Mrs. Ambrose Dale—forty,
slender, still young—sits in her drawing-room
at the tea-table. The winter twilight is falling,
a lamp has been lit, there is a fire on the hearth,
and the room is pleasantly dim and flower-scented.
Books are scattered everywhere—mostly with
autograph inscriptions “From the Author”—and
a large portrait of Mrs. Dale, at her desk,
with papers strewn about her, takes up one of the
wall-panels. Before Mrs. Dale stands
Hilda, fair and twenty, her hands full of letters.
Mrs. Dale. Ten more applications
for autographs? Isn’t it strange that people
who’d blush to borrow twenty dollars don’t
scruple to beg for an autograph?
Hilda (reproachfully). Oh—
Mrs. Dale. What’s the difference,
pray?
Hilda. Only that your last autograph sold
for fifty—
Mrs. Dale (not displeased).
Ah?—I sent for you, Hilda, because I’m
dining out to-night, and if there’s nothing important
to attend to among these letters you needn’t
sit up for me.
Hilda. You don’t mean to work?
Mrs. Dale. Perhaps; but
I sha’n’t need you. You’ll see
that my cigarettes and coffee-machine are in place,
and: that I don’t have to crawl about the
floor in search of my pen-wiper? That’s
all. Now about these letters—
Hilda (impulsively). Oh, Mrs. Dale—
Mrs. Dale. Well?
Hilda. I’d rather sit up for you.
Mrs. Dale. Child, I’ve
nothing for you to do. I shall be blocking out
the tenth chapter of Winged Purposes and it
won’t be ready for you till next week.
Hilda. It isn’t
that—but it’s so beautiful to sit
here, watching and listening, all alone in the night,
and to feel that you’re in there (she points
to the study-door) creating—.(Impulsively.)
What do I care for sleep?
Mrs. Dale (indulgently).
Child—silly child!—Yes, I should
have felt so at your age—it would have
been an inspiration—
Hilda (rapt). It is!
Mrs. Dale. But you must
go to bed; I must have you fresh in the morning; for
you’re still at the age when one is fresh in
the morning! (She sighs.) The letters? (Abruptly.)
Do you take notes of what you feel, Hilda—here,
all alone in the night, as you say?
Hilda (shyly). I have—
Mrs. Dale (smiling). For the diary?
Hilda (nods and blushes).
Mrs. Dale (caressingly).
Goose!—Well, to business. What is there?
Hilda. Nothing important,
except a letter from Stroud & Fayerweather to say
that the question of the royalty on Pomegranate
Seed has been settled in your favor. The
English publishers of Immolation write to consult
you about a six-shilling edition; Olafson, the Copenhagen
publisher, applies for permission to bring out a Danish
translation of The Idol’s Feet; and the
editor of the Semaphore wants a new serial—I
think that’s all; except that Woman’s
Sphere and The Droplight ask for interviews—with
photographs—
Mrs. Dale. The same old
story! I’m so toed of it all. (To herself,
in an undertone.) But how should I feel if it all
stopped? (The servant brings in a card.)
Mrs. Dale (reading it).
Is it possible? Paul Ventnor? (To the servant.)
Show Mr. Ventnor up. (To herself.) Paul Ventnor!
Hilda (breathless). Oh, Mrs. Dale—the
Mr. Ventnor?
Mrs. Dale (smiling). I fancy there’s
only one.
Hilda. The great, great
poet? (Irresolute.) No, I don’t dare—
Mrs. Dale (with a tinge of impatience).
What?
Hilda (fervently). Ask
you—if I might—oh, here in this
corner, where he can’t possibly notice me—stay
just a moment? Just to see him come in?
To see the meeting between you—the greatest
novelist and the greatest poet of the age? Oh,
it’s too much to ask! It’s an historic
moment.
Mrs. Dale. Why, I suppose
it is. I hadn’t thought of it in that light.
Well (smiling), for the diary—
Hilda. Oh, thank you,
thank you! I’ll be off the very instant
I’ve heard him speak.
Mrs. Dale. The very instant,
mind. (She rises, looks at herself in the glass,
smooths her hair, sits down again, and rattles the
tea-caddy.) Isn’t the room very warm?—(She
looks over at her portrait.) I’ve grown
stouter since that was painted—. You’ll
make a fortune out of that diary, Hilda—
Hilda (modestly). Four
publishers have applied to me already—
The Servant (announces). Mr. Paul Ventnor.
(Tall, nearing fifty, with an incipient
stoutness buttoned into a masterly frock-coat, Ventnor
drops his glass and advances vaguely, with a short-sighted
stare.)
Ventnor. Mrs. Dale?
Mrs. Dale. My dear friend!
This is kind. (She looks over her shoulder at Hilda,
mho vanishes through the door to the left.) The
papers announced your arrival, but I hardly hoped—
Ventnor (whose short-sighted stare
is seen to conceal a deeper embarrassment).
You hadn’t forgotten me, then?
Mrs. Dale. Delicious!
Do you forget that you’re public property?
Ventnor. Forgotten, I mean, that we were
old friends?
Mrs. Dale. Such old friends!
May I remind you that it’s nearly twenty years
since we’ve met? Or do you find cold reminiscences
indigestible?
Ventnor. On the contrary,
I’ve come to ask you for a dish of them—we’ll
warm them up together. You’re my first visit.
Mrs. Dale. How perfect
of you! So few men visit their women friends
in chronological order; or at least they generally
do it the other way round, beginning with the present
day and working back—if there’s time—to
prehistoric woman.
Ventnor. But when prehistoric
woman has become historic woman—?
Mrs. Dale. Oh, it’s
the reflection of my glory that has guided you here,
then?
Ventnor. It’s a
spirit in my feet that has led me, at the first opportunity,
to the most delightful spot I know.
Mrs. Dale. Oh, the first opportunity—!
Ventnor. I might have
seen you very often before; but never just in the
right way.
Mrs. Dale. Is this the right way?
Ventnor. It depends on you to make it
so.
Mrs. Dale. What a responsibility!
What shall I do?
Ventnor. Talk to me—make
me think you’re a little glad to see me; give
me some tea and a cigarette; and say you’re out
to everyone else.
Mrs. Dale. Is that all?
(She hands him a cup of tea.) The cigarettes
are at your elbow—. And do you think I
shouldn’t have been glad to see you before?
Ventnor. No; I think I
should have been too glad to see you.
Mrs. Dale. Dear me, what
precautions! I hope you always wear goloshes
when it looks like rain and never by any chance expose
yourself to a draught. But I had an idea that
poets courted the emotions—
Ventnor. Do novelists?
Mrs. Dale. If you ask me—on
paper!
Ventnor. Just so; that’s
safest. My best things about the sea have been
written on shore. (He looks at her thoughtfully.)
But it wouldn’t have suited us in the old days,
would it?
Mrs. Dale (sighing). When we were real
people!
Ventnor. Real people?
Mrs. Dale. Are you,
now? I died years ago. What you see before
you is a figment of the reporter’s brain—a
monster manufactured out of newspaper paragraphs,
with ink in its veins. A keen sense of copyright
is my nearest approach to an emotion.
Ventnor (sighing). Ah,
well, yes—as you say, we’re public
property.
Mrs. Dale. If one shared
equally with the public! But the last shred of
my identity is gone.
Ventnor. Most people would
be glad to part with theirs on such terms. I
have followed your work with immense interest. Immolation
is a masterpiece. I read it last summer when it
first came out.
Mrs. Dale (with a shade less warmth).
Immolation has been out three years.
Ventnor. Oh, by Jove—no?
Surely not—But one is so overwhelmed—one
loses count. (Reproachfully.) Why have you never
sent me your books?
Mrs. Dale. For that very reason.
Ventnor (deprecatingly).
You know I didn’t mean it for you! And
my first book—do you remember—was
dedicated to you.
Mrs. Dale. Silver Trumpets—
Ventnor (much interested).
Have you a copy still, by any chance? The first
edition, I mean? Mine was stolen years ago.
Do you think you could put your hand on it?
Mrs. Dale (taking a small shabby
book from the table at her side). It’s
here.
Ventnor (eagerly). May
I have it? Ah, thanks. This is very
interesting. The last copy sold in London for
£40, and they tell me the next will fetch twice as
much. It’s quite introuvable.
Mrs. Dale. I know that.
(A pause. She takes the book from him, opens
it, and reads, half to herself—)
How much we two have seen together,
Of other eyes unwist,
Dear as in days of leafless weather
The willow’s saffron
mist,
Strange as the hour when Hesper swings
A-sea in beryl green,
While overhead on dalliant wings
The daylight hangs serene,
And thrilling as a meteor’s fall
Through depths of lonely sky,
When each to each two watchers call:
I saw it!—So did
I._
Ventnor. Thin, thin—the
troubadour tinkle. Odd how little promise there
is in first volumes!
Mrs. Dale (with irresistible emphasis).
I thought there was a distinct promise in this!
Ventnor (seeing his mistake).
Ah—the one you would never let me fulfil?
(Sentimentally.) How inexorable you were!
You never dedicated a book to me.
Mrs. Dale. I hadn’t
begun to write when we were—dedicating things
to each other.
Ventnor. Not for the public—but
you wrote for me; and, wonderful as you are, you’ve
never written anything since that I care for half as
much as—
Mrs. Dale (interested). Well?
Ventnor. Your letters.
Mrs. Dale (in a changed voice).
My letters—do you remember them?
Ventnor. When I don’t, I reread
them.
Mrs. Dale (incredulous). You have them
still?
Ventnor (unguardedly). You haven’t
mine, then?
Mrs. Dale (playfully).
Oh, you were a celebrity already. Of course I
kept them! (Smiling.) Think what they are worth
now! I always keep them locked up in my safe
over there. (She indicates a cabinet.)
Ventnor (after a pause)_. I always carry yours
with me.
Mrs. Dale (laughing). You—
Ventnor. Wherever I go.
(A longer pause. She looks at him fixedly.)
I have them with me now.
Mrs. Dale (agitated). You—have
them with you—now?
Ventnor (embarrassed). Why not? One
never knows—
Mrs. Dale. Never knows—?
Ventnor (humorously).
Gad—when the bank-examiner may come round.
You forget I’m a married man.
Mrs. Dale. Ah—yes.
Ventnor (sits down beside her).
I speak to you as I couldn’t to anyone else—without
deserving a kicking. You know how it all came
about. (A pause.) You’ll bear witness
that it wasn’t till you denied me all hope—
Mrs. Dale (a little breathless). Yes,
yes—
Ventnor. Till you sent me from you—
Mrs. Dale. It’s
so easy to be heroic when one is young! One doesn’t
realize how long life is going to last afterward. (Musing.)
Nor what weary work it is gathering up the fragments.
Ventnor. But the time
comes when one sends for the china-mender, and has
the bits riveted together, and turns the cracked side
to the wall—
Mrs. Dale. And denies that the article
was ever damaged?
Ventnor. Eh? Well,
the great thing, you see, is to keep one’s self
out of reach of the housemaid’s brush. (A
pause.) If you’re married you can’t—always.
(Smiling.) Don’t you hate to be taken
down and dusted?
Mrs. Dale (with intention).
You forget how long ago my husband died. It’s
fifteen years since I’ve been an object of interest
to anybody but the public.
Ventnor (smiling). The
only one of your admirers to whom you’ve ever
given the least encouragement!
Mrs. Dale. Say rather the most easily
pleased!
Ventnor. Or the only one you cared to
please?
Mrs. Dale. Ah, you haven’t
kept my letters!
Ventnor (gravely). Is
that a challenge? Look here, then! (He drams
a packet from his pocket and holds it out to her.)
Mrs. Dale (taking the packet and
looking at him earnestly). Why have you brought
me these?
Ventnor. I didn’t
bring them; they came because I came—that’s
all. (Tentatively.) Are we unwelcome?
Mrs. Dale (who has undone the packet
and does not appear to hear him). The very
first I ever wrote you—the day after we
met at the concert. How on earth did you happen
to keep it? (She glances over it.) How perfectly
absurd! Well, it’s not a compromising document.
Ventnor. I’m afraid none of them
are.
Mrs. Dale (quickly). Is
it to that they owe their immunity? Because one
could leave them about like safety matches?—Ah,
here’s another I remember—I wrote
that the day after we went skating together for the
first time. (She reads it slowly.) How odd!
How very odd!
Ventnor. What?
Mrs. Dale. Why, it’s
the most curious thing—I had a letter of
this kind to do the other day, in the novel I’m
at work on now—the letter of a woman who
is just—just beginning—
Ventnor. Yes—just beginning—?
Mrs. Dale. And, do you
know, I find the best phrase in it, the phrase I somehow
regarded as the fruit of—well, of all my
subsequent discoveries—is simply plagiarized,
word for word, from this!
Ventnor (eagerly). I told you so!
You were all there!
Mrs. Dale (critically).
But the rest of it’s poorly done—very
poorly. (Reads the letter over.) H’m—I
didn’t know how to leave off. It takes
me forever to get out of the door.
Ventnor (gayly). Perhaps
I was there to prevent you! (After a pause.)
I wonder what I said in return?
Mrs. Dale (interested).
Shall we look? (She rises.) Shall we—really?
I have them all here, you know. (She goes toward
the cabinet.)
Ventnor (following her with repressed
eagerness). Oh—all!
Mrs. Dale (throws open the door
of the cabinet, revealing a number of packets).
Don’t you believe me now?
Ventnor. Good heavens!
How I must have repeated myself! But then you
were so very deaf.
Mrs. Dale (takes out a packet and
returns to her seat. Ventnor extends an impatient
hand for the letters). No—no; wait!
I want to find your answer to the one I was just reading.
(After a pause.) Here it is—yes,
I thought so!
Ventnor. What did you think?
Mrs. Dale (triumphantly).
I thought it was the one in which you quoted Epipsychidion—
Ventnor. Mercy! Did
I quote things? I don’t wonder you
were cruel.
Mrs. Dale. Ah, and here’s
the other—the one I—the one I
didn’t answer—for a long time.
Do you remember?
Ventnor (with emotion).
Do I remember? I wrote it the morning after we
heard Isolde—
Mrs. Dale (disappointed).
No—no. That wasn’t the one
I didn’t answer! Here—this is
the one I mean.
Ventnor (takes it curiously).
Ah—h’m—this is very like
unrolling a mummy—(he glances at her)—with
a live grain of wheat in it, perhaps?—Oh,
by Jove!
Mrs. Dale. What?
Ventnor. Why, this is
the one I made a sonnet out of afterward! By
Jove, I’d forgotten where that idea came from.
You may know the lines perhaps? They’re
in the fourth volume of my Complete Edition—It’s
the thing beginning
Love came to me with unrelenting eyes—
one of my best, I rather fancy.
Of course, here it’s very crudely put—the
values aren’t brought out—ah! this
touch is good though—very good. H’m,
I daresay there might be other material. (He glances
toward the cabinet.)
Mrs. Dale (drily). The live grain of wheat,
as you said!
Ventnor. Ah, well—my
first harvest was sown on rocky ground—now
I plant for the fowls of the air. (Rising and walking
toward the cabinet.) When can I come and carry
off all this rubbish?
Mrs. Dale. Carry it off?
Ventnor (embarrassed).
My dear lady, surely between you and me explicitness
is a burden. You must see that these letters of
ours can’t be left to take their chance like
an ordinary correspondence—you said yourself
we were public property.
Mrs. Dale. To take their
chance? Do you suppose that, in my keeping, your
letters take any chances? (Suddenly.) Do mine—in
yours?
Ventnor (still more embarrassed).
Helen—! (He takes a turn through the room.)
You force me to remind you that you and I are differently
situated—that in a moment of madness I sacrificed
the only right you ever gave me—the right
to love you better than any other woman in the world.
(A pause. She says nothing and he continues,
with increasing difficulty—) You asked
me just now why I carried your letters about with
me—kept them, literally, in my own hands.
Well, suppose it’s to be sure of their not falling
into some one else’s?
Mrs. Dale. Oh!
Ventnor (throws himself into a
chair). For God’s sake don’t pity
me!
Mrs. Dale (after a long pause).
Am I dull—or are you trying to say that
you want to give me back my letters?
Ventnor (starting up).
I? Give you back—? God forbid!
Your letters? Not for the world! The only
thing I have left! But you can’t dream that
in my hands—
Mrs. Dale (suddenly). You want yours,
then?
Ventnor (repressing his eagerness).
My dear friend, if I’d ever dreamed that you’d
kept them—?
Mrs. Dale (accusingly).
You do want them. (A pause. He makes
a deprecatory gesture.) Why should they be less
safe with me than mine with you? I never forfeited
the right to keep them.
Ventnor (after another pause).
It’s compensation enough, almost, to have you
reproach me! (He moves nearer to her, but she makes
no response.) You forget that I’ve forfeited
all my rights—even that of letting
you keep my letters.
Mrs. Dale. You do
want them! (She rises, throws all the letters into
the cabinet, locks the door and puts the key in her
pocket.) There’s my answer.
Ventnor. Helen—!
Mrs. Dale. Ah, I paid
dearly enough for the right to keep them, and I mean
to! (She turns to him passionately.) Have you
ever asked yourself how I paid for it? With what
months and years of solitude, what indifference to
flattery, what resistance to affection?—Oh,
don’t smile because I said affection, and not
love. Affection’s a warm cloak in cold
weather; and I have been cold; and I shall keep
on growing colder! Don’t talk to me about
living in the hearts of my readers! We both know
what kind of a domicile that is. Why, before long
I shall become a classic! Bound in sets and kept
on the top book-shelf—brr, doesn’t
that sound freezing? I foresee the day when I
shall be as lonely as an Etruscan museum! (She
breaks into a laugh.) That’s what I’ve
paid for the right to keep your letters. (She holds
out her hand.) And now give me mine.
Ventnor. Yours?
Mrs. Dale (haughtily). Yes; I claim them.
Ventnor (in the same tone). On what ground?
Mrs. Dale. Hear the man!—Because
I wrote them, of course.
Ventnor. But it seems
to me that—under your inspiration, I admit—I
also wrote mine.
Mrs. Dale. Oh, I don’t
dispute their authenticity—it’s yours
I deny!
Ventnor. Mine?
Mrs. Dale. You voluntarily
ceased to be the man who wrote me those letters—you’ve
admitted as much. You traded paper for flesh and
blood. I don’t dispute your wisdom—only
you must hold to your bargain! The letters are
all mine.
Ventnor (groping between two tones).
Your arguments are as convincing as ever. (He hazards
a faint laugh.) You’re a marvellous dialectician—but,
if we’re going to settle the matter in the spirit
of an arbitration treaty, why, there are accepted
conventions in such cases. It’s an odious
way to put it, but since you won’t help me, one
of them is—
Mrs. Dale. One of them is—?
Ventnor. That it is usual—that
technically, I mean, the letter—belongs
to its writer—
Mrs. Dale (after a pause). Such letters
as these?
Ventnor. Such letters especially—
Mrs. Dale. But you couldn’t
have written them if I hadn’t—been
willing to read them. Surely there’s more
of myself in them than of you.
Ventnor. Surely there’s
nothing in which a man puts more of himself than in
his love-letters!
Mrs. Dale (with emotion).
But a woman’s love-letters are like her child.
They belong to her more than to anybody else—
Ventnor. And a man’s?
Mrs. Dale (with sudden violence).
Are all he risks!—There, take them. (She
flings the key of the cabinet at his feet and sinks
into a chair.)
Ventnor (starts as though to pick
up the key; then approaches and bends over her)_.
Helen—oh, Helen!
Mrs. Dale (she yields her hands
to him, murmuring:) Paul! (Suddenly she straightens
herself and draws back illuminated.) What a fool
I am! I see it all now. You want them for
your memoirs!
Ventnor (disconcerted). Helen—
Mrs. Dale (agitated).
Come, come—the rule is to unmask when the
signal’s given! You want them for your memoirs.
Ventnor (with a forced laugh). What makes
you think so?
Mrs. Dale (triumphantly). Because I
want them for mine!
Ventnor (in a changed tone).
Ah—. (He moves away from her and leans against
the mantelpiece. She remains seated, with her
eyes fixed on him.)
Mrs. Dale. I wonder I
didn’t see it sooner. Your reasons were
lame enough.
Ventnor (ironically).
Yours were masterly. You’re the more accomplished
actor of the two. I was completely deceived.
Mrs. Dale. Oh, I’m
a novelist. I can keep up that sort of thing for
five hundred pages!
Ventnor. I congratulate you. (A pause.)
Mrs. Dale (moving to her seat behind
the tea-table). I’ve never offered
you any tea. (She bends over the kettle.) Why
don’t you take your letters?
Ventnor. Because you’ve
been clever enough to make it impossible for me. (He
picks up the key and hands it to her. Then abruptly)—Was
it all acting—just now?
Mrs. Dale. By what right do you ask?
Ventnor. By right of renouncing
my claim to my letters. Keep them—and
tell me.
Mrs. Dale. I give you
back your claim—and I refuse to tell you.
Ventnor (sadly). Ah, Helen,
if you deceived me, you deceived yourself also.
Mrs. Dale. What does it
matter, now that we’re both undeceived?
I played a losing game, that’s all.
Ventnor. Why losing—since all
the letters are yours?
Mrs. Dale. The letters?
(Slowly.) I’d forgotten the letters—
Ventnor (exultant). Ah,
I knew you’d end by telling me the truth!
Mrs. Dale. The truth?
Where is the truth? (Half to herself.)
I thought I was lying when I began—but the
lies turned into truth as I uttered them! (She
looks at Ventnor.) I did want your letters
for my memoirs—I did think I’d
kept them for that purpose—and I wanted
to get mine back for the same reason—but
now (she puts out her hand and picks up some of
her letters, which are lying scattered on the table
near her)—how fresh they seem, and how
they take me back to the time when we lived instead
of writing about life!
Ventnor (smiling). The
time when we didn’t prepare our impromptu effects
beforehand and copyright our remarks about the weather!
Mrs. Dale. Or keep our
epigrams in cold storage and our adjectives under
lock and key!
Ventnor. When our emotions
weren’t worth ten cents a word, and a signature
wasn’t an autograph. Ah, Helen, after all,
there’s nothing like the exhilaration of spending
one’s capital!
Mrs. Dale. Of wasting
it, you mean. (She points to the letters.)
Do you suppose we could have written a word of these
if we’d known we were putting our dreams out
at interest? (She sits musing, with her eyes on
the fire, and he watches her in silence.) Paul,
do you remember the deserted garden we sometimes used
to walk in?
Ventnor. The old garden
with the high wall at the end of the village street?
The garden with the ruined box-borders and the broken-down
arbor? Why, I remember every weed in the paths
and every patch of moss on the walls!
Mrs. Dale. Well—I
went back there the other day. The village is
immensely improved. There’s a new hotel
with gas-fires, and a trolley in the main street;
and the garden has been turned into a public park,
where excursionists sit on cast-iron benches admiring
the statue of an Abolitionist.
Ventnor. An Abolitionist—how
appropriate!
Mrs. Dale. And the man
who sold the garden has made a fortune that he doesn’t
know how to spend—
Ventnor (rising impulsively).
Helen, (he approaches and lays his hand on her
letters), let’s sacrifice our fortune and
keep the excursionists out!
Mrs. Dale (with a responsive movement).
Paul, do you really mean it?
Ventnor (gayly). Mean
it? Why, I feel like a landed proprietor already!
It’s more than a garden—it’s
a park.
Mrs. Dale. It’s
more than a park, it’s a world—as
long as we keep it to ourselves!
Ventnor. Ah, yes—even
the pyramids look small when one sees a Cook’s
tourist on top of them! (He takes the key from the
table, unlocks the cabinet and brings out his letters,
which he lays beside hers.) Shall we burn the
key to our garden?
Mrs. Dale. Ah, then it
will indeed be boundless! (Watching him while he
throws the letters into the fire.)
Ventnor (turning back to her with
a half-sad smile). But not too big for us
to find each other in?
Mrs. Dale. Since we shall
be the only people there! (He takes both her hands
and they look at each other a moment in silence.
Then he goes out by the door to the right. As
he reaches the door she takes a step toward him, impulsively;
then turning back she leans against the chimney-piece,
quietly watching the letters burn.)