Mummery Part 21
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'Was it by accident that you were in that shop?'
'Oh, no,' said she. 'The old man is a friend of mine.'
(He noticed that she said 'the old' and not as most people did 'the yold.' It was this perfection in her that made her so incredible. To the very finest detail she was perfect and he knew not whether to laugh or to weep.)
'It is absurd,' he said in his heart, 'it can't happen like this. It can't be true.'
Clara had no thought of anything but to make him open up his mind and heart to her, most easily and painlessly to break the taut strain in him.
They turned into a tea-shop in Coventry Street, and he sat glowering at her. A small orchestra was cras.h.i.+ng out a syncopated tune. The place was full of suburban people enjoying their escape into a vulgar excitement provided for them by the philanthropy of Joseph Lyons. The room was all gilt and marble and plentiful electric light. A waitress came up to them, but Rodd was so intent upon Clara that he could not collect his thoughts, and she had to order tea.
'Who are you?' he asked.
'I am an actress at the Imperium.'
He flung back his head and gave a shout of laughter.
'Is it funny?' she asked.
'Very.'
She smiled a little maliciously and asked.--
'Who are you?'
'I'm a queer fish.... I've wasted my life in expecting more from people than they had to give, and in offering them more than they needed.'
'You look tired.'
'I am tired--tired out.... You're not really an actress.'
'I'm paid for it if that makes me one.'
'I mean--you are not playing a part now. Actresses never stop. They take their cues from their husbands and lovers and go on until they drop. Their husbands and lovers generally kick them out before they do that.... The ordinary woman is an actress in her small way, but you are not so at all.... I can't place you. What are you doing in London? You ought not to be in London. You ought to leave us stewing in our own juice.'
The waitress brought them tea and the orchestra flung itself into a more outrageous effort than before.
'Ragtime and you!' he went on. 'They don't blend. Ragtime is for tired brains and jaded senses, for people who have lost all instinct and intuition. What have you to do with them? You will simply beat yourself to death upon their hard indifference.... You are only a child. You should be packed off home.'
'And suppose I have none.'
He shrugged his shoulders.
'That was an impertinence. Forgive me!' He took up the book he had given her. 'This fellow Mann is like all the rest. He wants to subst.i.tute a static show for a dynamic and vital performance, to impose his own art upon the theatre. The actors have done that until they have driven anything else out. He wants to drive them out. That is all, but he has great gifts....'
'Please don't talk about other people,' said Clara. 'I want to hear about you. What were you doing in the book-shop?'
He told her then why he went to the Charing Cross Road, to find a holiday which would make life tolerable; she described her holiday touring through the country with the glorious conclusion in the Lakes.
He looked rather gloomy and shook his head,--
'That wouldn't suit me. I like to go slowly and to linger over the things that please me, to drink in their real character. It is pleasant to move swiftly, but all this motor-car business seems to me to be only another dodge--running away from life.... I ought to do it if I were true to my temperament, but I love my job too much. I'm an intellectual, but I can't stand by and look on, and I can't run away.'
Clara had never met any one like him before. There was such acute misery in his face, and his words seemed only to be a cloud thrown up to disguise the retreat he was visibly making from her. She would not have that. She was sure of him. This att.i.tude of his was a challenge to her. The force with which he spoke had made Charles and even herself seem flimsy and fantastic, and she wanted to prove that she was or could be made as solid, as definite and precise as himself.
She knew what it was to be driven by her own will. Her sympathy was with him there. He was driven to the point of exhaustion.
'I've been trying to create the woman of the future,' he said.
'Ibsen's women are all nerves. What I want to get is the woman who can detach herself from her emotional experience and accept failure, as a man does, with a belief that in the long run the human mind is stronger than Nature. If instincts are baffled, they are not to be trusted.
Women have yet to learn that.... When they learn it, we can begin to get straight.'
It did not seem to matter whether she understood him or not. He had her sympathy, and he was glad to talk.
'That seems to be the heart of the problem. But it is a little disconcerting, when you have been trying to create a woman, to walk into a bookshop and find her.'
'How do you know?' she asked. 'I may be only acting. That is what women do. They find out by instinct the ideal in a man's mind and reproduce it.'
He shook his head.
'All ideals to all men? ... You have given the game away.'
'That might only be the cleverest trick of all.'
For a moment he was suspicious of her, but this coquetry was n.o.ble and designed to please and soothe him.
'I'm in for a bad time,' he said simply. 'Things have been too easy for me so far. I gave myself twenty years in which to produce what I want and what the world must have.... Things aren't so simple as all that.'
'Do drink your tea. I think you take everything too hardly. People don't know that they are indifferent. There are so many things to do, so many people to meet, they are so busy that they don't realise that they are standing still and just repeating themselves over and over again.'
'd.a.m.n the orchestra!' said Rodd. The first violin was playing a solo with muted strings. 'If people will stand this, they will stand anything. It is slow murder.'
'Do believe that they like it,' replied Clara.
'Slow murder?'
'No. The--music.'
'Same thing.' He laughed. 'Oh, well. You have robbed me of my occupation. When shall we meet again?'
'To-morrow?'
'To-morrow. You shall see how I live-- If you can spare the time I would like to take you to a concert. I always test my friends with music.'
'Even the New Woman?'
His eyes twinkled and a smile played about his sensitive lips.
Mummery Part 21
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Mummery Part 21 summary
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- Related chapter:
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