It so happened that Lucy, who found
daily life rather chaotic, entered a more solid world
when she opened the piano. She was then no longer
either deferential or patronizing; no longer either
a rebel or a slave. The kingdom of music is not
the kingdom of this world; it will accept those whom
breeding and intellect and culture have alike rejected.
The commonplace person begins to play, and shoots
into the empyrean without effort, whilst we look up,
marvelling how he has escaped us, and thinking how
we could worship him and love him, would he but translate
his visions into human words, and his experiences
into human actions. Perhaps he cannot; certainly
he does not, or does so very seldom. Lucy had
done so never.
She was no dazzling executante; her
runs were not at all like strings of pearls, and she
struck no more right notes than was suitable for one
of her age and situation. Nor was she the passionate
young lady, who performs so tragically on a summer’s
evening with the window open. Passion was there,
but it could not be easily labelled; it slipped between
love and hatred and jealousy, and all the furniture
of the pictorial style. And she was tragical
only in the sense that she was great, for she loved
to play on the side of Victory. Victory of what
and over what— that is more than the words
of daily life can tell us. But that some sonatas
of Beethoven are written tragic no one can gainsay;
yet they can triumph or despair as the player decides,
and Lucy had decided that they should triumph.
A very wet afternoon at the Bertolini
permitted her to do the thing she really liked, and
after lunch she opened the little draped piano.
A few people lingered round and praised her playing,
but finding that she made no reply, dispersed to their
rooms to write up their diaries or to sleep. She
took no notice of Mr. Emerson looking for his son,
nor of Miss Bartlett looking for Miss Lavish, nor
of Miss Lavish looking for her cigarette-case.
Like every true performer, she was intoxicated by
the mere feel of the notes: they were fingers
caressing her own; and by touch, not by sound alone,
did she come to her desire.
Mr. Beebe, sitting unnoticed in the
window, pondered this illogical element in Miss Honeychurch,
and recalled the occasion at Tunbridge Wells when
he had discovered it. It was at one of those
entertainments where the upper classes entertain the
lower. The seats were filled with a respectful
audience, and the ladies and gentlemen of the parish,
under the auspices of their vicar, sang, or recited,
or imitated the drawing of a champagne cork.
Among the promised items was “Miss Honeychurch.
Piano. Beethoven,” and Mr. Beebe was wondering
whether it would be Adelaida, or the march of The
Ruins of Athens, when his composure was disturbed
by the opening bars of Opus III. He was in suspense
all through the introduction, for not until the pace
quickens does one know what the performer intends.
With the roar of the opening theme he knew that things
were going extraordinarily; in the chords that herald
the conclusion he heard the hammer strokes of victory.
He was glad that she only played the first movement,
for he could have paid no attention to the winding
intricacies of the measures of nine-sixteen.
The audience clapped, no less respectful. It
was Mr. Beebe who started the stamping; it was all
that one could do.
“Who is she?” he asked the vicar afterwards.
“Cousin of one of my parishioners.
I do not consider her choice of a piece happy.
Beethoven is so usually simple and direct in his appeal
that it is sheer perversity to choose a thing like
that, which, if anything, disturbs.”
“Introduce me.”
“She will be delighted.
She and Miss Bartlett are full of the praises of your
sermon.”
“My sermon?” cried Mr.
Beebe. “Why ever did she listen to it?”
When he was introduced he understood
why, for Miss Honeychurch, disjoined from her music
stool, was only a young lady with a quantity of dark
hair and a very pretty, pale, undeveloped face.
She loved going to concerts, she loved stopping with
her cousin, she loved iced coffee and meringues.
He did not doubt that she loved his sermon also.
But before he left Tunbridge Wells he made a remark
to the vicar, which he now made to Lucy herself when
she closed the little piano and moved dreamily towards
him:
“If Miss Honeychurch ever takes
to live as she plays, it will be very exciting both
for us and for her.”
Lucy at once re-entered daily life.
“Oh, what a funny thing!
Some one said just the same to mother, and she said
she trusted I should never live a duet.”
“Doesn’t Mrs. Honeychurch like music?”
“She doesn’t mind it.
But she doesn’t like one to get excited over
anything; she thinks I am silly about it. She
thinks—I can’t make out. Once,
you know, I said that I liked my own playing better
than any one’s. She has never got over it.
Of course, I didn’t mean that I played well;
I only meant—”
“Of course,” said he,
wondering why she bothered to explain.
“Music—” said
Lucy, as if attempting some generality. She could
not complete it, and looked out absently upon Italy
in the wet. The whole life of the South was disorganized,
and the most graceful nation in Europe had turned
into formless lumps of clothes.
The street and the river were dirty
yellow, the bridge was dirty grey, and the hills were
dirty purple. Somewhere in their folds were concealed
Miss Lavish and Miss Bartlett, who had chosen this
afternoon to visit the Torre del Gallo.
“What about music?” said Mr. Beebe.
“Poor Charlotte will be sopped,” was Lucy’s
reply.
The expedition was typical of Miss
Bartlett, who would return cold, tired, hungry, and
angelic, with a ruined skirt, a pulpy Baedeker, and
a tickling cough in her throat. On another day,
when the whole world was singing and the air ran into
the mouth. like wine, she would refuse to stir from
the drawing-room, saying that she was an old thing,
and no fit companion for a hearty girl.
“Miss Lavish has led your cousin
astray. She hopes to find the true Italy in the
wet I believe.”
“Miss Lavish is so original,”
murmured Lucy. This was a stock remark, the supreme
achievement of the Pension Bertolini in the way of
definition. Miss Lavish was so original.
Mr. Beebe had his doubts, but they would have been
put down to clerical narrowness. For that, and
for other reasons, he held his peace.
“Is it true,” continued
Lucy in awe-struck tone, “that Miss Lavish is
writing a book?”
“They do say so.”
“What is it about?”
“It will be a novel,”
replied Mr. Beebe, “dealing with modern Italy.
Let me refer you for an account to Miss Catharine Alan,
who uses words herself more admirably than any one
I know.”
“I wish Miss Lavish would tell
me herself. We started such friends. But
I don’t think she ought to have run away with
Baedeker that morning in Santa Croce. Charlotte
was most annoyed at finding me practically alone,
and so I couldn’t help being a little annoyed
with Miss Lavish.”
“The two ladies, at all events, have made it
up.”
He was interested in the sudden friendship
between women so apparently dissimilar as Miss Bartlett
and Miss Lavish. They were always in each other’s
company, with Lucy a slighted third. Miss Lavish
he believed he understood, but Miss Bartlett might
reveal unknown depths of strangeness, though not perhaps,
of meaning. Was Italy deflecting her from the
path of prim chaperon, which he had assigned to her
at Tunbridge Wells? All his life he had loved
to study maiden ladies; they were his specialty, and
his profession had provided him with ample opportunities
for the work. Girls like Lucy were charming to
look at, but Mr. Beebe was, from rather profound reasons,
somewhat chilly in his attitude towards the other
sex, and preferred to be interested rather than enthralled.
Lucy, for the third time, said that
poor Charlotte would be sopped. The Arno was
rising in flood, washing away the traces of the little
carts upon the foreshore. But in the south-west
there had appeared a dull haze of yellow, which might
mean better weather if it did not mean worse.
She opened the window to inspect, and a cold blast
entered the room, drawing a plaintive cry from Miss
Catharine Alan, who entered at the same moment by
the door.
“Oh, dear Miss Honeychurch,
you will catch a chill! And Mr. Beebe here besides.
Who would suppose this is Italy? There is my sister
actually nursing the hot-water can; no comforts or
proper provisions.”
She sidled towards them and sat down,
self-conscious as she always was on entering a room
which contained one man, or a man and one woman.
“I could hear your beautiful
playing, Miss Honeychurch, though I was in my room
with the door shut. Doors shut; indeed, most
necessary. No one has the least idea of privacy
in this country. And one person catches it from
another.”
Lucy answered suitably. Mr. Beebe
was not able to tell the ladies of his adventure at
Modena, where the chambermaid burst in upon him in
his bath, exclaiming cheerfully, “Fa niente,
sono vecchia.” He contented himself with
saying: “I quite agree with you, Miss Alan.
The Italians are a most unpleasant people. They
pry everywhere, they see everything, and they know
what we want before we know it ourselves. We
are at their mercy. They read our thoughts, they
foretell our desires. From the cab-driver down
to—to Giotto, they turn us inside out, and
I resent it. Yet in their heart of hearts they
are—how superficial! They have no
conception of the intellectual life. How right
is Signora Bertolini, who exclaimed to me the other
day: ’Ho, Mr. Beebe, if you knew what I
suffer over the children’s edjucaishion.
Hi won’t ’ave my little Victorier
taught by a hignorant Italian what can’t explain
nothink!’”
Miss Alan did not follow, but gathered
that she was being mocked in an agreeable way.
Her sister was a little disappointed in Mr. Beebe,
having expected better things from a clergyman whose
head was bald and who wore a pair of russet whiskers.
Indeed, who would have supposed that tolerance, sympathy,
and a sense of humour would inhabit that militant
form?
In the midst of her satisfaction she
continued to sidle, and at last the cause was disclosed.
From the chair beneath her she extracted a gun-metal
cigarette-case, on which were powdered in turquoise
the initials “E. L.”
“That belongs to Lavish.”
said the clergyman. “A good fellow, Lavish,
but I wish she’d start a pipe.”
“Oh, Mr. Beebe,” said
Miss Alan, divided between awe and mirth. “Indeed,
though it is dreadful for her to smoke, it is not quite
as dreadful as you suppose. She took to it, practically
in despair, after her life’s work was carried
away in a landslip. Surely that makes it more
excusable.”
“What was that?” asked Lucy.
Mr. Beebe sat back complacently, and
Miss Alan began as follows: “It was a novel—and
I am afraid, from what I can gather, not a very nice
novel. It is so sad when people who have abilities
misuse them, and I must say they nearly always do.
Anyhow, she left it almost finished in the Grotto
of the Calvary at the Capuccini Hotel at Amalfi while
she went for a little ink. She said: ‘Can
I have a little ink, please?’ But you know what
Italians are, and meanwhile the Grotto fell roaring
on to the beach, and the saddest thing of all is that
she cannot remember what she has written. The
poor thing was very ill after it, and so got tempted
into cigarettes. It is a great secret, but I am
glad to say that she is writing another novel.
She told Teresa and Miss Pole the other day that she
had got up all the local colour—this novel
is to be about modern Italy; the other was historical—but
that she could not start till she had an idea.
First she tried Perugia for an inspiration, then she
came here— this must on no account get
round. And so cheerful through it all! I
cannot help thinking that there is something to admire
in every one, even if you do not approve of them.”
Miss Alan was always thus being charitable
against her better judgment. A delicate pathos
perfumed her disconnected remarks, giving them unexpected
beauty, just as in the decaying autumn woods there
sometimes rise odours reminiscent of spring. She
felt she had made almost too many allowances, and
apologized hurriedly for her toleration.
“All the same, she is a little
too—I hardly like to say unwomanly, but
she behaved most strangely when the Emersons arrived.”
Mr. Beebe smiled as Miss Alan plunged
into an anecdote which he knew she would be unable
to finish in the presence of a gentleman.
“I don’t know, Miss Honeychurch,
if you have noticed that Miss Pole, the lady who has
so much yellow hair, takes lemonade. That old
Mr. Emerson, who puts things very strangely—”
Her jaw dropped. She was silent.
Mr. Beebe, whose social resources were endless, went
out to order some tea, and she continued to Lucy in
a hasty whisper:
“Stomach. He warned Miss
Pole of her stomach-acidity, he called it—and
he may have meant to be kind. I must say I forgot
myself and laughed; it was so sudden. As Teresa
truly said, it was no laughing matter. But the
point is that Miss Lavish was positively attracted
by his mentioning S., and said she liked plain speaking,
and meeting different grades of thought. She thought
they were commercial travellers—’drummers’
was the word she used—and all through dinner
she tried to prove that England, our great and beloved
country, rests on nothing but commerce. Teresa
was very much annoyed, and left the table before the
cheese, saying as she did so: ’There, Miss
Lavish, is one who can confute you better than I,’
and pointed to that beautiful picture of Lord Tennyson.
Then Miss Lavish said: ‘Tut! The early
Victorians.’ Just imagine! ‘Tut!
The early Victorians.’ My sister had gone,
and I felt bound to speak. I said: ’Miss
Lavish, I am an early Victorian; at least, that is
to say, I will hear no breath of censure against our
dear Queen.’ It was horrible speaking.
I reminded her how the Queen had been to Ireland when
she did not want to go, and I must say she was dumbfounded,
and made no reply. But, unluckily, Mr. Emerson
overheard this part, and called in his deep voice:
’Quite so, quite so! I honour the woman
for her Irish visit.’ The woman! I
tell things so badly; but you see what a tangle we
were in by this time, all on account of S. having
been mentioned in the first place. But that was
not all. After dinner Miss Lavish actually came
up and said: ’Miss Alan, I am going into
the smoking-room to talk to those two nice men.
Come, too.’ Needless to say, I refused such
an unsuitable invitation, and she had the impertinence
to tell me that it would broaden my ideas, and said
that she had four brothers, all University men, except
one who was in the army, who always made a point of
talking to commercial travellers.”
“Let me finish the story,”
said Mr. Beebe, who had returned.
“Miss Lavish tried Miss Pole,
myself, every one, and finally said: ‘I
shall go alone.’ She went. At the end
of five minutes she returned unobtrusively with a
green baize board, and began playing patience.”
“Whatever happened?” cried Lucy.
“No one knows. No one will
ever know. Miss Lavish will never dare to tell,
and Mr. Emerson does not think it worth telling.”
“Mr. Beebe—old Mr.
Emerson, is he nice or not nice? I do so want
to know.”
Mr. Beebe laughed and suggested that
she should settle the question for herself.
“No; but it is so difficult.
Sometimes he is so silly, and then I do not mind him.
Miss Alan, what do you think? Is he nice?”
The little old lady shook her head,
and sighed disapprovingly. Mr. Beebe, whom the
conversation amused, stirred her up by saying:
“I consider that you are bound
to class him as nice, Miss Alan, after that business
of the violets.”
“Violets? Oh, dear!
Who told you about the violets? How do things
get round? A pension is a bad place for gossips.
No, I cannot forget how they behaved at Mr. Eager’s
lecture at Santa Croce. Oh, poor Miss Honeychurch!
It really was too bad. No, I have quite changed.
I do not like the Emersons. They are not
nice.”
Mr. Beebe smiled nonchalantly.
He had made a gentle effort to introduce the Emersons
into Bertolini society, and the effort had failed.
He was almost the only person who remained friendly
to them. Miss Lavish, who represented intellect,
was avowedly hostile, and now the Miss Alans, who
stood for good breeding, were following her.
Miss Bartlett, smarting under an obligation, would
scarcely be civil. The case of Lucy was different.
She had given him a hazy account of her adventures
in Santa Croce, and he gathered that the two men had
made a curious and possibly concerted attempt to annex
her, to show her the world from their own strange
standpoint, to interest her in their private sorrows
and joys. This was impertinent; he did not wish
their cause to be championed by a young girl:
he would rather it should fail. After all, he
knew nothing about them, and pension joys, pension
sorrows, are flimsy things; whereas Lucy would be his
parishioner.
Lucy, with one eye upon the weather,
finally said that she thought the Emersons were nice;
not that she saw anything of them now. Even their
seats at dinner had been moved.
“But aren’t they always
waylaying you to go out with them, dear?” said
the little lady inquisitively.
“Only once. Charlotte didn’t
like it, and said something—quite politely,
of course.”
“Most right of her. They
don’t understand our ways. They must find
their level.”
Mr. Beebe rather felt that they had
gone under. They had given up their attempt—if
it was one—to conquer society, and now the
father was almost as silent as the son. He wondered
whether he would not plan a pleasant day for these
folk before they left— some expedition,
perhaps, with Lucy well chaperoned to be nice to them.
It was one of Mr. Beebe’s chief pleasures to
provide people with happy memories.
Evening approached while they chatted;
the air became brighter; the colours on the trees
and hills were purified, and the Arno lost its muddy
solidity and began to twinkle. There were a few
streaks of bluish-green among the clouds, a few patches
of watery light upon the earth, and then the dripping
facade of San Miniato shone brilliantly in the declining
sun.
“Too late to go out,”
said Miss Alan in a voice of relief. “All
the galleries are shut.”
“I think I shall go out,”
said Lucy. “I want to go round the town
in the circular tram—on the platform by
the driver.”
Her two companions looked grave.
Mr. Beebe, who felt responsible for her in the absence
of Miss Bartlett, ventured to say:
“I wish we could. Unluckily
I have letters. If you do want to go out alone,
won’t you be better on your feet?”
“Italians, dear, you know,” said Miss
Alan.
“Perhaps I shall meet some one
who reads me through and through!”
But they still looked disapproval,
and she so far conceded to Mr. Beebe as to say that
she would only go for a little walk, and keep to the
street frequented by tourists.
“She oughtn’t really to
go at all,” said Mr. Beebe, as they watched
her from the window, “and she knows it.
I put it down to too much Beethoven.”