At half-past twelve next day Lord
Henry Wotton strolled from Curzon Street over to the
Albany to call on his uncle, Lord Fermor, a genial
if somewhat rough-mannered old bachelor, whom the outside
world called selfish because it derived no particular
benefit from him, but who was considered generous
by Society as he fed the people who amused him.
His father had been our ambassador at Madrid when
Isabella was young and Prim unthought of, but had
retired from the diplomatic service in a capricious
moment of annoyance on not being offered the Embassy
at Paris, a post to which he considered that he was
fully entitled by reason of his birth, his indolence,
the good English of his dispatches, and his inordinate
passion for pleasure. The son, who had been his
father’s secretary, had resigned along with
his chief, somewhat foolishly as was thought at the
time, and on succeeding some months later to the title,
had set himself to the serious study of the great
aristocratic art of doing absolutely nothing.
He had two large town houses, but preferred to live
in chambers as it was less trouble, and took most
of his meals at his club. He paid some attention
to the management of his collieries in the Midland
counties, excusing himself for this taint of industry
on the ground that the one advantage of having coal
was that it enabled a gentleman to afford the decency
of burning wood on his own hearth. In politics
he was a Tory, except when the Tories were in office,
during which period he roundly abused them for being
a pack of Radicals. He was a hero to his valet,
who bullied him, and a terror to most of his relations,
whom he bullied in turn. Only England could have
produced him, and he always said that the country
was going to the dogs. His principles were out
of date, but there was a good deal to be said for
his prejudices.
When Lord Henry entered the room,
he found his uncle sitting in a rough shooting-coat,
smoking a cheroot and grumbling over The Times.
“Well, Harry,” said the old gentleman,
“what brings you out so early? I thought
you dandies never got up till two, and were not visible
till five.”
“Pure family affection, I assure
you, Uncle George. I want to get something out
of you.”
“Money, I suppose,” said
Lord Fermor, making a wry face. “Well,
sit down and tell me all about it. Young people,
nowadays, imagine that money is everything.”
“Yes,” murmured Lord Henry,
settling his button-hole in his coat; “and when
they grow older they know it. But I don’t
want money. It is only people who pay their bills
who want that, Uncle George, and I never pay mine.
Credit is the capital of a younger son, and one lives
charmingly upon it. Besides, I always deal with
Dartmoor’s tradesmen, and consequently they never
bother me. What I want is information:
not useful information, of course; useless information.”
“Well, I can tell you anything
that is in an English Blue Book, Harry, although those
fellows nowadays write a lot of nonsense. When
I was in the Diplomatic, things were much better.
But I hear they let them in now by examination.
What can you expect? Examinations, sir, are
pure humbug from beginning to end. If a man
is a gentleman, he knows quite enough, and if he is
not a gentleman, whatever he knows is bad for him.”
“Mr. Dorian Gray does not belong
to Blue Books, Uncle George,” said Lord Henry
languidly.
“Mr. Dorian Gray? Who
is he?” asked Lord Fermor, knitting his bushy
white eyebrows.
“That is what I have come to
learn, Uncle George. Or rather, I know who he
is. He is the last Lord Kelso’s grandson.
His mother was a Devereux, Lady Margaret Devereaux.
I want you to tell me about his mother. What
was she like? Whom did she marry? You have
known nearly everybody in your time, so you might
have known her. I am very much interested in
Mr. Gray at present. I have only just met him.”
“Kelso’s grandson!”
echoed the old gentleman. “Kelso’s
grandson! ... Of course…. I knew his mother
intimately. I believe I was at her christening.
She was an extraordinarily beautiful girl, Margaret
Devereux, and made all the men frantic by running
away with a penniless young fellow— a mere
nobody, sir, a subaltern in a foot regiment, or something
of that kind. Certainly. I remember the
whole thing as if it happened yesterday. The
poor chap was killed in a duel at Spa a few months
after the marriage. There was an ugly story about
it. They said Kelso got some rascally adventurer,
some Belgian brute, to insult his son-in-law in public—paid
him, sir, to do it, paid him— and that
the fellow spitted his man as if he had been a pigeon.
The thing was hushed up, but, egad, Kelso ate his chop
alone at the club for some time afterwards.
He brought his daughter back with him, I was told,
and she never spoke to him again. Oh, yes; it
was a bad business. The girl died, too, died
within a year. So she left a son, did she?
I had forgotten that. What sort of boy is he?
If he is like his mother, he must be a good-looking
chap.”
“He is very good-looking,” assented Lord
Henry.
“I hope he will fall into proper
hands,” continued the old man. “He
should have a pot of money waiting for him if Kelso
did the right thing by him. His mother had money,
too. All the Selby property came to her, through
her grandfather. Her grandfather hated Kelso,
thought him a mean dog. He was, too. Came
to Madrid once when I was there. Egad, I was
ashamed of him. The Queen used to ask me about
the English noble who was always quarrelling with
the cabmen about their fares. They made quite
a story of it. I didn’t dare show my face
at Court for a month. I hope he treated his
grandson better than he did the jarvies.”
“I don’t know,”
answered Lord Henry. “I fancy that the
boy will be well off. He is not of age yet.
He has Selby, I know. He told me so. And
. . . his mother was very beautiful?”
“Margaret Devereux was one of
the loveliest creatures I ever saw, Harry. What
on earth induced her to behave as she did, I never
could understand. She could have married anybody
she chose. Carlington was mad after her.
She was romantic, though. All the women of that
family were. The men were a poor lot, but, egad!
the women were wonderful. Carlington went on
his knees to her. Told me so himself. She
laughed at him, and there wasn’t a girl in London
at the time who wasn’t after him. And by
the way, Harry, talking about silly marriages, what
is this humbug your father tells me about Dartmoor
wanting to marry an American? Ain’t English
girls good enough for him?”
“It is rather fashionable to
marry Americans just now, Uncle George.”
“I’ll back English women
against the world, Harry,” said Lord Fermor,
striking the table with his fist.
“The betting is on the Americans.”
“They don’t last, I am told,” muttered
his uncle.
“A long engagement exhausts
them, but they are capital at a steeplechase.
They take things flying. I don’t think
Dartmoor has a chance.”
“Who are her people?” grumbled the old
gentleman. “Has she got any?”
Lord Henry shook his head. “American
girls are as clever at concealing their parents, as
English women are at concealing their past,”
he said, rising to go.
“They are pork-packers, I suppose?”
“I hope so, Uncle George, for
Dartmoor’s sake. I am told that pork-packing
is the most lucrative profession in America, after
politics.”
“Is she pretty?”
“She behaves as if she was beautiful.
Most American women do. It is the secret of
their charm.”
“Why can’t these American women stay in
their own country?
They are always telling us that it is the paradise
for women.”
“It is. That is the reason
why, like Eve, they are so excessively anxious to
get out of it,” said Lord Henry. “Good-bye,
Uncle George. I shall be late for lunch, if I
stop any longer. Thanks for giving me the information
I wanted. I always like to know everything about
my new friends, and nothing about my old ones.”
“Where are you lunching, Harry?”
“At Aunt Agatha’s. I have asked myself
and Mr. Gray.
He is her latest protege.”
“Humph! tell your Aunt Agatha,
Harry, not to bother me any more with her charity
appeals. I am sick of them. Why, the good
woman thinks that I have nothing to do but to write
cheques for her silly fads.”
“All right, Uncle George, I’ll
tell her, but it won’t have any effect.
Philanthropic people lose all sense of humanity.
It is their distinguishing characteristic.”
The old gentleman growled approvingly
and rang the bell for his servant. Lord Henry
passed up the low arcade into Burlington Street and
turned his steps in the direction of Berkeley Square.
So that was the story of Dorian Gray’s
parentage. Crudely as it had been told to him,
it had yet stirred him by its suggestion of a strange,
almost modern romance. A beautiful woman risking
everything for a mad passion. A few wild weeks
of happiness cut short by a hideous, treacherous crime.
Months of voiceless agony, and then a child born
in pain. The mother snatched away by death,
the boy left to solitude and the tyranny of an old
and loveless man. Yes; it was an interesting
background. It posed the lad, made him more perfect,
as it were. Behind every exquisite thing that
existed, there was something tragic. Worlds had
to be in travail, that the meanest flower might blow.
. . . And how charming he had been at dinner the
night before, as with startled eyes and lips parted
in frightened pleasure he had sat opposite to him
at the club, the red candleshades staining to a richer
rose the wakening wonder of his face. Talking
to him was like playing upon an exquisite violin.
He answered to every touch and thrill of the bow.
. . . There was something terribly enthralling
in the exercise of influence. No other activity
was like it. To project one’s soul into
some gracious form, and let it tarry there for a moment;
to hear one’s own intellectual views echoed
back to one with all the added music of passion and
youth; to convey one’s temperament into another
as though it were a subtle fluid or a strange perfume:
there was a real joy in that—perhaps the
most satisfying joy left to us in an age so limited
and vulgar as our own, an age grossly carnal in its
pleasures, and grossly common in its aims….
He was a marvellous type, too, this lad, whom by so
curious a chance he had met in Basil’s studio,
or could be fashioned into a marvellous type, at any
rate. Grace was his, and the white purity of
boyhood, and beauty such as old Greek marbles kept
for us. There was nothing that one could not
do with him. He could be made a Titan or a toy.
What a pity it was that such beauty was destined to
fade! . . . And Basil? From a psychological
point of view, how interesting he was! The new
manner in art, the fresh mode of looking at life,
suggested so strangely by the merely visible presence
of one who was unconscious of it all; the silent spirit
that dwelt in dim woodland, and walked unseen in open
field, suddenly showing herself, Dryadlike and not
afraid, because in his soul who sought for her there
had been wakened that wonderful vision to which alone
are wonderful things revealed; the mere shapes and
patterns of things becoming, as it were, refined,
and gaining a kind of symbolical value, as though
they were themselves patterns of some other and more
perfect form whose shadow they made real: how
strange it all was! He remembered something like
it in history. Was it not Plato, that artist
in thought, who had first analyzed it? Was it
not Buonarotti who had carved it in the coloured marbles
of a sonnet-sequence? But in our own century it
was strange. . . . Yes; he would try to be to
Dorian Gray what, without knowing it, the lad was
to the painter who had fashioned the wonderful portrait.
He would seek to dominate him—had already,
indeed, half done so. He would make that wonderful
spirit his own. There was something fascinating
in this son of love and death.
Suddenly he stopped and glanced up
at the houses. He found that he had passed his
aunt’s some distance, and, smiling to himself,
turned back. When he entered the somewhat sombre
hall, the butler told him that they had gone in to
lunch. He gave one of the footmen his hat and
stick and passed into the dining-room.
“Late as usual, Harry,”
cried his aunt, shaking her head at him.
He invented a facile excuse, and having
taken the vacant seat next to her, looked round to
see who was there. Dorian bowed to him shyly
from the end of the table, a flush of pleasure stealing
into his cheek. Opposite was the Duchess of Harley,
a lady of admirable good-nature and good temper, much
liked by every one who knew her, and of those ample
architectural proportions that in women who are not
duchesses are described by contemporary historians
as stoutness. Next to her sat, on her right,
Sir Thomas Burdon, a Radical member of Parliament,
who followed his leader in public life and in private
life followed the best cooks, dining with the Tories
and thinking with the Liberals, in accordance with
a wise and well-known rule. The post on her left
was occupied by Mr. Erskine of Treadley, an old gentleman
of considerable charm and culture, who had fallen,
however, into bad habits of silence, having, as he
explained once to Lady Agatha, said everything that
he had to say before he was thirty. His own
neighbour was Mrs. Vandeleur, one of his aunt’s
oldest friends, a perfect saint amongst women, but
so dreadfully dowdy that she reminded one of a badly
bound hymn-book. Fortunately for him she had on
the other side Lord Faudel, a most intelligent middle-aged
mediocrity, as bald as a ministerial statement in
the House of Commons, with whom she was conversing
in that intensely earnest manner which is the one
unpardonable error, as he remarked once himself, that
all really good people fall into, and from which none
of them ever quite escape.
“We are talking about poor Dartmoor,
Lord Henry,” cried the duchess, nodding pleasantly
to him across the table. “Do you think
he will really marry this fascinating young person?”
“I believe she has made up her
mind to propose to him, Duchess.”
“How dreadful!” exclaimed
Lady Agatha. “Really, some one should interfere.”
“I am told, on excellent authority,
that her father keeps an American dry-goods store,”
said Sir Thomas Burdon, looking supercilious.
“My uncle has already suggested pork-packing
Sir Thomas.”
“Dry-goods! What are American
dry-goods?” asked the duchess, raising her large
hands in wonder and accentuating the verb.
“American novels,” answered
Lord Henry, helping himself to some quail.
The duchess looked puzzled.
“Don’t mind him, my dear,”
whispered Lady Agatha. “He never means
anything that he says.”
“When America was discovered,”
said the Radical member— and he began to
give some wearisome facts. Like all people who
try to exhaust a subject, he exhausted his listeners.
The duchess sighed and exercised her privilege of interruption.
“I wish to goodness it never had been discovered
at all!” she exclaimed. “Really,
our girls have no chance nowadays. It is most
unfair.”
“Perhaps, after all, America
never has been discovered,” said Mr. Erskine;
“I myself would say that it had merely been
detected.”
“Oh! but I have seen specimens
of the inhabitants,” answered the duchess vaguely.
“I must confess that most of them are extremely
pretty. And they dress well, too. They
get all their dresses in Paris. I wish I could
afford to do the same.”
“They say that when good Americans
die they go to Paris,” chuckled Sir Thomas,
who had a large wardrobe of Humour’s cast-off
clothes.
“Really! And where do
bad Americans go to when they die?” inquired
the duchess.
“They go to America,” murmured Lord Henry.
Sir Thomas frowned. “I
am afraid that your nephew is prejudiced against that
great country,” he said to Lady Agatha.
“I have travelled all over it in cars provided
by the directors, who, in such matters, are extremely
civil. I assure you that it is an education to
visit it.”
“But must we really see Chicago
in order to be educated?” asked Mr. Erskine
plaintively. “I don’t feel up to
the journey.”
Sir Thomas waved his hand. “Mr.
Erskine of Treadley has the world on his shelves.
We practical men like to see things, not to read about
them. The Americans are an extremely interesting
people. They are absolutely reasonable.
I think that is their distinguishing characteristic.
Yes, Mr. Erskine, an absolutely reasonable people.
I assure you there is no nonsense about the Americans.”
“How dreadful!” cried
Lord Henry. “I can stand brute force, but
brute reason is quite unbearable. There is something
unfair about its use. It is hitting below the
intellect.”
“I do not understand you,”
said Sir Thomas, growing rather red.
“I do, Lord Henry,” murmured Mr. Erskine,
with a smile.
“Paradoxes are all very well in their way…
.” rejoined the baronet.
“Was that a paradox?”
asked Mr. Erskine. “I did not think so.
Perhaps it was. Well, the way of paradoxes is
the way of truth. To test reality we must see
it on the tight rope. When the verities become
acrobats, we can judge them.”
“Dear me!” said Lady Agatha,
“how you men argue! I am sure I never can
make out what you are talking about. Oh!
Harry, I am quite vexed with you. Why do you
try to persuade our nice Mr. Dorian Gray to give up
the East End? I assure you he would be quite
invaluable. They would love his playing.”
“I want him to play to me,”
cried Lord Henry, smiling, and he looked down the
table and caught a bright answering glance.
“But they are so unhappy in
Whitechapel,” continued Lady Agatha.
“I can sympathize with everything
except suffering,” said Lord Henry, shrugging
his shoulders. “I cannot sympathize with
that. It is too ugly, too horrible, too distressing.
There is something terribly morbid in the modern sympathy
with pain. One should sympathize with the colour,
the beauty, the joy of life. The less said about
life’s sores, the better.”
“Still, the East End is a very
important problem,” remarked Sir Thomas with
a grave shake of the head.
“Quite so,” answered the
young lord. “It is the problem of slavery,
and we try to solve it by amusing the slaves.”
The politician looked at him keenly.
“What change do you propose, then?” he
asked.
Lord Henry laughed. “I
don’t desire to change anything in England except
the weather,” he answered. “I am
quite content with philosophic contemplation.
But, as the nineteenth century has gone bankrupt
through an over-expenditure of sympathy, I would suggest
that we should appeal to science to put us straight.
The advantage of the emotions is that they lead us
astray, and the advantage of science is that it is
not emotional.”
“But we have such grave responsibilities,”
ventured Mrs. Vandeleur timidly.
“Terribly grave,” echoed Lady Agatha.
Lord Henry looked over at Mr. Erskine.
“Humanity takes itself too seriously.
It is the world’s original sin. If the
caveman had known how to laugh, history would have
been different.”
“You are really very comforting,”
warbled the duchess. “I have always felt
rather guilty when I came to see your dear aunt, for
I take no interest at all in the East End. For
the future I shall be able to look her in the face
without a blush.”
“A blush is very becoming, Duchess,” remarked
Lord Henry.
“Only when one is young,”
she answered. “When an old woman like
myself blushes, it is a very bad sign. Ah!
Lord Henry, I wish you would tell me how to become
young again.”
He thought for a moment. “Can
you remember any great error that you committed in
your early days, Duchess?” he asked, looking
at her across the table.
“A great many, I fear,” she cried.
“Then commit them over again,”
he said gravely. “To get back one’s
youth, one has merely to repeat one’s follies.”
“A delightful theory!”
she exclaimed. “I must put it into practice.”
“A dangerous theory!”
came from Sir Thomas’s tight lips. Lady
Agatha shook her head, but could not help being amused.
Mr. Erskine listened.
“Yes,” he continued, “that
is one of the great secrets of life. Nowadays
most people die of a sort of creeping common sense,
and discover when it is too late that the only things
one never regrets are one’s mistakes.”
A laugh ran round the table.
He played with the idea and grew wilful;
tossed it into the air and transformed it; let it
escape and recaptured it; made it iridescent with
fancy and winged it with paradox. The praise
of folly, as he went on, soared into a philosophy,
and philosophy herself became young, and catching the
mad music of pleasure, wearing, one might fancy, her
wine-stained robe and wreath of ivy, danced like a
Bacchante over the hills of life, and mocked the slow
Silenus for being sober. Facts fled before her
like frightened forest things. Her white feet
trod the huge press at which wise Omar sits, till
the seething grape-juice rose round her bare limbs
in waves of purple bubbles, or crawled in red foam
over the vat’s black, dripping, sloping sides.
It was an extraordinary improvisation. He felt
that the eyes of Dorian Gray were fixed on him, and
the consciousness that amongst his audience there was
one whose temperament he wished to fascinate seemed
to give his wit keenness and to lend colour to his
imagination. He was brilliant, fantastic, irresponsible.
He charmed his listeners out of themselves, and they
followed his pipe, laughing. Dorian Gray never
took his gaze off him, but sat like one under a spell,
smiles chasing each other over his lips and wonder
growing grave in his darkening eyes.
At last, liveried in the costume of
the age, reality entered the room in the shape of
a servant to tell the duchess that her carriage was
waiting. She wrung her hands in mock despair.
“How annoying!” she cried. “I
must go. I have to call for my husband at the
club, to take him to some absurd meeting at Willis’s
Rooms, where he is going to be in the chair.
If I am late he is sure to be furious, and I couldn’t
have a scene in this bonnet. It is far too fragile.
A harsh word would ruin it. No, I must go, dear
Agatha. Good-bye, Lord Henry, you are quite delightful
and dreadfully demoralizing. I am sure I don’t
know what to say about your views. You must come
and dine with us some night. Tuesday?
Are you disengaged Tuesday?”
“For you I would throw over
anybody, Duchess,” said Lord Henry with a bow.
“Ah! that is very nice, and
very wrong of you,” she cried; “so mind
you come”; and she swept out of the room, followed
by Lady Agatha and the other ladies.
When Lord Henry had sat down again,
Mr. Erskine moved round, and taking a chair close
to him, placed his hand upon his arm.
“You talk books away,” he said; “why
don’t you write one?”
“I am too fond of reading books
to care to write them, Mr. Erskine. I should
like to write a novel certainly, a novel that would
be as lovely as a Persian carpet and as unreal.
But there is no literary public in England for anything
except newspapers, primers, and encyclopaedias.
Of all people in the world the English have the least
sense of the beauty of literature.”
“I fear you are right,”
answered Mr. Erskine. “I myself used to
have literary ambitions, but I gave them up long ago.
And now, my dear young friend, if you will allow me
to call you so, may I ask if you really meant all
that you said to us at lunch?”
“I quite forget what I said,”
smiled Lord Henry. “Was it all very bad?”
“Very bad indeed. In fact
I consider you extremely dangerous, and if anything
happens to our good duchess, we shall all look on you
as being primarily responsible. But I should
like to talk to you about life. The generation
into which I was born was tedious. Some day,
when you are tired of London, come down to Treadley
and expound to me your philosophy of pleasure over
some admirable Burgundy I am fortunate enough to possess.”
“I shall be charmed. A
visit to Treadley would be a great privilege.
It has a perfect host, and a perfect library.”
“You will complete it,”
answered the old gentleman with a courteous bow.
“And now I must bid good-bye to your excellent
aunt. I am due at the Athenaeum. It is
the hour when we sleep there.”
“All of you, Mr. Erskine?”
“Forty of us, in forty arm-chairs.
We are practising for an English Academy of Letters.”
Lord Henry laughed and rose.
“I am going to the park,” he cried.
As he was passing out of the door,
Dorian Gray touched him on the arm. “Let
me come with you,” he murmured.
“But I thought you had promised
Basil Hallward to go and see him,” answered
Lord Henry.
“I would sooner come with you;
yes, I feel I must come with you. Do let me.
And you will promise to talk to me all the time?
No one talks so wonderfully as you do.”
“Ah! I have talked quite
enough for to-day,” said Lord Henry, smiling.
“All I want now is to look at life. You
may come and look at it with me, if you care to.”