YOU remember old Neave, of course?
Little Humphrey Neave, I mean. We used to see
him pottering about Rome years ago. He lived in
two tiny rooms over a wine shop, on polenta and lentils,
and prowled among the refuse of the Ripetta whenever
he had a few soldi to spend. But you’ve
been out of the collector’s world for so long
that you may not know what happened to him afterward…
He was always a queer chap, Neave;
years older than you and me, of course—and
even when I first knew him, in my raw Roman days, he
gave me an extraordinary sense of age and experience.
I don’t think I’ve ever known any one
who was at once so intelligent and so simple.
It’s the precise combination that results in
romance; and poor little Neave was romantic.
He told me once how he’d come
to Rome. He was originaire of Mystic,
Connecticut—and he wanted to get as far
away from it as possible. Rome seemed as far
as anything on the same planet could be; and after
he’d worried his way through Harvard—with
shifts and shavings that you and I can’t imagine—he
contrived to get sent to Switzerland as tutor to a
chap who’d failed in his examinations.
With only the Alps between, he wasn’t likely
to turn back; and he got another fellow to take his
pupil home, and struck out on foot for the seven hills.
I’m telling you these early
details merely to give you a notion of the man’s
idealism. There was a cool persistency and a headlong
courage in his dash for Rome that one wouldn’t
have guessed in the little pottering chap we used
to know. Once on the spot, he got more tutoring,
managed to make himself a name for coaxing balky youths
to take their fences, and was finally able to take
up the more congenial task of expounding “the
antiquities” to cultured travellers. I
call it more congenial—but how it must have
seared his soul! Fancy unveiling the sacred scars
of Time to ladies who murmur: “Was this
actually the spot—?” while they
absently feel for their hatpins! He used to say
that nothing kept him at it but the exquisite thought
of accumulating the lire for his collection.
For the Neave collection, my dear fellow, began early,
began almost with his Roman life, began in a series
of little nameless odds and ends, broken trinkets,
torn embroideries, the amputated extremities of maimed
marbles: things that even the rag-picker had pitched
away when he sifted his haul. But they weren’t
nameless or meaningless to Neave; his strength lay
in his instinct for identifying, putting together,
seeing significant relations. He was a regular
Cuvier of bric-a-brac. And during those early
years, when he had time to brood over trifles and
note imperceptible differences, he gradually sharpened
his instinct, and made it into the delicate and redoubtable
instrument it is. Before he had a thousand francs’
worth of anticaglie to his name he began to
be known as an expert, and the big dealers were glad
to consult him. But we’re getting no nearer
the Daunt Diana…
Well, some fifteen years ago, in London,
I ran across Neave at Christie’s. He was
the same little man we’d known, effaced, bleached,
indistinct, like a poor “impression”—as
unnoticeable as one of his own early finds, yet, like
them, with a quality, if one had an eye for
it. He told me he still lived in Rome, and had
contrived, by fierce self-denial, to get a few decent
bits together—“piecemeal, little
by little, with fasting and prayer; and I mean the
fasting literally!” he said.
He had run over to London for his
annual “look-round”—I fancy
one or another of the big collectors usually paid
his journey—and when we met he was on his
way to see the Daunt collection. You know old
Daunt was a surly brute, and the things weren’t
easily seen; but he had heard Neave was in London,
and had sent—yes, actually sent!—for
him to come and give his opinion on a few bits, including
the Diana. The little man bore himself discreetly,
but you can imagine his pride. In his exultation
he asked me to come with him—“Oh,
I’ve the grandes et petites entrees, my
dear fellow: I’ve made my conditions—”
and so it happened that I saw the first meeting between
Humphrey Neave and his fate.
For that collection was his
fate: or, one may say, it was embodied in the
Diana who was queen and goddess of the realm.
Yes—I shall always be glad I was with Neave
when he had his first look at the Diana. I see
him now, blinking at her through his white lashes,
and stroking his seedy wisp of a moustache to hide
a twitch of the muscles. It was all very quiet,
but it was the coup de foudre. I could
see that by the way his hands trembled when he turned
away and began to examine the other things. You
remember Neave’s hands—thin, sallow,
dry, with long inquisitive fingers thrown out like
antennae? Whatever they hold—bronze
or lace, hard enamel or brittle glass—they
have an air of conforming themselves to the texture
of the thing, and sucking out of it, by every finger-tip,
the mysterious essence it has secreted. Well,
that day, as he moved about among Daunt’s treasures,
the Diana followed him everywhere. He didn’t
look back at her—he gave himself to the
business he was there for—but whatever
he touched, he felt her. And on the threshold
he turned and gave her his first free look—the
kind of look that says: “You’re mine.”
It amused me at the time—the
idea of little Neave making eyes at any of Daunt’s
belongings. He might as well have coquetted with
the Kohinoor. And the same idea seemed to strike
him; for as we turned away from the big house in Belgravia
he glanced up at it and said, with a bitterness I’d
never heard in him: “Good Lord! To
think of that lumpy fool having those things to handle!
Did you notice his stupid stumps of fingers?
I suppose he blunted them gouging nuggets out of the
gold fields. And in exchange for the nuggets he
gets all that in a year—only has to hold
out his callous palm to have that great ripe sphere
of beauty drop into it! That’s my idea of
heaven—to have a great collection drop into
one’s hand, as success, or love, or any of the
big shining things, drop suddenly on some men.
And I’ve had to worry along for nearly fifty
years, saving and paring, and haggling and intriguing,
to get here a bit and there a bit—and not
one perfection in the lot! It’s enough to
poison a man’s life.”
The outbreak was so unlike Neave that
I remember every word of it: remember, too, saying
in answer: “But, look here, Neave, you
wouldn’t take Daunt’s hands for yours,
I imagine?”
He stared a moment and smiled.
“Have all that, and grope my way through it
like a blind cave fish? What a question!
But the sense that it’s always the blind fish
that live in that kind of aquarium is what makes anarchists,
sir!” He looked back from the corner of the
square, where we had paused while he delivered himself
of this remarkable metaphor. “God, I’d
like to throw a bomb at that place, and be in at the
looting!”
And with that, on the way home, he
unpacked his grievance—pulled the bandage
off the wound, and showed me the ugly mark it had made
on his little white soul.
It wasn’t the struggling, stinting,
self-denying that galled him—it was the
inadequacy of the result. It was, in short, the
old tragedy of the discrepancy between a man’s
wants and his power to gratify them. Neave’s
taste was too exquisite for his means—was
like some strange, delicate, capricious animal, that
he cherished and pampered and couldn’t satisfy.
“Don’t you know those
little glittering lizards that die if they’re
not fed on some wonderful tropical fly? Well,
my taste’s like that, with one important difference—if
it doesn’t get its fly, it simply turns and
feeds on me. Oh, it doesn’t die, my taste—worse
luck! It gets larger and stronger and more fastidious,
and takes a bigger bite of me—that’s
all.”
That was all. Year by year, day
by day, he had made himself into this delicate register
of perceptions and sensations—as far above
the ordinary human faculty of appreciation as some
scientific registering instrument is beyond the rough
human senses—only to find that the beauty
which alone could satisfy him was unattainable—that
he was never to know the last deep identification
which only possession can give. He had trained
himself in short, to feel, in the rare great thing—such
an utterance of beauty as the Daunt Diana, say—a
hundred elements of perfection, a hundred reasons
why, imperceptible, inexplicable even, to the average
“artistic” sense; he had reached this point
by a long austere process of discrimination and rejection,
the renewed great refusals of the intelligence which
perpetually asks more, which will make no pact with
its self of yesterday, and is never to be beguiled
from its purpose by the wiles of the next-best-thing.
Oh, it’s a poignant case, but not a common one;
for the next-best-thing usually wins…
You see, the worst of Neave’s
state was the fact of his not being a mere collector,
even the collector raised to his highest pitch of
efficiency. The whole thing was blent in him with
poetry—his imagination had romanticized
the acquisitive instinct, as the religious feeling
of the Middle Ages turned passion into love. And
yet his could never be the abstract enjoyment of the
philosopher who says: “This or that object
is really mine because I’m capable of appreciating
it.” Neave wanted what he appreciated—wanted
it with his touch and his sight as well as with his
imagination.
It was hardly a year afterward that,
coming back from a long tour in India, I picked up
a London paper and read the amazing headline:
“Mr. Humphrey Neave buys the Daunt collection”...
I rubbed my eyes and read again. Yes, it could
only be our old friend Humphrey. “An American
living in Rome … one of our most discerning collectors”;
there was no mistaking the description. I clapped
on my hat and bolted out to see the first dealer I
could find; and there I had the incredible details.
Neave had come into a fortune—two or three
million dollars, amassed by an uncle who had a corset-factory,
and who had attained wealth as the creator of the Mystic
Super-straight. (Corset-factory sounds odd, by the
way, doesn’t it? One had fancied that the
corset was a personal, a highly specialized garment,
more or less shaped on the form it was to modify; but,
after all, the Tanagras were all made from two or three
moulds—and so, I suppose, are the ladies
who wear the Mystic Super-straight.)
The uncle had a son, and Neave had
never dreamed of seeing a penny of the money; but
the son died suddenly, and the father followed, leaving
a codicil that gave everything to our friend.
Humphrey had to go out to “realize” on
the corset-factory; and his description of that
... Well, he came back with his money in his pocket,
and the day he landed old Daunt went to smash.
It all fitted in like a Chinese puzzle. I believe
Neave drove straight from Euston to Daunt House:
at any rate, within two months the collection was his,
and at a price that made the trade sit up. Trust
old Daunt for that!
I was in Rome the following spring,
and you’d better believe I looked him up.
A big porter glared at me from the door of the Palazzo
Neave: I had almost to produce my passport to
get in. But that wasn’t Neave’s fault—the
poor fellow was so beset by people clamouring to see
his collection that he had to barricade himself, literally.
When I had mounted the state Scalone, and come
on him, at the end of half a dozen echoing saloons,
in the farthest, smallest reduit of the vast
suite, I received the same welcome that he used to
give us in his little den over the wine shop.
“Well—so you’ve
got her?” I said. For I’d caught sight
of the Diana in passing, against the bluish blur of
an old verdure—just the background
for her poised loveliness. Only I rather wondered
why she wasn’t in the room where he sat.
He smiled. “Yes, I’ve
got her,” he returned, more calmly than I had
expected.
“And all the rest of the loot?”
“Yes. I had to buy the lump.”
“Had to? But you wanted
to, didn’t you? You used to say it was your
idea of heaven—to stretch out your hand
and have a great ripe sphere of beauty drop into it.
I’m quoting your own words, by the way.”
Neave blinked and stroked his seedy
moustache. “Oh, yes. I remember the
phrase. It’s true—it is
the last luxury.” He paused, as if seeking
a pretext for his lack of warmth. “The thing
that bothered me was having to move. I couldn’t
cram all the stuff into my old quarters.”
“Well, I should say not!
This is rather a better setting.”
He got up. “Come and take
a look round. I want to show you two or three
things—new attributions I’ve made.
I’m doing the catalogue over.”
The interest of showing me the things
seemed to dispel the vague apathy I had felt in him.
He grew keen again in detailing his redistribution
of values, and above all in convicting old Daunt and
his advisers of their repeated aberrations of judgment.
“The miracle is that he should have got such
things, knowing as little as he did what he was getting.
And the egregious asses who bought for him were no
better, were worse in fact, since they had all sorts
of humbugging wrong reasons for admiring what old
Daunt simply coveted because it belonged to some other
rich man.”
Never had Neave had so wondrous a
field for the exercise of his perfected faculty; and
I saw then how in the real, the great collector’s
appreciations the keenest scientific perception is
suffused with imaginative sensibility, and how it’s
to the latter undefinable quality that in the last
resort he trusts himself.
Nevertheless, I still felt the shadow
of that hovering apathy, and he knew I felt it, and
was always breaking off to give me reasons for it.
For one thing, he wasn’t used to his new quarters—hated
their bigness and formality; then the requests to show
his things drove him mad. “The women—oh,
the women!” he wailed, and interrupted himself
to describe a heavy-footed German Princess who had
marched past his treasures as if she were inspecting
a cavalry regiment, applying an unmodulated Mugneeficent
to everything from the engraved gems to the Hercules
torso.
“Not that she was half as bad
as the other kind,” he added, as if with a last
effort at optimism. “The kind who discriminate
and say: ’I’m not sure if it’s
Botticelli or Cellini I mean, but one of that school,
at any rate.’ And the worst of all are the
ones who know—up to a certain point:
have the schools, and the dates and the jargon pat,
and yet wouldn’t know a Phidias if it stood where
they hadn’t expected it.”
He had all my sympathy, poor Neave;
yet these were trials inseparable from the collector’s
lot, and not always without their secret compensations.
Certainly they did not wholly explain my friend’s
attitude; and for a moment I wondered if it were due
to some strange disillusionment as to the quality
of his treasures. But no! the Daunt collection
was almost above criticism; and as we passed from
one object to another I saw there was no mistaking
the genuineness of Neave’s pride in his possessions.
The ripe sphere of beauty was his, and he had found
no flaw in it as yet…
A year later came the amazing announcement—the
Daunt collection was for sale. At first we all
supposed it was a case of weeding out (though how
old Daunt would have raged at the thought of anybody’s
weeding his collection!) But no—the
catalogue corrected that idea. Every stick and
stone was to go under the hammer. The news ran
like wildfire from Rome to Berlin, from Paris to London
and New York. Was Neave ruined, then? Wrong
again—the dealers nosed that out in no
time. He was simply selling because he chose to
sell; and in due time the things came up at Christie’s.
But you may be sure the trade had
found an answer to the riddle; and the answer was
that, on close inspection, Neave had found the collection
less impeccable than he had supposed. It was a
preposterous answer—but then there was no
other. Neave, by this time, was pretty generally
recognized as having the subtlest flair of
any collector in Europe, and if he didn’t choose
to keep the Daunt collection it could be only because
he had reason to think he could do better.
In a flash this report had gone the
rounds and the buyers were on their guard. I
had run over to London to see the thing through, and
it was the queerest sale I ever was at. Some of
the things held their own, but a lot—and
a few of the best among them—went for half
their value. You see, they’d been locked
up in old Daunt’s house for nearly twenty years,
and hardly shown to any one, so that the whole younger
generation of dealers and collectors knew of them
only by hearsay. Then you know the effect of suggestion
in such cases. The undefinable sense we were
speaking of is a ticklish instrument, easily thrown
out of gear by a sudden fall of temperature; and the
sharpest experts grow shy and self-distrustful when
the cold current of depreciation touches them.
The sale was a slaughter—and when I saw
the Daunt Diana fall at the wink of a little third-rate
brocanteur from Vienna I turned sick at the
folly of my kind.
For my part, I had never believed
that Neave had sold the collection because he’d
“found it out”; and within a year my incredulity
was justified. As soon as the things were put
in circulation they were known for the marvels they
are. There was hardly a poor bit in the lot;
and my wonder grew at Neave’s madness. All
over Europe, dealers began to be fighting for the
spoils; and all kinds of stuff were palmed off on
the unsuspecting as fragments of the Daunt collection!
Meanwhile, what was Neave doing?
For a long time I didn’t hear, and chance kept
me from returning to Rome. But one day, in Paris,
I ran across a dealer who had captured for a song
one of the best Florentine bronzes in the Daunt collection—a
marvellous plaquette of Donatello’s.
I asked him what had become of it, and he said with
a grin: “I sold it the other day,”
naming a price that staggered me.
“Ye gods! Who paid you that for it?”
His grin broadened, and he answered: “Neave.”
“_ Neave?_ Humphrey Neave?”
“Didn’t you know he was buying back his
things?”
“Nonsense!”
“He is, though. Not in his own name—but
he’s doing it.”
And he was, do you know—and
at prices that would have made a sane man shudder!
A few weeks later I ran across his tracks in London,
where he was trying to get hold of a Penicaud enamel—another
of his scattered treasures. Then I hunted him
down at his hotel, and had it out with him.
“Look here, Neave, what are you up to?”
He wouldn’t tell me at first:
stared and laughed and denied. But I took him
off to dine, and after dinner, while we smoked, I happened
to mention casually that I had a pull over the man
who had the Penicaud—and at that he broke
down and confessed.
“Yes, I’m buying them
back, Finney—it’s true.”
He laughed nervously, twitching his moustache.
And then he let me have the story.
“You know how I’d hungered
and thirsted for the real thing—you
quoted my own phrase to me once, about the ‘ripe
sphere of beauty.’ So when I got my money,
and Daunt lost his, almost at the same moment, I saw
the hand of Providence in it. I knew that, even
if I’d been younger, and had more time, I could
never hope, nowadays, to form such a collection as
that. There was the ripe sphere, within
reach; and I took it. But when I got it, and began
to live with it, I found out my mistake. It was
a mariage de convenance—there’d
been no wooing, no winning. Each of my little
old bits—the rubbish I chucked out to make
room for Daunt’s glories—had its own
personal history, the drama of my relation to it,
of the discovery, the struggle, the capture, the first
divine moment of possession. There was a romantic
secret between us. And then I had absorbed its
beauties one by one, they had become a part of my imagination,
they held me by a hundred threads of far-reaching
association. And suddenly I had expected to create
this kind of intense personal tie between myself and
a roomful of new cold alien presences—things
staring at me vacantly from the depths of unknown pasts!
Can you fancy a more preposterous hope? Why,
my other things, my own things, had wooed me
as passionately as I wooed them: there was a
certain little bronze, a little Venus Callipyge, who
had drawn me, drawn me, drawn me, imploring me to
rescue her from her unspeakable surroundings in a
vulgar bric-a-brac shop at Biarritz, where she shrank
out of sight among sham Sevres and Dutch silver, as
one has seen certain women—rare, shy, exquisite—made
almost invisible by the vulgar splendours surrounding
them. Well! that little Venus, who was just a
specious seventeenth century attempt at the ‘antique,’
but who had penetrated me with her pleading grace,
touched me by the easily guessed story of her obscure,
anonymous origin, was more to me imaginatively—yes!
more than the cold bought beauty of the Daunt Diana…”
“The Daunt Diana!” I broke
in. “Hold up, Neave—the Daunt
Diana?”
He smiled contemptuously. “A
professional beauty, my dear fellow—expected
every head to be turned when she came into a room.”
“Oh, Neave,” I groaned.
“Yes, I know. You’re
thinking of what we felt that day we first saw her
in London. Many a poor devil has sold his soul
as the result of such a first sight! Well, I
sold her instead. Do you want the truth
about her? Elle etait bete a pleurer.”
He laughed, and stood up with a little
shrug of disenchantment.
“And so you’re impenitent?”
I paused. “And yet you’re buying some
of the things back?”
Neave laughed again, ironically.
“I knew you’d find me out and call me
to account. Well, yes: I’m buying back.”
He stood before me half sheepish, half defiant.
“I’m buying back because there’s
nothing else as good in the market. And because
I’ve a queer feeling that, this time, they’ll
be mine. But I’m ruining myself at
the game!” he confessed.
It was true: Neave was ruining
himself. And he’s gone on ruining himself
ever since, till now the job’s nearly done.
Bit by bit, year by year, he has gathered in his scattered
treasures, at higher prices than the dealers ever
dreamed of getting. There are fabulous details
in the story of his quest. Now and then I ran
across him, and was able to help him recover a fragment;
and it was wonderful to see his delight in the moment
of reunion. Finally, about two years ago, we
met in Paris, and he told me he had got back all the
important pieces except the Diana.
“The Diana? But you told me you didn’t
care for her.”
“Didn’t care?” He
leaned across the restaurant table that divided us.
“Well, no, in a sense I didn’t. I
wanted her to want me, you see; and she didn’t
then! Whereas now she’s crying to me to
come to her. You know where she is?” he
broke off.
Yes, I knew: in the centre of
Mrs. Willy P. Goldmark’s yellow and gold drawing-room,
under a thousand-candle-power chandelier, with reflectors
aimed at her from every point of the compass.
I had seen her wincing and shivering there in her
outraged nudity at one of the Goldmark “crushes.”
“But you can’t get her, Neave,”
I objected.
“No, I can’t get her,” he said.
Well, last month I was in Rome, for
the first time in six or seven years, and of course
I looked about for Neave. The Palazzo Neave was
let to some rich Russians, and the splendid new porter
didn’t know where the proprietor lived.
But I got on his trail easily enough, and it led me
to a strange old place in the Trastevere, an ancient
crevassed black palace turned tenement house, and fluttering
with pauper clothes-lines. I found Neave under
the leads, in two or three cold rooms that smelt of
the cuisine of all his neighbours: a poor
shrunken little figure, seedier and shabbier than ever,
yet more alive than when we had made the tour of his
collection in the Palazzo Neave.
The collection was around him again,
not displayed in tall cabinets and on marble tables,
but huddled on shelves, perched on chairs, crammed
in corners, putting the gleam of bronze, the opalescence
of old glass, the pale lustre of marble, into all
the angles of his low dim rooms. There they were,
the proud presences that had stared at him down the
vistas of Daunt House, and shone in cold transplanted
beauty under his own painted cornices: there they
were, gathered in humble promiscuity about his bent
shabby figure, like superb wild creatures tamed to
become the familiars of some harmless old wizard.
As we went from bit to bit, as he
lifted one piece after another, and held it to the
light of his low windows, I saw in his hands the same
tremor of sensation that I had noticed when he first
examined the same objects at Daunt House. All
his life was in his finger-tips, and it seemed to
communicate life to the exquisite things he touched.
But you’ll think me infected by his mysticism
if I tell you they gained new beauty while he held
them…
We went the rounds slowly and reverently;
and then, when I supposed our inspection was over,
and was turning to take my leave, he opened a door
I had not noticed, and showed me into a slit of a room
beyond. It was a mere monastic cell, scarcely
large enough for his narrow iron bed and the chest
which probably held his few clothes; but there, in
a niche of the bare wall, facing the foot of the bed—there
stood the Daunt Diana.
I gasped at the sight and turned to
him; and he looked back at me without speaking.
“In the name of magic, Neave, how did you do
it?”
He smiled as if from the depths of
some secret rapture. “Call it magic, if
you like; but I ruined myself doing it,” he said.
I stared at him in silence, breathless
with the madness and the wonder of it; and suddenly,
red to the ears, he flung out his boyish confession.
“I lied to you that day in London—the
day I said I didn’t care for her. I always
cared—always worshipped—always
wanted her. But she wasn’t mine then, and
I knew it, and she knew it … and now at last we
understand each other.” He looked at me
shyly, and then glanced about the bare cold cell.
“The setting isn’t worthy of her, I know;
she was meant for glories I can’t give her;
but beautiful things, my dear Finney, like beautiful
spirits, live in houses not made with hands…”
His face shone with extraordinary
sweetness as he spoke; and I saw he’d got hold
of the secret we’re all after. No, the setting
isn’t worthy of her, if you like. The rooms
are as shabby and mean as those we used to see him
in years ago over the wine shop. I’m not
sure they’re not shabbier and meaner. But
she rules there at last, she shines and hovers there
above him, and there at night, I doubt not, steals
down from her cloud to give him the Latmian kiss.