Poor Relations - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Well, isn't it in a sick state?" James demanded, truculently.
"I don't know that I think it is. However, don't let's begin an argument before supper. Where's Beatrice?"
"She bought a new hat yesterday and has gone to demonstrate its becomingness to G.o.d and woman."
"I suppose you mean she's gone to church? I went to church myself this morning."
"What for? Copy?"
"No, no, no. I took George's children."
"You don't mean to say that you've got _them_ with you?"
John nodded, and his brother exploded with an uproarious laugh.
"Well, I was fool enough to marry before I was thirty," he bellowed.
"But at any rate I wasn't fool enough to have any children. So you're going to sup with us. I ought to warn you it's cold mutton to-night."
"Really? Capital! There's nothing I like better than cold mutton."
"Upon my soul, Johnnie, I'll say this for you. You may write stale romantic plays about the past, but you manage to keep plenty of romantic sauce for the present. Yes, you're a born optimist. Look at your skin--pink as a baby's. Look at mine--yellow as a horse's tooth. Have you heard my new name for your habit of mind? Rosification. Rather good, eh? And you can rosify anything from Lucretia Borgia to cold mutton.
Now don't look angry with me, Johnnie; you must rosify my ill-humor.
With so many roses you can't expect not to have a few thorns as well, and I'm one of them. No, seriously, I congratulate you on your success.
And I always try to remember that you write with your tongue in your cheek."
"On the contrary I believe I write as well as I can," said John, earnestly. "I admit that I gave up writing realistic novels, but that was because they didn't suit my temperament."
"No, by gad, they didn't! And, anyway, no Englishman can write a realistic novel--or any other kind of a novel if it comes to that. My lord, the English novel!"
"Look here," John protested. "I do not want to argue about either plays or novels to-night. But if you must talk about books, talk about your own, not mine. Beatrice wrote to me that you had something coming along about the French Symbolists. I shouldn't have thought that they would have appealed to you."
"They don't. I hate them."
"Well, why write a book about them? Their day has been over a long time."
"To smash them. To prove that they were a pretentious set of epileptic humbugs."
"Sort of Max Nordau business?"
"Max Nordau! I hope you aren't going to compare me with that flat-footed bus-conductor. No, no, Johnnie, the rascals took themselves seriously and I'm going to smash them on their own estimate of their own importance. I'm going to prove that they were on the wrong track and led nowhere."
"It's consoling to learn that even French literature can go off the lines sometimes."
"Of course it can, because it runs on lines. English literature on the contrary never had any lines on which to run, though in the eighteenth century it followed a fairly decent coaching-road. Modern English literature, however, is like a rogue elephant trampling down the jungle that its predecessors made some attempt to cultivate."
"I never knew that even moral elephants had taken up agriculture seriously."
James blew all the ashes of his pipe over Beyle in a gust of contempt, and rose from his chair.
"The smirk!" he cried. "The traditional British smirk! The gerumky-gerum horse-laugh! British humor! Ha-ha! Begotten by Punch out of Mrs. Grundy with the Spectator for G.o.dfather. '_Go to, you have made me mad._'"
"It's a pity you can't tell me about your new book without flying into a rage," John said, mildly. "You haven't told me yet when it's to appear."
"My fourteen readers aren't languis.h.i.+ng. But to repay politeness by politeness, my book will come out in March."
"I'm looking forward to it," John declared. "Have you got good terms from Worrall?"
"As good terms as a consumptive bankrupt might expect from Shylock. What does the British public care for criticism? You should hear me reading the proofs to Beatrice. You should really have the pleasure of watching her face, and listening to her comments. Do you know why Beatrice goes to church? I'll tell you. She goes to indulge in a debauch of the acc.u.mulated yawns of the week."
"Hush, here she is," John warned him.
James laughed again.
"Johnnie, you're _impayable_. Your sensitiveness to Beatrice betrays the fount of your success. You treat the British public with just the same gentlemanly gurgle. And above all you're a good salesman. That's where George failed when he tried whisky on commission."
"I don't believe you're half the misanthropist you make yourself out."
"Of course, I'm not. I love human nature. Didn't I marry Beatrice, and didn't I spend a year in making a clock out of fishbones to amuse my landlady's children, and wasn't I a doctor of medicine without once using my knowledge of poisons? I love mankind--but dragon-flies were more complex and dogs are more admirable. Well, Beatrice, did you enjoy the sermon?"
His wife had come in and was greeting John broadly and effusively, for when she was excited her loud contralto voice recaptured many rustic inflections of her youth. She was a tall woman, gaudily handsome, conserving in clothes and coiffure the fas.h.i.+ons of her prime as queens do and barmaids who become the wives of publicans. On Sundays she wore a lilac broadcloth with a floriated bodice cut close to the figure; but she was just as proud of her waist on weekdays and discreet about her legs, which she wrapped up in a number of petticoats. She was as real or as unreal as a cabinet-photograph of the last decade of the nineteenth century: it depended on the att.i.tude of the observer. Although there was too much of her for the apartments, it could not be said that she appeared out of place in them; in fact she was rather like a daughter of the house who had come home for the holidays.
"Why, it's John," she expanded in a voice rich with welcome. "How are you, little stranger?"
"Thank you very much for the flowers, Beatrice. They were much appreciated."
"I wanted you to know that we were still in the land of the livin'.
You're goin' to stay to supper, of course? But you'll have to be content with cold mutton, don't you know."
There was a tradition among novelists that well-bred people leave out their final "g's"; so Beatrice saved on these consonants what she squandered upon aspirates.
"And how do you think Jimmie's lookin'?" she went on. "I suppose he's told you about his new book. Comin' out in March, don't you know. I feel awfully up in French poitry since he read it out to me. Don't light another pipe now, dear. The girl's gettin' the supper at once. I think you're lookin' very well, Johnnie, I do indeed. Don't you think he's lookin' very well, Jimmie? Has Bill Bailey been out for his run?" This was Beatrice's affectionate diminutive for Henri Beyle, the dog.
"No, I won't bother about my hands," John put in hastily to forestall Beatrice's next suggestion.
"We had such a dull sermon," she sighed.
Her husband grunted a request to spare them the details.
"Well, don't you know, it's a dull time for sermons now before Christmas. But it didn't matter, as what I really wanted was a puff of fresh air. Yes, I'd begun to think you'd forgotten all about us," she rambled on, turning archly to John. "I know we must be dull company, but all work and no play, don't you know ... yours is all plays and no work.
Jimmie, I made a joke," she laughed, twitching her husband's sleeve to secure his attention. "Did you hear?"
"Yes, I heard," he growled.
"I thought it was rather good, didn't you, Johnnie?"
"Very good indeed," he a.s.sented, warmly. "Though I do work occasionally."
"Oh, of course, you silly thing, I wasn't bein' serious. I told you it was a joke. I know you must work a bit. Here comes the girl with supper.