“Comes here to lecture?” said Dolores. “Why, what does he lecture on? His own plays?”
“Oh, no,” said Miss Cliff. “He lectures in classicsâusually on the Greek drama. He is a classical scholar apart from his writing. You will be numbered in his pupils yourself in your last year. His plays would hardly be suited to academic purposes.”
“Would they not?” said Dolores, smiling. “I should have thought they would bear elucidation.”
“You have read them?” said Miss Cliff, with surprise. “Yes; they are obscure, as you say.
“And very profound, are they not?” said Dolores.
“Yes, yes, very profound. Read as they should be read, they take one very deep.”
“I wonder if they will ever be produced,” said Dolores.
“They would hardly bear production, would they?” said Miss Cliff. “There is so much that would not carry across the footlights. It is his ambition that they shall be read.”
“He talks about them then?” said Dolores, with an instinctive feeling of surprise.
“No, no,” said Miss Cliff, half smiling; “indeed he does not. He never comes out of himself. His only friend is a cousin of mine; or he would be a mystery to me as much as to you. He lives in Oxford with his mother; and supports her by private coaching, and by giving lectures here. His story is the old one of struggle with poverty and publishers, made bearable by the sense that he is giving his art his best.”
“I suppose what I saw was the visible part of the process,” said Dolores, covering with lightness a sense of being more deeply moved than was natural. “I must have seen him in the clutch of the creative spirit.”
“No doubt of it,” said Miss Cliff. “His habits would become a genius.”
“I suppose a few would say, they do become one,” said Dolores.
“Yes,” said Miss Cliff; “and there will be many more.”
“He must be a very fine man,” said a student who was sitting next to Dolores.
“I hardly think the words âfine man' give him,” said Miss Cliff. “His personality is too strange, to be fitted by such a current description. He wants something that goes deeper, and is not so wholly complimentary.”
“But the eccentricities of the great do not take from them, do they? I have known a good many remarkable people, and I have always loved their quaintnesses,” said the student with smile-begetting naïveté.
“No, no, I daresay not,” said Miss Cliff. “I only meant, they should be suggested in a full description.”
“I really think that genius is enhanced by superficial eccentricities,” went on the student, with a short, quick utterance which seemed intended to suggest, that her words covered more than appeared. “Would Socrates' personality mean so much to us, if he had not been like a Silenus?”
“What do you think, Miss Hutton?” said Miss Cliff.
“I should think it would,” said Dolores, with a strange sensation in the remembrance, that she had heard the last words before from the same lips. “We should just associate the other attributes with him, instead of those of a Silenus. There is not much in external attributes themselves, is there?”
“Is there not? I don't know,” said the other, slightly shaking her head.
“Well, I will leave you to convince Miss Hutton, Miss Kingsford,” said Miss Cliff, turning with a smile at Dolores to her neighbour on the other side. “I feel quite inspirited by having
met some one, who reads Mr Claverhouse's plays so young.”
“Why, his plays must be read by any one at any age, might they not? I should think so myself from what I know of them,” said the student, addressing Dolores, but failing to disguise that her words were spoken for Miss Cliff.
Dolores looked at the speakerâa student of her own standing with whom she was barely familiar; and felt her sense of being jarred yielding to a spirit of pardon. She knew that Perdita Kingsford knew nothing of the plays; but as she met the liquid eyes in the face that changed with the moments, the knowledge lost its estranging power. There was that in Dolores which yielded to womanhood's spells. She hardly judged of women as a woman amongst them; but as something sterner and stronger, that owed them gentleness in judgment. From the first hour to the last of their years of friendship, she read Perdita as an open page; and loved her with a love that grew, though its nurture was not in what she read.
“It is very inspiring to be brought into contact with a great, neglected life,” said Perdita, as they left the hall. “So many great lives have been unrecognised; and in a way they grow greater from the very neglect. One feels one would give or do anything for a chance of smoothing
one of them; and that if one were brought into touch with it, one's own interests would not count.”
These words were heard and forgotten, as other words, as they fell. But a time was to come when Dolores recalled them. This day which brought Perdita and Claverhouse into her life, was to gather significance in its twofold bringing of change. The change grew daily, widening and deepening along its threads. But at the first it widened and deepened slowly; and at the close of the term, we may watch her with the two who had come through her into friendship, without meeting any token that her life was not as theirs.
“Well, I am glad the term has an end,” said Felicia. “Things might have become monotonous if it had not had one. It will be cheering to join one's family, and find oneself a recognised item of something.”
“I never understand you when you talk like that,” said Perdita. “I felt myself recognised from the first. Did not you, Dolores?”
“Perhaps at the first,” said Dolores. “For a few hours I clung to interest in myself, and thought it natural that others should share it; but soon I hardly included myself in my own survey of life. I agree with Felicia that the change is painful.”
“Happily it is quick,” said Felicia.” In my case its climax was reached on the first morning; when the lecturers' enclosed pew struck me as a convenient hiding-place in chapel; and I was ushered into general viewâhard treatment when the floor is recognised as the only congenial passage of the embarrassed.”
“Well, they say that suffering is the truest education,” said Dolores. “A foundation like this is right to accord its advantages early. Were any of them in the pew? If so, they would understand you to take them for your own kind.”
“I did not think of that,” said Felicia. “To think that I wasted gratification that the pew was empty! But Miss Butler came in, as I slunk out; and looked at me with a twinkle in her eyes. You know my view of Miss Butler's eyes. I am growing accustomed to violating truth beneath their scrutiny.”
“Violating truth?” said Dolores. “I find they have the opposite influence.”
“It is the questions she asks, while she uses them,” said Felicia. “She asked me this morning, whether I did not find that classics had a growing fascination.”
“Ãnd what did you say?” said Perdita.
“I said âyes,'” said Felicia, turning a grave face to the laughter of the others.
“But, seriously, I don't think one can study a subject without feeling its fascination,” said Perdita. “My way of looking at my work is quite different from what it was. I can't help feeling and knowing it.”
“And I can't help feeling and knowing that mine is the same,” said Felicia;â” the view natural in the daughter of a parson with eleven children; brought up on the principle, that life is a time for becoming qualified to teach, and then teaching; resolving itself into week-days devoted to secular studies, and Sundays to scriptural.”
“Are not scriptural studies postponed till the day of scriptural instruction?” said Dolores. “To remember them longer than is needful seems sheer prodigality of brainsâextravagance in a scarce luxury, that is unbecoming in daughters of parsons with families.”
“But when Saturday's studies are postponed to the Sunday, there is little difference,” said Felicia. “Things just move on.”
“As the daughter of a parson myself, I should regard Saturday's studies as contraband on Sunday,” said Dolores.
“Yes,” said Felicia, smiling. “A memory lives with me of a Sunday of my youth, when my father brought a clerical brother âto see me doing my scripture;' and it wasn't scripture.”
“What did they say?” said Perdita.
“Little at the time,” said Felicia. “But my father said things afterwards. But I must be about my business. I have some books of Miss Butler's, that she lent me a month ago; and I feel the cutting of their leaves a seemly step to returning them.”
The spires of the university pierced the greyness of dusk. Among the many figures that trod the streets, which every age has trodden in its chosen sons, one figure passed lonely, bareheaded, marked of glances.
In the gateway of one of the colleges it made a halt; and remained stooping and still. Other figures passed it; nudging, muttering, or stepping aside with silenced tread. Two youths in cap and gown put their heads together, whispered, and broke into laughter. The ponderer started, glanced at the breakers of his musing, and stepped from the gateway. As he went his way, he cast another look at the youths. The look was long; and spoke of something that was neither resentment nor denial of heed.
On reaching the door of a dwelling in a street, that was little accounted and echoed of the past, he paused, and moved his hands in search. His hand lingered in his garments; his head bent; and the minutes past unheeded. All
at once he drew himself up with one of his sudden movements, clasped his hands, searched again with wandering fingers; and at last struck the knocker with violence on the door. A moment brought the response. It opened to disclose a little old woman, tiny to the point of dwarfishness, but strongly and squarely built; with a skin as dark, and eyes as piercing and deeply set as her son's. She bent her gaze for a moment on the stooping form; and then stood aside in silence, as it brushed past her, and hastened up the staircase. A door sounded on an upper floor; and she returned to the room whence the knocking had summoned her. A remarkable - looking old creature she was, as she sat in the lamp - lit chamber, with eyes rivetted to a printed page, and fingers empty of trifling of needle. She was clearly of a great age. Her tiny hands were dark-coloured and deep - veined; the whiteness of her hair was the streakless whiteness of the time when grey and raven tresses share the past. But age, though it showed its presence, had wrought no further. There was no faltering of limb, no trembling of the lower jaw, no wandering of the piercing eyes that passed down the page. They scanned it eagerly, neither missing nor recurring to a word. When an hour had passed, she laid the marker in the book; and taking the lamp in her hands, went up the staircase. Her gait
was curiousâa mingling of a slight lameness with the combined ungainliness and energy, which marked her son's. At the door of an upper room she came to a pause, and stood with her ear to the keyhole. She stood for long, the bentness of her form and her childlike stature giving the posture easiness. The sounds from withinâan irregular tread on the floor, betraying it bare of cover, and from time to time a deep voice breaking forth, brought no change to her still features; save that once, when the voice grew almost to a shout, a spasm of emotion gave them a fleeting softening. At length the steps and the voice grew silent; there was a sound of the drawing of a chair across the boards and the rustling of handled papers. She bore the lamp to the lower chamber; and began to limp about it with purposeful movements. The service of eyes and limbs was readily rendered, though the rendering would have carried to an eye that watched, no lessening of that which marked her very far in years. She spread the cloth for the evening meal, and brought vessels and platters from a closet and ordered them for three. There seemed to be a servant helping from a kitchen; for she went once or twice to the door, to receive some article of food or crockery; but she gave no sign of communion in glance or word. Her tiny, aged hands wrought without faltering: the doing from time to time
of the duty of one by both, or a grasp for an easy holding, was all that betrayed that the days of their service were numbered. When the task was ended, she returned to her seat at the table, trimmed the lamp, and resumed her book. It was a little book of worn and sombre binding, containing a drama. She read as before, absorbedly; holding the volume closely to her eyes, and turned to catch the light of the lamp. The travelling of the eyes was rapid; and at certain passages they gathered fire, as though the inspiration were known. When she came to the end, she turned the pages read, with a touch that lingered and almost caressed. The caressing movement gained deepened meaning from the hard experience in the face above it. With the turning of the blank opening leaf, her hand and eyes were stayed. It bore a written inscription. The tracing of the pencilled words was too faint for her aged sight; but she read them with eyes that knew them. “To Janet Claverhouse, from her son, and the author ofâ” beneath there followed the printed title of the play. The sunken features quivered. Motherhood had come late, and widowhood early to Janet; and through the fifty years from the day which brought them both, life had held them for her simply.
A step on the staircase brought an end to the yielding to emotion. She closed her book, and
pushed the lamp to the middle of the table. There was a sound as though of groping at the door; and the playwright entered, wearing his working garbâa ragged coat of some fabric that looked like canvas,âand bearing a pile of papers in his hands.
“Is Soulsby coming to-night?” he said, as he set the manuscript down.
“To supper at eight o'clock. It is the hour now,” said his mother, in guttural aged tones, which a German accent made curious.
Claverhouse took the seat that was nearest, and rested his elbows on the table, pushing his hands through his hair, and glancing at the clock.