Meanwhile the ladies were not having
such a bad time, after all. Once having gained
possession of the House-boat, they were loath to think
of ever having to give it up again, and it is an open
question in my mind if they would not have made off
with it themselves had Captain Kidd and his men not
done it for them.
“I’ll never forgive these
men for their selfishness in monopolizing all this,”
said Elizabeth, with a vicious stroke of a billiard-cue,
which missed the cue-ball and tore a right angle in
the cloth. “It is not right.”
“No,” said Portia.
“It is all wrong; and when we get back home
I’m going to give my beloved Bassanio a piece
of my mind; and if he doesn’t give in to me,
I’ll reverse my decision in the famous case
of Shylock versus Antonio.”
“Then I sincerely hope he doesn’t
give in,” retorted Cleopatra, “for I swear
by all my auburn locks that that was the very worst
bit of injustice ever perpetrated. Mr. Shakespeare
confided to me one night, at one of Mrs. Caesar’s
card-parties, that he regarded that as the biggest
joke he ever wrote, and Judge Blackstone observed to
Antony that the decision wouldn’t have held in
any court of equity outside of Venice. If you
owe a man a thousand ducats, and it costs you three
thousand to get them, that’s your affair, not
his. If it cost Antonio every drop of his bluest
blood to pay the pound of flesh, it was Antonio’s
affair, not Shylock’s. However, the world
applauds you as a great jurist, when you have nothing
more than a woman’s keen instinct for sentimental
technicalities.”
“It would have made a horrid
play, though, if it had gone on,” shuddered
Elizabeth.
“That may be, but, carried out
realistically, it would have done away with a raft
of bad actors,” said Cleopatra. “I’m
half sorry it didn’t go on, and I’m sure
it wouldn’t have been any worse than compelling
Brutus to fall on his sword until he resembles a chicken
liver en brochette, as is done in that Julius Caesar
play.”
“Well, I’m very glad I did it,”
snapped Portia.
“I should think you would be,”
said Cleopatra. “If you hadn’t done
it, you’d never have been known. What was
that?”
The boat had given a slight lurch.
“Didn’t you hear a shuffling
noise up on deck, Portia?” asked the Egyptian
Queen.
“I thought I did, and it seemed
as if the vessel had moved a bit,” returned
Portia, nervously; for, like most women in an advanced
state of development, she had become a martyr to her
nerves.
“It was merely the wash from
one of Charon’s new ferry-boats, I fancy,”
said Elizabeth, calmly. “It’s disgusting,
the way that old fellow allows these modern innovations
to be brought in here! As if the old paddle-boats
he used to carry shades in weren’t good enough
for the immigrants of this age! Really this Styx
River is losing a great deal of its charm. Sir
Walter and I were upset, while out rowing one day
last summer, by the waves kicked up by one of Charon’s
excursion steamers going up the river with a party
of picnickers from the city—the Greater
Gehenna Chowder Club, I believe it was—on
board of her. One might just as well live in
the midst of the turmoil of a great city as try to
get uninterrupted quiet here in the suburbs in these
days. Charon isn’t content to get rich
slowly; he must make money by the barrelful, if he
has to sacrifice all the comfort of everybody living
on this river. Anybody’d think he was an
American, the way he goes on; and everybody else here
is the same way. The Erebeans are getting to
be a race of shopkeepers.”
“I think myself,” sighed
Cleopatra, “that Hades is being spoiled by the
introduction of American ideas—it is getting
by far too democratic for my tastes; and if it isn’t
stopped, it’s my belief that the best people
will stop coming here. Take Madame Recamier’s
salon as it is now and compare it with what it used
to be! In the early days, after her arrival
here, everybody went because it was the swell thing,
and you’d be sure of meeting the intellectually
elect. On the one hand you’d find Sophocles;
on the other, Cicero; across the room would be Horace
chatting gayly with some such person as myself.
Great warriors, from Alexander to Bonaparte, were
there, and glad of the opportunity to be there, too;
statesmen like Macchiavelli; artists like Cellini
or Tintoretto. You couldn’t move without
stepping on the toes of genius. But now all is
different. The money-getting instinct has been
aroused within them all, with the result that when
I invited Mozart to meet a few friends at dinner at
my place last autumn, he sent me a card stating his
terms for dinners. Let me see, I think I have
it with me; I’ve kept it by me for fear of losing
it, it is such a complete revelation of the actual
condition of affairs in this locality. Ah! this
is it,” she added, taking a small bit of pasteboard
from her card-case. “Read that.”
The card was passed about, and all
the ladies were much astonished— and naturally
so, for it ran this wise:
NOTICE TO HOSTESSES.
Owing to the very great, constantly
growing, and at times vexatious demands upon his time
socially,
HERR WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART
takes this method of announcing to
his friends that on and after January 1, 1897, his
terms for functions will be as follows:
Dinners with conversation on the Marks
Theory of Music
500
Dinners with conversation on the
Theory of Music, illustrated
750
Dinners without any conversation 300
Receptions, public, with music 1000
” ” private,
750
Encores (single) 100
Three encores for 150
Autographs 10
Positively no Invitations for Five-o’Clock
Teas or Morning Musicales considered.
“Well, I declare!” tittered
Elizabeth, as she read. “Isn’t that
extraordinary? He’s got the three-name
craze, too!”
“It’s perfectly ridiculous,”
said Cleopatra. “But it’s fairer
than Artemus Ward’s plan. Mozart gives
notice of his intentions to charge you; but with Ward
it’s different. He comes, and afterwards
sends a bill for his fun. Why, only last week
I got a ‘quarterly statement’ from him
showing a charge against me of thirty-eight dollars
for humorous remarks made to my guests at a little
chafing-dish party I gave in honor of Balzac, and,
worst of all, he had marked it ’Please remit.’
Even Antony, when he wrote a sonnet to my eyebrow,
wouldn’t let me have it until he had heard whether
or not Boswell wanted it for publication in the Gossip.
With Rubens giving chalk-talks for pay, Phidias doing
‘Five-minute Masterpieces in Putty’ for
suburban lyceums, and all the illustrious in other
lines turning their genius to account through the
entertainment bureaus, it’s impossible to have
a salon now.”
“You are indeed right,”
said Madame Recamier, sadly. “Those were
palmy days when genius was satisfied with chicken salad
and lemonade. I shall never forget those nights
when the wit and wisdom of all time were—ah—were
on tap at my house, if I may so speak, at a cost to
me of lights and supper. Now the only people
who will come for nothing are those we used to think
of paying to stay away. Boswell is always ready,
but you can’t run a salon on Boswell.”
“Well,” said Portia, “I
sincerely hope that you won’t give up the functions
altogether, because I have always found them most
delightful. It is still possible to have lights
and supper.”
“I have a plan for next winter,”
said Madame Recamier, “but I suppose I shall
be accused of going into the commercial side of it
if I adopt it. The plan is, briefly, to incorporate
my salon. That’s an idea worthy of an
American, I admit; but if I don’t do it I’ll
have to give it up entirely, which, as you intimate,
would be too bad. An incorporated salon, however,
would be a grand thing, if only because it would perpetuate
the salon. ‘The Recamier Salon (Limited)’
would be a most excellent title, and, suitably capitalized
would enable us to pay our lions sufficiently.
Private enterprise is powerless under modern conditions.
It’s as much as I can afford to pay for a dinner,
without running up an expensive account for guests;
and unless we get up a salon-trust, as it were, the
whole affair must go to the wall.”
“How would you make it pay?”
asked Portia. “I can’t see where
your dividends would come from.”
“That is simple enough,”
said Madame Recamier. “We could put up
a large reception-hall with a portion of our capital,
and advertise a series of nights—say one
a week throughout the season. These would be
Warriors’ Night, Story-tellers’ Night,
Poets’ Night, Chafing-dish Night under the charge
of Brillat-Savarin, and so on. It would be understood
that on these particular evenings the most interesting
people in certain lines would be present, and would
mix with outsiders, who should be admitted only on
payment of a certain sum of money. The commonplace
inhabitants of this country could thus meet the truly
great; and if I know them well, as I think I do, they’ll
pay readily for the privilege. The obscure love
to rub up against the famous here as well as they
do on earth.”
“You’d run a sort of Social Zoo?”
suggested Elizabeth.
“Precisely; and provide entertainment
for private residences too. An advertisement
in Boswell’s paper, which everybody buys—”
“And which nobody reads,” said Portia.
“They read the advertisements,”
retorted Madame Recamier. “As I was saying,
an advertisement could be placed in Boswell’s
paper as follows: ’Are you giving a Function?
Do you want Talent? Get your Genius at the
Recamier Salon (Limited).’ It would be
simply magnificent as a business enterprise.
The common herd would be tickled to death if they
could get great people at their homes, even if they
had to pay roundly for them.”
“It would look well in the society
notes, wouldn’t it, if Mr. John Boggs gave a
reception, and at the close of the account it said,
’The supper was furnished by Calizetti, and
the genius by the Recamier Salon (Limited)’?”
suggested Elizabeth, scornfully.
“I must admit,” replied
the French lady, “that you call up an unpleasant
possibility, but I don’t really see what else
we can do if we want to preserve the salon idea.
Somebody has told these talented people that they
have a commercial value, and they are availing themselves
of the demand.”
“It is a sad age!” sighed Elizabeth.
“Well, all I’ve got to
say is just this,” put in Xanthippe: “You
people who get up functions have brought this condition
of affairs on yourselves. You were not satisfied
to go ahead and indulge your passion for lions in
a moderate fashion. Take the case of Demosthenes
last winter, for instance. His wife told me that
he dined at home three times during the winter.
The rest of the time he was out, here, there, and
everywhere, making after-dinner speeches. The
saving on his dinner bills didn’t pay his pebble
account, much less remunerate him for his time, and
the fearful expense of nervous energy to which he
was subjected. It was as much as she could do,
she said, to keep him from shaving one side of his
head, so that he couldn’t go out, the way he
used to do in Athens when he was afraid he would be
invited out and couldn’t scare up a decent excuse
for refusing.”
“Did he do that?” cried
Elizabeth, with a roar of laughter.
“So the cyclopaedias say.
It’s a good plan, too,” said Xanthippe.
“Though Socrates never had to do it. When
I got the notion Socrates was going out too much,
I used to hide his dress clothes. Then there
was the case of Rubens. He gave a Carbon Talk
at the Sforza’s Thursday Night Club, merely
to oblige Madame Sforza, and three weeks later discovered
that she had sold his pictures to pay for her gown!
You people simply run it into the ground. You
kill the goose that when taken at the flood leads
on to fortune. It advertises you, does the lion
no good, and he is expected to be satisfied with confectionery,
material and theoretical. If they are getting
tired of candy and compliments, it’s because
you have forced too much of it upon them.”
“They like it, just the same,”
retorted Recamier. “A genius likes nothing
better than the sound of his own voice, when he feels
that it is falling on aristocratic ears. The
social laurel rests pleasantly on many a noble brow.”
“True,” said Xanthippe.
“But when a man gets a pile of Christmas wreaths
a mile high on his head, he begins to wonder what they
will bring on the market. An occasional wreath
is very nice, but by the ton they are apt to weigh
on his mind. Up to a certain point notoriety
is like a woman, and a man is apt to love it; but when
it becomes exacting, demanding instead of permitting
itself to be courted, it loses its charm.”
“That is Socratic in its wisdom,” smiled
Portia.
“But Xanthippic in its origin,”
returned Xanthippe. “No man ever gave
me my ideas.”
As Xanthippe spoke, Lucretia Borgia
burst into the room.
“Hurry and save yourselves!”
she cried. “The boat has broken loose
from her moorings, and is floating down the stream.
If we don’t hurry up and do something, we’ll
drift out to sea!”
“What!” cried Cleopatra,
dropping her cue in terror, and rushing for the stairs.
“I was certain I felt a slight motion.
You said it was the wash from one of Charon’s
barges, Elizabeth.”
“I thought it was,” said
Elizabeth, following closely after.
“Well, it wasn’t,”
moaned Lucretia Borgia. “Calpurnia just
looked out of the window and discovered that we were
in mid-stream.”
The ladies crowded anxiously about
the stair and attempted to ascend, Cleopatra in the
van; but as the Egyptian Queen reached the doorway
to the upper deck, the door opened, and the hard features
of Captain Kidd were thrust roughly through, and his
strident voice rang out through the gathering gloom.
“Pipe my eye for a sardine if we haven’t
captured a female seminary!” he cried.
And one by one the ladies, in terror,
shrank back into the billiard-room, while Kidd, overcome
by surprise, slammed the door to, and retreated into
the darkness of the forward deck to consult with his
followers as to “what next.”