by Max Beerbohm
When a book about the literature
of the eighteen-nineties was given by Mr. Holbrook Jackson to the world, I
looked eagerly in the index for Soames,
Enoch. It was as I feared: he was not there. But everybody else was.
Many writers whom I had quite forgotten, or remembered but faintly, lived again
for me, they and their work, in Mr. Holbrook Jackson’s pages. The book was as
thorough as it was brilliantly written. And thus the omission found by me was
an all the deadlier record of poor Soames’s failure to impress himself on his
decade.
I dare
say I am the only person who noticed the omission. Soames had failed so
piteously as all that! Nor is there a counterpoise in the thought that if he
had had some measure of success he might have passed, like those others, out of
my mind, to return only at the historian’s beck. It is true that had his gifts,
such as they were, been acknowledged in his lifetime, he would never have made
the bargain I saw him make—that strange bargain whose results have kept him
always in the foreground of my memory. But it is from those very results that
the full piteousness of him glares out.
Not my
compassion, however, impels me to write of him. For his sake, poor fellow, I
should be inclined to keep my pen out of the ink. It is ill to deride the dead.
And how can I write about Enoch Soames without making him ridiculous? Or,
rather, how am I to hush up the horrid fact that he WAS ridiculous? I shall not
be able to do that. Yet, sooner or later, write about him I must. You will see
in due course that I have no option. And I may as well get the thing done now.
In the Summer Term of ‘93 a bolt
from the blue flashed down on Oxford. It drove deep; it hurtlingly embedded
itself in the soil. Dons and undergraduates stood around, rather pale, discussing
nothing but it. Whence came it, this meteorite? From Paris. Its name? Will
Rothenstein. Its aim? To do a series of twenty-four portraits in lithograph.
These were to be published from the Bodley Head, London. The matter was urgent.
Already the warden of A, and the master of B, and the Regius Professor of C had
meekly ‘sat.’ Dignified and doddering old men who had never consented to sit to
any one could not withstand this dynamic little stranger. He did not sue; he
invited: he did not invite; he commanded. He was twenty-one years old. He wore
spectacles that flashed more than any other pair ever seen. He was a wit. He
was brimful of ideas. He knew Whistler. He knew Daudet and the Goncourts. He
knew every one in Paris. He knew them all by heart. He was Paris in Oxford. It
was whispered that, so soon as he had polished off his selection of dons, he
was going to include a few undergraduates. It was a proud day for me when I—I
was included. I liked Rothenstein not less than I feared him; and there arose
between us a friendship that has grown ever warmer, and been more and more
valued by me, with every passing year.
At the
end of Term he settled in—or rather, meteoritically into–London. It was to him
I owed my first knowledge of that forever-enchanting little world-in-itself,
Chelsea, and my first acquaintance with Walter Sickert and other August elders
who dwelt there. It was Rothenstein that took me to see, in Cambridge Street,
Pimlico, a young man whose drawings were already famous among the few—Aubrey
Beardsley by name. With Rothenstein I paid my first visit to the Bodley Head.
By him I was inducted into another haunt of intellect and daring, the
domino-room of the Café Royal.
There, on
that October evening—there, in that exuberant vista of gilding and crimson
velvet set amidst all those opposing mirrors and upholding caryatids, with
fumes of tobacco ever rising to the painted and pagan ceiling, and with the hum
of presumably cynical conversation broken into so sharply now and again by the
clatter of dominoes shuffled on marble tables, I drew a deep breath and, ‘This
indeed,’ said I to myself, ‘is life!’ (Forgive me that theory. Remember the
waging of even the South African War was not yet.)
It was
the hour before dinner. We drank vermouth. Those who knew Rothenstein were
pointing him out to those who knew him only by name. Men were constantly coming
in through the swing-doors and wandering slowly up and down in search of vacant
tables or of tables occupied by friends. One of these rovers interested me
because I was sure he wanted to catch Rothenstein’s eye. He had twice passed
our table, with a hesitating look; but Rothenstein, in the thick of a
disquisition on Puvis de Chavannes, had not seen him. He was a stooping,
shambling person, rather tall, very pale, with longish and brownish hair. He
had a thin, vague beard, or, rather, he had a chin on which a large number of
hairs weakly curled and clustered to cover its retreat. He was an odd-looking
person; but in the nineties odd apparitions were more frequent, I think, than
they are now. The young writers of that era—and I was sure this man was a
writer—strove earnestly to be distinct in aspect. This man had striven
unsuccessfully. He wore a soft black hat of clerical kind, but of Bohemian
intention, and a grey waterproof cape which, perhaps because it was waterproof,
failed to be romantic. I decided that ‘dim’ was the mot juste for him. I
had already essayed to write, and was immensely keen on the mot juste,
that Holy Grail of the period.
The dim
man was now again approaching our table, and this time he made up his mind to
pause in front of it.
‘You don’t
remember me,’ he said in a toneless voice.
Rothenstein
brightly focused him. ‘Yes, I do,’ he replied after a moment, with pride rather
than effusion—pride in a retentive memory. ‘Edwin Soames.’
‘Enoch
Soames,’ said Enoch.
‘Enoch
Soames,’ repeated Rothenstein in a tone implying that it was enough to have hit
on the surname. ‘We met in Paris a few times when you were living there. We met
at the Café Groche.’
‘And I
came to your studio once.’
‘Oh, yes;
I was sorry I was out.’
‘But you
were in. You showed me some of your paintings, you know… I hear you’re in
Chelsea now.’
‘Yes.’
I almost
wondered that Mr. Soames did not, after this monosyllable, pass along. He stood
patiently there, rather like a dumb animal, rather like a donkey looking over a
gate. A sad figure, his. It occurred to me that ‘hungry’ was perhaps the mot
juste for him; but—hungry for what? He looked as if he had little appetite
for anything. I was sorry for him; and Rothenstein, though he had not invited
him to Chelsea, did ask him to sit down and have something to drink.
Seated, he was more
self-assertive. He flung back the wings of his cape with a gesture which, had
not those wings been waterproof, might have seemed to hurl defiance at things
in general. And he ordered an absinthe. ‘Je me tiens toujours fidèle,’
he told Rothenstein, ‘a la sorciere glauque.’
‘It is bad for you,’ said
Rothenstein, dryly.
‘Nothing is bad for one,’
answered Soames. ‘Dans ce monde il n’y a ni bien ni mal.’
‘Nothing good and nothing bad?
How do you mean?’
‘I explained it all in the preface
to Negations.’
‘Negations?’
‘Yes, I gave you a copy of it.’
‘Oh, yes, of course. But, did you
explain, for instance, that there was no such thing as bad or good grammar?’
‘N-no,’ said Soames. ‘Of course
in Art there is the good and the evil. But in Life—no.’ He was rolling a
cigarette. He had weak, white hands, not well washed, and with finger-tips much
stained with nicotine. ‘In Life there are illusions of good and evil, but’—his
voice trailed away to a murmur in which the words ‘vieux jeu’ and ‘rococo’
were faintly audible. I think he felt he was not doing himself justice, and
feared that Rothenstein was going to point out fallacies. Anyhow, he cleared
his throat and said, ‘Parlons d’autre chose.’
It occurs to you that he was a
fool? It didn’t to me. I was young, and had not the clarity of judgment that
Rothenstein already had. Soames was quite five or six years older than either
of us. Also—he had written a book. It was wonderful to have written a book.
If Rothenstein had not been
there, I should have revered Soames. Even as it was, I respected him. And I was
very near indeed to reverence when he said he had another book coming out soon.
I asked if I might ask what kind of book it was to be.
‘My poems,’ he answered.
Rothenstein asked if this was to be the title of the book. The poet meditated
on this suggestion, but said he rather thought of giving the book no title at
all. ‘If a book is good in itself—’ he murmured, and waved his cigarette.
Rothenstein objected that absence
of title might be bad for the sale of a book.
‘If,’ he urged, ‘I went into a
bookseller’s and said simply, “Have you got?” or, “Have you a copy of?” how
would they know what I wanted?’
‘Oh, of course I should have my
name on the cover,’ Soames answered earnestly. ‘And I rather want,’ he added,
looking hard at Rothenstein, ‘to have a drawing of myself as frontispiece.’
Rothenstein admitted that this was a capital idea, and mentioned that he was
going into the country and would be there for some time. He then looked at his
watch, exclaimed at the hour, paid the waiter, and went away with me to dinner.
Soames remained at his post of fidelity to the glaucous witch.
‘Why were you so determined not
to draw him?’ I asked.
‘Draw him? Him? How can one draw
a man who doesn’t exist?’
‘He is dim,’ I admitted. But my mot
juste fell flat. Rothenstein repeated that Soames was non-existent.
Still, Soames had written a book.
I asked if Rothenstein had read Negations. He said he had looked into
it, ‘but,’ he added crisply, ‘I don’t profess to know anything about writing.’
A reservation very characteristic of the period! Painters would not then allow
that anyone outside their own order had a right to any opinion about painting.
This law (graven on the tablets brought down by Whistler from the summit of
Fujiyama) imposed certain limitations. If other arts than painting were not
utterly unintelligible to all but the men who practiced them, the law
tottered—the Monroe Doctrine, as it were, did not hold good. Therefore no
painter would offer an opinion of a book without warning you at any rate that
his opinion was worthless. No one is a better judge of literature than
Rothenstein; but it wouldn’t have done to tell him so in those days, and I knew
that I must form an unaided judgment of Negations.
Not to buy a book of which I had
met the author face to face would have been for me in those days an impossible
act of self-denial. When I returned to Oxford for the Christmas term I had duly
secured Negations. I used to keep it lying carelessly on the table in my
room, and whenever a friend took it up and asked what it was about, I would
say: ‘Oh, it’s rather a remarkable book. It’s by a man whom I know.’ Just ‘what
it was about’ I never was able to say. Head or tail was just what I hadn’t made
of that slim, green volume. I found in the preface no clue to the labyrinth of
contents, and in that labyrinth nothing to explain the preface.
Lean near
to life. Lean very near— nearer.
Life is
web and therein nor warp nor woof is, but web only.
It is for
this I am Catholick in church and in thought, yet do let swift Mood weave there
what the shuttle of Mood wills.
These were the opening phrases of
the preface, but those which followed were less easy to understand. Then came ‘Stark:
A Conte,’ about a midinette who, so far as I could gather, murdered, or
was about to murder, a mannequin. It was rather like a story by Catulle Mendès
in which the translator had either skipped or cut out every alternate sentence.
Next, a dialogue between Pan and St. Ursula, lacking, I rather thought, in ‘snap.’
Next, some aphorisms (entitled αφοςίσματα). Throughout, in fact, there
was a great variety of form, and the forms had evidently been wrought with much
care. It was rather the substance that eluded me. Was there, I wondered, any
substance at all? It did now occur to me: suppose Enoch Soames was a fool! Up
cropped a rival hypothesis: suppose I was! I inclined to give Soames the
benefit of the doubt. I had read L’Après-midi d’un Faune without
extracting a glimmer of meaning; yet Mallarmé, of course, was a Master. How was
I to know that Soames wasn’t another? There was a sort of music in his prose,
not indeed, arresting, but perhaps, I thought, haunting, and laden, perhaps,
with meanings as deep as Mallarmé’s own. I awaited his poems with an open mind.
And I looked forward to them with
positive impatience after I had had a second meeting with him. This was on an
evening in January. Going into the aforesaid domino-room, I had passed a table
at which sat a pale man with an open book before him. He had looked from his
book to me, and I looked back over my shoulder with a vague sense that I ought
to have recognized him. I returned to pay my respects. After exchanging a few
words, I said with a glance to the open book, ‘I see I am interrupting you,’
and was about to pass on, but, ‘I prefer,’ Soames replied in his toneless
voice, ‘to be interrupted,’ and I obeyed his gesture that I should sit down.
I asked him if he often read
here.
‘Yes; things of this kind I read
here,’ he answered, indicating the title of his book—The Poems of Shelley.
‘Anything that you really’—and I
was going to say ‘admire?’ But I cautiously left my sentence unfinished, and
was glad that I had done so, for he said with unwonted emphasis, ‘Anything
second-rate.’
I had read little of Shelley but,
‘Of course,’ I murmured, ‘he’s very uneven.’
‘I should have thought evenness
was just what was wrong with him. A deadly evenness. That’s why I read him
here. The noise of this place breaks the rhythm. He’s tolerable here.’ Soames
took up the book and glanced through the pages. He laughed. Soames’s laugh was
a short, single, and mirthless sound from the throat, unaccompanied by any
movement of the face or brightening of the eyes. ‘What a period!’ he uttered,
laying the book down. And, ‘What a country!’ he added.
I asked rather nervously if he
didn’t think Keats had more or less held his own against the drawbacks of time
and place. He admitted that there were ‘passages in Keats,’ but did not specify
them. Of ‘the older men,’ as he called them, he seemed to like only Milton. ‘Milton,’
he said, ‘wasn’t sentimental.’ Also, ‘Milton had a dark insight.’ And again, ‘I
can always read Milton in the reading-room.’
‘The reading-room?’
‘Of the British Museum. I go
there every day.’
‘You do? I’ve only been there
once. I’m afraid I found it rather a depressing place. It—it seemed to sap one’s
vitality.’
‘It does. That’s why I go there.
The lower one’s vitality, the more sensitive one is to great art. I live near
the Museum. I have rooms in Dyott Street.’
‘And you go round to the
reading-room to read Milton?’
‘Usually Milton.’ He looked at
me. ‘It was Milton,’ he certificatively added, ‘who converted me to Diabolism.’
‘Diabolism? Oh, yes? Really?’
said I, with that vague discomfort and that intense desire to be polite which
one feels when a man speaks of his own religion. ‘You—worship the Devil?’
Soames shook his head. ‘It’s not
exactly worship,’ he qualified, sipping his absinthe. ‘It’s more a matter of
trusting and encouraging.’
‘Ah, yes… But I had rather
gathered from the preface to Negations that you were a—a Catholic.’
‘Je l’étais à cette époque.
Perhaps I still am. Yes, I’m a Catholic Diabolist.’
This profession he made in an
almost cursory tone. I could see that what was upmost in his mind was the fact
that I had read Negations. His pale eyes had for the first time gleamed.
I felt as one who is about to be examined viva voce on the very subject in
which he is shakiest. I hastily asked him how soon his poems were to be
published.
‘Next week,’ he told me.
‘And are they to be published
without a title?’
‘No. I found a title at last. But
I shan’t tell you what it is,’ as though I had been so impertinent as to
inquire. ‘I am not sure that it wholly satisfies me. But it is the best I can
find. It suggests something of the quality of the poems… Strange growths,
natural and wild, yet exquisite,’ he added, ‘and many-hued, and full of
poisons.’
I asked him what he thought of
Baudelaire. He uttered the snort that was his laugh, and, ‘Baudelaire,’ he
said, ‘was a bourgeois malgré lui.’ France had had only one poet—Villon;
‘and two thirds of Villon were sheer journalism.’ Verlaine was ‘an épicier
malgré lui.’ Altogether, rather to my surprise, he rated French literature
lower than English. There were ‘passages’ in Villiers de l’Isle-Adam. But, ‘I,’
he summed up, ‘owe nothing to France.’ He nodded at me. ‘You’ll see,’ he
predicted.
I did not, when the time came,
quite see that. I thought the author of Fungoids did, unconsciously of
course, owe something to the young Parisian decadents or to the young English
ones who owed something to them. I still think so. The little book,
bought by me in Oxford, lies before me as I write. Its pale-grey buckram cover
and silver lettering have not worn well. Nor have its contents. Through these,
with a melancholy interest, I have again been looking. They are not much. But
at the time of their publication I had a vague suspicion that they might
be. I suppose it is my capacity for faith, not poor Soames’s work, that is
weaker than it once was…
To a
Young Woman
Thou art, who hast not been!
Pale tunes irresolute
And traceries of old sounds
Blown from a rotted flute
Mingle with noise of cymbals
rouged with rust,
Nor not strange forms and epicene
Lie bleeding in the dust,
Being wounded with wounds.
For this it is
That in thy counterpart
Of age-long mockeries
Thou hast not been nor art!
There seemed to me a certain
inconsistency as between the first and last lines of this. I tried, with bent
brows, to resolve the discord. But I did not take my failure as wholly
incompatible with a meaning in Soames’s mind. Might it not rather indicate the
depth of his meaning? As for the craftsmanship, ‘rouged with rust’ seemed to me
a fine stroke, and ‘nor not’ instead of ‘and’ had a curious felicity. I
wondered who the Young Woman was and what she had made of it all. I sadly
suspect that Soames could not have made more of it than she. Yet even now, if
one doesn’t try to make any sense at all of the poem, and reads it just for the
sound, there is a certain grace of cadence. Soames was an artist, in so far as
he was anything, poor fellow!
It seemed to me, when first I
read Fungoids, that, oddly enough, the Diabolistic side of him was the
best. Diabolism seemed to be a cheerful, even a wholesome influence in his
life.
Nocturne
Round and round the shutter’d
Square
I strolled with the Devil’s arm
in mine.
No sound but the scrape of his
hoofs was there
And the ring of his laughter and
mine.
We had drunk black wine.
I scream’d, ‘I will race you,
Master!’
‘What matter,’ he shriek’d, ‘to-night
Which of us runs the faster?
There is nothing to fear to-night
In the foul moon’s light!’
Then I look’d him in the eyes
And I laugh’d full shrill at the
lie he told
And the gnawing fear he would
fain disguise.
It was true, what I’d time and
again been told:
He was old—old.
There was, I felt, quite a swing
about that first stanza—a joyous and rollicking note of comradeship. The second
was slightly hysterical, perhaps. But I liked the third, it was so bracingly
unorthodox, even according to the tenets of Soames’s peculiar sect in the
faith. Not much ‘trusting and encouraging’ here! Soames triumphantly exposing
the Devil as a liar, and laughing ‘full shrill,’ cut a quite heartening figure,
I thought—then! Now, in the light of what befell, none of his other poems
depresses me so much as ‘Nocturne’.
I looked out for what the
metropolitan reviewers would have to say. They seemed to fall into two classes:
those who had little to say and those who had nothing. The second class was the
larger, and the words of the first were cold; insomuch that
‘Strikes a note of modernity
throughout… These tripping numbers’ — Preston Telegraph
was the only lure offered in advertisements by Soames’s
publisher. I had hoped that when next I met the poet I could congratulate him
on having made a stir, for I fancied he was not so sure of his intrinsic
greatness as he seemed. I was but able to say, rather coarsely, when next I did
see him, that I hoped Fungoids was ‘selling splendidly.’ He looked at me
across his glass of absinthe and asked if I had bought a copy. His publisher
had told him that three had been sold. I laughed, as at a jest.
‘You don’t suppose I care,
do you?’ he said, with something like a snarl. I disclaimed the notion. He
added that he was not a tradesman. I said mildly that I wasn’t, either, and
murmured that an artist who gave truly new and great things to the world had
always to wait long for recognition. He said he cared not a sou for
recognition. I agreed that the act of creation was its own reward.
His moroseness might have
alienated me if I had regarded myself as a nobody. But ah! hadn’t both John
Lane and Aubrey Beardsley suggested that I should write an essay for the great
new venture that was afoot—The Yellow Book? And hadn’t Henry Harland, as
editor, accepted my essay? And wasn’t it to be in the very first number? At
Oxford I was still in statu pupillari. In London I regarded myself as
very much indeed a graduate now—one whom no Soames could ruffle. Partly to show
off, partly in sheer good-will, I told Soames he ought to contribute to The
Yellow Book. He uttered from the throat a sound of scorn for that publication.
Nevertheless, I did, a day or two
later, tentatively ask Harland if he knew anything of the work of a man called
Enoch Soames. Harland paused in the midst of his characteristic stride around
the room, threw up his hands toward the ceiling, and groaned aloud: he had
often met ‘that absurd creature’ in Paris, and this very morning had received
some poems in manuscript from him.
‘Has he no talent?’ I
asked.
‘He has an income. He’s all
right.’
Harland was the most joyous of
men and most generous of critics, and he hated to talk of anything about which
he couldn’t be enthusiastic. So I dropped the subject of Soames. The news that
Soames had an income did take the edge off solicitude. I learned afterward that
he was the son of an unsuccessful and deceased bookseller in Preston, but had
inherited an annuity of three hundred pounds from a married aunt, and had no
surviving relatives of any kind. Materially, then, he was ‘all right.’ But
there was still a spiritual pathos about him, sharpened for me now by the
possibility that even the praises of the Preston Telegraph might not
have been forthcoming had he not been the son of a Preston man He had a sort of
weak doggedness which I could not but admire. Neither he nor his work received
the slightest encouragement; but he persisted in behaving as a personage:
always he kept his dingy little flag flying. Wherever congregated the jeunes
féroces of the arts, in whatever Soho restaurant they had just discovered,
in whatever music-hall they were most frequently, there was Soames in the midst
of them, or, rather, on the fringe of them, a dim, but inevitable, figure. He
never sought to propitiate his fellow-writers, never bated a jot of his
arrogance about his own work or of his contempt for theirs. To the painters he
was respectful, even humble; but for the poets and prosaists of The Yellow
Book and later of The Savoy he had never a word but of scorn. He
wasn’t resented. It didn’t occur to anybody that he or his Catholic Diabolism
mattered. When, in the autumn of ‘96, he brought out (at his own expense, this
time) a third book, his last book, nobody said a word for or against it. I
meant, but forgot, to buy it. I never saw it, and am ashamed to say I don’t
even remember what it was called. But I did, at the time of its publication,
say to Rothenstein that I thought poor old Soames was really a rather tragic
figure, and that I believed he would literally die for want of recognition.
Rothenstein scoffed. He said I was trying to get credit for a kind heart which
I didn’t possess; and perhaps this was so. But at the private view of the New
English Art Club, a few weeks later, I beheld a pastel portrait of ‘Enoch
Soames, Esq.’ It was very like him, and very like Rothenstein to have done it.
Soames was standing near it, in his soft hat and his waterproof cape, all
through the afternoon. Anybody who knew him would have recognized the portrait
at a glance, but nobody who didn’t know him would have recognized the portrait
from its bystander: it ‘existed’ so much more than he; it was bound to. Also,
it had not that expression of faint happiness which on that day was
discernible, yes, in Soames’s countenance. Fame had breathed on him. Twice
again in the course of the month I went to the New English, and on both
occasions Soames himself was on view there. Looking back, I regard the close of
that exhibition as having been virtually the close of his career. He had felt
the breath of Fame against his cheek—so late, for such a little while; and at
its withdrawal he gave in, gave up, gave out. He, who had never looked strong
or well, looked ghastly now—a shadow of the shade he had once been. He still
frequented the domino-room, but having lost all wish to excite curiosity, he no
longer read books there. ‘You read only at the Museum now?’ I asked, with
attempted cheerfulness. He said he never went there now. ‘No absinthe there,’
he muttered. It was the sort of thing that in old days he would have said for
effect; but it carried conviction now. Absinthe, erst but a point in the ‘personality’
he had striven so hard to build up, was solace and necessity now. He no longer
called it ‘la sorcière glauque’. He had shed away all his French
phrases. He had become a plain, unvarnished Preston man.
Failure, if it be a plain,
unvarnished, complete failure, and even though it be a squalid failure, has
always a certain dignity. I avoided Soames because he made me feel rather
vulgar. John Lane had published, by this time, two little books of mine, and
they had had a pleasant little success of esteem. I was a—slight, but definite—’personality.’
Frank Harris had engaged me to kick up my heels in the Saturday Review, Alfred
Harmsworth was letting me do likewise in the Daily Mail. I was just what
Soames wasn’t. And he shamed my gloss. Had I known that he really and firmly
believed in the greatness of what he as an artist had achieved, I might not
have shunned him. No man who hasn’t lost his vanity can be held to have
altogether failed. Soames’s dignity was an illusion of mine. One day, in the
first week of June, 1897, that illusion went. But on the evening of that day
Soames went, too.
I had been out most of the
morning and, as it was too late to reach home in time for luncheon, I sought ‘the
Vingtième’. This little place—Restaurant du Vingtième Siècle, to give it its
full title—had been discovered in ‘96 by the poets and prosaists, but had now
been more or less abandoned in favour of some later find. I don’t think it
lived long enough to justify its name; but at that time there it still was, in
Greek Street, a few doors from Soho Square, and almost opposite to that house
where, in the first years of the century, a little girl, and with her a boy
named De Quincey, made nightly encampment in darkness and hunger among dust and
rats and old legal parchments. The Vingtième was but a small whitewashed room,
leading out into the street at one end and into a kitchen at the other. The
proprietor and cook was a Frenchman, known to us as Monsieur Vingtième; the
waiters were his two daughters, Rose and Berthe; and the food, according to
faith, was good. The tables were so narrow and were set so close together that
there was space for twelve of them, six jutting from each wall.
Only the two nearest to the door,
as I went in, were occupied. On one side sat a tall, flashy, rather
Mephistophelian man whom I had seen from time to time in the domino-room and
elsewhere. On the other side sat Soames. They made a queer contrast in that
sunlit room—Soames sitting haggard in that hat and cape, which nowhere at any
season had I seen him doff, and this other, this keenly vital man, at sight of
whom I more than ever wondered whether he were a diamond merchant, a conjurer,
or the head of a private detective agency.
I was sure Soames didn’t want my
company; but I asked, as it would have seemed brutal not to, whether I might
join him, and took the chair opposite to his. He was smoking a cigarette, with
an untasted salmi of something on his plate and a half-empty bottle of Sauterne
before him, and he was quite silent. I said that the preparations for the
Jubilee made London impossible. (I rather liked them, really.) I professed a
wish to go right away till the whole thing was over. In vain did I attune
myself to his gloom. He seemed not to hear me or even to see me. I felt that
his behaviour made me ridiculous in the eyes of the other man. The gangway
between the two rows of tables at the Vingtième was hardly more than two feet
wide (Rose and Berthe, in their ministrations, had always to edge past each
other, quarrelling in whispers as they did so), and any one at the table
abreast of yours was virtually at yours. I thought our neighbour was amused at
my failure to interest Soames, and so, as I could not explain to him that my
insistence was merely charitable, I became silent. Without turning my head, I
had him well within my range of vision. I hoped I looked less vulgar than he in
contrast with Soames. I was sure he was not an Englishman, but what was
his nationality? Though his jet-black hair was en brosse, I did not think he
was French. To Berthe, who waited on him, he spoke French fluently, but with a
hardly native idiom and accent. I gathered that this was his first visit to the
Vingtième; but Berthe was offhand in her manner to him: he had not made a good
impression. His eyes were handsome, but, like the Vingtième’s tables, too
narrow and set too close together. His nose was predatory, and the points of
his moustache, waxed up behind his nostrils, gave a fixity to his smile.
Decidedly, he was sinister. And my sense of discomfort in his presence was
intensified by the scarlet waistcoat which tightly, and so unseasonably in
June, sheathed his ample chest. This waistcoat wasn’t wrong merely because of
the heat, either. It was somehow all wrong in itself. It wouldn’t have done on
Christmas morning. It would have struck a jarring note at the first night of ‘Hernani.’
I was trying to account for its wrongness when Soames suddenly and strangely
broke silence. ‘A hundred years hence!’ he murmured, as in a trance.
‘We shall not be here,’ I briskly,
but fatuously, added.
‘We shall not be here. No,’ he
droned, ‘but the Museum will still be just where it is. And the reading-room
just where it is. And people will be able to go and read there.’ He inhaled
sharply, and a spasm as of actual pain contorted his features.
I wondered what train of thought
poor Soames had been following. He did not enlighten me when he said, after a
long pause, ‘You think I haven’t minded.’
‘Minded what, Soames?’
‘Neglect. Failure.’
‘Failure?’ I said
heartily. ‘Failure?’ I repeated vaguely. ‘Neglect—yes, perhaps; but that’s
quite another matter. Of course you haven’t been—appreciated. But what, then?
Any artist who—who gives—’ What I wanted to say was, ‘Any artist who gives
truly new and great things to the world has always to wait long for recognition’;
but the flattery would not out: in the face of his misery—a misery so genuine
and so unmasked—my lips would not say the words.
And then he said them for me. I
flushed. ‘That’s what you were going to say, isn’t it?’ he asked.
‘How did you know?’
‘It’s what you said to me three
years ago, when Fungoids was published.’ I flushed the more. I need not
have flushed at all. ‘It’s the only important thing I ever heard you say,’ he
continued. ‘And I’ve never forgotten it. It’s a true thing. It’s a horrible
truth. But—d’you remember what I answered? I said, ‘I don’t care a sou for
recognition.’ And you believed me. You’ve gone on believing I’m above that sort
of thing. You’re shallow. What should you know of the feelings of a man
like me? You imagine that a great artist’s faith in himself and in the verdict
of posterity is enough to keep him happy. You’ve never guessed at the
bitterness and loneliness, the’—his voice broke; but presently he resumed,
speaking with a force that I had never known in him. ‘Posterity! What use is it
to me? A dead man doesn’t know that people are visiting his grave,
visiting his birthplace, putting up tablets to him, unveiling statues of him. A
dead man can’t read the books that are written about him. A hundred years
hence! Think of it! If I could come back to life then—just for a few
hours—and go to the reading-room and read! Or, better still, if I could
be projected now, at this moment, into that future, into that reading-room,
just for this one afternoon! I’d sell myself body and soul to the Devil for
that! Think of the pages and pages in the catalogue: “Soames, Enoch” endlessly—endless editions, commentaries,
prolegomena, biographies’— But here he was interrupted by a sudden loud crack
of the chair at the next table. Our neighbour had half risen from his place. He
was leaning toward us, apologetically intrusive.
‘Excuse—permit me,’ he said
softly. ‘I have been unable not to hear. Might I take a liberty? In this little
restaurant-sans-façon—might I, as the phrase is, cut in?’
I could but signify our
acquiescence. Berthe had appeared at the kitchen door, thinking the stranger
wanted his bill. He waved her away with his cigar, and in another moment had
seated himself beside me, commanding a full view of Soames.
‘Though not an Englishman,’ he
explained, ‘I know my London well, Mr. Soames. Your name and fame—Mr. Beerbohm’s,
too—very known to me.
Your point is, who am I?’ He
glanced quickly over his shoulder, and in a lowered voice said, ‘I am the Devil.’
I couldn’t help it; I laughed. I
tried not to, I knew there was nothing to laugh at, my rudeness shamed me;
but—I laughed with increasing volume. The Devil’s quiet dignity, the surprise
and disgust of his raised eyebrows, did but the more dissolve me. I rocked to
and fro; I lay back aching; I behaved deplorably.
‘I am a gentleman, and,’ he said
with intense emphasis, ‘I thought I was in the company of gentlemen.’
‘Don’t!’ I gasped faintly. ‘Oh,
don’t!’
‘Curious, nicht wahr?’ I
heard him say to Soames. ‘There is a type of person to whom the very mention of
my name is—oh, so awfully—funny! In your theatres the dullest comédien
needs only to say “The Devil!” and right away they give him “the loud laugh
what speaks the vacant mind”. Is it not so?’
I had now just breath enough to
offer my apologies. He accepted them, but coldly, and re-addressed himself to
Soames.
‘I am a man of business,’ he
said, ‘and always I would put things through ‘right now,’ as they say in the
States. You are a poet. Les affaires—you detest them. So be it. But with
me you will deal, eh? What you have said just now gives me furiously to hope.’
Soames had not moved except to
light a fresh cigarette. He sat crouched forward, with his elbows squared on
the table, and his head just above the level of his hands, staring up at the Devil.
‘Go on,’ he nodded. I had no
remnant of laughter in me now.
‘It will be the more pleasant,
our little deal,’ the Devil went on, ‘because you are—I mistake not?—a Diabolist.’
‘A Catholic Diabolist,’ said
Soames.
The Devil accepted the
reservation genially.
‘You wish,’ he resumed, ‘to visit
now—this afternoon as-ever-is—the reading-room of the British Museum, yes? But
of a hundred years hence, yes? Parfaitement. Time—an illusion. Past and
future—they are as ever present as the present, or at any rate only what you
call “just round the corner”. I switch you on to any date. I project you—pouf!
You wish to be in the reading-room just as it will be on the afternoon of June
3, 1997? You wish to find yourself standing in that room, just past the
swing-doors, this very minute, yes? And to stay there till closing-time? Am I
right?’
Soames nodded.
The Devil looked at his watch. ‘Ten
past two,’ he said. ‘Closing-time in summer same then as now—seven o’clock.
That will give you almost five hours. At seven o’clock—pouf!—you find yourself
again here, sitting at this table. I am dining tonight dans le monde—dans le
higlif. That concludes my present visit to your great city. I come and
fetch you here, Mr. Soames, on my way home.’
‘Home?’ I echoed.
‘Be it never so humble!’ said the
Devil, lightly.
‘All right,’ said Soames.
‘Soames!’ I entreated. But my
friend moved not a muscle.
The Devil had made as though to
stretch forth his hand across the table, but he paused in his gesture.
‘A hundred years hence, as now,’
he smiled, ‘no smoking allowed in the reading-room. You would better therefore—’
Soames removed the cigarette from
his mouth and dropped it into his glass of Sauterne.
‘Soames!’ again I cried. ‘Can’t
you’—but the Devil had now stretched forth his hand across the table. He
brought it slowly down on the table-cloth. Soames’s chair was empty. His
cigarette floated sodden in his wine-glass. There was no other trace of him.
For a few moments the Devil let
his hand rest where it lay, gazing at me out of the corners of his eyes,
vulgarly triumphant.
A shudder shook me. With an
effort I controlled myself and rose from my chair. ‘Very clever,’ I said
condescendingly. ‘But—The Time Machine is a delightful book, don’t you
think? So entirely original!’
‘You are pleased to sneer,’ said
the Devil, who had also risen, ‘but it is one thing to write about an
impossible machine; it is a quite other thing to be a Supernatural Power.’ All
the same, I had scored.
Berthe had come forth at the
sound of our rising. I explained to her that Mr. Soames had been called away,
and that both he and I would be dining here. It was not until I was out in the
open air that I began to feel giddy. I have but the haziest recollection of
what I did, where I wandered, in the glaring sunshine of that endless
afternoon. I remember the sound of carpenters’ hammers all along Piccadilly and
the bare chaotic look of the half-erected ‘stands.’ Was it in the Green Park or
in Kensington Gardens or where was it that I sat on a chair beneath a
tree, trying to read an evening paper? There was a phrase in the leading
article that went on repeating itself in my fagged mind: ‘Little is hidden from
this august Lady full of the garnered wisdom of sixty years of Sovereignty.’ I
remember wildly conceiving a letter (to reach Windsor by an express messenger
told to await answer):
Madam: Well
knowing that your Majesty is full of the garnered wisdom of sixty years of
Sovereignty, I venture to ask your advice in the following delicate matter. Mr.
Enoch Soames, whose poems you may or may not know…
Was there no way of
helping him, saving him? A bargain was a bargain, and I was the last man to aid
or abet any one in wriggling out of a reasonable obligation. I wouldn’t have
lifted a little finger to save Faust. But poor Soames! —doomed to pay without
respite an eternal price for nothing but a fruitless search and a bitter
disillusioning.
Odd and uncanny it seemed to me
that he, Soames, in the flesh, in the waterproof cape, was at this moment
living in the last decade of the next century, poring over books not yet written,
and seeing and seen by men not yet born. Uncannier and odder still that
to-night and evermore he would be in hell. Assuredly, truth was stranger than
fiction.
Endless that afternoon was.
Almost I wished I had gone with Soames—not, indeed, to stay in the
reading-room, but to sally forth for a brisk sight-seeing walk around a new
London. I wandered restlessly out of the park I had sat in. Vainly I tried to
imagine myself an ardent tourist from the eighteenth century. Intolerable was
the strain of the slow-passing and empty minutes. Long before seven o’clock I
was back at the Vingtième.
I sat there just where I had sat
for luncheon. Air came in listlessly through the open door behind me. Now and
again Rose or Berthe appeared for a moment. I had told them I would not order
any dinner till Mr. Soames came. A hurdy-gurdy began to play, abruptly drowning
the noise of a quarrel between some Frenchmen farther up the street. Whenever
the tune was changed I heard the quarrel still raging. I had bought another evening
paper on my way. I unfolded it. My eyes gazed ever away from it to the clock
over the kitchen door...
Five minutes, now, to the hour! I
remembered that clocks in restaurants are kept five minutes fast. I
concentrated my eyes on the paper. I vowed I would not look away from it again.
I held it upright, at its full width, close to my face, so that I had no view
of anything but it. Rather a tremulous sheet? Only because of the draft, I told
myself.
My arms gradually became stiff;
they ached; but I could not drop them—now. I had a suspicion, I had a
certainty. Well, what, then? What else had I come for? Yet I held tight that
barrier of newspaper. Only the sound of Berthe’s brisk footstep from the
kitchen enabled me, forced me, to drop it, and to utter:
‘What shall we have to eat,
Soames?’
‘Il est souffrant, ce pauvre
Monsieur Soames?’ asked Berthe.
‘He’s only—tired.’ I asked her to
get some wine—Burgundy—and whatever food might be ready. Soames sat crouched
forward against the table exactly as when last I had seen him. It was as though
he had never moved—he who had moved so unimaginably far. Once or twice in the
afternoon it had for an instant occurred to me that perhaps his journey was not
to be fruitless, that perhaps we had all been wrong in our estimate of the
works of Enoch Soames. That we had been horribly right was horribly clear from
the look of him. But, ‘Don’t be discouraged,’ I falteringly said. ‘Perhaps it’s
only that you—didn’t leave enough time. Two, three centuries hence, perhaps—’
‘Yes,’ his voice came. ‘I’ve
thought of that.’
‘And now—now for the more
immediate future! Where are you going to hide? How would it be if you caught
the Paris express from Charing Cross? Almost an hour to spare. Don’t go on to
Paris. Stop at Calais. Live in Calais. He’d never think of looking for you in Calais.’
‘It’s like my luck,’ he said, ‘to
spend my last hours on earth with an ass.’ But I was not offended. ‘And a
treacherous ass,’ he strangely added, tossing across to me a crumpled bit of
paper which he had been holding in his hand. I glanced at the writing on
it—some sort of gibberish, apparently. I laid it impatiently aside.
‘Come, Soames, pull yourself
together! This isn’t a mere matter of life or death. It’s a question of eternal
torment, mind you! You don’t mean to say you’re going to wait limply here till
the Devil comes to fetch you.’
‘I can’t do anything else. I’ve
no choice.’
‘Come! This is “trusting and
encouraging” with a vengeance! This is Diabolism run mad!’ I filled his glass
with wine. ‘Surely, now that you’ve seen the brute—’
‘It’s no good abusing him.’
‘You must admit there’s nothing
Miltonic about him, Soames.’
‘I don’t say he’s not rather
different from what I expected.’
‘He’s a vulgarian, he’s a swell-mobsman,
he’s the sort of man who hangs about the corridors of trains going to the
Riviera and steals ladies’ jewel-cases. Imagine eternal torment presided over
by him!’
‘You don’t suppose I look forward
to it, do you?’
‘Then why not slip quietly out of
the way?’
Again and again I filled his
glass, and always, mechanically, he emptied it; but the wine kindled no spark
of enterprise in him. He did not eat, and I myself ate hardly at all. I did not
in my heart believe that any dash for freedom could save him. The chase would
be swift, the capture certain. But better anything than this passive, meek,
miserable waiting. I told Soames that for the honour of the human race he ought
to make some show of resistance. He asked what the human race had ever done for
him. ‘Besides,’ he said, ‘can’t you understand that I’m in his power? You saw
him touch me, didn’t you? There’s an end of it. I’ve no will. I’m sealed.’
I made a gesture of despair. He
went on repeating the word ‘sealed.’ I began to realize that the wine had
clouded his brain. No wonder! Foodless he had gone into futurity, foodless he
still was. I urged him to eat, at any rate, some bread. It was maddening to
think that he, who had so much to tell, might tell nothing. ‘How was it all,’ I
asked, ‘yonder? Come, tell me your adventures!’
‘They’d make first-rate “copy”,
wouldn’t they?’
‘I’m awfully sorry for you,
Soames, and I make all possible allowances; but what earthly right have you to
insinuate that I should make “copy”, as you call it, out of you?’
The poor fellow pressed his hands
to his forehead. ‘I don’t know,’ he said. ‘I had some reason, I’m sure... I’ll
try to remember.’ He sat plunged in thought.
‘That’s right. Try to remember
everything. Eat a little more bread. What did the reading-room look like?’
‘Much as usual,’ he at length
muttered.
‘Many people there?’
‘Usual sort of number.’
‘What did they look like?’
Soames tried to visualize them. ‘They
all,’ he presently remembered, ‘looked very like one another.’
My mind took a fearsome leap. ‘All
dressed in Jaeger?’
‘Yes, I think so. Greyish-yellowish
stuff.’
‘A sort of uniform?’ He nodded. ‘With
a number on it perhaps?—a number on a large disk of metal sewn onto the left sleeve?
DKF 78.910—that sort of thing?’ It was even so. ‘And all of them, men and women
alike, looking very well cared for? very Utopian? and smelling rather strongly
of carbolic? and all of them quite hairless?’
I was right every time. Soames
was only not sure whether the men and women were hairless or shorn. ‘I hadn’t
time to look at them very closely,’ he explained.
‘No, of course not. But—’
‘They stared at me, I can
tell you. I attracted a great deal of attention.’ At last he had done that! ‘I
think I rather scared them. They moved away whenever I came near. They followed
me about, at a distance, wherever I went. The men at the round desk in the
middle seemed to have a sort of panic whenever I went to make inquiries.’
‘What did you do when you
arrived?’
Well, he had gone straight to the
catalogue, of course—to the S volumes—and had stood long before SNN-SOF, unable
to take this volume out of the shelf because his heart was beating so... At
first, he said, he wasn’t disappointed—he only thought there was some new
arrangement. He went to the middle desk and asked where the catalogue of twentieth-century
books was kept. He gathered that there was still only one catalogue. Again he
looked up his name, stared at the three little pasted slips he had known so
well. Then he went and sat down for a long time…
‘And then,’ he droned, ‘I looked
up the Dictionary of National Biography and some encyclopaedias… I went
back to the middle desk and asked what was the best modern book on late
nineteenth-century literature. They told me Mr. T. K. Nupton’s book was
considered the best. I looked it up in the catalogue and filled in a form for
it. It was brought to me. My name wasn’t in the index, but—yes!’ he said with a
sudden change of tone, ‘that’s what I’d forgotten. Where’s that bit of paper?
Give it me back.’
I, too, had forgotten that
cryptic screed. I found it fallen on the floor, and handed it to him.
He smoothed it out, nodding and smiling
at me disagreeably. ‘I found myself glancing through Nupton’s book,’ he
resumed. ‘Not very easy reading. Some sort of phonetic spelling. All the modern
books I saw were phonetic.’
‘Then I don’t want to hear any
more, Soames, please.’
‘The proper names seemed all to
be spelt in the old way. But for that I mightn’t have noticed my own name.’
‘Your own name? Really? Soames, I’m
very glad.’
‘And yours.’
‘No!’
‘I thought I should find you
waiting here to-night, so I took the trouble to copy out the passage. Read it.’
I snatched the paper. Soames’s
handwriting was characteristically dim. It and the noisome spelling and my
excitement made me all the slower to grasp what T. K. Nupton was driving at.
The document lies before me at
this moment. Strange that the words I here copy out for you were copied out for
me by poor Soames just eighty-two years hence!
From p.
234 of Inglish Littracher 1890-1900 bi T. K. Nupton, publishd bi th
Stait, 1992.
Fr
egzarmpl, a riter ov th time, naimed Max Beerbohm, hoo woz stil alive in th
twentith senchri, rote a stauri in wich e pautraid an immajnari karrakter kauld
‘Enoch Soames’—a thurd-rait poit hoo beleevz imself a grate jeneus an maix a
bargin with th Devvl in auder ter no wot posterriti thinx ov im! It iz a sumwot
labud sattire, but not without vallu az showing hou seriusli the yung men ov th
aiteen-ninetiz took themselvz. Nou that th littreri profeshn haz bin auganized
az a departmnt of publik servis, our riters hav found their levvl an hav lernt
ter doo their duti without thort ov th morro. ‘Th laibrer iz werthi ov hiz hire’
an that iz aul. Thank hevvn we hav no Enoch Soameses amung us to-dai!
I found that by murmuring the
words aloud (a device which I commend to my reader) I was able to master them
little by little. The clearer they became, the greater was my bewilderment, my
distress and horror. The whole thing was a nightmare. Afar, the great grisly
background of what was in store for the poor dear art of letters; here, at the
table, fixing on me a gaze that made me hot all over, the poor fellow whom—whom
evidently… but no: whatever down-grade my character might take in coming years,
I should never be such a brute as to—
Again I examined the screed. ‘Immajnari’
—but here Soames was, no more imaginary, alas! than I. And ‘labud’—what on
earth was that? (To this day I have never made out that word.) ‘It’s all
very—baffling,’ I at length stammered.
Soames said nothing, but cruelly
did not cease to look at me.
‘Are you sure,’ I temporized, ‘quite
sure you copied the thing out correctly?’
‘Quite.’
‘Well, then, it’s this wretched
Nupton who must have made—must be going to make—some idiotic mistake. Look here
Soames, you know me better than to suppose that I— After all, the name “Max
Beerbohm” is not at all an uncommon one, and there must be several Enoch
Soameses running around—or, rather, “Enoch Soames” is a name that might occur
to any one writing a story. And I don’t write stories; I’m an essayist, an
observer, a recorder... I admit that it’s an extraordinary coincidence. But you
must see—’
‘I see the whole thing,’ said
Soames, quietly. And he added, with a touch of his old manner, but with more
dignity than I had ever known in him, ‘Parlons d’autre chose.’
I accepted that suggestion very
promptly. I returned straight to the more immediate future. I spent most of the
long evening in renewed appeals to Soames to come away and seek refuge
somewhere. I remember saying at last that if indeed I was destined to write
about him, the supposed ‘stauri’ had better have at least a happy ending.
Soames repeated those last three words in a tone of intense scorn. ‘In Life and
in Art,’ he said, ‘all that matters is an inevitable ending.’
‘But,’ I urged more hopefully
than I felt, ‘an ending that can be avoided isn’t inevitable.’
‘You aren’t an artist,’ he
rasped. ‘And you’re so hopelessly not an artist that, so far from being able to
imagine a thing and make it seem true, you’re going to make even a true thing
seem as if you’d made it up. You’re a miserable bungler. And it’s like my luck.’
I protested that the miserable
bungler was not I—was not going to be I—but T. K. Nupton; and we had a rather
heated argument, in the thick of which it suddenly seemed to me that Soames saw
he was in the wrong: he had quite physically cowered. But I wondered why—and
now I guessed with a cold throb just why—he stared so, past me. The bringer of
that ‘inevitable ending’ filled the doorway.
I managed to turn in my chair and
to say, not without a semblance of lightness, ‘Aha, come in!’ Dread was indeed
rather blunted in me by his looking so absurdly like a villain in a melodrama.
The sheen of his tilted hat and of his shirt-front, the repeated twists he was
giving to his moustache, and most of all the magnificence of his sneer, gave
token that he was there only to be foiled.
He was at our table in a stride. ‘I
am sorry,’ he sneered witheringly, ‘to break up your pleasant party, but—’
‘You don’t; you complete it,’ I
assured him. ‘Mr. Soames and I want to have a little talk with you. Won’t you
sit? Mr. Soames got nothing—frankly nothing—by his journey this afternoon. We
don’t wish to say that the whole thing was a swindle, a common swindle. On the
contrary, we believe you meant well. But of course the bargain, such as it was,
is off.’
The Devil gave no verbal answer.
He merely looked at Soames and pointed with rigid forefinger to the door.
Soames was wretchedly rising from his chair when, with a desperate, quick
gesture, I swept together two dinner-knives that were on the table, and laid
their blades across each other. The Devil stepped sharp back against the table
behind him, averting his face and shuddering.
‘You are not superstitious!’ he
hissed.
‘Not at all,’ I smiled.
‘Soames,’ he said as to an
underling, but without turning his face, ‘put those knives straight!’
With an inhibitive gesture to my
friend, ‘Mr. Soames,’ I said emphatically to the Devil, ‘is a Catholic Diabolist’;
but my poor friend did the Devil’s bidding, not mine; and now, with his master’s
eyes again fixed on him, he arose, he shuffled past me. I tried to speak. It
was he that spoke. ‘Try,’ was the prayer he threw back at me as the Devil
pushed him roughly out through the door, ‘try to make them know that I
did exist!’
In another instant I, too, was
through that door. I stood staring all ways, up the street, across it, down it.
There was moonlight and lamplight, but there was not Soames nor that other.
Dazed, I stood there. Dazed, I
turned back at length into the little room, and I suppose I paid Berthe or Rose
for my dinner and luncheon and for Soames’s. I hope so, for I never went to the
Vingtième again. Ever since that night I have avoided Greek Street altogether.
And for years I did not set foot even in Soho Square, because on that same
night it was there that I paced and loitered, long and long, with some such
dull sense of hope as a man has in not straying far from the place where he has
lost something. ‘Round and round the shutter’d Square’—that line came back to
me on my lonely beat, and with it the whole stanza, ringing in my brain and
bearing in on me how tragically different from the happy scene imagined by him
was the poet’s actual experience of that prince in whom of all princes we
should put not our trust.
But—strange how the mind of an
essayist, be it never so stricken, roves and ranges! —I remember pausing before
a wide doorstep and wondering if perchance it was on this very one that the
young De Quincey lay ill and faint while poor Ann flew as fast as her feet
would carry her to Oxford Street, the ‘stony-hearted stepmother’ of them both,
and came back bearing that ‘glass of port wine and spices’ but for which he
might, so he thought, actually have died. Was this the very doorstep that the
old De Quincey used to revisit in homage? I pondered Ann’s fate, the cause of
her sudden vanishing from the ken of her boyfriend; and presently I blamed
myself for letting the past override the present. Poor vanished Soames!
And for myself, too, I began to
be troubled. What had I better do? Would there be a hue and cry—Mysterious
Disappearance of an Author, and all that? He had last been seen lunching and
dining in my company. Hadn’t I better get a hansom and drive straight to
Scotland Yard?... They would think I was a lunatic. After all, I reassured
myself, London was a very large place, and one very dim figure might easily
drop out of it unobserved—now especially, in the blinding glare of the near
Jubilee. Better say nothing at all, I thought.
And I was right. Soames’s
disappearance made no stir at all. He was utterly forgotten before any one, so
far as I am aware, noticed that he was no longer hanging around. Now and again
some poet or prosaist may have said to another, ‘What has become of that man
Soames?’ but I never heard any such question asked. As for his landlady in
Dyott Street, no doubt he had paid her weekly, and what possessions he may have
had in his rooms were enough to save her from fretting. The solicitor through
whom he was paid his annuity may be presumed to have made inquiries, but no
echo of these resounded. There was something rather ghastly to me in the
general unconsciousness that Soames had existed, and more than once I caught
myself wondering whether Nupton, that babe unborn, were going to be right in
thinking him a figment of my brain.
In that extract from Nupton’s
repulsive book there is one point which perhaps puzzles you. How is it that the
author, though I have here mentioned him by name and have quoted the exact
words he is going to write, is not going to grasp the obvious corollary that I
have invented nothing? The answer can be only this: Nupton will not have read
the later passages of this memoir. Such lack of thoroughness is a serious fault
in any one who undertakes to do scholar’s work. And I hope these words will
meet the eye of some contemporary rival to Nupton and be the undoing of Nupton.
I like to think that sometime
between 1992 and 1997 somebody will have looked up this memoir, and will have
forced on the world his inevitable and startling conclusions. And I have reason
for believing that this will be so. You realize that the reading-room into
which Soames was projected by the Devil was in all respects precisely as it
will be on the afternoon of June 3, 1997. You realize, therefore, that on that
afternoon, when it comes round, there the self-same crowd will be, and there
Soames will be, punctually, he and they doing precisely what they did before.
Recall now Soames’s account of the sensation he made. You may say that the mere
difference of his costume was enough to make him sensational in that uniformed
crowd. You wouldn’t say so if you had ever seen him, and I assure you that in
no period would Soames be anything but dim. The fact that people are going to
stare at him and follow him around and seem afraid of him, can be explained
only on the hypothesis that they will somehow have been prepared for his
ghostly visitation. They will have been awfully waiting to see whether he
really would come. And when he does come the effect will of course be—awful.
An authentic, guaranteed, proved
ghost, but—only a ghost, alas! Only that. In his first visit Soames was a
creature of flesh and blood, whereas the creatures among whom he was projected
were but ghosts, I take it—solid, palpable, vocal, but unconscious and
automatic ghosts, in a building that was itself an illusion. Next time that
building and those creatures will be real. It is of Soames that there will be
but the semblance. I wish I could think him destined to revisit the world
actually, physically, consciously. I wish he had this one brief escape, this
one small treat, to look forward to. I never forget him for long. He is where
he is and forever. The more rigid moralists among you may say he has only
himself to blame. For my part, I think he has been very hardly used. It is well
that vanity should be chastened; and Enoch Soames’s vanity was, I admit, above
the average, and called for special treatment. But there was no need for
vindictiveness. You say he contracted to pay the price he is paying. Yes; but I
maintain that he was induced to do so by fraud. Well informed in all things,
the Devil must have known that my friend would gain nothing by his visit to
futurity. The whole thing was a very shabby trick. The more I think of it, the
more detestable the Devil seems to me.
Of him I have caught sight
several times, here and there, since that day at the Vingtième. Only once,
however, have I seen him at close quarters. This was a couple of years ago, in
Paris. I was walking one afternoon along the rue d’Antin, and I saw him
advancing from the opposite direction—overdressed as ever, and swinging an
ebony cane, and altogether behaving as though the whole pavement belonged to
him. At thought of Enoch Soames and the myriads of other sufferers eternally in
this brute’s dominion, a great cold wrath filled me, and I drew myself up to my
full height. But—well, one is so used to nodding and smiling in the street to
anybody whom one knows that the action becomes almost independent of oneself;
to prevent it requires a very sharp effort and great presence of mind. I was
miserably aware, as I passed the Devil, that I nodded and smiled to him. And my
shame was the deeper and hotter because he, if you please, stared straight at
me with the utmost haughtiness.
To be cut—deliberately cut—by him!
I was, I still am, furious at having had that happen to me.
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