he made a few of Ibsen's short, tripping steps, and felt as if he were Ibse; “There goes the Prime Minister," the captain said. Andreas allowed time to slide. He sometimes went to the the- atre, but mostly stayed indoors, reading. He liked books of travel best, and then history, as he had done in the old days. Reading about Napoleon was the same as visualizing him, assuming his per- sonality and becoming like him. Through the medium of one book he traversed Mexico and through another Africa. He caught the fever and he was wounded by poisoned arrows. Every page brought a new vision. Where was he? At the head of a Roman fleet on his way to burn down Carthage. “Here I am. My name is Scipio." “Mr Sendstad, please, supper is ready.” The Bank Messenger became his friend. Andreas constantly, though furtively, studied the old furrowed face with the red- rimmed eyes, its wrinkles, its fold downwards from the right corner of the mouth-unconsciously his brain assimilated the whole per- sonality, in order to re-create it in his own room afterwards. One day when the parlour was empty Andreas espied the old man's leather bag. He ventured to open it and found some bills of no value. He put a few in his pocket and afterwards studied these valueless bits of paper behind a locked door in his room. Here was the firm's signature, and the office stamp. Fully two thousand pounds had been drawn on a London bank. From that day he had a strange sensation when after a talk with the messenger he entered his own room. It was as if the old man accompanied him, trait by trait. In there Andreas began to possess that shuffling gait, those trembling hands, to wipe his eyes con- stantly, and to protrude his knees. What did it mean? What was going to happen? One day the old man was not seen at dinner. The landlady be- wailed her father's illness, and the necessity of an operation at the hospital next day. a 650 THE PRISONER WHO SANG The next day Andreas went out carrying a small valise and ordered a room at a small hotel. When he left there his face was that of Iversen, a brown wig, red-rimmed eyes, wrinkles, and old age. He also carried a well-worn leather bag with bills of ex- change inside it, and he directed his slow steps straight towards the Credit Bank. He was Iversen outside and in. He felt too tired to go on with that kind of work much longer. Probably he would have to go to the hospital and undergo an operation. At the same time another person was sufficiently awake in him to create a sensation of excitement. How would it come off? He entered the bank. There was a fog outside, and the gaslight burnt dimly. Business went on briskly behind the counters, people went in and out, some sat waiting for their turn. The cashier called out names and those waiting went up to him to pay in money or to receive payments. A young man behind a brass grill caught sight of the old messenger over there in the shadow, and called out in a kindly voice: "Well, Iversen, what brings you here to-day?" "Only a trifle,” Andreas replied, coughing and clearing his throat before he opened his bag and handed in the bills. He re- ceived his number and sat down, slowly, on a seat. He blew his nose and wiped his eyes and also his forehead. It is hard to grow old. Supposing luck was bad and another messenger from Iversen's firm came and began asking difficult questions? The next few moments would bring him much money, riches even—or prison. Yet Andreas was not so very excited after all, to such an extent had he assumed the real personality of old Iversen. He remem- bered his long life of work for the great bank. And at home he had a daughter who had misconducted herself he was sorry to say, and now she had a child. O dear, O dear, life is a burden. Then his number was called out from the cashier's desk. a VII It is not always easy to find sleep even late at night, and Andreas was wide awake. The fact was that the lay preacher had followed him and was now scolding him severely. A thief he called him, defrauder, rascal. Poor people have deposited their savings in the JOHAN BOJER 651 bank. They will suffer for your foul deed to-day. And old Iversen will be discharged of course, perhaps accused, how do you imagine he will get along afterwards ? But Andreas was well read by that time and easily created an- other person who could talk down the preacher. He was a young man, a cigarette-smoking dude, somewhat of a chemist if bombs were needed, but more especially an orator and revolutionary agi- tator, a modern idealist. “The money,” that young gentleman argued, "belongs to a com- pany of capitalists who use their gold to oppress the poor. How . much fraud and how many forgeries have they committed in order to gain their riches ? Countless, most probably. And do you be- lieve their consciences prick them? You rest at ease, Andreas. You even repaid those two thousand kroner to the doctor. You are an honest man after all.” “Of course I am,” Andreas declared from his bed, nodding his head at the lay preacher. "Henceforth you and I have no more to do with each other. I will live as my inclination and my natural gifts dictate. Good-night. I thank you for the time we have spent together.” A little later however when he opened his eyes, Mr Iversen with his stick and his leather bag stood beside his bed “Don't be afraid," he said, “it's only I. I should like to know why the model for me, old Iversen, is now at the hospital. It is all due to you. You absorbed him bit by bit. You took his fea- tures one by one and sucked him dry for your own ends. Now he is in the hospital. Andreas suddenly sat up in bed. "What is this madness," he whispered, "am I drunk with success once more? There is nobody here.” If any one wants to travel and meet fairly pleasant people with- out calling undue attention to himself, he can easily do so by styling himself a commercial traveller, Hansen by name, and nobody will make any remarks. Mr Hansen, commercial traveller, is not a person, he is a generality and he can travel over the same route indefinitely without arousing any one's comments. During spring and summer life on board the larger coasting steamers is quite pleasant. You meet interesting people travelling first class. Sometimes there are some officials, a handful of for- > 652 THE PRISONER WHO SANG eign tourists, and another day perhaps a parliamentary committee on inspection, a Persian prince with suite, a touring theatrical com- pany, every possible type. Young women sometimes travel alone and are glad of a helping hand when it is proffered with due respect. Andreas knew. After his last performance in Christiania he was very sure of him- self. He felt it in him to play the part of a State Secretary as easily as that of a stoker, and to make people believe in him. Why then should he not be everybody's equal ? A mild excitement arose in his mind whenever they landed at some small town. Things might have happened without his knowledge. But the steamer left the quay to proceed on her journey, and life still ran smoothly. He would lounge on deck in a wicker chair smoking a cigar and watching the hills, islands, and rocks glide past. Where was he going? He was on his way to a new deed of daring, or to a new personality; perhaps he would become a prince to-morrow. His whole life was a fairy tale, and he gave up all resistance to the magic of it. He was not Caesar, nor Scipio Africanus, but he was capable of unheard of foolhardiness, and he was a lone hand against all the world. He wished to treat the world according to his own caprice; he could afford to do so. “A commercial traveller, am I?” He would walk up and down the deck enjoying the feat of submerging himself in another mind, and giving up his own to the person he himself had created. “I am Mr Hansen, a commercial traveller. My mother's name was Mary and I have a sister in Bergen. I went to school there. Do I not remember the old Latin teacher? How long have I been on the road? For five years on behalf of the firm of Greenwich and Sons, Manchester. All right.” “A fine evening, Mr Hansen," the first mate would remark stamping past him, pipe in mouth. “Wonderful,” Mr Hansen would answer, “but I say, Mr Mate, could we not arrange a dance on deck. Those young ladies look as if they would like it." "I'll try,” the mate would answer. One day a slender young man boarded the steamer. Andreas felt compelled to look at him. He was exquisitely dressed, and carried himself like a grand seigneur, with great ease and yet with much dignity. When he spoke a tiny smile showed in the corner a > JOHAN BOJER 653 of his mouth as fascinating as the man himself. His voice possessed a certain light fulness not commonly heard. Involuntarily Andreas began to hover near the newcomer. There are some people whose personality have a certain musical quality which is most alluring. Andreas suddenly grew dissatis- fied with himself. He felt vague cravings to become like the man, to change himself, adopt his nature, even to become the man him- self. He sensed pleasure and joy in speaking to him and listening to the hidden music of his ideas, always with the involuntary self- questioning: “Could I be like him? Have I in my nature the hidden instrument whence emanates such sweetness of harmony?” The stranger went ashore one day leaving Andreas to dream of him, weaving romance about him. One fine day he, himself, left the ship, the captain and mate waving him farewell. “I hope to meet you again,” Andreas said. That very day he started working before the looking glass in the room at his hotel. If you want to create a Norwegian-born engineer from Alaska, his correct outer appearance is not sufficient, neither is his life story, nor his character and manners. You must even have a something of his knowledge though merely enough for conversa- tion in a steamer's saloon. Andreas had to call at the bookseller's, and reading takes time. Also it took time to acquire before the mirror the habit of this charming man's little mannerisms, his laughter, his way of coughing and clearing his voice, his intonation and table manners. He had a special way of sitting down and of getting up, and when insisting on some idea he moved his right hand in a rhythmic gesture. But first and foremost he had a masterpiece of a smile. All this meant work for Andreas, who would hum a tune, and keep on trying. Sometimes he wore him- self out, and sank down in a chair exhausted, and there were moments when he nearly gave up the task before him, also there were moments when he worked like an artist inspired. Thus the days passed. The hotel maid dusting the stairs saw a stranger descending, whom she had not seen go up. "Pardon me," he said, “my friend Mr Hansen went on board the north-going steamer just now. He asked me to pay his bill and have his luggage sent down to the quay." a 654 THE PRISONER WHO SANG “Certainly, sir,” the maid answered blushing before the look in his eyes and at his generous tip. Andreas was travelling once more. He dived into this new person and felt like looking at fresh scenery never viewed before. “Ah! Is this the outlook here!" He began exploring and liked it. “Fancy me reaching thus far, and think of all my experiences.” His reading of Alaska changed into personal memories. He had been the manager of a gold mine and could remember how the boys used their revolvers, and also the nights of bright starlight and the singing of Indian girls. Life like this was fascinating and pleasant. He met friends from former trips who did not recognize him. He was tickled when the county magistrate, who had once completely ignored Mr Hansen, invited Mr Starr, the engineer, to a seat at his side. From this new point of view he could laugh derisively to himself as he watched many unsuspecting persons. There was for instance the country doctor who went about inspecting poor people's clean- liness and sanitary arrangements, himself reeking of whiskey and tobacco, while blissfully ignoring his own dirty nails. The per- sonage Andreas had created was superior to this. At the steamer's table he listened to every possible opinion concerning life and death. One face would twist with faith, another with doubt, one man's Adam's apple would jump up and down with political zeal, everyone trying to force his opinions on his neighbours. The person created by Andreas was more refined in his reserve. In the smoking room over whiskey and soda, gossip ran riot, worse than at a country Dorcas meeting, and prominent men were openly slandered, only here, among the upper class, they called it ideals and convictions. The person created by Andreas was above such things. Days slipped by. One morning, it may be while brush- ing his teeth, Andreas conceived the idea of a fresh person not built after a model this time but according to a desire he felt when young, a childish dream of being such and such a man. Now it might be done. For a week or so he would build up his man, , adding new features until one fine day he would launch him out upon the world. Andreas went ashore. The captain and his mate waved their caps. “See you again some day, sir," they would say. “Hope so," Andreas would answer. JOHAN BOJER 655 a He was no longer afraid of landing in a fresh town. The police were probably diligently seeking some person who existed no longer. He travelled from one life to another, it was like death and resurrection in a new shape. He often sat on the steamer's deck dreaming in his own way. A commercial traveller may be taken ill and die, an engineer may be shot by his workmen, but he, himself, was above them both and above all. He only changed his life incessantly as if he could not be trapped by time nor by death, he was like a small rivulet in a world of men, running for- ever towards eternity. Then he would wake up with a mind to have a good hidden laugh—and that he could always afford. At Bod there arrived one fine day a foreigner, an Englishman, very stiff and very erect. His luggage consisted of twelve cases, all bearing the legend "Glass—with great care.” As they were being unshipped the crew were excited with sheer carefulness. “Look out there,” called the mate, and even the captain on the bridge let fall a warning. "Steady boys, easy does it.” The sailors screwed up their mouths with the effort and handled the cases as gingerly as if they were treading on pins and needles. “You be careful, Jens,” one of them said, stopping, and a moment later another exclaimed, “Are you mad, Kristian? know it's glass you're handling ?” The entire dozen cases were " unloaded with the utmost care, and yet not one of them contained a thing beyond stones and old newspapers. "What does it mat- ter ?” the stranger thought to himself; the fact only enhanced the highly strung nervousness of their faces. The papers brought news of a great bank fraud that had been committed in Christiania some The amount represented a fortune and headlines were many and conspicuous. The whole country was agape. Re- markably enough the Bank Director himself remembered having been suspicious about the bills, but old Mr Iversen was so well known to be a reliable man that he had waived his hesitation. On the other hand the registers of the Government Hospital showed that old Mr Iversen, Bank Messenger, was operated upon just that day, so that he could not possibly have been at the bank. Lawyers and police tore their hair, the whole country seemed to stare in wonderment. A new Methodist parson arrived at a north country townlet. Prominent members of the congregation waited for him on the Don't you time ago. 656 THE PRISONER WHO SANG quay, and when he appeared on the gangway they at once recog- nized the man whose photograph had been published in their own Methodist monthly. He was tall and handsome and wore his moustache after the fashion of the Kaiser. He carried a suit case in one hand and a rain-coat over his arm. “Good morning, dear brethren,” he said. "We did not expect you till Saturday,” said one of the elders. "You mentioned Saturday in your letter, I think.” “The journey was shorter than I thought,” was the reply. The new pastor performed a wedding ceremony, and christened some babies, and on Saturday his congregation arranged a welcome festive meeting in their new meeting house. Late in the evening there was a disturbance at the door, a stranger insisted on entering. All turned to look and see. A rather small man with a red moustache à la Kaiser walked up the floor, looking very bewildered, regarding the assembly and the chandeliers alternately. “There he is,” said the man who accompanied him, pointing out the new pastor who was just drinking a cup of cocoa, surrounded by a circle of women. The stranger lifted his eye-glasses and stared. He was breath- ing hard, and the sight of his own face on another man evidently made him excited. "Excuse me,” he said at last, going nearer, “I—I am the new parson.” The other visitor sipped his cocoa before answering in a very friendly manner, "So am I.” The two regarded each other. The congregation began to crowd round them. The stranger continued, "I think there must be a mis- take somewhere. My name is Johnson, Harry Johnson.” “Yes,” was the answer, "so is mine.” “Is your name also is your name Johnson, Harry Kristian Johnson ?" "Certainly,” said the pastor kindly, placing his cup on a table. The stranger looked from one to the other. He wiped his brow, regarded his hands, giving an impression as if he wanted to pinch his own arms to make sure that he was awake. “I have just left the Stavanger congregation,” he said faintly, hoping for help from that fact. A pause. JOHAN BOJER 657 a “So have I,” came the astounding reply. "What?” The little man opened his eyes wide. "Have you come—from Stavanger ?'' “Certainly,” the pseudo-pastor declared, wiping his mouth with his handkerchief. “I have worked in Stavanger for four years.' “For four years? You? In Stavanger ? Impossible!" The stranger looked as if he asked pardon from the assembly for not yet having gone mad. “And now our bishop has sent me here to work for the congrega- tion in this place,” continued the pastor wiping his fingers before placing the handkerchief in his pocket. "Our bishop-has-sent you? You—you say?” The little man fumbled for support. Everybody was dumbfounded until Mr Olsen, the young uphol: sterer, took courage and spoke. “This seems rather remarkable," ” he said. “I don't want to say that either gentleman is a fraud. But . you who arrived to-night-you are bald—and the photo- graph in the paper was not of a bald man.” “Bald!" The little man felt his scalp. “Yes, the photograph was taken some years ago. Gracious me! Any one of us may hap- pen to grow bald." ” Several men in the assembly made an involuntary movement to feel the tops of their heads, and were able to confirm the statement. More staring went on, until the tall parson spoke. “This matter must be cleared up. You come here accusing me of being someone else and pretending to be me. I cannot allow this to go on. Will you meet me with your witnesses at the police station to-morrow at twelve ?" "Most certainly I will. We have our papers both of us I guess, that will clear up the matter. I will certainly meet you to-morrow at twelve.” The little man bowed, apparently quite satisfied with the proposed arrangement. He did not feel quite sure of his own identity, whether he was really Peter or Paul! When the tall parson left all eyes followed him, and then stared at the other who folded his hands. “Oh, my brothers and sisters," the little fellow began in a trem- bling voice, “let us pray." The tall parson did not present himself on the following day, and the police made inquiries at his hotel. No, Mr Johnson, the Meth- 658 THE PRISONER WHO SANG odist parson, did not sleep there last night. He was called to a death-bed far away in a Lapp camp, and had left in a reindeer sledge. “Really,” ejaculated the police inspector dryly. “I guess he needed a couple of policemen to help him.” The police were busy tracking him and no one paid any attention to the fact that an organ grinder had arrived in the village that very day. He was a poor consumptive and in rags. His organ stayed and moaned outside the police master's own house until the worthy official rushed out and giving him some coppers asked him to go to—Jericho. “Thank you, sir,” said the beggar, pocketing the money with a smile; then he shouldered his organ and tottered off. Andreas liked to arrange that sort of little event in order to keep the police from becoming stale. He needed the excitement—he wanted the whole nation to act parts in a private performance for his sole enjoyment. What a life it was. People began to be mere masks behind which there was only a species of clockwork which he manipulated. A famous German gynecologist suddenly appeared at a watering- place. He spoke a little broken Norwegian, was very sociable, and several ladies from Christiania took advantage of the opportunity to consult him. He never refused nor did he ask for any fee. Af- ter a thorough examination of the patient he would wash his hands with great care and would look out of the window for a while be- a fore giving his advice. It was not until a month later that it leak- ed out that he was an impostor, but by that time he was far away. The police suffered. Once more all the papers printed the well- known legend, “it is supposed that the criminal has succeeded in escaping abroad.” Closing his eyes at nights Andreas saw before him a long proces- sion of persons, created by himself, and every one of them fleeing before the police. Sometimes he grew anxious on their behalf, he was anxious for their safety. At last a change took place. JOHAN BOJER 659 VIII “Really, Sophy dear, you ought to be more careful with a per- fectly unknown person.” “Mother dear, do you call Mr Will- mann a perfectly unknown person?” The young girl lifted her face from her embroidery the better to look at a grey-haired lady crocheting by the window. “Yes I do. What do we know about him?" “We know what the papers say. As soon as he arrived two local papers had him interviewed, and after his lecture you certainly were as enthusiastic as any one else.” “M—m-yes, only being able to speak in an interesting way about life at a Brazilian farm does not imply that—” The doctor's wife stopped short, touching her hair with her crocket hook. “And his idea of a direct line of steamers—is that nothing? And the service of commercial men wanted out there, and the great market waiting for Norwegian trade? You know he works night and day, and I am sure he will achieve great things. Her mother was crocheting now. “Yes, I admit that, it was I who opened our house to him. He has very charming manners and once a stranger of that sort is accepted he grows to be very pop- ular indeed—only—" "Only ?” “Well, dear, you have every reason to be very careful you know.” Which was true. The young girl, though still in her early twenties, had been engaged to be married twice, both engagements having come to an end with a considerable amount of gossip, and there was a time when her parents were afraid for the poor girl's reason. Since the arrival of the stranger, however, her steps were more elastic, her faced bloomed fresher, and in her half-dulled eyes youth once more kindled gleams of kindly fun. She rose and folded up her needlework, and humming to herself she went to the window. "Surely you are not going to meet him now again ?" Without answering, the young girl swept a wave of dark hair away from her forehead, then she laid her arms round her mother's neck, pressed her cheek against hers, closing her eyes for a few sec- onds. Then she ran out. 660 THE PRISONER WHO SANG She appeared on the front steps in a bright hat and with a sun- shade, but perceiving a number of doves on the eaves she returned into the house only to come out with hands full of peas for the pretty birds. It seemed as if she could not take her own pleasure before seeing that others were happy. It was summer, the gardens in front of the low wooden houses were full of flowers, a cool breeze from the sea came up the wide streets. She hurried off thinking to herself, “perhaps someone be- hind some curtain is wondering where I am going. I had better not look to the right or to the left.” Just outside the town there was a broad stretch of green park up towards View Hill; there he awaited her. He was a tall, well- built young man, dark haired, and ruddy of complexion, clean shaven. His light summer clothes were well fitting, he wore a thin gold chain round his left wrist, his tan shoes were American made. "At last you have come!” “Have you been waiting ?” They walked up the wide gravelled paths under the vaults of spruce branches. “Adolph, dear, do you know you have told me next to nothing of your childhood ?” “Really? It is much more fun to talk of yours, dear.” "No, be good to-day, I want to know. Where was your home? What was your life like when a boy? Can't you see, dear, that I want to know everything about you?” “I have had no childhood, my dear girlie, I am poor Boots of the fairy tales with no relatives and little knowledge of either father or mother. Do you hate me for that ?' She caught his hand and pressed it hard. He had such beautiful hands in spite of having worked so hard in his difficult life. Why should it be necessary to learn everything about such a fairy tale Prince Charming? He came here from a far country, weather- beaten and strong, full of adventurous stories about his life out there, with a thousand schemes for the future. Is it not meet that he should be a self-made man beginning life in a country cottage ? She caught his hand once more. Would to God she could be a real help-mate! Soon their talk was sweet nonsense again. They looked at each other smiling because they were just those two walking alone. JOHAN BOJER 661 a a Their talk was like a duet sung in harmony with little heed to the actual words. They discussed at one and the same time their wed- ding in the autumn, the journey to Brazil, all the trousseau neces- sary for her, love between elderly married people, and life after death, stopping short once in a while to look into each other's eyes. They reached the top of View Hill and saw the summer evening dying in a glory more golden than anywhere else. On the far hori- zon heaven and sea met in a shimmering golden mist, and above the nearer islets a cloud of white gulls drifted through the air, their shrill cries at that distance taking the tone of joyous sounds from an aerial feast. “Won't you sit down a bit, girlie ?” “No, I must hurry home,” she answered sitting down in spite of her words. A moment after her head lay on his shoulder. Late that night the young man walked alone along the water's edge. Finally he sat down, folded his hands round one knee, re- garding the spruce clad hillside across the broad bay. . He thought of his life's fairy-tale. Once upon a time there was a boy in rags who stood cap in hand when a young gentlewoman drove past him through the forest. Now one of them had come to him, embracing him. The boy and the forest? Were they dreams only? What was truth and what imagination? Surely Adolph Willmann was a real person; he needed but to close his eyes, and he remembered Brazil, his farm, his touches of fever and of sunstroke-poisonous reptiles and wild beasts. The only difficulty was that even Adolph Willmann needed cer- tain credentials in order to be decorously married and he could not possibly remember where they were. What then? He knew somebody who could easily produce genuine credentials. But Mr Willmann was a white man; not for worlds would he lead a young girl into a doubtful situation, least of all this young girl who had already suffered such hard experiences. At last life had offered him a wonderful romance. girl who had twice been struck down by hard fate rose again at his bidding, saying, with arms stretched towards him, “I have still a grain of trust and faith in the world and in mankind, I offer it to you.” He had seen how her cheeks filled out with health This young 662 THE PRISONER WHO SANG > and joy. Oh, it was wonderful, wonderful, and yet in other ways passing strange. Never before had he succeeded in creating a figure who could wake any one from the dead. Where would it all end? Andreas felt giddy sometimes, stop- ping bewildered to try and take his bearings. Where am I now? Is this the land where Don Juan dwells? It was summer, with sailing excursions in twilight nights. Their white boat would run smoothly before the evening breeze far out from the shore, the sun sinking in the west, painting in golden outlines the black silhouette of the lofty rig of a sailing vessel far away on the horizon. “Is this just you and I, Sophie ?” he would think, caressing her with his eyes. “Would it were all true—would we were never to row to land again.” Little quarrels would occur, the sort that lead to tears and end in smiles and kisses. “You do not always speak the truth, Adolph, and heaven help me if I cannot trust you.” "What is it I have been telling stories about, now then ?” he would ask, and she would mention some of his statements which did not tally with what he had told her previously. It was really hard on her, she had nothing but his word to rely on. It took a lot of explanation and many caresses to reassure her. But afterwards—his credentials? It is a wonderful experience to be under the influence of a young girl. Her point of view became involuntarily his. "What do you think of the relations between labour and capital ?" she asked one day. He was touched that her little head should be bothered with such problems and he answered as he thought she would like him to. Why could he not think as she did, just as well? And every opinion thus ac- quired became like a caress which she breathed into his soul, and therefore they also grew imperative and precious. She trans- formed him incessantly into something finer than he was, and with her he breathed an air so free of lies and fraud that one moment he felt as innocent as herself, and the next he felt that he ought to be swallowed up by the earth beneath his feet. His papers? When the red disc of the sun rose above far distant islands he was still brooding in the same place. A solitary diver came flying so low that spray flew up under his wings. A new morning had dawned, one day would follow another, and before long the matter would have to be straightened out. JOHAN BOJER 663 Should he confess? That would strike her down once more. And who was to take Mr Willmann's place? And who was he really after all? He might travel all over the world seeking Andreas Berget without finding him again. He had left him so infinitely far away, and for years he had been nothing but a part, a fiction, a piece of art—not a man for any girl to marry. Was there no power in heaven or on earth who could help him now, who could transform Mr Willmann into a real living man, and make everything come true? Was there no help in prayer, faith, work, sacrifice, payments, or entreaties? Was there no way of salvation, not one? Should he break off the engagement? and kill her. Should he disappear? Then she would keep his memory green, and it would be a fraud like the twelve boxes marked Glass. Poor little Sophie. IX A little before Christmas a new prisoner arrived at the solitary confinement prison in Christiania. He behaved differently from most others, being neither defiant nor broken-hearted. His eyes had a straight-forward look, he asked for nothing nor about anything, and answered in monosyllables only. He put on his prison clothes as carefully as if dressing for a dinner-party. His cell was Number 14, and his task was basket-making. No rela- tives inquired about him. He never asked leave to write a letter. Christmas Eve in prison is generally a day of unrest. Then you may hear weeping and harsh laughter, loud prayers or simply the restless pacing of the cell-floor up and down, up and down. Number 14 was as quiet that day as on every other day. It did not concern him, and everything was as it should be. A young man had obtained permission from the Authorities to visit the prisons and talk to the prisoners. One evening he entered cell Number 14. The warder remained outside. The stranger was of slender build, pale, and wore eye-glasses, but in his eyes a fire was burning. He shook hands with the prisoner and treated him as an equal, without on the whole being aggressively friendly. He merely asked as a favour to hear the life story of the prisoner. Number 14 regarded him. Then he smiled closing his eyes. “My history? Really? You wish to write it down for your 664 THE PRISONER WHO SANG 1 1 a never. • . own use ? Really?” After a while he opened his eyes and began telling his tale. It grew to be a most profoundly moving story of a poor boy who as a child was beaten, kicked, and starved, with hardly any clothes. His mother was a drunkard, his stepfather a thief, a sad household. Later on he passed from hand to hand and was ill- treated wherever he came, being forced to work day and night even when he was ill. The natural outcome of such a life was unavoidable, and he was now in prison. The young man wrote rapidly, wetting his pencil between his lips and writing again, with a sigh now and then. The tale told at last, he gathered his papers and regarded the unhappy man. “To what do you owe all your unhappiness do you think?" The prisoner pondered very seriously. "To sin,” he said at last, "and to Satan.” “Sin,” the young man laughed derisively, “Satan. Well I No, I will tell you who bears the dreadful respon- sibility. Have you never thought of it?” The other shook his head. “It is society.” The prisoner opened his eyes and a light dawned in them. "You don't say so," he said, “I never thought of that. Of course it is society.” And when the young man had talked himself tired Number 14 followed him two steps to the door. The warder turned the key in the lock. The basket-maker resumed his task, humming a hymn tune with a smile. Prison life is hard. No prisoner ever sees another. Sometimes the cell is not heated and one prisoner may cough until he gets a rupture, another may die quietly of pneumonia in the night. No news penetrates those grey walls. The world carries on. All sorts of things happen out there, but within the walls events con- sist of footsteps in the passages. Every step is known separately, they become the language which tells a little of the world outside. You listen! That is the watchman, that is the inspector. Wait a moment, there is no mistake about it, but there is the Director himself. Well, really—it pleases the reverend chaplain to let his saintly soles crunch upon the floor. Presumably he is going to call on the man next door who committed arson. JOHAN BOJER 665 a One day the prison chaplain entered Number 14. He was a tall broad-shouldered man, with a red face reminding one of Julius Caesar, and wearing a black skull cap, a masterful man who had been at the prison for twenty years, so that nothing human astounded him. "Well, good-morning, my friend,” he said sitting down on a camp stool which the warder had brought into the cell. "At last you have sent for me, I hope we shall both derive benefit from the fact.” The small grilled window did not let in much light. Perhaps it was winter outside or an April snow-fall. The prisoner leaned against the naked wall with a pale smile towards the chaplain. “I needed time to think,” he said. “There are many tangles to clear up.” “Naturally, and you have been thinking for six months now. Would it be indiscreet to ask what you have been thinking 'of ?” The chaplain stroked his chin and wriggled into a more comfort- able position, ready for a long entertainment. The prisoner walked a few steps backwards and forwards in the narrow room, his hands behind his back. “I remember,” he began, “when I attended the Engineering College at Hanover “What? Have you attended an Engineering College at Han- over?” The chaplain stared. “I beg your pardon.” The prisoner closed his eyes stroking his forehead. . . . "I meant to say when I was travelling agent for the firm of Greenwich in Newcastle." The chaplain interrupted him once more. "Were you ever an agent for any Newcastle firm?” The other man waived the question aside with a movement of his hand. “Oh, no, I thought of the time when I owned a coffee plantation in Brazil. "What is the meaning of this?” the chaplain exclaimed rising. “Do you think we do not know your life? Your name is Andreas Berget. You hail from the north country, you have been in prison several times; once you were an actor, but otherwise you have had no real occupation though sailing under a variety of false flags. If you want to speak with me you will leave out any pretences. Don't you think it is about time for you to reform a bit ?'' " O . . 666 THE PRISONER WHO SANG “Reform—whom?” The prisoner turned towards the chaplain. “Whom, do you say?" “Yes, I do ask. For a man is a complexity of individuals." “Hm.” “And they are not all equally bad. You just think now, there is a lay preacher, an agriculturist, a commercial traveller, an engineer, a bank messenger, a gynecologist, and a number of others, and they are all myself.” “Certainly all these persons are yourself.” “Which one of them ought I to reform?" “Look here, my friend, if you think I have come here to be made a fool of by you—” “Are you, then, one person?” “ "If you will not talk seriously I will leave you.” The chaplain thrust his hands into his coat sleeves on account of the cold. “Well, I had something quite private to speak to you of, or rather a favour to ask, but if you will not even try to understand me I am very sorry I have bothered you to come at all.” The prisoner bowed as if to say good-bye. The chaplain turned to the door, hesitating. This man who seemed perfectly absent-minded during his sermons, and who had up to now been so very inaccessible, had asked for him at last. Was his plan to pretend insanity? “What is it you have to tell me?" he finally asked, turning back. The other man smiled. His fair hair was now grey and his clean-shaven face pallid. But he kept on smiling as if at himself and all the world. His teeth were perfectly white. "Have you never felt, that when you want to make up your mind, you are at a general meeting? One person within you clamours against another, and every one is of a separate opinion. With me the lay preacher tears his hair when the gynecologist smokes a cigarette, well content with the scheme of things. What is right and in whom shall I believe? “Well another day you express an opinion on something or other and you suddenly become aware of the fact that you are borrowing some prominent man's power of judgement? You not only ask ‘what would he have done?' but you feel his form, his outer person, he possesses you, or you him—don't you? It happens to me sev- eral times a day, and was it he or you who spoke out ?'' JOHAN BOJER 667 The chaplain sat down again, breathing hard through his nose. “And what then? We are, all of us, more or less normal ?". “Normal, ha-ha,” the other man gave a short laugh, so that his blue breath shot out into the cold air. The chaplain pulled his overcoat more tightly around himself. “Normal. A man came here the other day, with eyeglasses and a pencil, he was not only a lunatic, he was a poster on two legs. But you, you are a man, a human being, your soul is not made of paper, you do not declare that a man is mad because he makes you think you—” “What do you want me to do?” the chaplain interrupted making as if to rise once more. "Well-yes, it is only that we—we human beings, we are never one, we exchange both soul and body with each other: often it is impossible to say which is which." The prisoner: walked across the floor for a couple of turns. Then he proceeded. "Have you never had a sorrow or a hope that you have given human form? Have you never travelled by train and thought, ‘the bishop is going by this train. It is I. Do you never stand ' by an open grave and feel with a shudder the dead man down there, 'It is I.' When reading history do you never mount to Napoleon's charger or Martin Luther's pulpit? Who was St Paul? Have you never said 'I was St Paul ? » The chaplain stared before him smiling stiffily. "And what then? What do you aim at with all this talk?” “At explaining myself. My crimes consist in imitating other people. I could not rest content with being shut inside one fate, I hungered for fresh ones. Why is it such a joy and a pleasure to don a new suit of clothes? Is it not because we get rid of an old person and put on a fresh one? Why do we alter our principles, forsake our friends and make alliance with one time foes, why do men change wives, work for promotion and new positions? Is it not in order to give scope to a fresh person within oneself? That is what I have done. There were voices within me clamouring for fresh human shapes, and fresh shapes again, it meant to me study, evolution, a longing for life eternal, life itself.” “But is it not remarkable that all your impersonations were frauds ?" a 668 THE PRISONER WHO SANG “A novel or a play, sculptured marble, are also frauds, yet they are the highest truths if good enough.” “But you were not sculptured marble.” The prisoner laughed, then answered staring towards the win- dow. "The greatest work of art is the human being. My various im- personations were worked out under inspiration. A poet dreams of what he can never achieve in reality, therefore he makes the dream come true in a poem. So did I. The only difference is that I did not confine my dream to people within a book or a piece of stone, but I gave them my own legs, I made them go about by steamer or train” “And then you made them into criminals,” the chaplain inter- rupted, "was that inspiration, too ?” “An artist needs the stimulant of the world's recognition and of its faith in his art. He claims some assurance that it is alive. When I presented a false cheque at a bank, you may say it was done to obtain money, but I say it was not. It was done to place my work before the severest of all critics, asking, 'Is this alive? Do you believe in it? Does my art give a complete illusion? Is it true to life?" The chaplain rose. “And the question of good and evil ?" The other passed his hand across his forehead. After a while he sighed looking at the chaplain. “That depends, naturally, on the person who reigns supreme at the time. A lay preacher judges A differently from an Alaska engineer.” The chaplain pressed his lips together and turned to leave once more. Suddenly he stopped, looking down at his feet. Then he turned to the prisoner. “It is cold here. Are you badly treated ?" The other man shrugged his shoulders, “No, I am quite comforta- ble," and he hid his chilblained hand in his pockets. "Have you no relatives? Are your parents alive? Have you no one-no-to love ?!! The prisoner bowed his head, and a slight shiver ran through his body. “Oh, yes—perhaps one.” “Really—one?” For a moment the young man regarded the chaplain as if reluc- JOHAN BOJER 669 tant to shrive to that masterful mind, although he had no longer the courage to be silent. "When you leave here,” the chaplain continued, “what then?” "God knows. There are visions and dreams in my soul, not yet realized but-after this I do not think I shall be able to do any more. Sir,” he asked, “will you do me a favour?” “That depends." "Try and discover something for me." "Hm.” "Concerning a—young woman. I often wonder whether she is still alive." The prisoner bowed his head and placed one hand across his fore- head. “It is not impossible that she may be living still. She was—she was engaged to be married to a planter from Brazil, and he was drowned, sailing on the fjord a week before the wedding-his boat was found drifting, empty. That planter was myself.' The chaplain looked calmly at him. “Indeed,” was his sole com- ment. “Some time afterwards there came to her town an old man, white- haired and white-bearded. He played in the streets, begging. That old man was me.” The chaplain lifted his eyebrows. The prisoner smiled and talk- ed on, leaning backwards against the wall. “I ventured into her mother's kitchen and saw that there was a trained nurse in the house. Later on I passed the house in the night and noticed that one window was lit. What then? The fact kept me standing there, and next night I came again. What wrong did I do watching there? My time was my own, and although it was winter and snow fell once in a while and the night wind was chilly, that winter passed more quickly than any other. . “Spring came once more and one Sunday morning I happened to pass her front door. She came out with her mother, prayerbook in hand. She had changed a great deal and she was dressed in mourn- ing, but I recognized her face under her black veil. "Well, an old beggar surely may be permitted to follow gentle- folk in the street, if he keeps at a respectful distance, and God knows I did that. I followed the two women to church. They sat rather apart from the others, and the mother joined in the singing 1 + 1 670 THE PRISONER WHO SANG but the young girl bent forwards hiding her face in her hands. I can see every detail even now.” “And she did not recognize you?” the chaplain asked. “What? Me?” The prisoner gave him a side glance. "No, but afterwards I ventured into the kitchen once more to beg a meal again. And I was lucky, for she came out in the kitchen. She looked at me and asked a few questions, and I?-I was an old bent man in rags, my white head shaking and my sore hands trembling. She gave me both money and food. It was strange to take such gifts from her hands.” Again the prisoner closed his eyes, hands in pockets. “And then ?” the chaplain asked. “Well, afterwards I travelled about trying to create fresh persons but I did not succeed as I had done before. Can you understand why? I have pondered over the matter very much, and I believe it was because I had become too fixed in the shape she loved, and it was impossible to give it up completely as I should have to do to create another. And then? Then I began doing clumsy things and the police caught sight of me. Every man has his limitations. And now I am here." The chaplain stroked his chin. “Who is she?” The prisoner opened his eyes and took a few steps backwards and forwards burying his hands deeper in his pockets, eyes downcast. It was evident that he shrank from giving her name. “If I am to learn anything about her I must know her name, surely you see that ?” “Look,” said the prisoner at last pointing to the wall. "I have done a little decorative work-in my own way.” He laughed self- consciously. The chaplain went nearer and read the name and ad- dress scratched on the wall. "I will think about it,” he promised and turned to leave; at the door he looked at the prisoner once more. “And yourself ?" “Excuse me for bothering you. Myself? I know nothing." “But there are only a few months left before your time is up- what then?" The younger man shook his head. “What do I know? I do not even know who I am, myself. I am but a memory of one person or the other, who were once I. Who am I when I leave here? I do not know. If I live to see that day I shall feel as if I had no face. JOHAN BOJER 671 . if “The first thing for me to do will be to find a new human form for myself, but why should I? There is——there is only one glim- mer of a hope, but it is impossible.” "A hope ?" “Yes—one can't help hoping-even stupidly-ha-ha.” “You think of that young girl still?” “If she were still alive, and if she were strong enough-perhaps— who knows? Ahem. Perhaps I would go to her and ask her help to create something new from the beginning. The next moment however the prisoner closed his fists half turning away as annoyed with himself for having said the last words. “M-m, yes,” the chaplain said thoughtfully, "I will think it over.” He opened the door, the warder fetched his stool, and their steps died away down the long passage. The prisoner remained leaning against the wall, looking straight before him. Then he began pacing the cell with short angry steps. . "Why did I lay bare my inmost soul to that man,” he muttered; “idiot that I was.” Days came and went. At rare intervals he guessed that the sun was shining on the wall across the prison yard. His baskets were not finished as quickly as before. He began hungering for a change, fresh work, something else to occupy his fingers. But why ask for it? The hours would pass anyhow. Steps were the real events, steps coming or going in the passage. There was the watchman, then the inspector, and one day even the director's footsteps were heard. The prisoner closed his eyes and stopped working. When would the chaplain come again? One evening he was startled, and listened. But the steps passed. Time went on, even there, and he finished another basket. By that time there would be full spring outside, every day the sun reached farther down his wall. Something began to grow in his soul, a craving for a fresh personality, a longing to create—he would like to create a human being who was happy. “Sunshine," he reflected looking at the yellow band of light on his grey wall, “sunny countries, and sunny people, the Mediter- ranean What he once read of the Roman fleet sailing for Carthage took shape before his inner vision. “How did Scipio look? Had he a heart's desire, unfulfilled? Could I assume his shape ?” 672 THE PRISONER WHO SANG His cell became the Mediterranean. It is quite possible for one's fingers to make a basket while one's thoughts besiege a city. He felt his left shoulder becoming chafed after a while with the armour he would not take off until Carthage was nothing but smouldering ashes. Other reminiscences of his readings filled his mind, and he tried to give a human shape to them all. Bending over his basket work he hummed hymn tunes, while fresh visions and fresh dreams crowded through his brain. "In ten thousand years there will come one who will rule the whole planet. What will he be like? Could I impersonate him? “But in a hundred thousand years there will come one who will unite three inhabited orbs into a defensive union in the universe, a king to rule over stars. How will he look? Could I impersonate him?" In the neighbouring cells wondering men listened to a happy pris- oner who paced up and down his floor-singing-singing, The End MEXICAN DESERT BY MINA LOY The belching ghost-wail of the locomotive trailing her rattling wooden tail into the jazz-band sunset. The mountains in a row set pinnacles of ferocious isolation under the alien hot heaven Vegetable cripples of drought thrust up the parching appeal cracking open the earth stump-fingered cacti and hunch-back palm trees belabour the cinders of twilight. . uillm 1 : A DRAWING. BY CARL SPRINCHORN. .:42 & S A DRAWING. BY CARL SPRINCHORN. THE AWAKENING OF THE ACADEMY BY THOMAS JEWELL CRAVEN I N 1913, in what was known as the Armoury Exhibition, at New York, the art of the Post-Impressionists was first intro- duced to the American public. Most of us remember the ignoble attitude of the press towards those rebellious painters: the critical obscurantists railed with indignation; fanatic was too mild a term -the exhibitors were maniacs, charlatans, degenerate Frenchmen. Eight years have passed; and now the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts has opened its finest galleries to the pictures of the modern Americans. It seems paradoxical that the few men who have anything beautiful to offer the world should have to fight for existence, but such is one of the ruinous effects of industrialism, and it is indeed remarkable that in so brief a time our younger artists should have been victorious over Philistine resentment, and should have found a response in one of the most conservative institutions in the United States. The Philadelphia Academy is to be com- mended for its new vision: it abandoned its traditional judgement that art should be a representation of material phenomena, and in- vited to its halls a group of painters who have at least one interest in common, the knowledge that art is based on design and not on natural imitation. The Committee of Selection is also to be ap- plauded, both for its disinterested method of hanging the can- vasses, and for its inclusive choice of painters. Eighty-eight ex- hibitors and two hundred eighty pictures were listed in the cata- logue; for once modern art was adequately presented, and the spec- tator was spared the abortive efforts of those innumerable and vain-glorious persons who bought space in the Independent Show at the Waldorf-Astoria. The exhibition was on view for a month. It did not provoke wild excitement. The day of condemnation is over; the shock- ing modern infant who, it seems only yesterday, screamed its mes- sage in discordant colours and thrashed its arms in Futuristic gestures, is strangely old and sober; the public has accepted the new painting, has reconciled it with contemporary life, and seeing 674 THE AWAKENING OF THE ACADEMY that it is not so new after all, but closely affiliated with the art of the past, has come to like it. Some, of course, will not admit this; they will join voices with the elderly clergymen of the museums and the newspapers, and deprecate every movement that has di- rected its energies against naturalism. Happily, their voices will not be heard, and the art of to-day will have what it needs most- big spaces, ample room to stand alone and to state its fresh and valid appeal to visitors without the disconcerting nonsense of in- trusive attendants. Not the least of the public benefits of this exhibition is the opportunity for making new valuations. The bou- doir painter is painfully exposed, and those canvasses which ask for recognition because of superficial cleverness and textural deli- cacy, shrink back into fitting insignificance. The mincing pretti- ness which has unfortunately crept, now and then, into modern painting, is simply annihilated by the big spaces: robbed of its pretentious aestheticism inherited from Victorian England and hung in the company of composed and undiluted form, it loses even its appearance of merit. Size, to be sure, is not the criterion of worth. The latter quality is to be discovered in large form, direct and ordered masses, clean and definite contrasts, and it is with these elements that some of the more advertised of the moderns fail, while others less known stand out conspicuously. There were on the walls huge canvas- ses which accomplished nothing; on the other hand, there were pic- tures which arrived almost at classic grandeur, and a number of small things whose carrying power and general impressiveness were extraordinary. And that strained triviality, which used to be so irritating in the new movement in America, was noticeably absent—in its place we saw dignity, the dignity which comes of growth, poise, and readjustment. Here and there among these canvasses we beheld the glimmering of the truth of great art; and there was abundant evidence on all sides of lucid conviction and sound knowledge. The future of American art will certainly re- pose in a number of men represented at Philadelphia, not in the illustrators, imitators, and literalists of fashionable exploitation. In the first place, technical experimentation, which has hitherto preoccupied the groping talents of the younger painters, and which has been so puzzling and offensive to the layman, has practically disappeared. The majority of the men have ripened to the point THOMAS JEWELL CRAVEN 675 where they no longer feel the need of playing with the purely sen- sational effects of pigment and texture; they have the modern means more or less under control, have discarded colour hypotheses which could never have existed without European eloquence, and have concentrated their attention on the delineation of form. A conclusive sign of solid development. Second: There are examples of unrestricted rendering of natu- ral forms in which the feelings of the painter are indicated in a distinctly personal manner. This is a selective art. To get at its truth we must realize that the artist has considered himself as more important that his subject; that formalistic accuracy of drawing, ne, perspective, and verisimilitude are subordinate to ideas of value. Such ideas are not always defensible; they lend themselves freely to idiosyncrasy; but in their worst aspect go far beyond the mechanical copying of nature as taught by the academy. In this class we must include Ben Benn, Emile Branchard, Arthur B. Carles, Andrew Dasburg, Preston Dickinson, Edward Fisk, Ber- nard Gussow, Henry McCarter, D. W. McCouch, Henry L. McFee, Gus Mager, John Marin, A. H. Maurer, George F. Of, Samuel Halpert, Marsden Hartley, Bertram Hartman, Yasuo Kuniyoshi, Owen Merton, Lyman Sayen, Maurice Sterne, and Charles Demuth. Third: To one unfamiliar with primitive design and with the recent trend of abstractionism, several pictures will appear as little more than bands of ragged colour or sharp flashes of spectral light. Works of this order present arbitrary combinations of geometrical units, and when successful have the value of pure decoration. Strict symmetry of the flat surfaces is neither desired nor at- tempted; the direction of the lines is determined by the artistic impulse, which, in some instances, is recklessly manifested. As new architectural forms are evolved this art will take its place in the modern world in much the same fashion as the arabesque in the buildings of past ages. John Covert, E. E. Cummings, Edward Nagle, and Carl Newman are good examples. Fourth: The influence of Cubism is apparent but not engross- ing. The reduction of natural objects to their nearest geometrical equivalent offers advantages for plastic design, but in imitative hands it results in a complicated pattern that is highly disturbing. Form is disintegrated rather than composed, and a certain sem- blance of unity is attained by the strange scaffolding, and by the 676 THE AWAKENING OF THE ACADEMY translation of natural tone-values into terms of colour. Textures have been drawn into some of the pictures, textures amazingly executed, but of no aesthetic importance. This art is spirited and exciting, but structurally it is often fragmentary and lacking deci- sion. It is represented by Paul Burlin, A. S. Baylinson, Carl Kahler, Man Ray, Morton L. Schamburg, Charles Sheeler, Joseph Stella, and Max Weber. Fifth: The dissatisfaction with sterile transcripts of nature has given rise to a new symbolism, an art allied with Futurism when it deals with the figure, and with Expressionism when it be- comes abstract. Both manifestations were seen at the Pennsyl- vania Academy. These pictures engage to present states of the soul, to put into graphic form indefinable emotions, to stir the sensibilities of the observer into response by means of arresting emblems portrayed in brilliant colour and free line. A language of this kind is not always articulate; it leads to a curious personal- ization that is foreign to the psychic states of the audience, and its message is lost. To appreciate its real meaning an actual ac- quaintance with the artist is almost necessary. Beautiful pat- terns have sprung from this art, patterns which seem to grow spontaneously like crystals. In this group are Homer Boss, Arthur B. Davies, Arthur G. Dove, Georgia O'Keefe, A. Wal- kowitz, Marguerite Zorach, and William Zorach. Sixth: The undying stimulus of Classicism is evident in sev- eral canvasses. Here art is created by tectonic methods; the design is severe, and though in most instances limited to a single figure, it testifies to careful study of the masters of the High Re- naissance in Italy. Works of this tendency are connected with modernism by two processes: first, by the notation of lines and planes of structure in terms of colour, as exemplified in the water- colours of Cézanne; and second, by an elaboration of the ordered Impressionism of Renoir. Colour is made predominant; it is ap- plied purely and with little tonal value; so far as it is possible line is abolished and the form established by definite areas of colour, each chosen according to its relative intensity, and bounded by line after it has taken its position in space. An art opposed to objec- tivity and destined to a rich future. The principal exhibitors were S. MacDonald Wright and William Yarrow. Seventh: Another phase of classical composition comes into prominence—the selection of objective and dispersed facts of ex- THOMAS JEWELL CRAVEN 677 perience, and their incorporation as units of structure into a complex and limited form where all the parts tend to sequential relationship. Such an art can hardly be called modern; it appears in the culmi- nating periods of the whole history of the expressive life of man, and is symptomatic of the everlasting human need of finding kin- ship and meaning in the details of the external world. In this exhibition, like the colour-art just mentioned, it derives liberally from the Renaissance, but it contains no perceptible traces of Cézanne and Renoir. Thomas H. Benton is a characteristic expo- nent. As a composer, Gaston Lachaise might be included here, but his drawings by no means measure his sculptural gifts, and his work shows oriental and modern French influences rather than Italian. The last tendency is difficult to catalogue. There are etchings analogous to Hogarth. It were a waste of time to say these prints are not modern: they may be caustic, satiric, documentary, but all the same, they are artistic and will remain as records of American life. There are water-colours depicting actual scenes in which the characters are recognizably drawn. These, too, are beautiful; and yet they are purposely descriptive—their beauty relates to Dau- mier. And there are pictures where design and the new means are employed in humorous situations—legitimate and successful efforts. Works of this order were shown by Louis Bouché, Horace Brodsky, Marius De Zayas, Alfred J. Frueh, Wood Gaylor, Walt Kuhn, Jules Pascin, and John Sloan. In putting forward these divisions only a general classification is intended. One is conscious of the overlapping of tendencies, and it is doubtful if a single canvas may be fitted unreservedly into a given category. Art, like life, becomes positive only when it is narrow and puritanical; and one of the most encouraging features of the show was its breadth. These pictures speak unanimously when they say that art is not the reflex of actuality; that it must create a reality peculiar to itself to bear the stamp of meaning and the signature of beauty; they speak triumphantly against pedantry and studio formulae; they transport us into a world of freedom where preferences large or small, emotional or ideational, true or fanciful, may have their expression. Is there anything American in the exhibition? Is it merely a repetition of foreign experiment? A comparison with the French Masters temporarily hung in the Brooklyn Museum will help to 678 THE AWAKENING OF THE ACADEMY answer these questions. The same tendencies were obvious in both collections, a condition to be expected in a world becoming daily more closely knit, where social and intellectual problems in the larger sense are identical, and where the commerce of ideas goes on continually. Nor can we overlook the fact that France is the home of the whole modern movement. In casting about for differ- ences it is readily seen that our own painting is less assured; that it is harder, more conscious, and marked by a heavier volitional force; while the European work flowers easily from a well-cultivated soil. The Brooklyn exhibition represented men of undeniable maturity, men who have, as we say, arrived, and have taken their place in history; in Philadelphia there were comparatively few who have really found themselves, who have full command over their powers. All things considered, we can detect in our younger painters a spirit which points to a stiff determination, a sort of will to grow, whether the ground be good or bad, a distinctly un-European quality. This originates from the want of a cultural background: in America art is compelled to live on itself, and the pompous dis- play of the dead with its returns in money has usurped the col- lector's appreciation of living talent. The artist dwells in spirit- ual loneliness, and on those rare occasions when he comes into contact with society his mood is inhibitive and one of combat. He does not dare to be expansive and friendly. The mental habits reflecting his inheritances and his environment direct the form of his pictures—he struggles for existence; he is hard, wilful, pas- sionate, practical—and native to some soil. Many of the can- vasses at Philadelphia were too imitative of the French to count for very much; on the other hand, the larger number would stand out in any foreign gallery as American productions. It is hardly necessary to add that the modern painters have de- served official recognition. Their work has justified their claims; and the Pennsylvania Academy, by giving them annual representa- tion, could do art an immense service. It would mean that New York would fall into line, and Boston, and the schools throughout America. The life of art does not, of course, rest with the academies; but every exhibition increases the audience and en- courages appreciation. In this manner the public would more quickly learn of the value of the new men; and the dealer, whose interest in pictures is largely commercial, would be forced either to change his policy or to go out of business. DEX Courtesy of the Milch Galleries CAI tran zatimo BY LUCY PERKINS RIPLEY ZN PT en her ze of The a + DAWN. hand a 114 Ons 021225 htu ' anual up د / ان audienes Bic mais امور میں مع vefonn'un + 1 1 "***** TWO POEMS BY JOHN DOS PASSOS JARDIN DES TUILERIES (To A. K. McC.) This is a garden where through the russet mist of clustered trees and strewn November leaves, they crunch with vainglorious heels of ancient vermilion the dry dead of spent summer's greens and stalk with mincing sceptic steps and sound of snuffboxes snapping to the capping of an epigram, in fuffy attar-scented wigs the exquisite Augustans. ON POETIC COMPOSITION There was a king in China. He sat in a garden under a moon of gold while a black slave scratched his back with a backscratcher of emerald. Before him beyond the tulipbed where the tulips were stiff goblets of fiery wine stood the poets in a row. One sang One sang of the intricate patterns of snowflakes. of the hennatipped breasts of girls dancing and of yellow limbs rubbed with attar. One sang of the red bows of Tartar horsemen and the whine of arrows, and bloodclots on new spearshafts. 680 TWO POEMS Others sang of wine and dragons coiled in purple bowls, and one, in a droning voice recited the maxims of Lao T'se. 1 (Far off at the walls of the city a groaning of drums and a clank of massed spearmen. Gongs in the temples.) The king sat under a moon of gold while a black slave scratched his back with a backscratcher of emerald. The long gold nails of his left hand twined about a red tulip blotched with black, a tulip shaped like a dragon's mouth or the flames bellying about a pagoda of sandalwood. The long gold nails of his right hand were held together at the tips in an attitude of discernment: to award the tulip to the poet of the poets that stood in a row. (Gongs in the temples. Men with hairy arms climbing on the walls of the city. They have red bows slung on their backs, their hands grip new spearshafts.) The guard of the tomb of the king's great grandfather stood with two swords under the moon of gold. With one sword he very carefully slit the base of his large belly and inserted the other and fell upon it and sprawled beside the king's footstool; his blood sprinkled the tulips and the poets in a row. (The gongs are quiet in the temples. Men with hairy arms JARDIN DES TUILERIES 681 scatter with taut bows through the city. There is blood on new spearshafts.) The long gold nails of the king's right hand were held together at the tips in an attitude of discernment: the geometric glitter of snowflakes, the pointed breasts of yellow girls crimson with henna, the swirl of river-eddies about a barge where men sit drinking, the eternal dragon of magnificence Beyond the tulipbed stood the poets in a row. The garden full of spearshafts and shouting and the whine of arrows and the red bows of Tartars and trampling of the sharp hoofs of warhorses. Under the golden moon the men with hairy arms struck off the heads of the tulips in the tulipbed and of the poets in a row. The king lifted the hand that held the flaming dragonflower: To him of the snowflakes, he said. On a new white spearshaft the men with hairy arms spitted the king and the black slave who scratched his back with a backscratcher of emerald. There was a king in China. DUBLIN LETTER May, 1921 WHA > a HAT are we to say of the Silence of the Gods in Ireland —that is to say, of those Irish writers who have attained their intellectual thrones and sit thereon through these dark days in unhelpful aloofness? Even that most garrulous of gods, Mr Bernard Shaw, is rather silent now about Ireland: his pam- phlet on Home Rule was perhaps the only completely futile shaft ever sped from that far-darting hand. A.E., indeed, intervenes from time to time with solemn adjurations and vaticinations; yet his philosophy of a “national being,” according to which the pres- ent population of Ireland is conceived of as an organic unity ac- tuated from within by a creative impulse communicated to it by divine beings in the dawn of history, is difficult to apply to a situation in which the centre of gravity of the modern Irish nation is the very point to be determined. Meanwhile, "nescio quid majus nascitur,” A.E. is, I hear, engaged upon a work which may well be his magnum opus. He imagines an episode in a revo- lutionary movement of the future, when a fortuitous company of idealistic reformers, awaiting execution together, abandon all reserve in a last discussion of their conflicting ideals, imperialist, socialist, individualist, anarchist, et cetera. My own experience of political idealists inclines me to suspect that they are as much in need of clearing up their ideas as ordinary people, and I wish it were possible for them on some less tragic occasion to determine amongst themselves precisely what each of them is driving at. Mr W. B. Yeats refers directly but guardedly to contemporary happenings in his new volume of verse published by the Cuala Press. In several of these poems, his detachment from the pas- sions of the popular movement originated by Pearse and Con- nolly is avowed, and is instructive when we consider it in connec- tion with his propensity to ruminate over his own ancestry, which appears to have numbered various picturesque and powerful in- dividuals of the Anglo-Irish stock. If only the sentiment of 1 Ten of these poems appeared in The Dial for November, 1920. JOHN EGLINTON 683 these ruminations could be expanded into a true race-sentiment, Mr Yeats might be explicitly and professedly the poet of the Anglo-Irish, who are in need of some poetic justification of their existence. In a very beautiful poem, A Prayer for my Daughter, he expresses an aspiration for the maintenance by a child of his race of the sanctities of ceremony and custom in a world given over to the blatancy of opinion and passion. The pleasure derived from Mr Yeats' recent verse lies in its frequent surprise of curi- ously felicitous yet often whimsically selected phrase. Somewhat similarly Wordsworth, in his later period, when the lyric affilatus had departed from him and his “ear had become morbidly sensi- tive to the clashing of consonants," devoted endless toil to short " poems, poor enough sometimes in thought, but in which the mar- vellous clarity of the language has never perhaps been sufficiently admired. But Mr Yeats' expression is uncertain. His meaning is un- certain. What proves it is that he is never satisfied with his expression. In every edition of his poems there are alterations- . themselves with no air of finality—and if his poems ran through twenty editions the first version of one of his poems might hardly recognize the last. And yet Mr Yeats' striving after the “in- evitable phrase” is apparent. Is the moral perhaps that a poet ” should not entertain too many ideas? A A poet of a very different kind from Mr Yeats, Thomas Campbell—a man, one would say, of few and rather stereotyped ideas—wrote a very fine ballad on the Battle of the Baltic, in which he appears to have said exactly what he wanted to say: yet the first version, a long poem with only a hint here and there of the final form, appears now no better than a canvas screen thrown up while the latter was preparing. The most Epicurean of the gods is Mr George Moore. His book of Héloïse and Abélard is a precinct of aloof quietude. It is not merely that no sound from the distracted world mounts to mar its calm, but its tiltings and tramplings, its vicissitudes of scene and circumstance, all blend into one another and break off as in a dream-world where nothing strikes the ear. The book is one long series of visualizations—tapestry, as one critic has aptly called it. But the heroic patience of the whole undertaking! Its amazing evenness of tone! The pervasive witchery of the language! The author remembers beautifully that Nominalism 684 DUBLIN LETTER } and Realism, architecture, minstrelsy, et cetera, are not the whole of the twelfth century, and his book is most like the Middle Ages, perhaps, in its wealth of animal life. But has Mr Moore done what he set out to do, has he told the story of Héloïse and Abélard? It is easy to understand how a story-writer may be attracted by some episode or period of the past, and before he is aware be drawn into that pitfall of so many great reputations, the histori- cal novel. Why is the adventure so hazardous? Is it not because the conception of the story has occurred once for all in the popular consciousness, or by some miracle of fortuitous happenings in history itself, so that the organic growth and shaping of the story can never really happen over again in the mind of the artist? The story no longer follows the inevitable development of a story which has sprung up in his own mind, and he becomes liable to the inquiry how far his reading and powers of divination have admitted him into the manners and mentality of a bygone age. A writer may be visited with an intuition as to what really hap- pened at the dawn of the Christian era, or during the Crusades, and this may serve as an original conception; but in retelling one of the world's love-stories like that of Héloïse and Abélard, his chance of success must depend on his power of conceiving the story as no one else has conceived it. Mr Moore appears to have been interested chiefly in imagining how it may actually have occurred. There are writers who have brooded so long over some period that they actually understand life better in terms of the manners and ideals of that period. Nay, it is true of most men that they are not fully contemporaries: some atavism of the eighteen cen- tury, of the sixteenth, or it may be of some far earlier system of things, persists in the psychology of most of us, and supplies a medium through which a distorted image reaches us of contempo- rary reality. Mr Moore belongs temperamentally to an age more comfortable and less crude than the age which he has delineated: like Théophile Gautier, he is "a man for whom the sensible world exists,” and he has imported certain comforts and tastes from a maturer world into his delineation of the twelfth century, as well as a Voltairean detachment from its controversial issues, which nevertheless he has been at considerable pains to master. A sym- pathetic interpreter of that century would feel the full impact JOHN EGLINTON 685 upon his own mind of the problem which indicated its centrality by throwing men into the angry factions of Nominalists and Real- ists; similarly he would endeavour to realize what Pope calls the "struggle of grace and nature" in the soul of Héloïse. The fact that Héloïse and Abélard passed the years after their union apart from one another constitutes the main difficulty in telling their story in such a manner that one lover shall be presented as fully as the other, and seems to render it inevitable that the story should be told, as it actually however imperfectly was, in their letters. As Pope makes Héloïse say: “Heaven first taught letters for some wretch's aid, Some banished lover or some captive maid; They live, they speak, they breathe what love inspires, Warm from the soul and faithful to its fires." John EGLINTON LONDON LETTER May, 1921 THE PHOENIX SOCIETY In my last letter I mentioned an approaching performance by the Phoenix Society of Ben Jonson's Volpone; the performance proved to be the most important theatrical event of the year in London. The play was superbly carried out; the performance gave evidence of Jonson's consummate skill in stage technique, proceeding with- out a moment of tedium from end to end; it was well acted and both acted and received with great appreciation. Almost the only opportunity for seeing a good play is that given by a few private societies, which by reason of their "private” character are allowed to give performances (for subscribers) on Sunday evenings. These are not commercial enterprises, but de- pend upon the enthusiasm of a few patrons and the devotion of a few actors, most of whom have other engagements during the week. The Phoenix, which restricts itself to Elizabethan and Restoration drama, is an off-shoot of the Incorporated Stage Society, which pro- duces modern and contemporary plays of the better sort—the better sort usually being translations. At the beginning of its ven- ture, last year, the Phoenix was obliged to suffer a good deal of abuse in the daily press, especially from the Daily News and the Star. These two journals are, to my mind, the least objectionabl of the London newspapers in their political views, but their Man- chester-School politics gives a strong aroma of the Ebenezer Tem- perance Association to their views on art. The bloodiness of Elizabethan tragedy, and the practice of the Society in presenting the complete text of the plays, were the points of attack. The Daily News reviewed the performance of The Duchess of Malfi under the heading, Funnier than Farce! Mr William Archer mumbled “this farrago of horrors . . . shambling and ill-composed · funereal affectation . . . I am far from calling the Duchess of Malfi garbage, but . Still droller was a certain Sir Leo Money: “I agree with Mr Robert Lynd that 'there are perhaps, a dozen Elizabethan plays apart from Shakespeare's that are as great as his third-best work, but I should not include the Duchess of . T. S. ELIOT 687 Malf' in the dozen. . . . I did not see the Phoenix production, but .. I hope that some fumigation took place.” Sir Leo writes frequently about the Tariff, the income tax, and kindred topics. For my part, I am more and more convinced that the Phoenix is wholly justified in its refusal to admit any expurgation whatever. The sense of relief, in hearing the indecencies of Elizabethan and Restoration drama, leaves one a better and a stronger man. I do not suggest that Jonson is comparable to Shakespeare. But we do not know Shakespeare; we only know Sir J. Forbes- Robertson's Hamlet, and Irving's Shylock, and so on. The per- formance of Volpone had a significance for us which no con- temporary performance of Shakespeare has had; it brought the great English drama to life as no contemporary performance of Shakespeare has done. Shakespeare (that is to say, such of his plays as are produced at all) strained through the nineteenth cen- tury, has been dwarfed to the dimensions of a part for Sir Johnston Forbes-Robertson, Sir Frank Benson, or other histrionic nonentities: Shakespeare is the avenue to knighthood. But the continued popu- larity of Shakespeare perhaps has this meaning, that the appetite for poetic drama, and for a peculiarly English comedy or farce, has never disappeared; and that a native popular drama, if it existed, would be nearer to Shakespeare than to Ibsen or Chekhov. It is curious that the popular desire for Shakespeare, and for the operas of Gilbert and Sullivan, should be insatiable, although no attempt is ever made to create anything similar; and that on the other hand the crudest American laughter-and-tears plays, such as Romance or Peg o' My Heart, should be constantly imported. Curious, again, that with so much comic talent in England—more than any other country-no intelligent attempt has been made to use it to ad- vantage in good comic opera or revue. Music-HALL AND REVUE This is an age of transition between the music-hall and the revue. The music-hall is older, more popular, and is sanctified by the ad- miration of the Nineties. It has flourished most vigorously in the North; many of its most famous stars are of Lancashire origin. (Marie Lloyd, if I am not mistaken, has a bit of a Manchester ac- cent.) Lancashire wit is mordant, ferocious, and personal; the a 688 THE LONDON LETTER a Lancashire music-hall is excessively intime; success depends upon the relation established by a comedian of strong personality with an audience quick to respond with approval or contempt. The fierce talent of Nellie Wallace (who also has a Lancashire accent) holds the most boisterous music-hall in complete subjection. Little Tich, and George Robey (though the latter has adapted himself in recent years to some inferior revues) belong to this type and generation. The Lancashire comedian is at his best when unsupported and making a direct set, pitting himself, against a suitable audience; he is seen to best advantage at the smaller and more turbulent halls. As the smaller provincial or suburban hall disappears, supplanted by the more lucrative Cinema, this type of comedian disappears with it. The music-hall comedian, however, can still be seen to perfection, whereas the revue comedian never is, because the revue is never good enough. Our best revue comedienne, Miss Ethel Levey, has seldom had the revue, and never the appreciation, that she deserves. Her type is quite different from that of Marie Lloyd or Nellie Wallace. She is the most aloof and impersonal of personalities; indifferent, rather than contemptuous, towards the audience; her appearance and movement are of an extremely modern type of beauty. Hers is not broad farce, but a fascinating inhuman grotes- querie; she plays for herself rather than for the audience. Her art requires a setting which in this country at least) it has never had. It is not a comedy of mirth. An element of bizarrerie is present in most of the comedians whom we should designate as of the revue stage rather than the music-hall stage: in Lupino Lane, in Robert Hale and George Graves; a bizarrerie more mature, perhaps more cosmopolitan, than that of Little Tich. But the revue itself is still lacking. a CARICATURE Baudelaire, in his essay on le Rire (qui vaut bien celui de Berg- son) remarks of English caricature “Pour trouver du comique féroce et très-féroce, il faut passer la Manche et visiter les royaumes brumeux du spleen ... le signe distinctif de ce genre de comique était la violence." 1 T. S. ELIOT 689 Perhaps the best of the English caricaturists of journalism is H. M. Bateman. He has lately held a very interesting exhibition at the Leicester Galleries. It is curious to remark that some of his drawings descend to the pure and insignificant funniness without seriousness which appeals to the readers of Punch; while others continue the best tradition from Rowlandson and Cruikshank. They have some of the old English ferocity. Bateman is, I im- agine, unconscious of the two distinct strains in his work; Mr Wynd- ham Lewis, in his exhibition now on show at the same gallery, is wholly conscious and deliberate in his attempt to restore this pecu- liarly English caricature and to unite it with serious work in paint. Mr Lewis is the most English of English painters, a student of Hogarth and Rowlandson; his fantastic imagination produces something essentially different from anything across the Channel. I have always thought his design at its greatest when it approached the border of satire and caricature; and his Tyros may be expected to breed a most interesting and energetic race. The State Of CRITICISM The disappearance of the Athenaeum as an independent organ, and its gradual suffocation under the ponderous mass of the Nation, are greatly to be deplored. It leaves the Times Literary Supple- ment and the London Mercury as the only literary papers. The former is a useful bibliographer; it fills, and always will fill, an important place of its own. This place it can only hold by main- taining the anonymity of its contributions; but this anonymity, and the large number of its contributors, prevent it from upholding any definite standard of criticism. Nevertheless it possesses more authority than the Mercury, which is homogeneous enough, but suf- fers from the mediocrity of the minds most consistently employed upon it. Mr Murry, as editor of the Athenaeum, was genuinely studious to maintain a serious criticism. With his particular tastes, as well as with his general statements, I find myself frequently at variance: the former seem to me often perverse or exaggerated, the latter tainted by some unintelligible Platonism. But there is no doubt that he had much higher standards and greater ambitions for literary journalism than any other editor in London. When he is not deceived by some aberration of enthusiasm or dislike, and when 690 THE LONDON LETTER he is not deluded by philosophy, he is the only one of the accredited critics whom I can read at all. There is Mr Clutton-Brock, whose attention is not focussed upon literature but upon a very mild type of philosophic humanitarian religion; he is like a very intelligent archdeacon. There is Mr Robert Lynd, who has successfully culti- vated the typical vices of daily journalism and has risen to the top of his profession; and there is Mr Squire, whose solemn trifling fascinates multitudes; and there are several writers, like Mr Ed- mund Gosse and Sir Sidney Colvin, whom I have never read and so cannot judge. I cannot find, after this muster, that there is any ground for the rumour current in the chatty paragraphs of the newsprint several months ago, that the younger generation has decided to revive criti- , cism. There has been a brisk business in centenaries. Keats and Marvell have just been celebrated in this way. The former has been particularly fortunate. All the approved critics, each in a different paper, blew a blast of glory enough to lay Keats' ghost , for twenty years. I have never read such unanimous rubbish, and yet Keats was a poet. Possibly, after the chatty columns of the newsprint have ceased to cheer the “revival” of criticism, they will get a tip to lament its decay. Yet the “revival” of criticism as a “form” is not the essential thing; if we are intelligent enough, and really interested in the arts, both criticism and "creation” will in some form flourish. lary The True CHURCH AND THE NINETEEN CHURCHES While the poetry lovers have been subscribing to purchase for the nation the Keats house in Hampstead as a museum, the Church of England has apparently persisted in its design to sell for demoli- tion nineteen religious edifices in the City of London. Probably few American visitors, and certainly few natives, ever inspect these disconsolate fanes; but they give to the business quarter of Lon- don a beauty which its hideous banks and commercial houses have not quite defaced. Some are by Christopher Wren himself, others by his school; the least precious redeems some vulgar street, like the plain little church of All Hallows at the end of London Wall. Some, like St Michael Paternoster Royal, are of great beauty. As the prosperity of London has increased, the City Churches have T. S. ELIOT 691 fallen into desuetude; for their destruction the lack of congrega- tion is the ecclesiastical excuse, and the need of money the ecclesi- astical reason. The fact that the erection of these churches was apparently paid for out of a public coal tax and their decoration probably by the parishioners, does not seem to invalidate the right of the True Church to bring them to the ground. To one who, like the present writer, passes his days in this City of London (quand'io sentii chiavar l'uscio di sotto) the loss of these towers, to meet the eye down a grimy lane, and of these empty naves, to receive the solitary visitor at noon from the dust and tumult of Lombard Street, will be irreparable and unforgotten. A small pamphlet issued for the London County Council (Proposed Demolition of Nineteen City Churches: P. S. King & Son, Ltd., 2-4 Gt. Smith Street, West- minster, S.W.1, 3s.6d. net) should be enough to persuade of what I have said. T. S. ELIOT BOOK REVIEWS A METROPOLITAN HERMIT Poems. By Stewart Mitchell. 12mo. 85 pages. Duffield and Company. New York. I N all artists, there is a tendency towards hermitry and a desire for justification from those who know what beauty is. The man has a disgust for humanity; the artist expresses himself in symbols which only humanity can read. In Mr Mitchell's work, a self-evolved independence as a result of this conflict we feel very much. We are conscious of hauteur, yet a contempt for the occasions to hauteur—for the tyranny, panic, and fetishism of urban life: the passion in these poems is real and the coldness is real: there is sensuous beauty and a desire to replace susceptibility to it with something more fundamental. It is not always possible to tell whether a man or a woman is designated in certain of the poems and this is as it should be; in so far as a poem is a work of art, one does not wish to know, and must not know too definitely, the facts which underlie the expression. Mr Mitchell feels the aesthetic value of courage, but he also has courage. He makes no concessions; he forces nothing on one and although the very quality which makes the craftsman cautious and technically competent, hampers expression, in Mr Mitchell's poems thought and feeling triumph over formality and while a radical might object to the method, one is always sure that the underlying thought has justified the writing. There is honesty and depth in these poems; there seems to be extant in this author a power of self-expression which is not self-conscious—which is devoid of that blatantly self- analytical aggressiveness which is characteristic of certain modern contortionists. In the descriptive detail, note the actuality in Autumn: "Webs of grey mist, a glitter of black wings, life circled with fire," and in From a Garden: “the purple well of night walled with the elms like shadows of vast fountains.” The sea is treated with great dis- a MARIANNE MOORE 693 tinction, both allusively and directly. We have in Ego, “Out of contending light and darkness, springs the tempest on the sea” and in Sea Side, reversing the stereotyped order of comparison, Mr Mitchell says: “The waters tremble where the grey wind sets His blue lips to the body of the sea, Cloud over as your face, now it forgets Some vague pledge common between such as we- Startled to hear my tedious regrets That you it was who were the death of me." One's taste in verse forms varies as one's taste in gems varies. It may vary with the occasion but it is essentially a matter of tem- perament. For a poet not to know this is to throw away his power of attack. For Mr Mitchell to be erratic or showy would be to forfeit distinction. There is something very pleasing about the arrangement of the words in the following line: “Till life shall be as love may please” and in Mr Mitchell's work throughout, the faceted correctness of the verse structure gives pleasure. There are in it, various best things—Ego, Sea Side, Lucretius, A Theorist, Astarte, Helen, and, especially in Ipswich Dunes, the sea is brought before us in all its calm, savage finality: "If ever we could love them who are sped, Out of the world with swift and trackless feet, I should have known your England from my bed, In fields of poppies sown through deep, green wheat • . Stretched on these dunes—white sand, sweet-smelling bay, I think I taste the draught of your disdain- Only what you have told of Beauty, we, Who love you best, remember-turn away From idle fancy, and your age-old vain Unprofitable comradeship with pain, On wings of light, wings that desire the sea.” MARIANNE MOORE A VICTORIAN HOME Our Family Affairs. By E. F. Benson. 8vo. 336 pages. George H. Doran Company. New York. MONG the admirers of Edward White Benson, former Arch- A of , a Church of England owed its existence in unimpaired unity, amid storms of heresy and ritualism, to his executive wisdom and ad- ministrative zeal. Though this view is exaggerated, it does a certain justice to his ardent championship of the institution to which he gave in full his extraordinary ability and energy. Amid his ecclesi- astical triumphs the archbishop was disappointed in his sons. Martin, the eldest and most promising, died while a school-boy. Arthur became no more than a master of Eton and a graceful essayist. Only the youngest, Hugh, took orders, and he later fell away to the Church of Rome. It would have been to His Grace a startling revelation of the ways of Providence could he have fore- seen that from the least ecclesiastically minded of the four-from the graceless author of Dodo-would proceed this most winning and convincing apology for the Church of England. It is a part of the irony of human nature that the sermons, speeches, and letters of the archbishop, his life of Saint Cyprian, and his judgement of the Bishop of Lincoln, should be outweighed in service to the church by this unpretending record of the affairs of his family. The paradox, however, is characteristic of the Church of England. The great quality of the institution, by virtue of which it is truly national, is that it has made religion a part of civilization. The church has piled up volumes of theology and records of saints and martyrs; it has organized education, charity, and worship; it has built schools, colleges, cathedrals, and lately monasteries and settle- ments. More important than any of these things are its homes. In the seventeenth century men like Jeremy Taylor and George Herbert gave to the Anglican faith its special domestic character. Since then the effect of this culture can be traced in its offspring, especially in the children of churchmen—in Addison, in Coleridge, in Tennyson, and in whole families, the Wilberforces, the Arnolds, ROBERT MORSS LOVETT 695 and the Bensons. Granting all that Martin Mar-Prelate and John Milton have urged against Prelatical Episcopacy it cannot be denied that to the institution is due a certain strain of moral beauty-a beauty of holiness—that grew in homes consecrated by a “pure religion breathing household laws." The church furnished the support and background for the utterly charming existence which Mr Benson records. He knew his stately father first as Headmaster of Wellington College, where he and his brothers and sisters looked remotely on at the life of a great public school. Then the rising churchman became Chancellor of Lincoln, and in the Chancery house within the cathedral close the children established their museum, and in the garden they played "siege” about a mediaeval tower, and in the cathedral itself Edward fell in love with a choir-boy and used to pray night and morning, “O God, let me enter into Lincoln Cathedral choir, and abide there in happiness evermore with Thee.” Next, came the Bishopric of Truro, and "the enchantment of Cornwall instantly began to weave its spell.” The primitive museum expanded into elaborate collec- tions of flowers, birds' eggs, butterflies, and water life. "Siege” was replaced by "pirate." A joint literary effort known as the ' Saturday Magazine made its appearance. And finally the Bishop of Truro became Primate of all England, and the young Bensons had Lambeth Palace and Addington to play in. It has been held by some broad- minded persons a sufficient excuse for the presidency of Roosevelt that his family enjoyed the White House so much. A similar extenuating circumstance might have been urged by Queen Victoria had her conscience demanded any apology for the elevation of the archbishop. Life at Lambeth was rather formal and stately, but "it was a pompous pleasure to see the traffic stopped at Hyde Park Corner, so that we might ride past saluting policemen through the arch. . After all, if you happened to be riding with your father, for whose passage in those days all traffic was stayed, you might as well enjoy it.” At Addington the riding was a different sort. “Away went the cavalcade at a violent gallop up the long slope of turf in front of the house with ‘Braemar' in the shape of a comma, and 'Quentin' playing the piano in the air with his forelegs, and ‘Ajax' kicking up behind, and 'Peggy' going sideways, just because 696 A VICTORIAN HOME my father had mounted first and smacked 'Columba' over the rump while the rest of us were betwixt and between the gravel and the saddle. There were hurdles stuck up on the slope, and 'Braemar,' shrilly squealing, bucked over the first, and 'Ajax' ran out, and ‘Peggy' trod solemnly on the top of one, and 'Quentin’ still hopping on his hind legs refused and was whacked, and my father went pounding on ahead as we rocketed after him.” In the Christmas holidays they made a toboggan-run "which soon became unmitigated ice," and played golf in the snow and mist. . “The Saturday Magazine made frequent appearances. . . . Be- tween whiles Arthur composed voluntaries to be played on the organ of the chapel at prayers, Nellie studied the violin, Hugh produced a marionette theatre, and wrote a highly original play for it, called The Sandy Desert; or Where is the Archbishop? and Maggie made oil pictures of her family of Persian cats.” You may say that this is the life of any healthy young English family of the upper class, but you will be wrong. The church gave not only the material support but the peculiar distinction of this life, the ecclesiastical principle being here as recognizable as else- where the feudal; and religion gave to it its flavour and charm as definitely as chivalry might have done. It was a part of young Benson's "circumstances” that his father "wore black cloth gaiters, an apron, and a hat with strings at the side.” He feared, on first going to school, that it would be a handicap, but he was relieved when on his father's visit at his confirmation the whole school was given a special holiday at the request of His Grace. “He had just asked for it, so it appeared, and in honour of his visit, it was granted. 'Can't you be confirmed again?' was the gratifying com- ment of friends. 'I say, do be confirmed again.'” And through the busy days at Truro or Addington wound a thread of ritual marked by prayer and music. The children grew deadly tired of this devo- tion, just as little pages must have wearied of watching by their arms. “The Day of Rest in fact became a day of pitiless fatigue.” But the reaction took such wholesome and humorous forms that the original restraint is almost justified by it. Mr Benson gives us an entrancing picture of himself reading from The a ROBERT MORSS LOVETT 697 Lives of the Saints to his somnolent family underneath the trees at Addington on a Sunday afternoon, "Hugh with swoony eyes, laden with sleep, Nellie and Maggie primly and decorously listen- ing, their eyelids closed, like Miss Matty's because they listened better so, and my father, for whom and by whom this treat was arranged, with head thrown back and mouth nakedly open.' And when after giving them a bit of St Catherine and a bit about another Saint, and a bit of the general introduction, and the end of St Francis he closed the book it was to hear His Grace exclaim “Wonderful!" An entirely beautiful picture, edifying even in its gentle hypocrisy. If any one doubts the value of the religious back- ground in English family life, let him turn to Margot Asquith's account of the Tennants ! Mrs Benson connived at mitigating the rigours of devotion. When His Grace was away she was quite capable of saying "We won't have prayers tonight for a treat." She was not ecclesiastical, and yet she could not possibly have achieved her exquisite com- pleteness anywhere but in the archbishop's palace. She belonged to the Lambeth of Victoria as utterly as Lucrezia to the Vatican of the Borgias. She furnished the healthy vivacity, the humorous relief, in the family life. “Did ever any other mother," asks Mr Benson, “at the age of forty run so violently in playing at that stren- uous game called, “Three knights-a-riding that she broke a sinew in her leg? Mine did.” And the account of her feminine passion for the concrete against the abstract devotion of her husband is bet- ter characterization than Dodo. “Just as she cared not two straws for the Pan-Anglican Confer- ence, yet delighted in the human members of it, so, when standing in front of the west façade of, say Rheims Cathedral, or looking across from the Riffel Alp to the Matterhorn, her real attention would not be devoted to these silent sublimities, but much rather to a cat blinking in the sun, or a sparrow building in the eaves. ... I doubt if she ever looked with eagerness or wonder at the Matter- horn, except on the day when she knew that one of her sons was near the summit in the early morning.” It is entirely characteristic that a large part of Our Family Affairs should be concerned with school. One of the happiest 698 A VICTORIAN HOME aspects of Mr Benson's book is its perfect illustration of the way in which English family life leads into school life, and remains interwoven with it. And here again the influence of the church on a most important part of the nation's culture, the education of youth, is easily apparent. As young Levites, the Benson boys were eligible to scholarships in various great public schools. Eton was their natural destination, and there Arthur and Hugh entered and won distinction. Edward was unsuccessful in various competi- tions, and forced to content himself with Marlborough where, however, he made himself perfectly at home. Not since Tom Brown have we had so winning an account of an English boy's school-days. The shy master, Beesly, who for his pupils made the Greeks “the supreme interpreters of humanity,” and was a champion at rackets; the matches at cricket, rackets, and football; The Marl- burian; the "Penny Readings" with Haydn's Toy Symphony and recitations by Harry Irving, all these elements of school life are delightfully present. But the theme which Mr Benson touches most delicately and subtly is friendship—the friendship of boys. “That which above all gilded and glorified these delights, that which was the stem from which their green leaves drew nourish- ment, was friendship. All these were the foliage that was fed from that stem, though the sun and the clear windy air and the rain fortified and refreshed them and swelled the buds that expanded into flowers. For what man is there, surrounded though he be with the love of wife and children, who does not retain a memory of the romantic affection of boys for each other? Having felt it, he could scarcely have forgotten it, and if he never felt it, he missed one of the most golden of the prizes of youth, unrecaptur- able in mature life.” Here is the English school-boy's version of Newman's theme, The Parting of Friends. “ 'It's been ripping anyhow,' he said. “Did two fellows ever have such a good time?' “Quite suddenly at that, when the passing-bell should have been loudest, it ceased altogether. The whole of my dismal maunder- ings about days that were dead and years that were past, I knew ROBERT MORSS LOVETT 699 < to be utterly mistaken. Nothing that was worth having was dead or past at all: it was all here now, and all mine, a possession eternally alive. “ 'But did they?' he repeated, as I did not answer. “ Never, nor will. And there's chapel-bell. Get up.' ' "He stood up and picked the grass seeds from his clothes. “ 'Psalms this morning,' he said telegraphically. “ 'I know. “Brethren and companions' sake.” sake.” Didn't think you had noticed.' “ Rather. Good old Psalm.' “I took up the cricket-bag, and he pulled at it to carry it. A handle came off. "'Ass,' said I. “ 'Well, it was three quarters off already,' said he. 'Come on; we shall be late. You can leave it at the porter's lodge.' ''Oh, may I, really? Thanks awfully,' said I. Sarc,' said he.” There are two races which have made boyhood and young man- hood a perfect thing of wonder and delight, the Greeks and the English. With both, the magic elements are reverence and friend- ship, the fear of the gods and the love of man. How much of this simple human beauty was due to the presence of an established religion so traditional as to be taken for granted, so beautiful in its forms and worship as to be compelling, so intimate as to enter into the daily routine, can be seen in Mr Benson's book. Doubt- less the author of Our Family Affairs and of Dodo would describe himself as eminently a secular person, a man of the world. Yet, as it were in spite of himself, he has given in his best and truest writing an apology for the ecclesiastical system from which he made it his earnest preoccupation to escape, a defence of the Church of agland—and, let it be added, a strong argument against the celibacy of the clergy. Robert Morss Lovett THESE THINGS ARE BANAL . . BREAKERS AND GRANITE. By John Gould Fletcher. 12mo. 163 pages. The Macmillan Company. New York. Punch: The IMMORTAL LIAR. By Conrad Aiken. 12mo. 80 pages. Alfred A. Knopf. New York. IT T is easy to be dogmatic about Conrad Aiken or John Gould Fletcher, but in their case dogmatism carries one nowhere. The very obviousness of their defects and their virtues makes it danger- ous to render a final judgement of the sort that should go ringing down the halls of a questionable eternity. One could say safely, “Fletcher is ecstatic but muddy.” One could say, "Aiken is a great musician who can work only in one key.” In such limited judgements one would be reasonably safe. But whether Fletcher's muddiness or his ecstasy, and whether Aiken's melody or his mo notony will be remembered, it would be impossible to say. Mean- while they offer definite qualities to imitate and to avoid. And there is the assurance that they are willing to learn by their own mistakes—and by each other's. The weakness of Breakers and Granite is even more apparent , than is usual with Fletcher. He has attempted the extravagant task of writing a book about America. In a hundred and sixty pages of verse he tries to delineate the spiritual geography of a territory whose area you may find by consulting the World Al- manac, and to bottle the fine essence of a hundred million lives. Naturally most of the essence escapes; the book resolves itself into a sort of Cook's Tour of the United States, in which he sweeps across prairies and mesas, ricochets from bank to bank down the Mississippi, and sketches Chicago and Manhattan briefly as if from an aeroplane. In this case he is a poet led astray by the desire for infinity. This is a criticism of the general plan of the volume; it does not apply to the individual poems. Here his virtues are just as obvious; when he pauses in his headlong course to paint a par- MALCOLM COWLEY 701 ticular landscape he can be thoroughly satisfying. There is no muddy rapture, for example, about his Mississippi River poems; instead there is a detailed ecstasy and immediacy. His poem on the Canyon of the Colorado is grandiose, but here the subject re- quires a certain grandiosity: “I have seen that which is mysterious, Aloof, divided, silent; Something not of this earth.” The adjectives are not new, but they are arranged exactly as they should be; he has said the only thing possible about the Canyon. The defects of Aiken's last book are as obvious as Fletcher's. He is another victim of the nostalgia of the infinite, only in his case the infinities are temporal rather than spatial. He has walled himself about in a barren circle of love and death. When he has stripped life arbitrarily to these essentials, it becomes as monoto- nous as a prison, and there is no escape for him except by projecting his troubles indefinitely through time. That is why the Punch of the present volume is called The Immortal Liar instead of being treated as an untruthful individual. That is why Punch rushes through the centuries to bargain with Mephistopheles and to sit on the lap of the Queen of Sheba. There is a certain monotony of effect about the volume, but the monotony lies in Aiken's attitude toward his subject and not in his technique. The melody of his verse is apparent as never before. Partly it is apparent because he has returned to more regular verse, with a skill acquired during his divagations among free forms. He has mastered the art of first establishing a pattern and then varying from it. Punch, in the alehouse, speaks in bawdy couplets. Punch reflects in blank verse. And when Punch falls to cosmic boasting, the metre is altered grandiloquently: a "This heart that beats here,—underneath my hand, All of the clocks in the world keep time with it! Even the stars in the sky, the sun and planets, Measure their time by me! I am the centre!" In this passage one notices again the preoccupation with time. 702 THESE THINGS ARE BANAL . I made the distinction of infinity and eternity between Fletcher and Aiken; although it may seem a little arbitrary, it holds through- out their respective volumes with amazing consistency. With re- gard to form, the genesis of their work is even more different. Whereas Fletcher thinks naturally in free verse, or rather in that sort of free verse where the line unit is a single breath, Aiken, on the other hand, is most at ease in iambic pentameters; the heroic line is the norm towards which and away from which he varies. Aiken uses rhyme naturally. Fletcher avoids it, and when he does rhyme, one can usually detect the influence of Aiken. For these two poets, in many ways so different, at one time reacted strongly on each other. During a winter not so far distant (I do not remember the exact year) they lived in neighbouring garrets on Beacon Hill. There was a great deal of visiting back and forth, and, necessarily, a certain interchange of ideas. One poem of Aiken's, written about that time, shows his debt to Fletcher especially; even the title of The White Nocturne is reminiscent of the latter's colour symphonies. Meanwhile Fletcher was playing the borrower as well as the lender. It was in his White Symphony that he wrote: “In midnight, in mournful moonlight By paths I could not trace I walked in the white garden, Each flower had a white face. Their perfume intoxicated me; thus I began my dream.” The most familiar elements of Aiken's magic are here: the garden, the moonlight, the perfume, the dream. In a stanza from The Empty House (included in a volume which Fletcher published in London two or three years later) the relationship of the two poets is even more apparent: "Was this a dream-house? Or was I the dream? Wind and dancing sunlight gave no answer. I only knew that I was abandoned, Betrayed by these back-shrinking walls.” MALCOLM COWLEY 703 There are any number of lines in Senlin and in The Jig of Forslin which recall these. At the moment I can only quote as prototype: - "Has Senlin become a forest? Do we walk in Senlin? Is Senlin the wood we walk in, ourselves,—the world? Senlin! we cry .. Senlin! again . No answer, Only soft broken echoes backward hurled.” . a This quoting of parallel passages could be extended indefinitely —and vainly. If one chanced to exhaust the relationship between Fletcher and Aiken, one could turn to that between Fletcher and Amy Lowell—sometimes much more obvious. Or one could use the parallelisms between Aiken and T. S. Eliot, like a writer in a recent Dial. And at the end very little would be accomplished. For one would have proved only that poets learn from their con- temporaries as well as from their predecessors—a fact which one -a could have verified more easily from readings in Shakespeare and Marlowe, or from a study of Dorothy Wordsworth's Diary. And yet it is a fact which the more romantic members of the present generation (in other words, the majority) are striving vigorously to forget. Behind Miss Deutsch's attack on Conrad Aiken there lay an idea of a totally different sort: namely, that poems may spring, fully adorned, from the forehead of any casual Jove. Put in another way, it is the idea of the poet as a modern St Simeon Stylites, who, standing aloof on a pillar, draws master- pieces from the wells of the Inner Consciousness. The whole question of authorship and originality has been ridicu- lously over-emphasized during the last century. The results are upon us in an epidemic of bad grammar and bad workmanship, and, curiously enough, in a great deal of unconscious plagiarism. Far better if the imitation be conscious. The poet is a workman to whom a certain task has been set, and it is no dishonour if he calls on his fellows to aid him. Or he might be compared more specifically to a builder at work on the unfinished edifice of litera- ture. He contributes an arch or a nave or the portion of a wall, and passes on; the important question is not his identity but whether he has done his work well. The workman who succeeds him builds further upon what has already been constructed, as La- 704 . THESE THINGS ARE BANAL . forgue built on Baudelaire and as T. S. Eliot has built on Laforgue. There are periods of general demolition—and they are very neces- sary—in which the false work of several generations is torn down, but never is one forced to begin again on new foundations. For to be completely original, one would have to invent a language of one's own; even the idiom in which we work is a sort of crystallized poetry. ... These things are banal, but they are irritatingly true. Aiken and Fletcher recognize their truth; that is why these bor- rowings back and forth are significant. In a generation so proud of its independence that it gets nowhere, they have been content, for a little while, to work together towards a common aim. A certain amount of shoddy workmanship must be debited to each of them, but they accomplish something; their aim and their achievement is part of the mind of the race. MALCOLM COWLEY THE NEW PSYCHOLOGY HUMAN TRAITS AND THEIR SOCIAL SIGNIFICANCE. By Irwin Edman. 12mo. 467 pages. Houghton Mifflin Company. Boston. The PsyCHOLOGY OF PERSUASION. By William MacPherson. 12 mo. 256 pages. E. P. Dutton and Company. New York. The BEHAVIOR OF Crowds. By Everett Dean Mar- tin. 8vo. 312 pages. Harper and Brothers. New York. The Psychology of Social RECONSTRUCTION. By G. T. W. Patrick. 12 mo. 273 pages. Houghton Mifflin Company. Boston. The New Psychology. By A. G. Tansley. 8vo. . 283 pages. Dodd, Mead and Company. New York. Our Social HERITAGE. By Graham Wallas. 8vo. 307 pages. Yale University Press. New Haven. of to TH HE new psychology is really a departure-new in content, for an understanding of human nature and the laws underlying its effective adjustment to the world. Nowhere has this new con- tent been more succinctly indicated that in Mr Tansley's defini- tional paragraphs: “The New Psychology looks upon the human mind as a highly evolved organism, intimately adapted, as regards its most funda- mental traits, to the needs of its possessor, built up and elaborated during a long course of evolution in constant relation to those needs, but often showing the most striking want of adaptation and ad- justment to the rapidly developed and rapidly changing demands of modern civilized life. Its most fundamental activities are non- 706 THE NEW PSYCHOLOGY rational and largely unconscious activities. The power of conscious reasoning is a later development, playing but a minor part, even in the most highly developed human being, on the surface, so to speak, of the firmly built edifice of instincts, emotions, and desires, which form the main structure of the mental organism. In many cases the apparent importance of rational activity is seen to be illusory, forming as it were a mere cloak for the action of deep-seated in- stincts and desires. “The New Psychology obtains its material from the whole field of mental life, normal and abnormal, from external observation and from introspection, from the study of behaviour and conduct, from art, literature and practical life, from mythology and history, from the habits and customs of primitive peoples, and from those of the most advanced civilizations. Already great strides have been made towards a self-consistent and illuminating interpretation of the human mind, and the field of future investigation seems illimi- table.. - Each of the books here under review evidences the changed emphasis of contemporary psychology. Whether it be Professor Edman making a lucid statement as to the characteristic elements of the human equipment and of the typical social interactions which it evokes, or Professor Wallas concerned to see how those psychic factors in our civilization which are not matters of physical inheri- tance are to be transmitted from one generation to the next, the interest is fundamentally the same; it is to get a picture of the scope, strength, and weakness of the human mind under the stresses and strains of civilized life. Psychology has become to a sur- prising degree, and almost against its will, but because of its ap- preciation of the forces which make mental life possible, a social science concerned with the actual and possible effects of mind upon mind. Even the psychology of mental measurement although con- cerned with individual status measures from a base which is usually socially derived and the result is in terms of a comparison of the individual's attainments with those of some hypothetical "normal" or "average” person. Not less truly is the method of these studies similar-based largely on accumulated bodies of such fact data as observation of behaviour, biography, current events (although one could hardly say a ORDWAY TEAD 707 that the laboratory methods of a consistent behaviourist like Wat- son are applicable to the type of crowd study made by Mr Martin). This similarity of method means that the element of interpretation and personal bias is a factor to be reckoned with and scientific success is determined by the degree of disinterestedness in the choice and use of illustrative matter. It does not necessarily mean, however, that the closer a writer will cling to tested laboratory con- clusions, the sounder his findings will be; admittedly the labora- tory method of controlled experiment is available for comparatively little of the more active and elaborate human behaviour which we seek to understand. But it does mean that the closer the author will stick to accepted psychological findings or to statements which can be reinforced by quantitative measurement, the less assailable is his work likely to be. Thus Edman and Tansley fare better, scientifically speaking, than Patrick. Again, in result these widely different volumes come to much the same thing. They supply a general picture of our human nature which despite differences in vocabulary is fundamentally similar in each volume. The characterization which the above-quoted paragraph from Mr Tansley provides is typical, although Wallas, Edman, and Patrick would probably argue a much greater actual influence of intelligence in life than Tansley suggests. The com- mon recognition given to the influence of events which are forgot- ten, but in some way still powerful in conduct, and to impulses which the individual has attempted to suppress, shows the wide in- fluence of the Freudians in respect to their significant contribution. Indeed the recent books of W. H. R. Rivers of Cambridge and Pro- fessor Hollingworth of Columbia agree in finding another than the sex basis for the “neurosis," and thus while accepting the idea of functional neurosis they find a wider causation than simply sex re- pressions. Which means that from one angle or another a needed corrective is being given to psychoanalytical psychology which promises to bring its unique results into harmony with the central body of accepted psychological scholarship and terminology. Cer- tainly, as Tansley shows, a reading of any considerable number of the volumes in this school brings an appreciation of the fact that if the medical writers of the Freudian group had been familiar with "straight psychology,” they would have been less at pains to build up an independent nomenclature, thus compounding confusion in a 708 THE NEW PSYCHOLOGY any discussion which is honestly seeking to recognize the kernel of new truth which they are bringing. Of special interest is the concern which is manifested in several of these books—notably those of Edman, Martin, Patrick, and Wallas—as to the future of civilization. Whether or not man can control the industrial enterprise he has built up, whether he can get his mind around the idea of world co-operation sufficiently to act wisely on world issues, whether he can provide education so that the will to co-operate and the data for intelligent co-operation will keep pace with the necessity for co-operation—these are ques- tions to which the reflective student is led when once he knows what frail higher mammals we are. The very asking of them seems to me a salutary thing. We are, as a civilization, coming out of a period of warfare of unprecedented magnitude where the co-operative ef- fort called into play was likewise on an unprecedented scale. The machinery of “persuasion,” of propaganda, of crowd influence was developed and used with a precision heretofore unthought of. Inter-allied administrative agencies operated successfully on a scale formerly impossible. The forces of destruction invented and made manifest were hideous; the forces of constructive human power, of moral devotion and fortitude displayed were grand. Prophecy con- cerning reconstruction after an era of such deep-seated contradic- tions is of little avail. But if civilization is becoming too heavy to carry itself, we shall at least be warned; we shall see human nature for what it is and we shall continue to overtax it at our peril. It is because the new psychology can without becoming senti- mental or too conjectural consider these problems of social control, “heritage,” and “reconstruction,” that we have a right to be cautiously hopeful about it. The attitude of "conscious experi- mentalism” for which Dewey has argued is taken more or less de- liberately by all of the writers here under review and we get an appreciation at once of values and purposes in social life which the past has tested to a point which warrants our serious consideration of them while at the same time a basis is laid for their revaluation in our increasing knowledge of the functional limits of our natures. A word as to the individual merits of these books may suggest their relative usefulness. Professor Edman has, I believe, pre- sented the clearest, most direct and authoritative statement thus far made of the consensus of present psychological scholarship re- a ORDWAY TEAD 709 garding the human equipment and its typical behaviour. Written for freshmen at Columbia it has an appeal and value for a wide non-academic audience. Mr MacPherson's book about "persuasion” is suggestive of some of the uses of a psychological technique in affecting changes of in- dividual opinion. In a new field where tremendously important aids to social integration are to be looked for, he has really only hinted at the possibilities and he has failed to take adequate account of the most recent American experience on the subject. Mr Martin has attempted to establish a connection between the characteristics of crowd behaviour and the repression mechanism of the Freudians. While calling attention to some of our gravest problems of social adjustment, he does not seem to me by his an- alogy to contribute especially to a deeper insight into those prob- lems. The book is more valuable as analysis than synthesis. Professor Patrick is mindful for the future of our country and civilization. He inclines to the view that we are "going to the dogs"-with drink, dancing, dames, and disintegration of moral standards undermining our life. His criticism of modern notions of "self realization” are in point and his insistence on the uses of "applied science” sound; but as a whole the book seems to me to be more moralistic than rigorously scientific. To Mr Tansley must go credit for accomplishing successfully a difficult task. He has taken his McDougall, his Trotter, and his Freudians, mixed them with shrewd insight and common sense, and produced a generalized view of human nature which is a distinctly synthetic and incisive contribution. It deserves unqualified com. mendation. Mr Wallas in his most recent study carries on the implications of his earlier work. He is concerned for the ability of the mind so to master its heritage of necessary ideas that it can effectively play its rôle in modern life. He puts a fundamental problem with great artistry—indeed one feels at times that a classic literary excellence has been achieved at the sacrifice of sharpness and brevity of argu- ment. To me the chapter summaries at the beginning of the book seem more effective scientific writing than the actual text. But the book repays reading, even if the admiring student of Mr Wallas' contribution to modern thought feels, as I did, that his earlier work was more significant. ORDWAY TEAD SOME ENGLISH CRITICS LIFE AND LETTERS. By J. C. Squire. 12mo. 320 pages. George H. Doran and Company. New York. REPUTATIONS. By Douglas Goldring. 12mo. 232 pages. Thomas Seltzer. New York. The Art of LETTERS. By Robert Lynd. 8vo. 240 pages. Charles Scribner's Sons. New York. THE EVOLUTION OF AN INTELLECTUAL. 8vo. 227 pages. ASPECTS OF LITERATURE. 8vo. 204 pages. By John Middleton Murry. Alfred A. Knopf. New York. T HE books noted above are all collections of critical essays and book reviews by English writers and taken in lump they are impressive. They encourage us to believe that in England a great many books are reviewed by literary critics, and Mr Lynd speaks of "an immense public which reads book-reviews,” and says that "many thousands of readers have acquired the habit of reading criticism of current literature.” Yet Mr T. S. Eliot is of the opinion that Coleridge was in a sense the last of England's critics; an icy voice alluded to by Mr Murry announces that "there is reviewing, but no criticism," and Mr Murry himself reproaches the London Mercury for leaving us still a little in the dark con- cerning those standards of authoritative criticism which it proposed to restore. Private information (from one who has not recov- ered from the war and therefore asks that the source of his authori- ty be kept secret) leads us to believe that criticism there is a feud as well as an art. There is said to be a Daily News gang and there was an Athenaeum gang and, such is the potency of format, a London Mercury group. These, with daggers, complete the an- alogy to our own position and although I get more satisfaction from reading the work of Mr Eliot and of Mr Murry than I get from any contemporary critic publishing regularly in America, I am per- suaded that art and letters are very much in the same predicament a SGANARELLE 711 there as here. The predicament is their odd and variable relation to criticism. There appears to be an opinion widely held that it is a good thing for a large number of people to read a large number of books; perversely enough this is associated with the phrase, the greatest good of the greatest number, and is amusingly called utilitarianism. Those who hold this opinion think highly of the reviewer and are never quite sure what the critic is driving at. And they would, I sup- pose, urge Mr Squire to remain always Solomon Eagle. Although the present collection appeared under Mr Squire's proper name it contains even less of criticism than the two volumes of Books in General. The New Statesman was the first source; Land and Water published the present lot; there is no reason why The Out- look should not afford a third. Mr Squire makes everything about books agreeable; one encounters here a genial spirit who cannot re- sist anything between covers and is competent to talk about his weekly liaisons with literature. In the course of his causerie Mr Squire shows himself sensible always, reasonable, and with some sound prejudices. When he says something which ought to be said, you are grateful because you know that Mr Squire's readers are aware of his pontifical position elsewhere and will probably give him heed. Mr Squire's books, until he begins to publish his criti- cal work, will lead men to letters, and leave them there with no particularly acute appreciation of them. As for himself, it is futile to attempt judgement, since these books, being written without power, show no limitations. . Mr Lynd and Mr Goldring, whatever their politics may be, do much less for the purely numerical grandeur of letters. They both want good books to be intelligently read. Mr Goldring is impatient of certain manufactured reputations and is equally im- patient with the slow process by which good work imposes itself upon the reading community. He is appreciative and serious, but all sorts of extraneous matter creeps into his essays so that they fall as short of clear thinking as of pure literature. Mr Lynd is much more the professional critic and reviewer; at least part of his criticism is his apology for his reviews. A review, he believes, should be a portrait of a book, or better still, a portrait of an author. He is therefore indifferent to those reviewers who spend their time attacking the Hall Caines and Corellis and Garvices for not being Conrads and Anatole Frances and Hardys. He might 712 SOME ENGLISH CRITICS make his point more certain by noting that these are the very critics who usually acclaim the next cut above the mediocre and are really dangerous because they convince people that the nearly good are good enough. Criticism is a different thing: “True criticism is a search for beauty and truth and an announce- ment of them. It does not care twopence whether the method of their revelation is new or old, academic or futuristic. It only asks that the revelation shall be genuine. It is concerned with form because beauty and truth demand perfect expression. But it is a mere heresy in aesthetics to say that perfect expression is the whole of art that matters. It is the spirit that breaks through the form that is the main interest of criticism.” Mr Lynd's book is written in that spirit, with occasional diversions by way of reviewing. It is clearly written and enter- taining; Mr Lynd is not afraid of quoting, and he quotes with discrimination; in writing of Wilde he has a pretty turn, saying, for example: "He was addicted rather than devoted to language.” There is no passion for letters; there is very little passion of any kind in the book. But he writes with admiration of admirable books and people; his portraits of Walpole and Shelley are exceed- ingly attractive. He likes the sensation of being just. There is passion enough in the books of Mr Middleton Murry. Although he is a reviewer of books, with him we pass almost alto- gether out of the range of the reader. The direction of his criticism is towards the creator, the artist. The title of one of his books confesses him an intellectual and whatever concerns literature in that book is secondary, for it is Mr Murry's morality and his philosophy which are important there. It is about the war and expresses very well the evolution of despair and the grim re- crudescence of courage which were the history of many intellectu- als. But as far as criticism of literature goes it gives instances enough of what Mr Eliot calls? "the pernicious effect of emotion.” The pernicious effect of ideas Mr Murry would probably accept as a tribute to his later work. I have said that he is interested in the artist; he is deeply interested in the ideas of the artist and he seems to be trying to ennoble literature by giving it good ideas. 1 In the Sacred Wood (Knopf). Reviewed in The Dial for March. SGANARELLE 713 I am aware that the words are odd, but it would be much the same thing if one said high ideals, and neither should suggest that Mr Murry is a prig or a preacher. He says that “the pith and marrow of Aristotle's literary criticism is a system of moral values derived from his contemplation of life.” Moral values Mr Murry cares for, and the reason he cares for art is because “there is no other power than our aesthetic intuition by which we can imagine or conceive it [an ideal of the good life); we can express it only in aesthetic terms." And criticism is valuable because it is the har- monious control of art by art.” Or, about Chekhov: “There is in him less admixture of preoccupations that are not purely aesthetic, and probably for this reason he has less creative vigour than any other artist of equal rank.” It seems to me that at an earlier stage Mr Murry might have suggested that if Chekhov had had Tolstoi's ideal of humanity, he would have been a greater artist; critics are continually suggesting that sort of thing and Mr Murry's intellectual honesty shows in his refusal to reduce Chekhov in rank. But the quality of his mind and his idea of criticism are as implicit in that one judgement as they are explicit in the other sentences I have quoted from him. Compare this with some of Mr Eliot's requirements for the critic: “ a creative interest, a focus upon the immediate future. The important critic is the per- son who is absorbed in the present problems of art, and who wishes to bring the forces of the past to bear upon the solution of these problems.” Perhaps it is unnecessary to emphasize words in this It is not even necessary to choose between Mr Murry and Mr Eliot; but it is important to understand that if Mr Murry is going to serve letters by bringing illumination to the artist, Mr Eliot will serve letters no less by bringing light to the critic. . statement. SGANARELLE BRIEFER MENTION 1 A CASE IN CAMERA, by Oliver Onions (12mo, 320 pages; Macmillan) is a well conceived and very well written story which escapes the classification of "mystery" by several miles, yet is probably better than any mystery story of the year because of Mr Onions' endless skill with his characters, his complete mastery of his method, his abundant humour, because, in short, he is a competent novelist who has chosen to twist a theme he has used before-justifiable homicide-to the uses of a psychological puzzle. Credible human beings, doing things for obscure, credible reasons, are rare in any kind of fiction; they are a godsend in stories of entertainment. Mr Onions has knocked the dummy detective story utterly cold. 1 PEOPLE, by Pierre Hamp (12mo, 206 pages ; Harcourt, Brace & Company) brings to American readers a proletarian De Maupassant. The author, rich in experience, identifies himself with short and extremely realistic sketches of women of the streets, scullions, carpenters, clerks, all those types of the submerged strugglers of Paris. For the most part objective, the reader will note at times a profound irony behind the writer's work. There are moments when the intense social consciousness of Maxim Gorki manifests itself so strongly as to suggest a deliberate discipleship on Pierre Hamp's part. The Old Man's YOUTH AND THE YOUNG Man's Old Age, by William De Morgan (12mo, 528 pages; Holt) left unfinished at the author's death, is satisfactorily rounded out by Mrs De Morgan's interpolated chapters, and secures a place beside his other novels-shrewd, leisurely, sprightly, and minutely detailed. A curious blend of the Victorian and the modern in spirit, and deriving an added interest from the fact that it is more or less autobiographical. Dust, by Mr and Mrs Haldeman-Julius (12mo, 251 pages; Brentano) makes no compromise with its theme-the drab, unhorizoned, soul- destroying existence of one who harvests, not to fill his bins, but to swell his coffers. As a picture of the drudgery of farm life on the Kansas plains, it is a substantial performance, free from affectation and skilful in char- acterization. The HEADLAND, by C. A. Dawson-Scott (12mo, 276 pages; Knopf) may be described as a “highstrung" novel. Its locale is the wild Cornish coast where the family of Pendragons have lived for hundreds of years. The major theme of the book is the degeneration of this family and the action at times rises to a horror that is emphasized through the nervous naturalistic style of the author. The head of the Pendragon family, an old man suf- fering from palsy, may almost be described as a Sadist because of the extreme pleasure he takes in the sufferings of others. The style of the author shows the influence of the later May Sinclair. BRIEFER MENTION 715 Pagan Fire, by Norval Richardson (12mo, 382 pages; Scribner) has back- ground and sophistication-attributes which lift it above the level of a mere story of political and romantic intrigue. Mr Richardson is at home with his material, and the result is a novel of decided interest, keenly written and shrewd in characterization. CHRISTMAS Roses, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick (12mo, 326 pages ; Houghton Mifflin) comprises stories of English life, neat as a clipped hedge, but somewhat thin and precious even in their most unconventional moments. In emotion, they are artificial, and in atmosphere, they give off the vitiated, unexhilarating air of a hothouse. The Best Short STORIES OF 1920, edited by Edward J. O'Brien (12mo, 500 pages; Small, Maynard) needs at this date no detailing of its merits. As the sixth volume of a series long since past the experimental period, it presents itself as a sane, stimulating, and judicious handbook, as varied and inclusive as one can humanly demand for a work of this kind. Its bestowal of the laurel is basically broad-minded; a catholic taste preserves a nice balance between purely aesthetic values and those of psychological and imaginative reality. A marked trend towards the elevation of content above form, of substance above the mere technique of a well-made tale, is perhaps the outstanding impression which one gleans from the present col- lection. The EMPEROR JONES, DIFF'RENT, THE STRAW; by Eugene O'Neill (12mo, 285 pages ; Boni & Liveright). Two of these plays have been presented this year with a success to substantiate considerably Mr O'Neill's reputa- tion, and The Straw, we hear, is to appear next season. Just how much this play concerning the love of two consumptives will beguile the public remains to be seen. Only from reading it we prefer those plays of fishing smacks and the Caribbean Sea to this one of a sanatorium, with all its sputum cups. Certainly in this book The Emperor Jones is distinctly the most important, the best reading, in spite of its essentially pictorial char- acter. But we miss in them all that living talk of the earlier one-act plays. Ships in Harbour, by David Morton (12mo, 101 pages; Putnam) presents its author as a sonneteer of facile grace but rather tenuous thought. There are approximately ninety poems in the book of which all but a meager dozen are shaped in the Shakespearean sonnet form. There is nothing casier to do badly than this particular form and it is surprising to note how well Mr Morton lifts his efforts above mediocrity. It is still more surprising to note that after the volume is completely read the reader does not carry one sonnet away in his memory. ENGLISH MADRIGAL VERSE, 1588-1632, edited by E. H. Fellowes (12mo, 640 pages; Oxford University Press) is a collection, buttressed formidably with notes, of madrigals, canzonets, and ayres. The minor lyricists of the Elizabethan and Jacobean period have suffered the fate of being discussed a great deal and very little read; in fact Mr Fellowes' volume is the first complete reprint of their work as it appears in the old songbooks. 716 BRIEFER MENTION THE MARRIAGE Feast, by Marie Tudor Garland (12mo, 145 pages; Put- nam) is so natural and genuine an expression of life that the author seems at times a very mouthpiece of the earth. With no trace of mannerism, with scarcely any thought for form, Mrs Garland has written of love, mother- hood, dreams, and disillusionment, taking the world as she finds it and with a keen passion for living. The poems are often musical and always vivid, but there is some disparity between the beauty of the thought and the sometimes monotonous form of the verse. The rhythms are too often stroked the wrong way. This is not the conscious casting off of form to concentrate on the image. It is expression too eager for its vehicle, full- hearted, intent on understanding. AN ANTHOLOGY OF RECENT POETRY, compiled by L. D. O. Walters (12mo, 113 pages; Dodd, Mead) does not profess to include the best of recent verse; rather it represents the taste of one man. Mr Walters stresses the innocuous side of Georgian poetry; his selections deal with dogs and donkeys and trees and babies. As a result his anthology resembles noth- ing quite so much as A Child's Garden of Verse. . Harold Monro contributes an introduction in words of one syllable. The same book, with illustrations, has been published by Brentano's and serves a different pur- pose most agreeably. The WRITER's Art, compiled by Rollo Walter Brown (12mo, 357 pages; Harvard University Press) is a text-book on literary craftsmanship dif- fering in this important respect from most pedagogic pamphlets—it is writ- ten entirely by men who themselves know how to write. Comprising the opinions of two generations of authors, and including such diverse names as Diderot, Buffon, Copleston, Hazlitt, Stevenson, Spencer, Thackeray, Schopenhauer, Maupassant, De Quincey, Emerson, Lewes, Poe, Conrad, James, Quiller-Couch, and Norris, the book is a collaborative treatise on nearly every problem of the pen. It will of course inform no one how to become a genius. Indeed, it probably will not cure even one fool of his folly, for the simple reason that none but the elect are likely to peruse it. MAYFAIR TO Moscow, by Clare Sheridan (illus., 12mo, 239 pages; Boni & Liveright) is a journal which reflects the feminine graces by its intuition, and the artistic graces by its vivacity. Here are Russian impressions caught by observation and verified in plaster, together with much anecdote and just enough sophisticated gossip to give it flavour. When Winston Churchill said to her: “Clare! You have the most enviable position in the world-you are a woman, you are an artist, you are free and you have children"-Mrs Sheridan did not dissent, and so the capitulation of Bol- shevik dictators became but a question of time. An English Wife in Berlin, by Evelyn, Princess Blücher (8vo, 336 pages; Dutton) is a simple and affecting book, sharing little of the sensational quality of other war diaries, making a revelation or two of importance, but revealing, far more significantly, a spirit sensitive to the madness which it was more poignantly than most able to experience and to understand. The title of the book and the parentage of the writer indicate the setting. BRIEFER MENTION 717 LETTERS FROM CHINA AND JAPAN, by John Dewey and Alice Chipman Dewey (12mo, 311 pages; Dutton) have an informal charm which oblit- erates the family tie and initiates the casual reader into the delights of their chatty intimacy. The descriptive bits are gay and humorous, and the comment and observation have a background of sanity and scholarship sadly lacking in the factory run of travel books for American consumption. The SEA AND THE JUNGLE, by H. M. Tomlinson (8vo, 354 pages; Dutton) enjoyed a succès d'estime many years ago and is republished so that more readers may learn to know Mr Tomlinson's great narrative gifts—this record of a sea voyage is full of enchanting stories—and his for the most part unpretentious style in descriptions of the unknown reaches of the Amazon. It is more interesting than most novels, probably because the author was willing to expose himself to a hundred experiences and to a thousand sensations without falsifying a single one in his port. A Last Diary, by W. N. P. Barbellion, with a preface by Arthur J. Cum- mings (12mo, 148 pages; Doran) completes The Journal of a Dis- appointed Man. It has the humour and the shamelessness which Bruce Cummings hoped reviewers would find in that earlier work of his; little essays on politics and on literature; but chiefly the daily entries of a supe- rior being in torture. It is full of courage and justifies the quotation on its title-page, “We are in the power of no calamity while Death is in our own.' THE MEMOIRS OF Count WITTE, translated from the original Russian manu- script and edited by Abraham Yarmolinsky (8vo, 445 pages; Doubleday, Page). These leisurely reminiscences of "Russia's great liberal statesman' have neither the psychological curiosity of a Retz nor the iridescent on-dits of the incomparable Saint-Simon. This circumstance, however, does not detract from the high value of the book as indubitable source material for the history of the reigns of the last two autocrats of all the Russias. It is remarkable for the variety and interest of the experience so unpretentiously presented. Although a stickler for the divine right, Witte does not spare anointed personalities, which accounts for the Czar's attempts to seize the manuscript. While the book does not permit us to discover how large the editor's contribution has been, the work has been patiently and judiciously done. FRENCH CIVILIZATION, by Albert Léon Guérard (12mo, 328 pages; Hough- ton Mifflin). This volume, the companion to M Guérard's French Civil- ization in the Nineteenth Century, is concerned only with the past tense of culture. From the Eolithic age down through mere antiquity and the Middle Ages, the vitality of French culture is kept before us, the details which illustrate it being unerringly selected to reveal the continuity and the breadth of the process. It is a delightful book with much of the charm of Froissart in its manner and the erudition of Guizot in its matter. Clear, compact, and vigorous, its brief space is crammed full without loss of human colour or keen ironic comment on the immaturities of old institutions and ideals. ! MODERN ART THE 1 HE failure of the Pittsburgh exhibition to be international this year provides food for thought. An unusually generous sum was set aside by Mr Carnegie for the furtherance of this annual art gala, but apparently after all he did not set enough aside to entice foreigners to lend us their thoughts. A sketch of a soldier by Augustus John and casual canvasses by Sir John Lavery, George W. Lambert, and Laura Knight—and somehow one feels that the mighty British Empire has not cared to say it to us in pictures. France, which almost owes its life as a nation to its leadership in the arts, sends us works by Charles Cottet, Lucien Simon, and René X. Prinet, who are all able enough in their several ways, but scarcely exhilarating in the role of leaders. We behold, in consequence, America having a singularly easy time in a competition with rivals who used to be formidable, carry- ing off all the money prizes and commanding such interest as there is. Ardent patriots, noting the fact, might jump too quickly to optimistic conclusions were it not for the hyphenated among us who insist that Europe still has the goods and could if it would show us up. In that case there's something in the situation that needs explaining, for Europe might as well be warned that we are only too eager to make the eagle scream the word "art" loud enough to ring around the world, and that there are some among us who at the first fancy that Europe may be too proud to fight would be even willing to take advantage of the technical situation created by the failure of the Carnegie Institute's exhibition to be international. It needs explaining upon two counts; first to us, for though not absolutely convinced that international exhibitions are desirable yet, since we have paid the money for one, we insist upon getting it; and secondly to Europe, for if Europe fondly hopes that the second class will still be good enough for America it is time she should be undeceived. The question, of course, brings in politics. How shall republics be protected against their politicians? How shall true art be encouraged, how shall we obtain officials who are more concerned HENRY MCBRIDE 719 in the advancement of genius than in the preferment of friends, and finally how shall a country put its best artistic foot foremost in a time of international comparisons? Some hold that a Secretary of Arts in the cabinet of the President would go a long way in solving the problem, but in this connection it is well to remember that the French have long had a Secretary of the Beaux Arts, and the French, of all people, need to ponder most over the above questions. By some miracle the British Government did ask its foremost men to take their paint boxes with them into the trenches, and by another miracle these Muirhead Bones and Major Sir William Orpens did memorable work there. For a modern government to discriminate intelligently among its artists is so rare that some held that this lone example must have been an accident. Governments, like the artists themselves, are entitled to all the credit that they can squeeze from their happy accidents, but this British instance having occurred, it would seem likely that a little study of it with the help of scientists—Christian or otherwise-might induce mira- cles to happen in other countries. The poor showing of France at Pittsburgh cannot be blamed upon the war. In 1914 the French exhibit was only less stupid than that of 1921 by a fraction, if at all. The affair is a matter of bigotry, narrow-mindedness, of wrong committees, and politics. During the war French artists were badly hit, as were artists every- where. Innumerable little societies were formed by Americans to assist the Frenchmen during this trying time (none that I heard of were formed to help our almost equally distressed Americans) and for all this Americans will continue to congratulate themselves that they were able to help a little. Constant little collections of ill-chosen French pictures were sent here by the usual hasty philan- thropists desirous of getting a ribbon or other decoration, and these were invariably treated as kindly by the critics as the charity of the affair, and the state of war, obliged. But the fact remains that all the works of art that have been sent us during the recent years through more or less official channels have been unworthy of the great reputation of the French. Now though as artists we are rivals of the French, and though we intend to snatch the world supremacy from them just as soon as we are able, we are after all friendly rivals, and it is as friends rather than rivals that we advise a 720 MODERN ART them to look after their politicians. Certain people here are begin- ning to think that nothing lively and interesting is claiming the attention of Parisian art circles, that the academic productions seen at Pittsburgh represent the summit of French achievement. If these do not (and of course they do not) then see to it, Monsieur le Ministre des Beaux-Arts, that the work of your genuine celebri- ties gets to us. There's millions in prestige, as you know. You have prestige. Why throw it away? a Two new sculptors were presented to the New York public recently, Arthur Lee and Alfeo Faggi, and a word or two in regard to each should go upon the record. Mr Lee's tall gods and goddesses in white plaster crowded one of the small rooms at Wildenstein's, reminding me of Rodin's Citizens of Calais in that they seemed to spring up all over the place, but not reminding me of the Citizens in any other way. Mr Lee's Gods seemed more familiar with soap and water than the haggard burghers and in fact it is clear they've had the best of possible bringings-up since infancy. Possibly they had a French nurse-French nurses are the best—and that explains the faint far-away resemblances to something in the work of Joseph Bernard and Maillol. But Mr Lee is a sculptor and a sculptors' sculptor. It will prob- ably be his fellow craftsmen in the end who will help him with clients. Not so with Mr Faggi. If success comes to him, and let us hope it comes quickly to both these sculptors, it will come to him in spite of his rival artists. Mr Faggi's work is the product of soul torture and the clay and the bronze are minor incidents. He evi- dently has terrific struggles with the unwilling materials, and though in practically each of the pieces shown in the Bourgeois Galleries there were passages of inspired modelling the thing as a whole seldom came off. The Eva, a tall, slim, primitive, and still innocent Eva, was his most complete performance, but there were not enough complete performances in the show to justify prophecies for the future. Mr Faggi's fellow sculptors, while admitting the fine modelling of the legs in the Pietà, or the undeniable dignity of the figure of the standing woman, or certain touches in the portraits, will be apt to rebel at the other touches that jump out of value, at HENRY MCBRIDE 721 the chaos of the groups, and the uncertainties of most of the bases. On the other hand, there is real feeling in the work, and a decided streak of mysticism. As there is much mysticism in the air these days, due doubtless to the fearful shaking up the world has had, there may be a popular response to Mr Faggi's effort. But it will be some time before he conquers sculptors. There's an immense amount that's consoling to artists in the life of Constantin Guys and the beautiful new edition of the story by Gustave Geffroy-Les Editions G. Crès et Cie.—will be found fortifying. Almost any artist in any garret could die happy were he persuaded that fine art must win eventually upon its merit and that it does seems to be the moral of Constantin Guys' history. Guys, himself, did all he could to shun fame. He had a passion for obscurity, and even when fate knocked at his door in the person of Charles Baudelaire he refused the poet permission to name him in the essay that was being consecrated to his work, and so, though the artist saw himself put down in immortal words, the public could only guess at the individuality of the man whom Baudelaire called Le Peintre de la Vie Moderne. Then Guys grew old, met with an accident, spent seven lonely years in hospital, died, and in spite of a famous chapter of eulogy by a famous writer, was forgot Guys produced his drawings of the coaches in the bois and the filles of the dance-halls in prodigious quantities and scattered them to the four winds prodigally. He sold the larger ones for a franc, , and others for fifteen and even ten cents. It is said that one could obtain packets of them. Such lightly appraised work naturally vanished speedily, but enough of it survived, when the sign changed, to give him his great modern fame. M Geffroy takes occasion to exclaim at the futility of criticism, seeing that Guys sank from the public sight in spite of the eloquence of Baudelaire. But Baudelaire was scarcely futile. His critique remains the supreme one upon the subject of Guys and when the careless public in its knockings-about from chains to liberty hap- pened upon a moment of revulsion from scholasticism it verified its instinct for an appreciation of Guys by Baudelaire. The book is exceedingly handsome, with excellent illustrations of the best drawings. HENRY MCBRIDE a MUSICAL CHRONICLE TWA WAS in the musical red-light district that the New York sea- son of Mr Stokowski finished. All-Tchaikowsky was the pro- gramme tastefully confectioned for the final concert of the Philadelphia Orchestra. Amid the spoiled humanity of the Sym- phonie Pathétique, the pousses-cafés of the Nutcracker Suite, the subnormalities of the 1812 Overture, the young conductor sported. , . But even his sporting, like almost everything else he had been doing on the platform during the last two years, was wanting in intensity. The red lights burnt feebly. Never before had as little compulsion lain in his gestures. The orchestra remained tight and shut, re- minded one at times of a violin of inferior make. The music of the self-pitiful Russ seemed thoroughly demoded, outworn, obso- lete, useless, and good only for the chamber of musical horrors. The audience, from its apathy, appeared to have gotten not a sensa- tion. No trumpet-blast had set fire playing about the nipples. No parabola of the woodwind had serpentined up the spinal cord. Usually, the Symphonie Pathétique rouses "hurrahs," no matter how flatly it is presented, makes the clappers utter noises and high and extended “Yea's” at the conclusion of each movement. Usually, nothing conducted by the gentleman from Philadelphia, unless perchance it be a concerto in someone else's style by Emanuel Moor, fails to please an audience, ready, as is his metropolitan, to be delighted. But, on this evening, despite the warmth of March, there was a notable frigidity in and about Carnegie Hall. The audience resembled nothing so much as a child who, but a moment before the proud owner of a ruby air-sailing balloon, suddenly hears a slight report above him, and finds falling earthward a shrivelled dusky film. One was surprised that what had commenced as brave- ly as had the New York career of Mr Stokowski should have de- veloped a thing as empty as this concert. That was all. Two years since, at the conclusion of the New York season of the Philadelphia Orchestra, the late James Huneker saw the young Polish-American conductor holding the Metropolitan or- chestral situation in his palm. Very few members of the concert- public did not at the time see eye to eye with the musicographer. Out of the prevalent fog, the Stransky mist, the Damrosch mist, the a PAUL ROSENFELD 723 town. Rabaud-Monteux mist, Mr Stokowski had risen like a young sun. The concerts given in 1916 and 1917 for the Society of the Friends of Music, the five matinées given in 1918, had, it was perceived, introduced a veritably musical personage to the starved A man was throwing himself into the instrumental sea, making its waves vibrate and surge and foam with beauty, re- leasing himself through the tones of the orchestra. The carpers who muttered “Prima-donna conductor,” and pointed disparag- ingly to the somewhat fatuous exhibition that was the performance of the Mahler Symphonie der Tausend, were good-humouredly dis- regarded by a public impressed with the significance of the ap- parition. For, if the man, in his years, was already as sensitive . and elastic and sensuous as Mr Stokowski showed himself to be, what might not be expected of him, so thoughts ran, as the passage of time matured and developed him, suppressed the self-consciousness, and approfondized his feeling? One had, indeed, but to look at him, especially during the moments when he forgot himself and Aubrey Beardsley, and moved unconstrainedly, to be assured of his latent mastery. The bodies of musicians, after all, quite as direct- ly as their performances, reveal how gifted they are; what external- izes itself in tone, is already evident previously in the co-ordination of the frame. You need not hear Mr Walter Damrosch for in- stance in order to know what manner of conductor he is. You have but to observe him cross the platform, watch his movements, to know the degree of his limitation as a leader. Nor was it neces- sary to hear Dr Muck to know the fineness and sobriety of his direction. The man looked good-natured as an archfiend of Hell; his visage betrayed a scarcely controlled desire to stick pins into the eyes of every one of his auditors; but his great musicianship was in his gait and manner. And Mr Stokowski, in his person, seemed to presage another epiphany of the good fire, another conductor of premier order. But it was only for a summer that the newcomer held, or seemed to be holding in his palm the metropolitan orchestral situation. Immediately his winter began, it was evident that he was letting it dribble rapidly through his fingers. With his auditorium entirely filled for the season, a parterre of dowagers and former borough presidents spread fanwise before his stand, a horseshoe of friendly bosoms attentive to his every mood, he gave shockingly little. Neither that year, nor the last, did Mr Stokowski make anything 724 MUSICAL CHRONICLE notable of the immense opportunity offered him by his success. At the veritable beginning of his race, he appears to have thought it opportune to rest on his oars. One could not believe that he was earnestly working, delving, sweating. For he was not creating. The sensuous quality of his art, of course, had not abated; when the energy was in him, he could still entrance with some voluptuous piece of music, Scheherazade, the Tannhauser Bacchanale, a Liszt Rhapsody, squeeze all the lingering sensuality out of Wagner and Rimsky. But the inwardness which it was necessary he develop to counterbalance his purely physical understanding, that put in its appearance neither last season nor this. When Mr Stokowski conducts the Pastorale Symphony at present, one knows that he never has understood what it is to go sick from the city, and feel the goodness of the countryside, the release of trees and fields and waters and the healing power of green and growing things. When . he conducts the Jupiter Symphony, one knows that he has never sensed the radiant life-affirmation of Mozart, never floated up on the ceiling amid clouds, never fled out into the universe through the singing planets. He turns the Fourth of Brahms to melodrama; he does not weep with the Ornstein Funeral March; he makes the brilliant dream-cavalcade that passes through the middle of Fêtes by Debussy sound dangerously in the style of Die Meistersinger. Moreover, his entire morale seems to have been relaxed. His pro- gramme-making, these last two years, has been tasteless and con- ventional. During the first of his series of evening concerts, the principal novelty presented was the incredible Bells of Rachman- inoff. Here, again, one sensed the conductor busy over the miser- able advertising-game of America. This winter, the New World Symphony of Dvorák, the c-major of Schubert, appeared on his programme. But of Haydn, Bruckner, the symphonies of the modern Frenchmen, there was never a sign. Tchaikowsky, how- ever, figured largely. The Five Orchestral Pieces of Schoenberg were promised among the novelties, but nothing new save the Italia of Casella, the poor stuff of Moor mentioned above, and the compo- sitions of Cyril Scott, conducted by their author, was played. There was a revival of Tod und Verklärung (a veritable mania among conductors for being transfigured and transfiguring others, ex- posed itself this season) and a performance of the amorphous Requiem of Brahms. But there was no grip in the season of Mr Stokowski, no enthusiasm, no faith, no redness and courage and PAUL ROSENFELD 725 energy. The series of his concerts was yellow, tired, courageless. At each performance, the conducting of the man seemed to grow more etiolated. An afternoon concert in January showed the old passion still there; showed that it would relume at will. But it did not relume. Still, one would not let go of him. One would not resign one- self to expecting nothing of him. The man was too musical a person not to compel one's faith even when he was doing everything to dispel it. A blessing was always about to come from him. And when it persisted in absenting itself, one was always ready to be- lieve that it was just around the corner, and poised for landing. It took some deed as raw, insolent, and impotent in conception, as impotent in execution as the final concert of the season just ended, to disillusion one, and set the toy balloon plunging earthward a wrinkled skin. At present, of course, one stands facing the com- ing season of the Philadelphia Orchestra no less convinced than before of the latent genius of the young conductor. But one stands other than before. For nothing much is expected. It seems en- . tirely too possible to us that Mr Stokowski may never again be seen the man he was a few years since. He has shown himself none too strong a person to wage the terrible war against an unnourishing a environment which every artist who wishes to persist in America is compelled to wage. He doesn't seem to have in himself the pre- servative force and freshness and faith, which alone can make the musician to survive and flourish here. Not being, as was Dr Muck, an aristocrat, he has no inner support and bulwark to serve him in a devitalizing atmosphere. One is very sorry for the precious porcelain smashed, to be sure. We shall never be a civil- ized people till we manage to feed these artists who cannot feed themselves. But, at present, no matter how sorry one is for the harm, one finds that there wells sympathy only for those who discover within themselves the will to show fight. Of course, should it appear that Mr Stokowski has it in him to gird his loins, to give largely and generously, to give due respect to himself and Beethoven and the public, a few sincere hosannas would doubt- lessly burst from the choked breast. Till then, however, we must be excused if we stand, like Mephisto, legs crossed, expression contemplative, and say quite calmly: "Neugierig bin ich, ob er wieder kommt.” PAUL ROSENFELD THE THEATRE WS > ALTER HAMPDEN'S tired nobility was 0. K. in the SERVANT IN THE House, it was defensible in HAMLET; in Macbeth it was desolating. Mary Hall could neither animate her lord nor carry on by herself. Only while they sat on the little bench at the foot of the stair did they give us much pleasure—a pleasure created less by their conduct than by their costumes and surround- ings. Claude Bragdon, the "art director,” kept his scenery well under control, and when he did cut loose, produced some very beautiful and useful effects. The banquet scene was in the style of Rembrandt-dun cloths, rounded backs; the scene for the last appearance of the witches reminded my companion of those dreary trenches round the S. O. S. at Tours. A vertical light used in the latter part of this scene was one of the neatest tricks we know about in modern staging. The witches themselves were bizarre." Shakespeare failed again to give a unified account of himself; there was too much cancelling among S. W. 1 the pawns. A Play in high-sounding but not exceptionally beautiful English, in a dramatic framework which was obviously inappropriate, Mary a Stuart ran a brief course in New York and may be revived in the Drinkwater repertory season which threatens our peace for next year. Perhaps by that time Miss Clare Eames will come out of the trance in which she played the Queen when I saw it. It is not the mark of intelligence to appear unremittingly intellectual in a play dealing with the passions. For the family life of queens in general I prefer Deception, in which it was not the spectacle but the emo- tional truth of the picture which impressed one most. Even apart from Emil Jannings whose Henry VIII was even richer and more impressive than his Louis XV in Passion, the film was notable for the direction of Ernest Lubitsch. His ideas were in action at the same time as those of Mr Griffith, for The Birth Of A NATION underwent revival and impressed tremendously. 1 “Bizarre, i. e., shocking to the majority of reasonable persons”—Prof. Chanler Post. THE THEATRE 727 The Last Waltz is Messrs Shubert's two hundredth musical comedy and it is very good. The essentials: a score by Oscar Straus, grateful to the ear; the singing of Miss Eleanor Painter and Mr Walter Woolf; the bizarre, maddeningly funny clowning of James Barton, looking like a comic strip and cutting up auda- ciously in the atmosphere of an operetta in the grand manner; the girls and the settings, ninety per cent of each agreeable to the eye. The whole production is remarkably finished and smooth. More of this and we could dispense with revivals. The production of Liliom ought to be epoch-making, in the sense that no playwright and no producer of the future should re- main unaffected by it. Except that The Theatre Guild plays it as if the idea and not the drama were of first importance, the produc- tion is perfect; and like most Continental dramatists Molnar is so much at home with ideas that he can stand being produced as if he were a philosopher and a prophet, which he is not. The heartbreak in the Guild production is too voulu, that is all. Mr Lee Simonson's settings possess an imaginative life of their own and participate in the play; his obscure and dewy scene in the park, the solidity and straightness of the railway arch, the loftiness of the scene in heaven, the niceness of the cottage at the end, have a creative power as definite as voice or movement and are very beautiful. Miss Eva Le Gallienne and Mr Joseph Schildkraut are so good that they make one forget all the bad and most of the good acting of the season, and others in the cast, especially Mr Dudley Digges, Miss Lillian Kingsbury, and Miss Evelyn Chard, tread softly lest the illusion break. Mr Frank Reicher is to be congrat- ulated on the technical successes of the play, and The Theatre Guild on having been temporarily weaned from St John Ervine. G. S. In re Liliom, I desire to depone three things: first, that the heavenly courtroom is positively Fra Angelico; second, that Hor- tense Alden is all-wool peasant-girl; third, that Helen Westley, as the thaumaturgical Mrs Muskat, bangs, wheezes, bumps, clatters, and in every other way comports and squeaks herself with that degree of horse-power appropriate to the proprietress of a steam- propelled round-about. She might honourably peacock: "Les chevaux de bois, c'est moi." > 728 THE THEATRE "There is no reason why an audience may not get as great an aesthetic, emotional thrill out of a MIDNIGHT FROLIC as out of a Maeterlinck play. The MIDNIGHT Frolic is created and per- formed by the highest-priced artists that money can procure.” So delivered himself of a faceful F. Ziegfeld, Jr. Which appears to imply that Mr Ziegfeld pays as high as does Mr Maeterlinck. News. Bob Lasalle, real U. S. A. jazz stepper, Bird Millman, buster queen of "the realm of buoyancy,” and Jack Hanley, world's champion retriever of tennis-balls with a soup-ladle, are worth their Maeterlinckian hire. The Dance to the Great Spirit, pulled off by Princess White Deer, was, however, more particularly in the distinguished foreigner's line. It is the pleasure of Mr Leo Ditrichstein to throw himself away upon trifles. But the present vehicle, in the mouths of this Kansas company, distends to considerably more than a peccadillo. Yet once a Ditrichstein, always a Ditrichstein; and, in this rôle of King Toto, even the nape of that neck demonstrates the acclaimed strut. The high-geared face as always hits on all twelve cylinders. а To Michael Strange God has been good. Since He so indulged the fancy of that well-to-do shepherd-girl of Domrémy, permitting her to sport mail, to stride a stallion, and to fuddle and otherwise discommode fat interloping outre-Manche sheep all over the lot, no other young woman of her class has, so far as I know, been allowed such acres of rope. To have uttered a Borzoi volume (entitled Re- surrecting Life) to have put over a $5.00 a seat drama (entitled Clair de Lune) and to have knocked down in matrimony a perfect 36 genius (entitled Mr John Barrymore)—these things bunched amount to the sort of man's job the late Mr Roosevelt, when he talked earnestly to us about “the strenuous life,” in small—and as “through a glass, darkly"-inkled. [One is again aware of the Re- public's loss. ] First, let us consider—upon the Paschal theme of Resurrecting Life-Exhibit A: The nude Excalibur female sliding up the middle of the fully coloured frontispiece semaphores attention. She has, in her undraped longitude, already given the slimy down-stage beasties (even the one with the Last Judgement J. Barrymore an- gles) the happy slip. She is on her way. The next depot-a . - THE THEATRE 729 22-carat Holy Grail-cheers and glimmers in the flies. This ob- ject is daisy-chained and electrically wired and generally dolled up to kill and comfort. Pushing on, we next attack the Contents. Here we note the kind authoress has herself indicated three major provinces; the Visionary, the Emotional, the Descriptive. This book need not detain us further. Secondly, let us take up, at the Empire, Clair de Lune. Of course there is a great deal of scenery and a wealth of shrubbery and adjectives. But the fresco monkey throwing a kiss to the bobbed saint of the stained-glass window, the sea-going all-silk curtains, the fauns, fantasts, bacchanales, poppies, and such-like small-talk small-fry popping impatly out and in the perfumed gullets of these bad, bad men and women are not by a long shot the whole show. For Ethel is there—ETHEL-and large as life. Her as-of-old untied (or should I rather say unlaced?) womanly voice makes everything somehow quite different: viscous with humanity, it jumps back the wholesome and homely grandeur of Our own Mrs McChesney. (Under their téclas, good Queens and good Sales- ladies beat much the same tune.) The unfortunate husband of Mrs John Barrymore, the unfor- tunate illustrator of Resurrecting Life, the unfortunate hero of this execrable play, mercifully, if tardily, drowns himself in what we are permitted to hope proves on gulp honest sea-water. Through two and one-half highly unpleasant acts he had—before this drastic swallow—been—with pious horror-observed piteously to wade, desperately to plunge, and glutinously to crawl onward and about through oceans upon oceans upon oceans of what was indeed labeled innocent Clair de Lune, but what oozed out, under assay, the dreaded Oil of Luna. There are white wigs a thing just now and where fashions come from fashionable—and a nice closet-a thing so always anywhere. And all might so easily have been otherwise. For Michael Strange is one of those who can give pleasure by simply being looked at. Why then did she and her good man not have the gumption privately to burn this odorous and mangy drama? And why did she not show us instead, wisely, herself? But, seriously, this book and this play should both have been still-born. Certain women, like children, should be seen and not heard. S. T. а ANNOUNCEMENT Afiel 1 1 1 FTER a year and a half of not easy sledding, The Dial finds itself in a position to say a very few words. And what is a sight more important, it is now so placed as to be able to look for- ward every year to doing at least one young American writer a good turn. The Dial announces that on January the first of each year it will acknowledge the service to letters of some one of those who have, during the twelvemonth, contributed to its pages by the pay- ment to him of two thousand dollars. This payment is in no sense at all a prize. There are fields of endeavour wherein the idea and the feeling of competition are, quite simply, not required; wherein men and women strive not to outdo one another, but merely and with hunched backs so to right at once their own splay selves and the malignant wrongness of the objective world as to exist–for brief, hieratic moments—un- thwarted and unbound. These moments themselves constitute re- . ward sufficient. And as there is of them for those with the heart to grapple a store infinite and inexhaustible, to speak here of com- petition were a confusion of terms: it were to talk of rivalry in worship. Such is the way of the Good Life, and such is the way of Art and of Science. To feign otherwise were hypocrisy. But artists like Mendicant Friars have to live. From that epoch in which the highest unit of civilization was but the tribe, men have had the sense to feed and to clothe their priests. In some singularly enlightened communities, notably in those of the South Sea Islands, orders of artists have been kept and treated with quite as much ceremony as these priests themselves; and, while it is only amongst enlightened Polynesians that such is the bright case, all who know what the word Art signifies know that every Artist, in so much of that word as the sense is good, remains the most direct channel of the religious emotion. Wherefore in Greece the artist was the guest-friend of the whole world; in the Middle Age he was the child of the Church; in the Renaissance there were magnani- mous princes; in the Eighteenth Century (the last in which men knew to live well) there was the not ignoble system of literary patronage; in the Twentieth, disrupted and bankrupt Europe still 1 ANNOUNCEMENT 731 makes shift to feed and clothe her artists. America, sound as a nut and rich as Tophet, feeds 'em air. When it is a question of Frans Hals and of Raphael Sanzio, our sausage-kings do indeed go the whole hog. And they are guilty of the distinguished vulgarity of tearing out beautiful objects from that European frame which is their flesh. And they are so sunken in vandalism as to puff themselves over that ownership which, to the citizen of feeling, is a brand of shame. For, with about all our own poets and painters squatting above the Elevated and there on their hunkers licking condensed milk cans, to pay eight hundred thousand dollars to butcher a Sienese chapel and from the offal to manufacture upon Long Island a Social Register holiday, is, I had thought obviously, not the thing to do. One wonders how long be- fore how many people will wake up to just what is on. But we do know that if America is ever to be more than a storehouse for dead dreams, a new tack must be taken. A year and a half ago The Dial set out to give a hand to the a young writers and artists of America. Too many Mary Gardens and Henry Jameses had had to go abroad for recognition; we found it high time somebody set up to recognize good work at home. So far, reckoning our accomplishment against our intention, we have accomplished powerful little. We have, however, notably in the last few months, achieved, both here and in Europe, considerable recognition. We have also cut down that annual deficit which we shall always take care does not eventuate in what, in the present state of affairs, we should deem a dishonourable income. It is thus that we now find ourselves in a position both to extend our own recognition to another and to give that recognition some small pecuniary weight. Among those who realize The Dial to be in- tellectually sound, there will be some worth to a man in our mere endo sement of his name; and the two thousand dollars will pass current even among those to whom the name of The Dial is not yet a household word. Money is always the least significant of gifts: like a bad work of art it requires a descriptive tag. What we really want to give is leisure, leisure through which at least one artist may serve God (or go to the Devil) according to his own lights. If there were any way of doing up this leisure with white paper and a pink string, we should not have to fall back on so drab a medium. Since a 732 ANNOUNCEMENT 1 there is not, we have fixed a sum which should amount, when reckoned in the more important commodity, to approximately one year. But if the man or woman we hit on should turn out a live wire he may smuggle himself over to Italy; favoured by Italian sunlight and the present rate of exchange the service to God might be proportionately prolonged. If, on the other hand, he should turn out a live genius, he may blow-in a whole year—and above the afore-mentioned Elevated-in one night. That is up to him. One overhears a lot of silly talk about environment; one has oneself been asked whether modern America "furnishes” the proper environment for an artist. The only environment that counts is liberty; the only liberty that counts is leisure; and this all good artists know. They know that leisure is—at least for such as they-quintessentially and intimately the Good Environment: they would rather-in so far as they are worth their salt-be re- mittance-men in Hell than master-financiers in Heaven. And they are the kind of remittance-men Yankee Land wants. Why doesn't somebody else (some fine fellow who doesn't know what the word deficit means) come over with two HUNDRED thousand? Why not? l 1 1 ID:000020203238 051054 v.70 Jan. - June 1921 The Dial Browne, Francis F. (F route to: CATO-PARK in transit to: UP-ANNEX 8/7/2005,8:18 A000020203238 869