The sun streamed through the bay-window
of a “best” bedroom in the Warden’s
house, and glorified the pale crayon-portraits on the
wall, the dimity curtains, the old fresh chintz.
He invaded the many trunks which—all painted
Z. D.—gaped, in various stages of excavation,
around the room. The doors of the huge wardrobe
stood, like the doors of Janus’ temple in time
of war, majestically open; and the sun seized this
opportunity of exploring the mahogany recesses.
But the carpet, which had faded under his immemorial
visitations, was now almost entirely hidden from
him, hidden under layers of fair fine linen, layers
of silk, brocade, satin, chiffon, muslin. All
the colours of the rainbow, materialised by modistes,
were there. Stacked on chairs were I know not
what of sachets, glove-cases, fan-cases. There
were innumerable packages in silver-paper and pink
ribands. There was a pyramid of bandboxes.
There was a virgin forest of boot-trees. And
rustling quickly hither and thither, in and out of
this profusion, with armfuls of finery, was an obviously
French maid. Alert, unerring, like a swallow
she dipped and darted. Nothing escaped her, and
she never rested. She had the air of the born
unpacker—swift and firm, yet withal tender.
Scarce had her arms been laden but their loads were
lying lightly between shelves or tightly in drawers.
To calculate, catch, distribute, seemed in her but
a single process. She was one of those who are
born to make chaos cosmic.
Insomuch that ere the loud chapel-clock
tolled another hour all the trunks had been sent empty
away. The carpet was unflecked by any scrap of
silver-paper. From the mantelpiece, photographs
of Zuleika surveyed the room with a possessive air.
Zuleika’s pincushion, a-bristle with new pins,
lay on the dimity-flounced toilet-table, and round
it stood a multitude of multiform glass vessels, domed,
all of them, with dull gold, on which Z. D., in zianites
and diamonds, was encrusted. On a small table
stood a great casket of malachite, initialled in like
fashion. On another small table stood Zuleika’s
library. Both books were in covers of dull gold.
On the back of one cover Bradshaw, in beryls,
was encrusted; on the back of the other, A.B.C.
Guide, in amethysts, beryls, chrysoprases, and
garnets. And Zuleika’s great cheval-glass
stood ready to reflect her. Always it travelled
with her, in a great case specially made for it.
It was framed in ivory, and of fluted ivory were the
slim columns it swung between. Of gold were its
twin sconces, and four tall tapers stood in each of
them.
The door opened, and the Warden, with
hospitable words, left his grand-daughter at the threshold.
Zuleika wandered to her mirror.
“Undress me, Melisande,” she said.
Like all who are wont to appear by night before the
public, she had the habit of resting towards sunset.
Presently Melisande withdrew.
Her mistress, in a white peignoir tied with a blue
sash, lay in a great chintz chair, gazing out of the
bay-window. The quadrangle below was very beautiful,
with its walls of rugged grey, its cloisters, its
grass carpet. But to her it was of no more interest
than if it had been the rattling court-yard to one
of those hotels in which she spent her life.
She saw it, but heeded it not. She seemed to
be thinking of herself, or of something she desired,
or of some one she had never met. There was ennui,
and there was wistfulness, in her gaze. Yet one
would have guessed these things to be transient—to
be no more than the little shadows that sometimes
pass between a bright mirror and the brightness it
reflects.
Zuleika was not strictly beautiful.
Her eyes were a trifle large, and their lashes longer
than they need have been. An anarchy of small
curls was her chevelure, a dark upland of misrule,
every hair asserting its rights over a not discreditable
brow. For the rest, her features were not at
all original. They seemed to have been derived
rather from a gallimaufry of familiar models.
From Madame la Marquise de Saint-Ouen came the shapely
tilt of the nose. The mouth was a mere replica
of Cupid’s bow, lacquered scarlet and strung
with the littlest pearls. No apple-tree, no wall
of peaches, had not been robbed, nor any Tyrian rose-garden,
for the glory of Miss Dobson’s cheeks. Her
neck was imitation-marble. Her hands and feet
were of very mean proportions. She had no waist
to speak of.
Yet, though a Greek would have railed
at her asymmetry, and an Elizabethan have called her
“gipsy,” Miss Dobson now, in the midst
of the Edvardian Era, was the toast of two hemispheres.
Late in her ’teens she had become an orphan
and a governess. Her grandfather had refused
her appeal for a home or an allowance, on the ground
that he would not be burdened with the upshot of a
marriage which he had once forbidden and not yet forgiven.
Lately, however, prompted by curiosity or by remorse,
he had asked her to spend a week or so of his declining
years with him. And she, “resting”
between two engagements—one at Hammerstein’s
Victoria, N.Y.C., the other at the Folies Bergeres,
Paris—and having never been in Oxford, had
so far let bygones be bygones as to come and gratify
the old man’s whim.
It may be that she still resented
his indifference to those early struggles which, even
now, she shuddered to recall. For a governess’
life she had been, indeed, notably unfit. Hard
she had thought it, that penury should force her back
into the school-room she was scarce out of, there
to champion the sums and maps and conjugations she
had never tried to master. Hating her work, she
had failed signally to pick up any learning from her
little pupils, and had been driven from house to house,
a sullen and most ineffectual maiden. The sequence
of her situations was the swifter by reason of her
pretty face. Was there a grown-up son, always
he fell in love with her, and she would let his eyes
trifle boldly with hers across the dinner-table.
When he offered her his hand, she would refuse it—not
because she “knew her place,” but because
she did not love him. Even had she been a good
teacher, her presence could not have been tolerated
thereafter. Her corded trunk, heavier by another
packet of billets-doux and a month’s salary
in advance, was soon carried up the stairs of some
other house.
It chanced that she came, at length,
to be governess in a large family that had Gibbs for
its name and Notting Hill for its background.
Edward, the eldest son, was a clerk in the city, who
spent his evenings in the practice of amateur conjuring.
He was a freckled youth, with hair that bristled in
places where it should have lain smooth, and he fell
in love with Zuleika duly, at first sight, during
high-tea. In the course of the evening, he sought
to win her admiration by a display of all his tricks.
These were familiar to this household, and the children
had been sent to bed, the mother was dozing, long
before the seance was at an end. But Miss Dobson,
unaccustomed to any gaieties, sat fascinated by the
young man’s sleight of hand, marvelling that
a top-hat could hold so many goldfish, and a handkerchief
turn so swiftly into a silver florin. All that
night, she lay wide awake, haunted by the miracles
he had wrought. Next evening, when she asked
him to repeat them, “Nay,” he whispered,
“I cannot bear to deceive the girl I love.
Permit me to explain the tricks.” So he
explained them. His eyes sought hers across the
bowl of gold-fish, his fingers trembled as he taught
her to manipulate the magic canister. One by
one, she mastered the paltry secrets. Her respect
for him waned with every revelation. He complimented
her on her skill. “I could not do it more
neatly myself!” he said. “Oh, dear
Miss Dobson, will you but accept my hand, all these
things shall be yours—the cards, the canister,
the goldfish, the demon egg-cup—all yours!”
Zuleika, with ravishing coyness, answered that if
he would give her them now, she would “think
it over.” The swain consented, and at bed-time
she retired with the gift under her arm. In the
light of her bedroom candle Marguerite hung not in
greater ecstasy over the jewel-casket than hung Zuleika
over the box of tricks. She clasped her hands
over the tremendous possibilities it held for her—manumission
from her bondage, wealth, fame, power. Stealthily,
so soon as the house slumbered, she packed her small
outfit, embedding therein the precious gift. Noiselessly,
she shut the lid of her trunk, corded it, shouldered
it, stole down the stairs with it. Outside—how
that chain had grated! and her shoulder, how it was
aching!—she soon found a cab. She took
a night’s sanctuary in some railway-hotel.
Next day, she moved into a small room in a lodging-house
off the Edgware Road, and there for a whole week she
was sedulous in the practice of her tricks. Then
she inscribed her name on the books of a “Juvenile
Party Entertainments Agency.”
The Christmas holidays were at hand,
and before long she got an engagement. It was
a great evening for her. Her repertory was, it
must be confessed, old and obvious; but the children,
in deference to their hostess, pretended not to know
how the tricks were done, and assumed their prettiest
airs of wonder and delight. One of them even pretended
to be frightened, and was led howling from the room.
In fact, the whole thing went off splendidly.
The hostess was charmed, and told Zuleika that a glass
of lemonade would be served to her in the hall.
Other engagements soon followed. Zuleika was very,
very happy. I cannot claim for her that she had
a genuine passion for her art. The true conjurer
finds his guerdon in the consciousness of work done
perfectly and for its own sake. Lucre and applause
are not necessary to him. If he were set down,
with the materials of his art, on a desert island,
he would yet be quite happy. He would not cease
to produce the barber’s-pole from his mouth.
To the indifferent winds he would still speak his
patter, and even in the last throes of starvation
would not eat his live rabbit or his gold-fish.
Zuleika, on a desert island, would have spent most
of her time in looking for a man’s foot-print.
She was, indeed, far too human a creature to care
much for art. I do not say that she took her work
lightly. She thought she had genius, and she
liked to be told that this was so. But mainly
she loved her work as a means of mere self-display.
The frank admiration which, into whatsoever house
she entered, the grown-up sons flashed on her; their
eagerness to see her to the door; their impressive
way of putting her into her omnibus—these
were the things she revelled in. She was a nymph
to whom men’s admiration was the greater part
of life. By day, whenever she went into the streets,
she was conscious that no man passed her without a
stare; and this consciousness gave a sharp zest to
her outings. Sometimes she was followed to her
door—crude flattery which she was too innocent
to fear. Even when she went into the haberdasher’s
to make some little purchase of tape or riband, or
into the grocer’s—for she was an
epicure in her humble way—to buy a tin of
potted meat for her supper, the homage of the young
men behind the counter did flatter and exhilarate
her. As the homage of men became for her, more
and more, a matter of course, the more subtly necessary
was it to her happiness. The more she won of
it, the more she treasured it. She was alone in
the world, and it saved her from any moment of regret
that she had neither home nor friends. For her
the streets that lay around her had no squalor, since
she paced them always in the gold nimbus of her fascinations.
Her bedroom seemed not mean nor lonely to her, since
the little square of glass, nailed above the wash-stand,
was ever there to reflect her face. Thereinto,
indeed, she was ever peering. She would droop
her head from side to side, she would bend it forward
and see herself from beneath her eyelashes, then tilt
it back and watch herself over her supercilious chin.
And she would smile, frown, pout, languish—let
all the emotions hover upon her face; and always she
seemed to herself lovelier than she had ever been.
Yet was there nothing Narcissine in
her spirit. Her love for her own image was not
cold aestheticism. She valued that image not for
its own sake, but for sake of the glory it always
won for her. In the little remote music-hall,
where she was soon appearing nightly as an “early
turn,” she reaped glory in a nightly harvest.
She could feel that all the gallery-boys, because
of her, were scornful of the sweethearts wedged between
them, and she knew that she had but to say “Will
any gentleman in the audience be so good as to lend
me his hat?” for the stalls to rise as one man
and rush towards the platform. But greater things
were in store for her. She was engaged at two
halls in the West End. Her horizon was fast receding
and expanding. Homage became nightly tangible
in bouquets, rings, brooches—things acceptable
and (luckier than their donors) accepted. Even
Sunday was not barren for Zuleika: modish hostesses
gave her postprandially to their guests. Came
that Sunday night, notanda candidissimo calculo! when
she received certain guttural compliments which made
absolute her vogue and enabled her to command, thenceforth,
whatever terms she asked for.
Already, indeed, she was rich.
She was living at the most exorbitant hotel in all
Mayfair. She had innumerable gowns and no necessity
to buy jewels; and she also had, which pleased her
most, the fine cheval-glass I have described.
At the close of the Season, Paris claimed her for
a month’s engagement. Paris saw her and
was prostrate. Boldini did a portrait of her.
Jules Bloch wrote a song about her; and this, for a
whole month, was howled up and down the cobbled alleys
of Montmartre. And all the little dandies were
mad for “la Zuleika.” The jewellers
of the Rue de la Paix soon had nothing left to put
in their windows— everything had been bought
for “la Zuleika.” For a whole month,
baccarat was not played at the Jockey Club—every
member had succumbed to a nobler passion. For
a whole month, the whole demi-monde was forgotten
for one English virgin. Never, even in Paris,
had a woman triumphed so. When the day came for
her departure, the city wore such an air of sullen
mourning as it had not worn since the Prussians marched
to its Elysee. Zuleika, quite untouched, would
not linger in the conquered city. Agents had
come to her from every capital in Europe, and, for
a year, she ranged, in triumphal nomady, from one
capital to another. In Berlin, every night, the
students escorted her home with torches. Prince
Vierfuenfsechs-Siebenachtneun offered her his hand,
and was condemned by the Kaiser to six months’
confinement in his little castle. In Yildiz Kiosk,
the tyrant who still throve there conferred on her
the Order of Chastity, and offered her the central
couch in his seraglio. She gave her performance
in the Quirinal, and, from the Vatican, the Pope launched
against her a Bull which fell utterly flat. In
Petersburg, the Grand Duke Salamander Salamandrovitch
fell enamoured of her. Of every article in the
apparatus of her conjuring-tricks he caused a replica
to be made in finest gold. These treasures he
presented to her in that great malachite casket which
now stood on the little table in her room; and thenceforth
it was with these that she performed her wonders.
They did not mark the limit of the Grand Duke’s
generosity. He was for bestowing on Zuleika the
half of his immensurable estates. The Grand Duchess
appealed to the Tzar. Zuleika was conducted across
the frontier, by an escort of love-sick Cossacks.
On the Sunday before she left Madrid, a great bull-fight
was held in her honour. Fifteen bulls received
the coup-de-grace, and Alvarez, the matador of matadors,
died in the arena with her name on his lips.
He had tried to kill the last bull without taking
his eyes off la divina senorita. A prettier compliment
had never been paid her, and she was immensely pleased
with it. For that matter, she was immensely pleased
with everything. She moved proudly to the incessant
music of a paean, aye! of a paean that was always
crescendo.
Its echoes followed her when she crossed
the Atlantic, till they were lost in the louder, deeper,
more blatant paean that rose for her from the shores
beyond. All the stops of that “mighty organ,
many-piped,” the New York press, were pulled
out simultaneously, as far as they could be pulled,
in Zuleika’s honour. She delighted in the
din. She read every line that was printed about
her, tasting her triumph as she had never tasted it
before. And how she revelled in the Brobdingnagian
drawings of her, which, printed in nineteen colours,
towered between the columns or sprawled across them!
There she was, measuring herself back to back with
the Statue of Liberty; scudding through the firmament
on a comet, whilst a crowd of tiny men in evening-dress
stared up at her from the terrestrial globe; peering
through a microscope held by Cupid over a diminutive
Uncle Sam; teaching the American Eagle to stand on
its head; and doing a hundred-and-one other things—whatever
suggested itself to the fancy of native art. And
through all this iridescent maze of symbolism were
scattered many little slabs of realism. At home,
on the street, Zuleika was the smiling target of all
snap-shooters, and all the snap-shots were snapped
up by the press and reproduced with annotations:
Zuleika Dobson walking on Broadway in the sables gifted
her by Grand Duke Salamander—she says “You
can bounce blizzards in them”; Zuleika Dobson
yawning over a love-letter from millionaire Edelweiss;
relishing a cup of clam-broth—she says “They
don’t use clams out there”; ordering her
maid to fix her a warm bath; finding a split in the
gloves she has just drawn on before starting for the
musicale given in her honour by Mrs. Suetonius X.
Meistersinger, the most exclusive woman in New York;
chatting at the telephone to Miss Camille Van Spook,
the best-born girl in New York; laughing over the
recollection of a compliment made her by George Abimelech
Post, the best-groomed man in New York; meditating
a new trick; admonishing a waiter who has upset a
cocktail over her skirt; having herself manicured;
drinking tea in bed. Thus was Zuleika enabled
daily to be, as one might say, a spectator of her
own wonderful life. On her departure from New
York, the papers spoke no more than the truth when
they said she had had “a lovely time.”
The further she went West— millionaire
Edelweiss had loaned her his private car—the
lovelier her time was. Chicago drowned the echoes
of New York; final Frisco dwarfed the headlines of
Chicago. Like one of its own prairie-fires, she
swept the country from end to end. Then she swept
back, and sailed for England. She was to return
for a second season in the coming Fall. At present,
she was, as I have said, “resting.”
As she sat here in the bay-window
of her room, she was not reviewing the splendid pageant
of her past. She was a young person whose reveries
never were in retrospect. For her the past was
no treasury of distinct memories, all hoarded and
classified, some brighter than others and more highly
valued. All memories were for her but as the
motes in one fused radiance that followed her and made
more luminous the pathway of her future. She
was always looking forward. She was looking forward
now—that shade of ennui had passed from
her face—to the week she was to spend in
Oxford. A new city was a new toy to her, and—for
it was youth’s homage that she loved best—this
city of youths was a toy after her own heart.
Aye, and it was youths who gave homage
to her most freely. She was of that high-stepping
and flamboyant type that captivates youth most surely.
Old men and men of middle age admired her, but she
had not that flower-like quality of shyness and helplessness,
that look of innocence, so dear to men who carry life’s
secrets in their heads. Yet Zuleika was
very innocent, really. She was as pure as that
young shepherdess Marcella, who, all unguarded, roved
the mountains and was by all the shepherds adored.
Like Marcella, she had given her heart to no man,
had preferred none. Youths were reputed to have
died for love of her, as Chrysostom died for love
of the shepherdess; and she, like the shepherdess,
had shed no tear. When Chrysostom was lying on
his bier in the valley, and Marcella looked down from
the high rock, Ambrosio, the dead man’s comrade,
cried out on her, upbraiding her with bitter words—“Oh
basilisk of our mountains!” Nor do I think Ambrosio
spoke too strongly. Marcella cared nothing for
men’s admiration, and yet, instead of retiring
to one of those nunneries which are founded for her
kind, she chose to rove the mountains, causing despair
to all the shepherds. Zuleika, with her peculiar
temperament, would have gone mad in a nunnery.
“But,” you may argue, “ought not
she to have taken the veil, even at the cost of her
reason, rather than cause so much despair in the world?
If Marcella was a basilisk, as you seem to think,
how about Miss Dobson?” Ah, but Marcella knew
quite well, boasted even, that she never would or could
love any man. Zuleika, on the other hand, was
a woman of really passionate fibre. She may not
have had that conscious, separate, and quite explicit
desire to be a mother with which modern playwrights
credit every unmated member of her sex. But she
did know that she could love. And, surely, no
woman who knows that of herself can be rightly censured
for not recluding herself from the world: it is
only women without the power to love who have no right
to provoke men’s love.
Though Zuleika had never given her
heart, strong in her were the desire and the need
that it should be given. Whithersoever she had
fared, she had seen nothing but youths fatuously prostrate
to her—not one upright figure which she
could respect. There were the middle-aged men,
the old men, who did not bow down to her; but from
middle-age, as from eld, she had a sanguine aversion.
She could love none but a youth. Nor—though
she herself, womanly, would utterly abase herself
before her ideal—could she love one who
fell prone before her. And before her all youths
always did fall prone. She was an empress, and
all youths were her slaves. Their bondage delighted
her, as I have said. But no empress who has any
pride can adore one of her slaves. Whom, then,
could proud Zuleika adore? It was a question which
sometimes troubled her. There were even moments
when, looking into her cheval-glass, she cried out
against that arrangement in comely lines and tints
which got for her the dulia she delighted in.
To be able to love once—would not that
be better than all the homage in the world? But
would she ever meet whom, looking up to him, she could
love—she, the omnisubjugant? Would
she ever, ever meet him?
It was when she wondered thus, that
the wistfulness came into her eyes. Even now,
as she sat by the window, that shadow returned to
them. She was wondering, shyly, had she met him
at length? That young equestrian who had not
turned to look at her; whom she was to meet at dinner
to-night . . . was it he? The ends of her blue
sash lay across her lap, and she was lazily unravelling
their fringes. “Blue and white!”
she remembered. “They were the colours he
wore round his hat.” And she gave a little
laugh of coquetry. She laughed, and, long after,
her lips were still parted in a smile.
So did she sit, smiling, wondering,
with the fringes of her sash between her fingers,
while the sun sank behind the opposite wall of the
quadrangle, and the shadows crept out across the grass,
thirsty for the dew.