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Oscar Wilde The Complete Short Fiction

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OSCAR WILDE: COMPLETE SHORT FICTION

OSCAR FINGAL O’FLAHERTIE WILLS WILDE, was born in Dublin in 1854, the
son of an eminent eye-surgeon and a nationalist poetess who wrote
under the pseudonym of ‘Speranza’. He went to Trinity College,
Dublin and then to Magdalen College, Oxford, where he began to
propagandize the new Aesthetic (or ‘Art for Art’s sake’) Movement.
Despite winning a first and the Newdigate Prize for poetry, Wilde
failed to obtain an Oxford fellowship, and was forced to earn a
living by lecturing and writing for periodicals. He published a
largely unsuccessful volume of poems in 1881 and in the next year
undertook a lecture tour of the United States in order to promote
the D’Oyly Carte production of Gilbert and Sullivan’s comic opera
Patience. After his marriage to Constance Lloyd in 1884, he tried to
establish himself as a writer, but with little initial success. However,
his three volumes of short fiction, The Happy Prince (1888), Lord
Arthur Savile’s Crime (1891) and A House of Pomegranates (1891),
together with his only novel, The Picture of Dorian Gray (1891),
gradually won him a reputation as a modern writer with an original
talent, a reputation confirmed and enhanced by the phenomenal
success of his Society Comedies – Lady Windermere’s Fan, A Woman
of No Importance, An Ideal Husband and The Importance of Being
Earnest, all performed on the West End stage between 1892 and
1895.

Success, however, was short-lived. In 1891 Wilde had met and fallen
extravagantly in love with Lord Alfred Douglas. In 1895, when his
success as a dramatist was at its height, Wilde brought an
unsuccessful libel action against Douglas’s father, the Marquess of
Queensberry. Wilde lost the case and two trials later was sentenced
to two years’ imprisonment for acts of gross indecency. As a result
of this experience he wrote The Ballad of Reading Gaol. He was
released from prison in 1897 and went into an immediate self-
imposed exile on the Continent. He died in Paris in ignominy in
1900.

IAN SMALL is professor of English Literature at the University of


Birmingham. His publications include Conditions for Criticism:
Authority, Knowledge, and Literature in the Late Nineteenth Century
(1991), Oscar Wilde Revalued (1993), and (with Josephine Guy)
Politics and Value in English Studies (1993) and Oscar Wilde’s
Profession: Writing and the Culture Industry in the Late Nineteenth
Century (2001). In 1992 he edited (with Marcus Walsh) The Theory
and Practice of Text-Editing.
OSCAR WILDE

Complete Short Fiction

Edited by IAN SMALL

PENGUIN BOOKS
PENGUIN BOOKS
Published by the Penguin Group

Penguin Books Ltd, 80 Strand, London, WC2R 0RL, England

Penguin Putnam Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, USA

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Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London, WC2R 0RL, England

www.penguin.com

This edition first published 1994

Reprinted with minor revisions 2003


11

Copyright © Ian Small, 1994, 2003

All rights reserved

The moral right of the editor has been asserted

Except in the United States of America, this book is sold subject

to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent,

re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s

prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in

which it is published and without a similar condition including this

condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser

EISBN: 9781101488799
Contents

Chronology

Introduction

Further Reading

A Note on the Texts

The Happy Prince and Other Tales (1888)

The Happy Prince

The Nightingale and the Rose

The Selfish Giant

The Devoted Friend

The Remarkable Rocket

The Portrait of Mr. W. H. (1889)

A House of Pomegranates (1891)

The Young King

The Birthday of the Infanta

The Fisherman and his Soul


The Star-Child

Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime and Other Stories (1891)

Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime

The Sphinx Without a Secret

The Canterville Ghost

The Model Millionaire

Poems in Prose (1894)

The Artist

The Doer of Good

The Disciple

The Master

The House of Judgment

The Teacher of Wisdom

Appendix

‘Elder-tree’ (fragment)

Notes
Chronology

1854       Oscar Fingal O’Flahertie Wilde born (he added ‘Wills’ in the 1870s) on 16 October
at 21 Westland Row, Dublin.

1855       His family move to 1 Merrion Square in Dublin.

1857       Birth of Isola Wilde, Oscar’s sister.

1858       Birth of Constance Mary Lloyd, Wilde’s future wife.

1864       Wilde’s father is knighted following his appointment as Queen Victoria’s ‘Surgeon


Oculist’ the previous year. Wilde attends Portora Royal School, Enniskillen.

1867       Death of Isola Wilde.

1871–4   At Trinity College, Dublin, reading Classics and Ancient History.

1874–8   At Magdalen College, Oxford, reading Classics and Ancient History (‘Greats’).

1875       Travels in Italy with his tutor from Dublin, J. P. Mahaffy.

1876       First poems published in Dublin University Magazine. Death of Sir William Wilde.

1877       Further travels in Italy, and in Greece.

1878       Wins the Newdigate Prize for Poetry in Oxford with ‘Ravenna’. Takes a double first
from Oxford. Moves to London and starts to establish himself as a popularizer of
Aestheticism.

1879       Meets Constance Lloyd.

1881       Poems published at his own expense; not well received critically.

1882       Lecture tour of North America, speaking on art, aesthetics and decoration. Revised
edition of Poems published.

1883       His first play, Vera; or, The Nihilists performed in New York; it is not a success.

1884       Marries Constance Lloyd in London, honeymoon in Paris and Dieppe.

1885       Moves into 16 Tite Street, Chelsea. Cyril Wilde born.

1886       Vyvyan Wilde born. Meets Robert Ross, to become his lifelong friend and, in 1897,
his literary executor. Ross might have been Wilde’s first homosexual lover.
1887       Becomes the editor of Lady’s World: A Magazine of Fashion and Society, and changes
its name to Woman’s World. Publication of ‘The Canterville Ghost’ and ‘Lord Arthur
Savil’s Crime’.

1888       The Happy Prince and Other Tales published; on the whole well-received.

1889       ‘Pen, Pencil and Poison’ (on the forger and poisoner Thomas Griffiths
Wainewright), ‘The Decay of Lying’ (a dialogue in praise of artifice over nature and art
over morality), ‘The Portrait of Mr W.H.’ (on the supposed identity of the dedicatee of
Shakespeare’s sonnets) all published.

1890       The Picture of Dorian Gray published in the July number of Lippincott’s Monthly
Magazine; fierce debate between Wilde and hostile critics ensues. ‘The True Function
and Value of Criticism’ (later revised and included in Intentions as ‘The Critic as Artist’)
published.

1891       Wilde’s first meeting with Lord Alfred Douglas (‘Bosie’). The Duchess of Padua
performed in New York. ‘The Soul of Man Under Socialism’ and ‘Preface to Dorian
Gray’ published in February and March in the Fortnightly Review. The revised and
extended edition of The Picture of Dorian Gray published by Ward, Lock and Company
in April. Intentions (collection of critical essays), Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime and Other
Stories and A House of Pomegranates (fairy-tales) published.

1892       Lady Windermere’s Fan performed at St James’s Theatre, London (February to


July).

1893       Salomé published in French. A Woman of No Importance performed at Haymarket


Theatre, London.

1894       Salome published in English with illustrations by Aubrey Beardsley; Douglas is the


dedicatee. The Sphinx, a poem with illustrations by Charles Ricketts, published.

1895       An Ideal Husband opens at Haymarket Theatre in January; it is followed by the


hugely successful The Importance of Being Earnest at St James’s Theatre in February. On
28 February Wilde returns to his club, the Albemarle, to find a card from Douglas’s
father, the Marquess of Queensberry, accusing Wilde of ‘posing as a somdomite’
(sodomite). Wilde quickly takes out an action accusing Queensberry of criminal libel.
In April Queensberry appears at the Old Bailey and is acquitted, following a successful
plea of justification on the basis that Wilde was guilty of homosexual behaviour. Wilde
is immediately arrested, after ignoring his friends’ advice to flee the country. In May
he is tried twice at the Old Bailey, and on 25 May sentenced to two years’
imprisonment with hard labour for ‘acts of gross indecency with another male person’.
In July he is sent to Wandsworth Prison. In November he is declared bankrupt, and
shortly afterwards transferred to Reading Gaol.

1896       Death of Wilde’s mother, Lady Jane Francesca Wilde (‘Speranza’).

1897       Wilde writes the long letter to Douglas that would be later entitled ‘De Profundis’.
In May Wilde is released from prison, and sails for Dieppe by the night ferry. He never
returns to Britain.

1898       The Ballad of Reading Gaol published pseudonymously as C.3.3, Wilde’s cell-


number in Reading Gaol. Wilde moves to Paris in February. Constance Wilde (who had
by now changed her name to Holland) dies.

1899       Willie (b. 1852), Wilde’s elder brother, dies.

1900       In January Queensberry dies. By July Wilde himself is very ill with a blood
infection. On 29 November he is received into the Roman Catholic Church, and dies on
30 November in the Hôtel d’Alsace in Paris.

1905       An abridged version of De Profundis, edited by Robert Ross, published.

1908       The Collected Works, edited by Robert Ross, are published.


Introduction

This volume of Oscar Wilde’s short fiction collects those stories


originally published in the late 1880s and early 1890s. Most
appeared first in periodicals and were then collected in three
separate books: The Happy Prince and Other Tales (1888), Lord Arthur
Savile’s Crime and Other Stories (1891) and A House of Pomegranates
(1891). This volume prints in addition Wilde’s ‘Poems in Prose’ and
‘The Portrait of Mr. W. H.’ – a periodical essay, part-fiction and part-
literary criticism, published in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine in
1889.1 These works are some of Wilde’s earliest, written during his
middle thirties when he was still trying to establish himself as a
serious writer in the London literary world. Indeed, Wilde found his
first volume of fiction, The Happy Prince, difficult to place; in 1888
he submitted the manuscript to Macmillan, one of the most
distinguished literary publishers of the time. At Oxford Wilde knew
a son of the family, George Macmillan, and he assiduously used this
undergraduate connection to try to sell his early work to the firm.
The report of Macmillan’s anonymous reader, however, was less
than favourable, and it contained what has proved to be one of the
least perspicacious judgements in nineteenth-century literary
history:

There is undoubtedly point and cleverness in the way in wh[ich]


these stories are told. The writer has, no doubt, the literary knack –
the point and finish. You feel at once the hand of the man who
knows how to write. Two or three of the stories are very pretty, but
I can hardly say as a whole that they have any striking imaginative
brilliance – nor do I think that they would be likely to rush into
marked popularity. They are pretty and bright, but they hardly
strike into the reader’s mind. They are good and respectable.
Whether they are more than that, I doubt.2

Not surprisingly, Macmillan refused the volume, and in June 1890


Alexander, George’s brother, also rejected Wilde’s famous novel, The
Picture of Dorian Gray, returning the manuscript of it with almost
indecent haste. Dorian Gray was finally brought out by Ward Locke,
one of the less reputable Victorian publishing houses; The Happy
Prince and Other Tales had been published earlier by David Nutt,
another minor firm. It is ironic that today both pieces are considered
to be among the most distinguished and popular works of late
nineteenth-century fiction: Dorian Gray has been dramatized and
filmed, and ‘The Happy Prince’ is frequently anthologized and has
been turned into an animated film. The idea of Wilde hawking his
manuscripts from publisher to publisher fits uneasily with the image
of him which has been transmitted to the twentieth century, one
associated with accomplished but effortless achievement. In fact,
this myth – of a Wilde who, in his own words, put his genius into
his life and his talent into his works – is far from the truth. Wilde
was successful as a writer for only a relatively short period in his
life, and then as a dramatist, rather than as a writer of fiction. Fame,
and the financial and social success which accompanied it, came
only in 1892, with the enormously successful first production of
Lady Windermere’s Fan, and it lasted until the middle of 1895 when
the run of The Importance of Being Earnest was halted by the scandal
surrounding Wilde’s trials and subsequent imprisonment. On his
release from prison in 1897 Wilde lived in self-imposed exile in
France and Italy, begging from friends and never recapturing his
former reputation. He died in 1900 in relative obscurity.

At the point in his career when Wilde began writing his short
fiction, what reputation he did possess was that which attached to
what we should now call a ‘media personality’ rather than a writer.
He had been born and brought up in Dublin, the second son of Sir
William and Lady Wilde. His father was an eminent eye surgeon and
his mother an Irish nationalist who wrote poetry under the
pseudonym of ‘Speranza’. Oscar was educated at Portora Royal
School and Trinity College, Dublin, where he was taught by the
eminent classicist John Pentland Mahaffy and from where he won a
scholarship to Magdalen College, Oxford, taking in 1878 a first-class
honours degree in Literae Humaniores (in, that is, Greek and Latin
literature, history and philosophy). He also distinguished himself by
winning the Newdigate Prize for his poem ‘Ravenna’. The Oxford
years were not, however, a complete success, for although Wilde
succeeded in impressing dedicated friends, such as George
Macmillan, he was also becoming adept at making lifelong enemies.
His relationships would continue to follow this pattern of’ friend or
foe’ right up until the first of his trials when he found that the
counsel for his opponent, the Marquess of Queensberry, was none
other than Edward Carson, an old enemy from his days at Trinity.
Another setback at Oxford, but one which had more immediate and
serious consequences, was Wilde’s failure to secure a fellowship at
Magdalen College: with it one possible route to literary fame was
closed. A contemporary – such as Walter Pater – could support a
modestly successful literary career by virtue of a fellowship at
Brasenose College; Wilde, however, was forced to build a literary
career in a different way. In the absence of the relative financial
security of an academic post, he moved to London, and set about
making himself known to the rich and powerful in London Society.
Much of his effort was spent on cultivating an image that would
distinguish him in the fashionable milieu of London literary life. At
Trinity, and later at Oxford, Wilde had become interested in the
literary movement known as Aestheticism. Associated initially with
French writers such as Théophile Gautier and Charles Baudelaire,
and later in Britain with the work of Algernon Swinburne and
Walter Pater, Aestheticism, or the ‘Art for Art’s Sake’ movement,
advocated the separation of artistic from ethical concerns. Followers
of this movement were known popularly as Aesthetes and were
generally the subject of public disapproval, if not outright contempt.
In his search for a suitable image to engage literary society, Wilde
fixed upon that of the Aesthete; indeed he perfected the role to such
an extent that in the late 1870s and early 1880s he enjoyed modest
celebrity as the prototypical ‘Aesthete’. He adopted a special
‘Aesthetic’ dress and hair cut which had their origins in a fancy-
dress ball which he had attended as an undergraduate.
Distinguished by this flamboyant appearance, and later by the witty
conversation for which he was to become renowned, Wilde
socialized conscientiously, attending fashionable parties, first nights
and private views. On the strength of his new-found celebrity, he
undertook in December 1881 a highly successful lecture tour in the
United States in order to promote Richard D’Oyly Carte’s production
of Gilbert and Sullivan’s comic opera Patience, which was taken by
some to be a satire on Wilde’s own ‘Aesthetic’ posing. The lecture
tour made Wilde money, and brought him further celebrity as the
spokesman for what the press (and Wilde himself) had called a ‘new
Renaissance’ of art, a concern that we can now identify with the
broadly based revival of interest in the applied and decorative arts
which occurred in Britain in the last half of Victoria’s reign.
However, during thi season of celebrity, success as a writer
continued to elude him. In 1881 he had published a collection of
poems, but at his own expense; moreover the volume attracted
mainly hostile criticism.
Wilde returned briefly to New York in 1883 to see the first night
of his melodrama Vera; Or, the Nihilists, but the play was not well
received. In 1884 he married Constance Lloyd. They moved to 16
(now 33) Tite Street, Chelsea, a house which had been designed for
them by the fashionable architect, E. W. Godwin. The couple had
two sons, Cyril and Vyvyan, born in 1885 and 1886 respectively.
Like so many other late nineteenth-century writers, including
Rudyard Kipling and George Bernard Shaw, Wilde, finding himself
with a wife and young family to support, was forced to turn his
hand to journalism. In the early 1880s, he earned his money
through book reviewing for periodicals such as the Pall Mali Gazzette
and the Dramatic Review; and for a period in the mid-eighties he
even edited the periodical Woman’s World.
Wilde published The Happy Prince and Other Tales in 1888, but
literary success eluded him really until 1891, when four of his books
appeared in the same year. All consisted of earlier material, some of
it in a revised form: Lord Arthur Sarnie’s Crime and Other Stories,
Intentions (a collection of four critical dialogues or essays), The
Picture of Dorian Gray, and A House of Pomegranates. His play The
Duchess of Padua was also produced in New York under the title
Guido Ferranti. But most significantly, 1891 saw Wilde begin work
on the first of his Society Comedies, Lady Windermere’s Fan. The
play was staged by George Alexander at the St James’s Theatre in
1892. It was a considerable artistic and financial success; indeed it is
estimated to have earned Wilde in excess of £ 11,000, a sum worth
much more then than it is now. In the same year Salome, Wilde’s
biblical drama, was refused a licence by the Lord Chamberlain’s
Office, but the final three Society Comedies, which established
Wilde’s literary fame, followed in quick succession: A Woman of No
Importance and A Ideal Husband were produced by Herbert
Beerbohm Tree at the Haymarket Theatre in April 1893 and January
1895 respectively; and Wilde’s masterpiece, The Importance of Being
Earnest, opened at the St James’s Theatre in February 1895, making
Wilde the toast of the fashionable theatres of the West End.
The story of how this dazzling success was transformed into
disgrace, imprisonment and destitution in a matter of weeks is one
of the best-known narratives in literary history. In 1891 the poet
Lionel Johnson had introduced Wilde to Lord Alfred Douglas, the
third son of the Marquess of Queensberry, then, as Wilde had been a
decade or so earlier, an undergraduate at Magdalen College, Oxford.
Wilde fell deeply and tragically in love, and the affair with ‘Bosie’
(as Douglas was known to his family) is the most exhaustively
moralized of all nineteenth-century male-male relationships.
Perhaps its two most important aspects were its very public nature
and the violent and unpredictable reaction of Douglas’s father.
Douglas insisted upon flaunting his relationship with Wilde, possibly
with the intention of hurting his father, and he cared little how his
behaviour affected any of the parties concerned. Matters were
further complicated by the mysterious death in 1894 of Viscount
Drumlanrig, Douglas’s half-brother, and by the rumour that he had
been involved in a homosexual scandal implicating prominent
members of British public life, including perhaps the Prime Minister
himself, Lord Rosebery. Partly as a consequence of the death of
Drumlanrig and partly because of the public nature of the affair
with Lord Alfred, Queens-berry prosecuted what amounted to a
vendetta against Wilde. He tried to create a public scene on the first
night of The Importance of Being Earnest, but was thwarted by the
timely intervention of the theatre’s management. Two weeks later,
on 28 February 1895, he left at the Albemarle Club a card that
carried the inaccurately spelt but mortifyingly exact inscription ‘For
Oscar Wilde posing as a somdomite’. Despite the advice of most of
his friends, Wilde sued Queensberry for criminal libel. Under cross-
examination Wilde made a number of compromising revelations,
and the case went against him. He was soon arrested on charges
made under the Criminal Law Amendment Act of 1885, which made
both private and public homosexual relationships between men
illegal. The specific accusations concerned acts of gross indecency
with young, lower-class male prostitutes. The jury at what was
effectively Wilde’s second trial failed to agree. A retrial took place,
and on 25 May 1895 Wilde was convicted, receiving a sentence of
two years’ imprisonment with hard labour, one which could involve
a regime of both solitary confinement and repetitive, debilitating
manual tasks. Wilde movingly described this prison regime in letters
on prison reform written to the Morning Chronicle and in a long
bitter letter of recrimination written to Douglas which was later
published under the title of De Profundis. During his time in prison
Wilde was declared bankrupt and his possessions were sold. After
his release he led a nomadic existence on the Continent. Constance
died in 1898, leaving him a small annuity of £150 a year, but he
was denied access to his children. In November 1900 Wilde grew ill
and underwent an operation to his ear. This last illness was
diagnosed at the time as cerebral meningitis; a more recent account
has suggested tertiary syphilis. Whatever the cause, Wilde died in
obscurity and poverty in Paris on 30 November.
The stories in Wilde’s volumes The Happy Prince and A House of
Pomegranates are fairy stories – they are stories written for parents to
tell to their children. Moreover filial and parental relationships –
particularly, the idea of adult responsibility to children – form an
important theme within the stories. So, for example, in ‘The Selfish
Giant’, the role of the child is to educate the giant into the art of
good parenting, and the giant’s reward for learning the values of
tolerance and altruism is a divine death-bed revelation: the child he
has cared for becomes mysteriously and magically transformed into
an image of Christ offering His hand to lead the giant to heaven. It
is also significant that in the early stories Wilde always sees
parenting from a child’s point of view; so the narrative focus is
always the child’s perception of a good parent, and not the parent’s
perception of a good child. Wilde goes further by suggesting that to
be a good parent – that is, to show tolerance and kindness towards
children – is a moral education for the adult, and as such, is as
necessary for the adult as for the child. All of this represents a
thoroughgoing if simple reversal of the conventional fairy tale form,
for Wilde’s stories run directly counter to the nineteenth-century
tradition of moral tales for children that emphasize the role of
parents in educating recalcitrant children into the norms and values
of adult culture. Good examples of this tradition are to be found in
the characters of Mrs Do-as-you-would-be-done-by and Mrs Be-done-
by-as-you-did, both of whom are agents in the moral re-education of
the chimney-sweep Tom in Charles Kingsley’s The Water Babies
(1862–3), a work which had as its subtitle ‘A Fairy Story for a Land-
Baby’. In fact the strategy of reversal is a key to understanding the
whole of Wilde’s work, and in the stories it can be seen in both their
thematic concerns and formal structures.

The sympathy and tenderness with which Wilde describes the


child’s world was unusual in Victorian Britain, and it obviously
derived from his own experience as a son and a father. Here it is
worth noting that he had a particularly close relationship with his
mother, Lady Jane Wilde. From the moment he left Ireland for
Oxford right up to her death in 1896, Wilde was in regular contact
with her; over a hundred of her letters to him survive. Most are
familiar, conversational accounts of friends and neighbours and of
common interests. Some reveal Lady Wilde to be in what she
describes as trouble, and not infrequently she asks Oscar for
financial support. So, for example, in 1894 she can be found writing
to him that ‘You are always good & kind & generous, & have ever
been my best aid and companion’. 3 That Wilde should have
preserved such a copious correspondence from his mother is in itself
revealing; more significant, however, is that after his father’s death
Wilde willingly took on a protective filial role. Interestingly, though,
in this role-reversal Lady Wilde did not relinquish all of her
maternal authority, for there is some evidence that Wilde’s refusal
to flee to France to avoid arrest after the failure of his prosecution of
Queensberry was made at the insistence of his mother who wished
him to stand trial to clear his name.
Given Wilde’s attachment to his mother, it should be unsurprising
that he took his own role as parent equally seriously: indeed the
evidence suggests that he was a loving and devoted father. For
example, in a letter to Robert Ross (reputedly Wilde’s first
homosexual lover, certainly a lifelong faithful friend and his
painstaking literary executor) Wilde reveals the importance of his
children in his life – so much so that even his gay relationships had
to be accommodated to them: in this instance Wilde’s lover (and as
such, interloper into his family matters) becomes a friend to his
children, Cyril and Vyvyan, here through the present of a kitten:

16, Tite Street,

Chelsea, S.W.

My Dear Bobbie,

The kitten is quite lovely – it does not look white, indeed it


looks a sort of tortoise-shell colour… with velvety dark
[patches?] but as you said it was white I have given orders
that it is always to be spoken of as the ‘white kitten’ – the
children are enchanted with it, and sit, one on each side of its
basket, worshipping – It seems pensive – perhaps it is thinking
of some dim rose-garden in Persia, and wondering why it is
kept in this chill England.

I hope you are enjoying yourself at Cambridge – whatever


people may say against Cambridge, it is certainly the best
preparatory school for Oxford that I know.
After this insult I better stop.

Yours ever

Oscar Wilde.4

Devotion to his children continued through Wilde’s disgrace and up


to his death. After his release from prison and despite his protests,
Constance forbade Wilde to see Cyril and Vyvyan. Wilde persuaded
several of his friends, principally More Adey and Ada Leverson, to
act as intermediaries, but Constance was never reconciled to Wilde
re-establishing contact with the children, and he died without ever
seeing them again. In Time Remembered, Vyvyan (Wilde’s second
son) described receiving a letter from a Frenchman called Ernest
Lajeunesse. Lajeunesse recalled an encounter with Wilde in a French
hotel in the late 1890s – that is, after the trials, imprisonment and
self-imposed exile:

One autumn evening, while putting on my overcoat after finishing


my meal, I clumsily upset something, perhaps a salt-cellar, on
Monsieur Sébastien’s [i.e., Sebastian Melmoth, the pseudonym by
which Wilde was known in France] table. He said nothing, but my
mother scolded me and told me to apologize, which I did, distressed
by my clumsiness. But Monsieur Sébastien turned to my mother and
said: ‘Be patient with your little boy. One must always be patient
with them. If, one day, you should find yourself separated from
him… ’ I did not give him time to finish his sentence, but asked him:
‘Have you got a little boy?’ ‘I’ve got two’, he said. ‘Why don’t you
bring them here with you?’ My mother interrupted… ‘It doesn’t
matter; it doesn’t matter at all,’ he said with a sad smile. ‘They don’t
come here with me because they are too far away… ’ Then he took
my hand, drew me to him and kissed me on both cheeks. I bade him
farewell, and then I saw that he was crying. And we left.

While kissing me he had said a few words which I did not


understand. But on the following day we arrived before him and a
bank employee who used to sit at a table on the other side of us
asked us: ‘Did you understand what Monsieur Sébastien said last
evening?’ ‘No,’ we replied. ‘He said, in English: “Oh, my poor dear
boys!” ‘5

There is no external evidence to support Lajeunesse’s anecdote, but


nor is there any reason to doubt its truthfulness. In fact it affirms all
that we do know about the constancy of Wilde’s affection towards
his children, a sentiment which in turn goes some way towards
explaining that initial decision to write fairy stories, and why the
themes of love and self-denial figure so strongly in them.

There were, however, other, more pragmatic reasons for Wilde’s


decision to write fiction. One of the most striking qualities of his
short stories is that they can be read both as simple and satisfying
narratives for children and as self-conscious literary exercises. This
combination of naivety and complexity largely derives from Wilde’s
exploitation of a number of popular sub-genres that had grown up
in the second half of the nineteenth century in response to changes
in the audiences and markets for literature. Developments in
printing technologies in the 1860s and 1870s had substantially
reduced the cost of book production, making it possible to print
books relatively cheaply for the first time. Together with a new
impetus towards universal adult literacy, formalized in John
Forster’s 1870 Education Act, and a new focus on leisure brought
about through greater prosperity and legislation limiting working
hours, this new availability of cheap books led to a dramatic
increase in the potential readership for literature. New sub-genres
were developed to exploit the interests of these new groups of
readers, whose tastes and backgrounds were different from the
limited and exclusive readership addressed by writers earlier in the
century. The most popular of the new sub-genres included ghost
stories, detective fiction, the sensation novel, and the fairy tale.
Authors who successfully exploited these new topics and sub-genres
– such as Arthur Conan Doyle, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Wilkie
Collins and J. S. Le Fanu – became household names; and demand
for new kinds of stories was so strong that it fuelled a succession of
new monthly and fortnightly magazines, the best known of which
included Temple Bar, London Society, Tit Bits, The Argosy, Tinsley’s
Magazine and Belgravia.
In the late 1880s, when he had made the transition from writing
journalism to writing fiction, a literary reputation was not Wilde’s
only concern; he also required financial security. Earlier works, such
as the Poems and his first plays, The Duchess of Padua and Vera; Or,
the Nihilists had failed on both counts. When Wilde tried again to
establish a literary career, this time more attuned to the twin
imperatives of creative and commercial success, he struck out in a
new and altogether more modern direction: that of the short story.
In choosing to try his hand at fairy tales, and subsequently at ghost
and detective stories, Wilde was no doubt attempting to emulate the
fame (and indeed fortune) of popular writers such as Collins,
Braddon and Conan Doyle. Moreover, he was not the only ‘serious’
writer to entertain such ambitions; a few years later, Henry James
also tried his hand at writing in a popular genre, and the result
proved to be one of his most successful works, The Turn of the Screw.
However, Wilde-was also very keen to keep himself aloof from those
writers who merely pandered to what he would later refer to
scathingly as ‘Public Opinion’. The result of this dilemma was the
emergence of Wilde’s most distinctive stylistic device, that of
parody. Almost all of his short stories represent parodies of the sub-
genres which he appropriated. Sometimes these parodies are overt
and witty – in, for example, ‘Sir Ardiur Savile’s Crime’ or ‘The
Canterville Ghost’. On other occasions, as in ‘The Fisherman and his
Soul’, they are more subtle and complex, and the line between the
parodic and the serious is deliberately blurred. This last kind of
story is the most self-consciously ‘literary’, and it is in this group
that we find the strongest prefiguring of the complexity of Wilde’s
later work.
Whether overt or subtle, Wilde’s parodies are never simply
playful: to appreciate their serious and subversive edge we need to
understand the social dimension of the popular genres which he was
exploiting. Ghost stories, detective fiction and fairy stories all
deploy a number of stock literary devices, the most important of
which include an emphasis on plot, rather than character; the use of
character types such as heroes and heroines, villains and cads; and
the adoption of a simple moral framework in which good and evil
are rigidly and unambiguously defined, so much so that the qualities
constituting good and evil are not in question. These elements are
most visible in the endings to such stories where the most important
function of plot is to reward good and punish evil: so princesses
marry their princes, detectives catch their villains, and ghosts are
finally and successfully laid to rest. All these actions represent a
restoration of the social order, and through it, a reaffirmation of the
status quo. In this sense the tendency of ghost stories, detective
fiction and fairy stories is always towards a conservatism: they
dramatize the triumph and cohesiveness of society’s values when
they are threatened by an outside evil force, whether it comes in the
shape of a wicked witch, criminal, or malevolent ghost. Here it is
worth remembering that fairy stories were originally told to
children, and so their primary social function was to educate
children into the values of a culture, in particular its moral values.
The effect of Wilde’s stories could not be more different. While
they seem to adhere to the stock literary devices of a genre – the
simple plotting, the use of given character-types, the deployment of
a rigid moral framework, and so on – they nevertheless invest those
devices with a very different significance. Evil and the threats which
it poses are certainly present in Wilde’s stories: they come as the
vengeful Canterville ghost, or in Lord Arthur’s attempts to commit
murder, or in the fisherman’s decision to cut away his soul (and so
his moral conscience). But the threat that evil presents typically
functions to expose the corruption and poverty of society’s values,
rather than – as with the conventional moral tale – to reaffirm their
intrinsic rightness. In this way Wilde subverts the traditional
moralizing function of such fiction; or, as he says rather more
forcefully in the ‘Preface’ to The Picture of Dorian Gray: ‘There is no
such thing as a moral or an immoral book. Books are well written,
or badly written. That is all.’ Indeed, rather than socialize readers
into the given values of a culture, Wilde’s stories subtly criticize the
nature of those values, and the ways in which they bring about
social cohesion in the first place. Some examples will make this
strategy a little clearer.
‘Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime’ parodies elements of both detective
and sensation fiction. The story is set in the fashionable salon of
Lady Windermere, and it concerns a visiting palmist’s prediction to
the young Lord Arthur Savile that he will commit a murder. Savile,
who is engaged to be married, decides that, out of gentlemanly duty
to his future wife, he must fulfil his destiny before his marriage
takes place, and the story relates his various attempts to find a
suitable murder victim. After a string of failures, one night by
chance he comes across the same palmist leaning over the railings of
the Thames. Lord Arthur seizes his opportunity and pushes the
palmist into the river. The murder committed, and his destiny
fulfilled, Savile returns home in relief, marries his bride and lives
happily ever after. The whole plot represents a comic inversion of
the traditional devices of moral justice, for here it is the act of
murder (rather than the unmasking of the murderer) which brings
about the restoration of social order: the murderer becomes the hero
(and ironically is rewarded through a happy marriage) and the
victim becomes the villain (and equally ironically is punished by
death). The consequence of this inversion is that the reader’s
attention is focused not on the traditional triumph of good over evil,
but rather on the kind of society where murder is justified on the
grounds of right conduct, where ‘right’ means observing the codes of
gentlemanly behaviour. So Wilde’s narrator ironically muses on the
nature of duty:

[Arthur] recognised none the less clearly where his duty lay, and
was fully conscious of the fact that he had no right to marry until he
had committed the murder. This done, he could stand before the
altar with Sybil Merton, and give his life into her hands without
terror of wrongdoing. This done, he could take her to his arms,
knowing that she would never have to blush for him, never have to
hang her head in shame…

Many men in his position would have preferred the primrose path
of dalliance to the steep heights of duty; but Lord Arthur was too
conscientious to set pleasure above principle. (pp. 180–81)

This comic discrepancy between manners and morals is a theme that


preoccupied Wilde for the rest of his creative life, and it is central to
his best-known works, the Society Comedies.
The plot of ‘The Canterville Ghost’ works by means of a similar
series of inversions. Once again it is the evil avenging ghost which
turns out to be the hero, and the members of the bourgeois family
he taunts become the villains. The plot is relatively simple: it
concerns the ghost’s varied but failed attempts to frighten a new
American family that has recently taken up residence in his house.
The problem for the ghost lies in the family’s matter-of-fact
sensibilities: they refuse to believe in the supernatural, and always
find a perfectly rational explanation for the ghost’s manifestations
and the disruption it causes, such as strange noises and stains on the
floor. In the dénouement of the story, the ghost is finally laid to rest
by the youngest daughter, for she alone has the imagination to
understand him, and it is her sympathy with his suffering which
finally allows him to find peace. Like ‘Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime’,
the story reserves its censure not for the ghost and the murder he
committed, but rather for the family (and by extension the society)
responsible for criminalizing him. So when Virginia, the young girl,
complains that ‘it is very wrong to kill anyone’, the ghost interjects:

‘Oh, I hate the cheap severity of abstract ethics! My wife was very
plain, never had my ruffs properly starched, and knew nothing
about cookery. Why, there was a buck I had shot in Hogley Woods,
a magnificent pricket, and do you know how she had it sent up to
table? However, it is no matter now, for it is all over, and I don’t
think it was very nice of her brothers to starve me to death, though I
did kill her.’
‘Starve you to death? Oh, Mr Ghost, I mean Sir Simon, are you
hungry? I have a sandwich in my case. Would you like it?’ (p. 224)

The implication is that criminal behaviour is produced by society’s


lack of moral imagination and sympathy – a theme Wilde was to
take up in his essay ‘The Soul of Man under Socialism’ and, in
relation to his own imprisonment, in De Profundis. There Wilde
charges his society with responsibility for his suffering:

Society takes upon itself the right to inflict appalling punishments


on the individual, but it also has the supreme vice of shallowness,
and fails to realise what it has done. When the man’s punishment is
over, it leaves him to himself: that is to say it abandons him at the
very moment when its highest duty towards him begins. It is really
ashamed of its own actions, and shuns those whom it has punished,
as people shun a creditor whose debt they cannot pay, or one on
whom they have inflicted an irreparable, an irredeemable wrong. I
claim on my side that if I realise what I have suffered, Society
should realise what it has inflicted on me: and that there should be
no bitterness or hate on either side.6

Interestingly, very shortly after this passage, Wilde describes the


way events in his own life had been ‘prefigured’ in his ‘art’. ‘Some of
it,’ he observes, ‘is in “The Happy Prince”: some of it is in “The
Young King”.’7

‘The Fisherman and his Soul’ represents the most complex kind of
parody. The tale itself is reminiscent of Hans Christian Andersen’s
‘The Little Mermaid’ and Matthew Arnold’s poem ‘The Forsaken
Merman’. In both of these examples, the moral of the tale centres on
the familiar Christian opposition between the spiritual (represented
by the conscience and the soul) and the material (represented by
worldly attractions and the body), which is in turn presented in
terms of the equally familiar opposition between selfless love and
selfish desire. Needless to say, both Andersen’s fairy tale and
Arnold’s poem describe the corrupting influence of the material
world and sexual desire, and the ultimate triumph of the power of
selfless spiritual love whose reward is immortality. In Wilde’s tale,
however, these moral dichotomies are not nearly so clear cut. Most
obviously, the roles of soul and body seem to be reversed: so when
Wilde’s fisherman cuts away his soul from his body, the soul
embarks upon a life of dedicated immorality which parodies and
inverts the three temptations of Christ. Paradoxically, it is the soul
which expresses a fascination with the sins of the flesh and the
world, rather than the other way around:

And ever did his Soul tempt him with evil, and whisper of terrible
things. Yet did it not prevail against him, so great was the power of
his love.

And after the year was over, the Soul thought within himself, ‘I
have tempted my master with evil, and his love is stronger than I
am.’ (p. 144)
Wilde seems to suggest that the fisherman’s ability to withstand
temptation derives from the power of his love. Usually love is
considered to be the prerogative of the soul or spirit, but in Wilde’s
story, love (and the values associated with it, such as fidelity) reside
in the body. The implication is that for Wilde ‘true love’ is
exclusively of the body and is therefore (sexual) desire, a conclusion
which completely reverses the traditional Christian understanding of
the relationship between body and soul, where soul is the regulating
conscience of the body.

The society and its values which Wilde implicates in his stories
(and in his other works, including the comedies and De Profanáis) is
always fashionable Society, with a capital ‘S’ – that is, the world of
privilege, of rich salons and country houses. London ‘Society’, as this
group was more formally known, was composed of the upper
middle-class or the aristocracy, that Victorian and Edwardian group
which Max Beerbohm later called the ‘upper ten thousand’ of British
society. In Wilde’s work this group is characterized in terms of its
philistinism and materialism: they know, in the words of Lord
Darlington in Lady Windermere’s Fan, ‘the price of everything and
the value of nothing’. The group is represented in the stories by
characters such as the daughter of the professor in ‘The Nightingale
and the Rose’, who prefers material objects – the Chamberlain’s
nephew’s gift of jewels – to the rose created at the cost of the
nightingale’s life; or the Town Councillors in ‘The Happy Prince’
who, unlike the swallow (and, finally, unlike God), can recognize
only the material worth of the prince, and who ensure that when his
statue is stripped of its gold and its precious jewels it is discarded
for scrap; or the spoilt Infanta and her entourage who value the
faithful dwarf only in terms of his ability to entertain them. In all
these stories the worldly materialism of society is set against the
values of selfless love and fidelity. That opposition is not in itself
unusual; what marks out Wilde’s tales is that such values are always
vulnerable to society’s vulgar self-interest. In traditional fairy tales,
love and constancy are rewarded in this world; in Wilde’s tales love
and constancy lead generally to the destruction of the individual
(the one possible exception is ‘The Model Millionaire’). Some of the
tales compensate for this destruction with the reward of a Christian
afterlife: so the Happy Prince and the swallow are taken to ‘God’s
garden of Paradise’; and the Selfish Giant dies after being
vouchsafed a beatific vision of Christ. But in general terms the most
striking feature of the tales is the impotence of good – a conclusion
which is again reiterated in the Society Comedies. For example in a
play such as Lady Windermere’s Fan, selfless love (couched in terms
of maternal devotion) is powerful enough to ‘save’ the reputation of
Lady Windermere, but impotent in the face of the hypocrisy of
London Society. Similarly, in A Woman of No Importance, the selfless
charity of Mrs Arbuthnot is only a source of humour for the social
circles that ultimately reject her. In the stories the most forceful
statement of the impotence of selfless love occurs in the final
sentence of ‘The Star-Child’, where the child’s realization of the
value of selflessness is followed by a death which renders that love
ineffectual:

Yet ruled he not long, so great had been his suffering, and so bitter
the fire of his testing, for after the space of three years he died. And
he who came after him ruled evilly. (p. 164)

It is also worth noting that the society Wilde describes is always


recognizably Victorian, and that the archetypal themes of suffering
that he appropriates are given a specific Victorian character. So the
temptation of the Soul in ‘The Fisherman and his Soul’ is described
in terms of the lure of the Orient, a favourite motif in late Victorian
culture, strikingly articulated in works such as Gustave Flaubert’s
Salammbô, Sir Richard Burton’s translation of The Arabian Nights and
Edward Fitzgerald’s The Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám. (Indeed the
exoticism of the East figures in other stories by Wilde – in ‘The
Young King’, and ‘The Birthday of the Infanta’, for example.)
Similarly, suffering in ‘The Happy Prince’ is given a specific
Victorian cast. The Swallow notices

the rich making merry in their beautiful houses, while the beggars were sitting at the gates.
He flew into dark lanes, and saw the white faces of starving children looking out listlessly
at the black streets. Under the archway of a bridge two little boys were lying in one
another’s arms to try and keep themselves warm. (pp. 9–10)

The pattern is repeated in ‘The Young King’, where the misery


which the King witnesses is reminiscent of Victorian social-problem
novels – those novels, such as Elizabeth Gaskell’s Mary Barton,
written in middle years of the nineteenth century and which dwell
upon the misery of the urban poor:

The meagre daylight peered in through the grated windows, and showed him the gaunt
figures of the weavers bending over their cases. Pale, sickly-looking children were
crouched on the huge crossbeams. As the shuttles dashed through the warp they lifted up
the heavy battens, and when the shuttles stopped they let the battens fall and pressed the
threads together. Their faces were pinched with famine, and their thin hands shook and
trembled. Some haggard women were seated at a table sewing. A horrible odour filled the
place. The air was foul and heavy, and the walls dripped and streamed with damp. (p. 87)

In these ways the stories are topical, and they point to a potential
audience more sophisticated and knowing than the child desiring to
be told a good story. In letters to The Speaker and The Pall Mall
Gazette in 1891 Wilde ridiculed the idea that ‘the extremely limited
vocabulary at the disposal of the British child’ should be ‘the
standard by which the prose of an artist is to be judged’. Indeed, it is
the simultaneous appeal to both child and adult that explains what
is perhaps the most striking and modern element in all the stories –
those themes to which their subtexts allude.

In the last decade there has been a trend among critics of Wilde’s
work to see submerged concerns in his fiction and drama,
particularly that of nineteenth-century sexual politics. So some
critics read the representation of marriage and sexual ethics in the
Society Comedies in terms of a covert discussion of the politics of
male–male desire. For example, the plot of A Woman of No
Importance appears to be concerned with a familiar tension between
child and parents: Lord Illingworth, the father of the illegitimate
Gerald Arbuthnot, competes for his affections with his mother.
However, cancelled drafts of the play confirm the suspicions of some
gay critics that Wilde’s original concern was with plotting the
dynamics of male-male desire between an older and powerful man
(here Lord Illingworth) and a younger, attractive ingénu (Gerald
Arbuthnot). Vestiges of this concern remain in the stereotyped
character of Mrs Arbuthnot, whose emotions have little interest in
the play, despite the fact that in terms of the plot, she is the central
character. More tangible evidence for the existence of this
submerged gay politics exists in a scene maintained throughout the
drafts of the play. It concerns a group of middle-aged women
discussing their ‘ideal man’. In their conversation the dowagers
emphasize qualities such as physical beauty, idleness and
fecklessness, thereby selfconsciously overturning Victorian
stereotypes that value duty, work and protectiveness. It is significant
that precisely these qualities are attributed to Dorian Gray and are
features of the way in which Wilde describes the object of desire in
homosexual relationships. Equally significant is the fact that these
qualities are attributed to an ideal man, and not an ideal husband.
By divorcing the terms ‘man’ and ‘husband’, Wilde resists the
Victorian practice of defining men by means of their relationships
with women.

It is possible to see the existence of exactly the same kind of


subtexts in some of the short stories. For example, when Wilde’s
narrator in ‘The Model Millionaire’ describes Hughie Erskine, he
does so in a particularly loaded way: Erskine is a ‘delightful
ineffectual young man with a perfect profile and no profession’.
Wilde re-used the terms of the description in an epigram published
in ‘Phrases and Philosophies for the Use of the Young’:

There is something tragic about the enormous number of young men there are in England
at the present moment who start life with a perfect profile, and end by adopting some

useful profession.8

The same epigram was read out by Edward Carson in court in


Wilde’s first trial, and the connection with Wilde’s own
homosexuality was thereby made explicit. Lord Arthur Savile shares
some of the physical characteristics of Hughie Erskine: he is
described as having led the ‘delicate and luxurious life of a young
man of birth and fortune, a life exquisite in its freedom from sordid
care, its beautiful boyish insouciance’. The motivation for Lord
Arthur’s actions is of course his relationship with his fiancée, but the
story itself completely disregards her feelings: indeed its interest is
firmly with Lord Arthur and not, as might be expected, with the
force of heterosexual desire.

However the most elaborate of all of Wilde’s coded references to a


gay double life occurs in the ‘Portrait of Mr. W. H.’ There Wilde’s
character (once again called Erskine) describes his relationship with
Cyril Graham which is reminiscent of Wilde’s representation of
male–male desire, and uncannily prophetic of his own relationship
with Bosie and Bosie’s father, the Marquess of Queensberry:
I don’t think that Lord Crediton cared very much for Cyril… Cyril had very little affection
for him, and was only too glad to spend most of his holidays with us in Scotland. They
never really got on together at all. Cyril thought him a bear, and he thought Cyril
effeminate. He was effeminate, I suppose, in some things, though he was a very good rider
and a capital fencer. In fact he got the foils before he left Eton. But he was very languid in
his manner, and not a little vain of his good looks, and had a strong objection to football.
The two things that really gave him pleasure were poetry and acting. At Eton he was
always dressing up and reciting Shakespeare… I was absurdly devoted to him… he always
set an absurdly high value on personal appearance, and once read a paper before our
debating society to prove that it was better to be good-looking than to be good. He
certainly was wonderfully handsome. People who did not like him, Philistines and college
tutors, and young men reading for the Church, used to say that he was merely pretty; but
there was a great deal more in his face than mere prettiness. I think he was the most
splendid creature I ever saw, and nothing could exceed the grace of his movements, the
charm of his manner. He fascinated everybody who was worth fascinating, and a great
many people who were not. He was often wilful and petulant, and I used to think him
dreadfully insincere. (pp. 52–3)

It is significant that the main theme of this story is forgery and


deception: what matters in it is not the distinction between truth
and lies, but the ability to sustain a falsehood – a topic which Wilde
explored more fully in his critical essay ‘The Decay of Lying’ in
Intentions (1891). Other stories provide variations on this basic
theme. For example, the plots of both ‘The Sphinx Without a Secret’
and ‘The Model Millionaire’ involve a sustained deception. In the
first story a widow so desires mystery that she literally invents a
secret life; the irony of Wilde’s tale is that the heroine is only living
the appearance of a double life. What matters is not the ‘reality’
behind the secret, but the woman’s ability to sustain a belief in
secrecy. In the second story, a millionaire wants to be painted as a
pauper. During the course of the story the millionaire fails to keep
his real identity secret, but his lie is maintained by the work of art –
his portrait. In both these examples the emphasis is not upon truth-
telling, for the revelation of truth is seen as a mark of failure;
success, rather, is an ability to sustain a deception. At one level this
reversal of the traditional truth-telling functions of ghost and
mystery stories is part of Wilde’s larger strategy of parody, but the
interest in revaluing deception is also part of the sexual subtexts of
the stories. The idea of deception in Wilde’s own life was linked to
an emerging homosexual consciousness, and the need to maintain
secrets, as his trials later revealed, was both urgent and necessary.
Indeed nearly all of Wilde’s writing is obsessed with the parallel
themes of secrecy, unmasking and love, and an enduring element of
many of the stories is the power of a love which society either
ignores or sees as illicit: the dwarf’s inappropriate love for the
Infanta; the Fisherman’s profane love for the Mermaid; the
invisibility of the Prince’s benevolent love of children, and so on. In
this way the archetypal themes of the stories, those of love and its
vulnerability, are placed in very specific contexts. So, on the one
hand, the stories fulfil the demands of their respective genres by
being accessible to a very wide audience; but the contexts they use
invariably work in a coded way, and are to be recognized only by a
coterie audience. This dual function makes for the stories’
paradoxical qualities – their simplicity and complexity, their
heterodoxy and orthodoxy, their appeal to adults and children.
In the century since Wilde’s short stories were first published,
literary critics have had little to say about them: either they are
dismissed as juvenilia, or they are simply overlooked. However,
many of the themes and character-types so well known from Wilde’s
comedies were first established in the stories. Like his drama the
stories are inhabited by witty dandies who keep their social world at
a distance with a well-turned epigram, by the imperious dowagers
who run London Society and by innocents who suffer for their
honesty in a corrupt world. In the stories we see Wilde developing
the parodic style that the plays were to make famous. The stories
also reveal his early interest in the devices of melodrama, the ability
of paradox to shock the reader and the power of irony to subvert
stock literary forms. Most importantly, the stories are also the first
expression of Wilde’s preoccupation with the oppositions that were
to dominate his life and thought. They include love and desire; art
and life; sincerity and insincerity; innocence and sin; honesty and
deceit; altruism and greed; self-sacrifice and self-aggrandizement.
Wilde spent the years between 1889 and 1895, the main creative
period of his life, trying to overturn and revalue the basis of these
oppositions and the moral and social values which gave them force.
In his own life, Wilde tragically failed in this ambition; but the
fiction, by contrast and despite the negativism of Macmillan’s
anonymous reader, has proved remarkably successful.

Notes to the Introduction


1 I also print as an appendix one fugitive text by Wilde; see ‘A Note on the Texts’.

2 The reader’s report survives in the Macmillan archive in the British Library. See

Macmillan Add. 5594; 16 Feb. 1888.

3 The unpublished sequence of letters is housed in the William Andrews Clark Memorial

Library, The University of California at Los Angeles (ALS W67126 W6721: 1894. Sept?
27).

4 Letter to Ross (c 1888), also in the Clark Library; published in Ian Small, Oscar Wilde

Revalued: An Essay on New Materials and Methods of Research (Greensboro, NC, 1993), p.
45.

5 Vyvyan Holland, Time Remembered (1966), pp. 11–12.

6 Wilde, De Profundis (letter to Lord Alfred Douglas, Jan–March. 1897) in The Letters of

Oscar Wilde, ed. Sir Rupert Hart-Davis (London, 1963), p. 470.

7 Ibid. 475.

8 ‘Phrases and Philosophies for the Use of the Young’, in The Oxford Authors: Oscar Wilde,

ed. Isobel Murray (Oxford, 1989), p. 573.


Further Reading

Biography

Richard Ellmann, Oscar Wilde (London, 1987).


Merlin Holland, The Wilde Album (1997).
E. H. Mikhail, ed., Oscar Wilde: Interviews and Recollections 2 vols.
(London, 1979).
H. Montgomery Hyde, The Trials of Oscar Wilde (London, 1948).
Richard Pine, Oscar Wilde (Dublin, 1983).

Editions

The Picture of Dorian Gray, ed. Donald E. Lawler (New York, 1988).
Lady Windermere’s Fan, ed. Ian Small (London, 1980).
A Woman of No Importance, ed. Ian Small (London, 1993)
An Ideal Husband, ed. Russell Jackson (London, 1993).
The Importance of Being Earnest and Outer Plays, ed. Richard Allen
Cave (Harmondsworth, 2000)
The Importance of Being Earnest, ed. Russell Jackson (London, 1980;
revd edn, 1993).
Vera; Or, the Nihilists, ed. Frances Miriam Reed (Dyfed, 1989).
Oscar Wilde: Poems and Poems in Prose (The Complete Works of Oscar
Wilde, Vol. I), eds. Bobby Fong and Karl Beckson (Oxford, 2000).
Oscar Wilde’s Oxford Notebooks, eds. Philip E. Smith, H, and Michael
S. Helfand (New York, 1989).
Isobel Murray, ed., The Oxford Authors: Oscar Wilde (Oxford, 1989).
Robert Ross, ed., The First Collected Edition of the Works of Oscar
Wilde (London, 1908–22).

Collections of Criticism

Karl Beckson, ed., Oscar Wilde: The Critical Heritage (London, 1970).
Richard Ellmann, ed., Oscar Wilde: A Collection of Critical Essays
(Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1969; repr., 1986). Regenia Gagnier, ed.,
Critical Essays on Oscar Wilde (New York, 1991).
Peter Raby, ed., The Cambridge Companion to Oscar Wilde
(Cambridge, 1997).
Willliam Tydeman, ed., Wilde: Comedies (London, 1982).

Criticism

Karl Beckson, The Oscar Wilde Encyclopedia (New York, 1998).


Alan Bird, The Plays of Oscar Wilde (London, 1977).
Regenia Gagnier, Idylls of the Marketplace: Oscar Wilde and the
Victorian Public (London, 1987).
Josephine M. Guy and Ian Small, Oscar Wilde’s Profession: Writing
and the Culture Industry in the Late Nineteenth Century (Oxford,
2000).
Norbert Kohl, Oscar Wilde: The Works of a Conformist Rebel
(Gambridge, 1991).
Christopher Nassaar, Into The Demon Universe: A Literary Exploration
of Oscar Wilde (New Haven, Conn., 1974).
Kerry Powell, Oscar Wilde and the Theatre of the 1890s (Cambridge,
1990).
Peter Raby, Oscar Wilde (Cambridge, 1988).
Rodney Shewan, Oscar Wilde: Art and Egotism (London, 1977).
Alan Sinfield, The Wilde Century (London, 1994).

Letters

The Letters of Oscar Wilde, ed., Rupert Hart-Davis (London, 1963).


More Letters of Oscar Wilde, ed., Rupert Hart-Davis (London, 1985).
The Complete Letters of Oscar Wilde, eds. Merlin Holland and Rupert
Hart-Davis (London, 2000).

Bibliography

Ian Fletcher and John Stokes, ‘Oscar Wilde’, in Anglo-Irish Literature:


A Review of Research, ed. Richard J. Finneran (New York, 1976),
48–137.
Ian Fletcher and John Stokes, ‘Oscar Wilde’, in Recent Research on
Anglo-Irish Writers: A Supplement to Anglo-Irish Literature: A Review
of Research, ed. Richard J. Finneran (New York, 1983), 21–47.
Stuart Mason, [C. S. Millard], A Bibliography of Oscar Wilde (London,
1914)
E. H. Mikhail, Oscar Wilde: An Annotated Bibliography of Criticism
(London, 1978).
Ian Small, Oscar Wilde: Recent Research (Gerrards Cross, Bucks.,
2000).
–, Oscar Wilde Revalued: An Essay on New Materials and Methods of
Research (Greensboro, NC, 1993).
A Note on the Texts

The present edition prints the first book-version of the stories


contained in The Happy Prince and Other Tales (London: David Nutt,
1888), A House of Pomegranates (London: Osgood, McIlvaine and
Co., 1891), and Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime (London: Osgood,
McIlvaine and Co., 1891). In all three cases there were very few
editions in Wilde’s lifetime. There were only two of The Happy
Prince; A House of Pomegranates was printed in only one edition, and
unsold copies of it were remaindered around the time of Wilde’s
death. Lord Arthur Sarnie’s Crime, too, was printed in only one
British and one American edition. In most cases, and in keeping
with much nineteenth-century writing practice, the first publication
of the stories had in fact been in the periodical press. However, the
argument for reprinting the stories as they were collected in book-
form is two-fold. In the first instance, the act of collecting, arranging
and revising the stories represented an artistic judgement and
reveals Wilde’s mature attitude towards his texts. The second reason
involves the pragmatics of nineteenth-century publishing. Generally
speaking, once their work had passed out of their hands authors had
little control over it; however, book publishing offered significantly
more artistic and authorial control than the periodical press, which
had to answer to much narrower constraints. Moreover, the three
volumes of stories were reprinted in their book-form in the collected
edition of Wilde’s works published by Robert Ross, his literary
executor, and Ross clearly had access to authorial material not
available to the modern editor. I have collated Ross’s edition with
the first book editions; the only differences are of punctuation, but
these have not been noted. As with Ross, in printing the first book
editions I have made some silent corrections to obvious printers’
errors.

This volume also reprints ‘The Portrait of Mr. W. H.’ and the
‘Poems in Prose’. The identity of both works presents the editor with
a problem. ‘The Portrait of Mr. W. H.’ is an anomalous text; it
hovers between Wilde’s stories and his literary criticism (as it is
represented in Intentions). The decision to include it here is based on
what I have judged to be its basic narrative impetus, together with
its clear relationship with popular sub-genres which Wilde explored
in his other stories. The difficulty over categorizing the ‘Poems in
Prose’ is similar in that they can be seen either as poems or prose-
narratives. My decision to include them here is largely pragmatic:
there is no modern edition of Wilde’s poems, and the ‘Poems in
Prose’ (in their entirety) are relatively inaccessible for the general
reader. Moreover, all are informed by a strong narrative structure
and have a generic relationship with some of the stories.
Unlike the volumes of stories, the texts for both ‘The Portrait of
Mr. W. H.’ and the ‘Poems in Prose’ are taken from periodicals.
(‘The Portrait of Mr. W. H.’ is from Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine,
July, 1889, and the six ‘Poems in Prose’ from The Fortnightly Review,
July, 1894.) There is a second and much longer version of ‘The
Portrait of Mr. W. H.’, which was printed posthumously. The reasons
for not taking this work as base-text are two-fold. In the first
instance it is much more literary criticism than prose fiction; more
importantly, although there is clear evidence that Wilde wished to
extend the original periodical essay of ‘The Portrait of Mr. W. H.’
into a book, we have no way of knowing whether the posthumous
text in fact does represent that intention. (For details of this issue,
see Horst Schroeder, Oscar Wilde, ‘The Portrait of Mr. W.H.’ – Its
Composition, Publication and Reception, Braunschweig, 1984.)
Finally I print one fugitive text as an appendix. It is a fragment of
a hitherto unknown poem in prose, ‘Elder-tree’; the manuscript of it
is in the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library at the University
of California, Los Angeles. It was first published in my Oscar Wilde
Revalued (1993).
The Happy Prince and Other Tales

To Carlos Blacker1

The Happy Prince

High above the city, on a tall column, stood the statue of the Happy
Prince. He was gilded all over with thin leaves of fine gold, for eyes
he had two bright sapphires, and a large red ruby glowed on his
sword-hilt.

He was very much admired indeed. ‘He is as beautiful as a


weathercock,’ remarked one of the Town Councillors who wished to
gain a reputation for having artistic tastes; ‘only not quite so useful,’
he added, fearing lest people should think him unpractical, which
he really was not.
‘Why can’t you be like the Happy Prince?’ asked a sensible mother
of her little boy who was crying for the moon. ‘The Happy Prince
never dreams of crying for anything.’
‘I am glad there is some one in the world who is quite happy,’
muttered a disappointed man as he gazed at the wonderful statue.
‘He looks just like an angel,’ said the Charity Children1 as they
came out of the cathedral in their bright scarlet cloaks, and their
clean white pinafores.
‘How do you know?’ said the Mathematical Master, ‘you have
never seen one.’
‘Ah! but we have, in our dreams,’ answered the children; and the
Mathematical Master frowned and looked very severe, for he did not
approve of children dreaming.
One night there flew over the city a little Swallow. His friends had
gone away to Egypt six weeks before, but he had stayed behind, for
he was in love with the most beautiful Reed. He had met her early
in the spring as he was flying down the river after a big yellow
moth, and had been so attracted by her slender waist that he had
stopped to talk to her.
‘Shall I love you?’ said the Swallow, who liked to come to the
point at once, and the Reed made him a low bow. So he flew round
and round her, touching the water with his wings, and making silver
ripples. This was his courtship, and it lasted all through the summer.
‘It is a ridiculous attachment,’ twittered the other Swallows, ‘she
has no money, and far too many relations;’ and indeed the river was
quite full of Reeds. Then, when the autumn came, they all flew
away.
After they had gone he felt lonely, and began to tire of his lady-
love. ‘She has no conversation,’ he said, ‘and I am afraid that she is
a coquette, for she is always flirting with the wind.’ And certainly,
whenever the wind blew, the Reed made the most graceful curtsies.
‘I admit that she is domestic,’ he continued, ‘but I love travelling,
and my wife, consequently, should love travelling also.’
‘Will you come away with me?’ he said finally to her; but the
Reed shook her head, she was so attached to her home.
‘You have been trifling with me,’ he cried, ‘I am off to the
Pyramids. Good-bye!’ and he flew away.
All day long he flew, and at night-time he arrived at the city.
‘Where shall I put up?’ he said; ‘I hope the town has made
preparations.’
Then he saw the statue on the tall column. ‘I will put up there,’ he
cried; ‘it is a fine position with plenty of fresh air.’ So he alighted
just between the feet of the Happy Prince.
‘I have a golden bedroom,’ he said softly to himself as he looked
round, and he prepared to go to sleep; but just as he was putting his
head under his wing a large drop of water fell on him. ‘What a
curious thing!’ he cried, ‘there is not a single cloud in the sky, the
stars are quite clear and bright, and yet it is raining. The climate in
the north of Europe is really dreadful. The Reed used to like the
rain, but that was merely her selfishness.’
Then another drop fell.
‘What is the use of a statue if it cannot keep the rain off?’ he said;
‘I must look for a good chimney-pot,’ and he determined to fly
away.
But before he had opened his wings, a third drop fell, and he
looked up, and saw – Ah! what did he see?
The eyes of the Happy Prince were filled with tears, and tears
were running down his golden cheeks. His face was so beautiful in
the moonlight that the little Swallow was filled with pity.
‘Who are you?’ he said.
‘I am the Happy Prince.’
‘Why are you weeping then?’ asked the Swallow; ‘you have quite
drenched me.’
‘When I was alive and had a human heart,’ answered the statue, ‘I
did not know what tears were, for I lived in the Palace of Sans-
Souci2 where sorrow is not allowed to enter. In the daytime I played
with my companions in the garden, and in the evening I led the
dance in the Great Hall. Round the garden ran a very lofty wall, but
I never cared to ask what lay beyond it, everything about me was so
beautiful. My courtiers called me the Happy Prince, and happy
indeed I was, if pleasure be happiness. So I lived, and so I died. And
now that I am dead they have set me up here so high that I can see
all the ugliness and all the misery of my city, and though my heart
is made of lead yet I cannot choose but weep.’
‘What, is he not solid gold?’ said the Swallow to himself. He was
too polite to make any personal remarks out loud.
‘Far away,’ continued the statue in a low musical voice, ‘far away
in a little street there is a poor house. One of the windows is open,
and through it I can see a woman seated at a table. Her face is thin
and worn, and she has coarse, red hands, all pricked by the needle,
for she is a seamstress. She is embroidering passion-flowers on a
satin gown for the loveliest of the Queen’s maids-of-honour to wear
at the next Court-ball. In a bed in the corner of the room her little
boy is lying ill. He has a fever, and is asking for oranges. His mother
has nothing to give him but river water, so he is crying. Swallow,
Swallow, little Swallow, will you not bring her the ruby out of my
sword-hilt? My feet are fastened to this pedestal and I cannot move.’
‘I am waited for in Egypt,’ said the Swallow. ‘My friends are flying
up and down the Nile, and talking to the large lotus-flowers. Soon
they will go to sleep in the tomb of the great King. The King is there
himself in his painted coffin. He is wrapped in yellow linen, and
embalmed with spices. Round his neck is a chain of pale green jade,
and his hands are like withered leaves.’
‘Swallow, Swallow, little Swallow,’ said the Prince, ‘will you not
stay with me for one night, and be my messenger? The boy is so
thirsty, and the mother so sad.’
‘I don’t think I like boys,’ answered the Swallow. ‘Last summer,
when I was staying on the river, there were two rude boys, the
miller’s sons, who were always throwing stones at me. They never
hit me, of course; we swallows fly far too well for that, and besides,
I come of a family famous for its agility; but still, it was a mark of
disrespect.’
But the Happy Prince looked so sad that the little Swallow was
sorry. ‘It is very cold here,’ he said; ‘but I will stay with you for one
night, and be your messenger.’
‘Thank you, little Swallow,’ said the Prince.
So the Swallow picked out the great ruby from the Prince’s sword,
and flew away with it in his beak over the roofs of the town.
He passed by the cathedral tower, where the white marble angels
were sculptured. He passed by the palace and heard the sound of
dancing. A beautiful girl came out on the balcony with her lover.
‘How wonderful the stars are,’ he said to her, ‘and how wonderful is
the power of love!’ ‘I hope my dress will be ready in time for the
State-ball,’ she answered; ‘I have ordered passion-flowers to be
embroidered on it; but the seamstresses are so lazy.’
He passed over the river, and saw the lanterns hanging to the
masts of the ships. He passed over the Ghetto, and saw the old Jews
bargaining with each other, and weighing out money in copper
scales. At last he came to the poor house and looked in. The boy was
tossing feverishly on his bed, and the mother had fallen asleep, she
was so tired. In he hopped, and laid the great ruby on the table
beside the woman’s thimble. Then he flew gently round the bed,
fanning the boy’s forehead with his wings. ‘How cool I feel,’ said the
boy, ‘I must be getting better;’ and he sank into a delicious slumber.
Then the Swallow flew back to the Happy Prince, and told him
what he had done. ‘It is curious,’ he remarked, ‘but I feel quite
warm now, although it is so cold.’
‘That is because you have done a good action,’ said the Prince.
And the little Swallow began to think, and then he fell asleep.
Thinking always made him sleepy.
When day broke he flew down to the river and had a bath.
‘What a remarkable phenomenon,’ said the Professor of
Ornithology as he was passing over the bridge. ‘A swallow in
winter!’ And he wrote a long letter about it to the local newspaper.
Every one quoted it, it was full of so many words that they could
not understand.
‘To-night I go to Egypt,’ said the Swallow, and he was in high
spirits at the prospect. He visited all the public monuments, and sat
a long time on top of the church steeple. Wherever he went the
Sparrows chirruped, and said to each other, ‘What a distinguished
stranger!’ so he enjoyed himself very much.
When the moon rose he flew back to the Happy Prince. ‘Have you
any commissions for Egypt?’ he cried; ‘I am just starting.’
‘Swallow, Swallow, little Swallow,’ said the Prince, ‘will you not
stay with me one night longer?’
‘I am waited for in Egypt,’ answered the Swallow. To-morrow my
friends will fly up to the Second Cataract.3 The river-horse couches
there among the bulrushes, and on a great granite throne sits the
God Memnon.4 All night long he watches the stars, and when the
morning star shines he utters one cry of joy, and then he is silent. At
noon the yellow lions come down to the water’s edge to drink. They
have eyes like green beryls,5 and their roar is louder than the roar of
the cataract.’
‘Swallow, Swallow, little Swallow,’ said the Prince, ‘far away
across the city I see a young man in a garret. He is leaning over a
desk covered with papers, and in a tumbler by his side there is a
bunch of withered violets. His hair is brown and crisp, and his lips
are red as a pomegranate, and he has large and dreamy eyes. He is
trying to finish a play for the Director of the Theatre, but he is too
cold to write any more. There is no fire in the grate, and hunger has
made him faint.’
‘I will wait with you one night longer,’ said the Swallow, who
really had a good heart. ‘Shall I take him another ruby?’
‘Alas! I have no ruby now,’ said the Prince; ‘my eyes are all that I
have left. They are made of rare sapphires, which were brought out
of India a thousand years ago. Pluck out one of them and take it to
him. He will sell it to the jeweller, and buy food and firewood, and
finish his play.’
‘Dear Prince,’ said the Swallow, ‘I cannot do that;’ and he began
to weep.
‘Swallow, Swallow, little Swallow,’ said the Prince, ‘do as I
command you.’
So the Swallow plucked out the Prince’s eye, and flew away to the
student’s garret. It was easy enough to get in, as there was a hole in
the roof. Through this he darted, and came into the room. The
young man had his head buried in his hands, so he did not hear the
flutter of the bird’s wings, and when he looked up he found the
beautiful sapphire lying on the withered violets.
‘I am beginning to be appreciated,’ he cried; ‘this is from some
great admirer. Now I can finish my play,’ and he looked quite
happy.
The next day the Swallow flew down to the harbour. He sat on
the mast of a large vessel and watched the sailors hauling big chests
out of the hold with ropes. ‘Heave a-hoy!’ they shouted as each
chest came up. ‘I am going to Egypt!’ cried the Swallow, but nobody
minded, and when the moon rose he flew back to the Happy Prince.
‘I am come to bid you good-bye,’ he cried.
‘Swallow, Swallow, little Swallow,’ said the Prince, ‘will you not
stay with me one night longer?’
‘It is winter,’ answered the Swallow, ‘and the chill snow will soon
be here. In Egypt the sun is warm on the green palm-trees, and the
crocodiles lie in the mud and look lazily about them. My
companions are building a nest in the Temple of Baalbec, and the
pink and white doves are watching them, and cooing to each other.
Dear Prince, I must leave you, but I will never forget you, and next
spring I will bring you back two beautiful jewels in place of those
you have given away. The ruby shall be redder than a red rose, and
the sapphire shall be as blue as the great sea.’
‘In the square below,’ said the Happy Prince, ‘there stands a little
match-girl. She has let her matches fall in the gutter, and they are
all spoiled. Her father will beat her if she does not bring home some
money, and she is crying. She has no shoes or stockings, and her
little head is bare. Pluck out my other eye, and give it to her, and
her father will not beat her.’
‘I will stay with you one night longer,’ said the Swallow, ‘but I
cannot pluck out your eye. You would be quite blind then.’
‘Swallow, Swallow, little Swallow,’ said the Prince, ‘do as I
command you.’
So he plucked out the Prince’s other eye, and darted down with it.
He swooped past the match-girl, and slipped the jewel into the palm
of her hand. ‘What a lovely bit of glass,’ cried the little girl; and she
ran home, laughing.
Then the Swallow came back to the Prince. ‘You are blind now,’
he said, ‘so I will stay with you always.’
‘No, little Swallow,’ said the poor Prince, ‘you must go away to
Egypt.’
‘I will stay with you always,’ said the Swallow, and he slept at the
Prince’s feet.
All the next day he sat on the Prince’s shoulder, and told him
stories of what he had seen in strange lands. He told him of the red
ibises, who stand in long rows on the banks of the Nile, and catch
gold fish in their beaks; of the Sphinx, who is as old as the world
itself, and lives in the desert, and knows everything; of the
merchants, who walk slowly by the side of their camels, and carry
amber beads in their hands; of the King of the Mountains of the
Moon,6 who is as black as ebony, and worships a large crystal; of
the great green snake that sleeps in a palm-tree, and has twenty
priests to feed it with honey-cakes; and of the pygmies who sail over
a big lake on large flat leaves, and are always at war with the
butterflies.
‘Dear little Swallow,’ said the Prince, ‘you tell me of marvellous
things, but more marvellous than anything is the suffering of men
and of women. There is no Mystery so great as Misery. Fly over my
city, little Swallow, and tell me what you see there.’
So the Swallow flew over the great city, and saw the rich making
merry in their beautiful houses, while the beggars were sitting at the
gates. He flew into dark lanes, and saw the whitefaces of starving
children looking out listlessly at the black streets. Under the
archway of a bridge two little boys were lying in one another’s arms
to try and keep themselves warm. ‘How hungry we are!’ they said.
‘You must not lie here,’ shouted the Watchman, and they wandered
out into the rain.
Then he flew back and told the Prince what he had seen.
‘I am covered with fine gold,’ said the Prince, ‘you must take it
off, leaf by leaf, and give it to my poor; the living always think that
gold can make them happy.’
Leaf after leaf of the fine gold the Swallow picked off, till the
Happy Prince looked quite dull and grey. Leaf after leaf of the fine
gold he brought to the poor, and the children’s faces grew rosier,
and they laughed and played games in the street. ‘We have bread
now!’ they cried.
Then the snow came, and after the snow came the frost. The
streets looked as if they were made of silver, they were so bright
and glistening; long icicles like crystal daggers hung down from the
eaves of the houses, everybody went about in furs, and the little
boys wore scarlet caps and skated on the ice.
The poor little Swallow grew colder and colder, but he would not
leave the Prince, he loved him too well. He picked up crumbs
outside the baker’s door when the baker was not looking, and tried
to keep himself warm by flapping his wings.
But at last he knew that he was going to die. He had just strength
to fly up to the Prince’s shoulder once more. ‘Good-bye, dear
Prince!’ he murmured, ‘will you let me kiss your hand?’
‘I am glad that you are going to Egypt at last, little Swallow,’ said
the Prince, ‘you have stayed too long here; but you must kiss me on
the lips, for I love you.’
‘It is not to Egypt that I am going,’ said the Swallow. ‘I am going
to the House of Death. Death is the brother of Sleep, is he not?’
And he kissed the Happy Prince on the lips, and fell down dead at
his feet.
At that moment a curious crack sounded inside the statue, as if
something had broken. The fact is that the leaden heart had snapped
right in two. It certainly was a dreadfully hard frost.
Early the next morning the Mayor was walking in the square
below in company with the Town Councillors. As they passed the
column he looked up at the statue: ‘Dear me! how shabby the Happy
Prince looks!’ he said.
‘How shabby indeed!’ cried the Town Councillors, who always
agreed with the Mayor, and they went up to look at it.
‘The ruby has fallen out of his sword, his eyes are gone, and he is
golden no longer,’ said the Mayor; ‘in fact, he is little better than a
beggar!’
‘Little better than a beggar,’ said the Town Councillors.
‘And here is actually a dead bird at his feet!’ continued the Mayor.
‘We must really issue a proclamation that birds are not to be
allowed to die here.’ And the Town Clerk made a note of the
suggestion.
So they pulled down the statue of the Happy Prince. ‘As he is no
longer beautiful he is no longer useful,’7 said the Art Professor at the
University.
Then they melted the statue in a furnace, and the Mayor held a
meeting of the Corporation to decide what was to be done with the
metal. ‘We must have another statue, of course,’ he said, ‘and it shall
be a statue of myself.’
‘Of myself,’ said each of the Town Councillors, and they
quarrelled. When I last heard of them they were quarrelling still.
‘What a strange thing!’ said the overseer of the workmen at the
foundry. ‘This broken lead heart will not melt in the furnace. We
must throw it away.’ So they threw it on a dust-heap where the dead
Swallow was also lying.
‘Bring me the two most precious things in the city,’ said God to
one of His Angels; and the Angel brought Him the leaden heart and
the dead bird.
‘You have rightly chosen,’ said God, ‘for in my garden of Paradise
this little bird shall sing for evermore, and in my city of gold the
Happy Prince shall praise me.’
The Nightingale and the Rose

‘She said that she would dance with me if I brought her red roses,’
cried the young Student; ‘but in all my garden there is no red rose.’

From her nest in the holm-oak tree the Nightingale heard him,
and she looked out through the leaves, and wondered.
‘No red rose in all my garden!’ he cried, and his beautiful eyes
filled with tears. ‘Ah, on what little things does happiness depend! I
have read all that the wise men have written, and all the secrets of
philosophy are mine, yet for want of a red rose is my life made
wretched.’
‘Here at last is a true lover,’ said the Nightingale. ‘Night after
night have I sung of him, though I knew him not: night after night
have I told his story to the stars, and now I see him. His hair is dark
as the hyacinth-blossom, and his lips are red as the rose of his
desire; but passion has made his face like pale ivory, and sorrow has
set her seal upon his brow.’
‘The Prince gives a ball to-morrow night,’ murmured the young
Student, ‘and my love will be of the company. If I bring her a red
rose she will dance with me till dawn. If I bring her a red rose, I
shall hold her in my arms, and she will lean her head upon my
shoulder, and her hand will be clasped in mine. But there is no red
rose in my garden, so I shall sit lonely, and she will pass me by. She
will have no heed of me, and my heart will break.’
‘Here indeed is the true lover,’ said the Nightingale. ‘What I sing
of, he suffers: what is joy to me, to him is pain. Surely Love is a
wonderful thing. It is more precious than emeralds, and dearer than
fine opals. Pearls and pomegranates cannot buy it, nor is it set forth
in the market-place. It may not be purchased of the merchants, nor
can it be weighed out in the balance for gold.’
‘The musicians will sit in their gallery,’ said the young Student,
‘and play upon their stringed instruments, and my love will dance to
the sound of the harp and the violin. She will dance so lightly that
her feet will not touch the floor, and the courtiers in their gay
dresses will throng round her. But with me she will not dance, for I
have no red rose to give her;’ and he flung himself down on the
grass, and buried his face in his hands, and wept.
‘Why is he weeping?’ asked a little Green Lizard, as he ran past
him with his tail in the air.
‘Why, indeed?’ said a Butterfly, who was fluttering about after a
sunbeam.
‘Why, indeed?’ whispered a Daisy to his neighbour, in a soft, low
voice.
‘He is weeping for a red rose,’ said the Nightingale.
‘For a red rose!’ they cried; ‘how very ridiculous!’ and the little
Lizard, who was something of a cynic, laughed outright.
But the Nightingale understood the secret of the Student’s sorrow,
and she sat silent in the oak-tree, and thought about the mystery of
Love.
Suddenly she spread her brown wings for flight, and soared into
the air. She passed through the grove like a shadow, and like a
shadow she sailed across the garden.
In the centre of the grass-plot was standing a beautiful Rose-tree,
and when she saw it, she flew over to it, and lit upon a spray.
‘Give me a red rose,’ she cried, ‘and I will sing you my sweetest
song.’
But the Tree shook its head.
‘My roses are white,’ it answered; ‘as white as the foam of the sea,
and whiter than the snow upon the mountain. But go to my brother
who grows round the old sun-dial, and perhaps he will give you
what you want.’
So the Nightingale flew over to the Rose-tree that was growing
round the old sun-dial.
‘Give me a red rose,’ she cried, ‘and I will sing you my sweetest
song.’
But the Tree shook its head.
‘My roses are yellow,’ it answered; ‘as yellow as the hair of the
mermaiden who sits upon an amber throne, and yellower than the
daffodil that blooms in the meadow before the mower comes with
his scythe. But go to my brother who grows beneath the Student’s
window, and perhaps he will give you what you want.’
So the Nightingale flew over to the Rose-tree that was growing
beneath the Student’s window.
‘Give me a red rose,’ she cried, ‘and I will sing you my sweetest
song.’
But the Tree shook its head.
‘My roses are red,’ it answered, ‘as red as the feet of the dove, and
redder than the great fans of coral that wave and wave in the ocean-
cavern. But the winter has chilled my veins, and the frost has nipped
my buds, and the storm has broken my branches, and I shall have
no roses at all this year.’
‘One red rose is all I want,’ cried the Nightingale, ‘only one red
rose! Is there no way by which I can get it?’
‘There is a way,’ answered the Tree; ‘but it is so terrible that I
dare not tell it to you.’
‘Tell it to me,’ said the Nightingale, ‘I am not afraid.’
‘If you want a red rose,’ said the Tree, ‘you must build it out of
music by moonlight, and stain it with your own heart’s-blood. You
must sing to me with your breast against a thorn. All night long you
must sing to me, and the thorn must pierce your heart, and your
life-blood must flow into my veins, and become mine.’
‘Death is a great price to pay for a red rose,’ cried the Nightingale,
‘and Life is very dear to all. It is pleasant to sit in the green wood,
and to watch the Sun in his chariot of gold, and the Moon in her
chariot of pearl. Sweet is the scent of the hawthorn, and sweet are
the bluebells that hide in the valley, and the heather that blows on
the hill. Yet Love is better than Life, and what is the heart of a bird
compared to the heart of a man?’
So she spread her brown wings for flight, and soared into the air.
She swept over the garden like a shadow, and like a shadow she
sailed through the grove.
The young Student was still lying on the grass, where she had left
him, and the tears were not yet dry in his beautiful eyes.
‘Be happy,’ cried the Nightingale, ‘be happy; you shall have your
red rose. I will build it out of music by moonlight, and stain it with
my own heart’s-blood. All that I ask of you in return is that you will
be a true lover, for Love is wiser than Philosophy, though she is
wise, and mightier than Power, though he is mighty. Flame-coloured
are his wings, and coloured like flame is his body. His lips are sweet
as honey, and his breath is like frankincense.’
The Student looked up from the grass, and listened, but he could
not understand what the Nightingale was saying to him, for he only
knew the things that are written down in books.
But the Oak-tree understood, and felt sad, for he was very fond of
the little Nightingale who had built her nest in his branches.
‘Sing me one last song,’ he whispered; ‘I shall feel very lonely
when you are gone.’
So the Nightingale sang to the Oak-tree, and her voice was like
water bubbling from a silver jar.
When she had finished her song the Student got up, and pulled a
note-book and a lead-pencil out of his pocket.
‘She has form,’ he said to himself, as he walked away through the
grove – ‘that cannot be denied to her; but has she got feeling? I am
afraid not. In fact, she is like most artists; she is all style, without
any sincerity.1 She would not sacrifice herself for others. She thinks
merely of music, and everybody knows that the arts are selfish. Still,
it must be admitted that she has some beautiful notes in her voice.
What a pity it is that they do not mean anything, or do any practical
good.’ And he went into his room, and lay down on his little pallet-
bed, and began to think of his love; and, after a time, he fell asleep.
And when the Moon shone in the heavens the Nightingale flew to
the Rose-tree, and set her breast against the thorn. All night long
she sang with her breast against the thorn, and the cold crystal
Moon leaned down and listened. All night long she sang, and the
thorn went deeper and deeper into her breast, and her life-blood
ebbed away from her.
She sang first of the birth of love in the heart of a boy and a girl.
And on the topmost spray of the Rose-tree there blossomed a
marvellous rose, petal following petal, as song followed song. Pale
was it, at first, as the mist that hangs over the river – pale as the feet
of the morning, and silver as the wings of the dawn. As the shadow
of a rose in a mirror of silver, as the shadow of a rose in a water-
pool, so was the rose that blossomed on the topmost spray of the
Tree.
But the Tree cried to the Nightingale to press closer against the
thorn. ‘Press closer, little Nightingale,’ cried the Tree, ‘or the Day
will come before the rose is finished.’
So the Nightingale pressed closer against the thorn, and louder
and louder grew her song, for she sang of the birth of passion in the
soul of a man and a maid.
And a delicate flush of pink came into the leaves of the rose, like
the flush in the face of the bridegroom when he kisses the lips of the
bride. But the thorn had not yet reached her heart, so the rose’s
heart remained white, for only a Nightingale’s heart’s-blood can
crimson the heart of a rose.
And the Tree cried to the Nightingale to press closer against the
thorn. ‘Press closer, little Nightingale,’ cried the Tree, ‘or the Day
will come before the rose is finished.’
So the Nightingale pressed closer against the thorn, and the thorn
touched her heart, and a fierce pang of pain shot through her.
Bitter, bitter was the pain, and wilder and wilder grew her song, for
she sang of the Love that is perfected by Death, of the Love that dies
not in the tomb.
And the marvellous rose became crimson, like the rose of the
eastern sky. Crimson was the girdle of petals, and crimson as a ruby
was the heart.
But the Nightingale’s voice grew fainter, and her little wings
began to beat, and a film came over her eyes. Fainter and fainter
grew her song, and she felt something choking her in her throat.
Then she gave one last burst of music. The white Moon heard it,
and she forgot the dawn, and lingered on in the sky. The red rose
heard it, and it trembled all over with ecstasy, and opened its petals
to the cold morning air. Echo2 bore it to her purple cavern in the
hills, and woke the sleeping shepherds from their dreams. It floated
through the reeds of the river, and they carried its message to the
sea.
‘Look, look!’ cried the Tree, ‘the rose is finished now;’ but the
Nightingale made no answer, for she was lying dead in the long
grass, with the thorn in her heart.
And at noon the Student opened his window and looked out.
‘Why, what a wonderful piece of luck!’ he cried; ‘here is a red
rose! I have never seen any rose like it in all my life. It is so
beautiful that I am sure it has a long Latin name;’ and he leaned
down and plucked it.
Then he put on his hat, and ran up to the Professor’s house with
the rose in his hand.
The daughter of the Professor was sitting in the doorway winding
blue silk on a reel, and her little dog was lying at her feet.
‘You said that you would dance with me if I brought you a red
rose,’ cried the Student. ‘Here is the reddest rose in all the world.
You will wear it to-night next your heart, and as we dance together
it will tell you how I love you.’
But the girl frowned.
‘I am afraid it will not go with my dress,’ she answered; ‘and,
besides, the Chamberlain’s nephew has sent me some real jewels,
and everybody knows that jewels cost far more than flowers.’
‘Well, upon my word, you are very ungrateful,’ said the Student
angrily; and he threw the rose into the street, where it fell into the
gutter, and a cart-wheel went over it.
‘Ungrateful!’ said the girl. I tell you what, you are very rude; and,
after all, who are you? Only a Student. Why, I don’t believe you
have even got silver buckles to your shoes as the Chamberlain’s
nephew has;’ and she got up from her chair and went into the
house.
‘What a silly thing Love is,’ said the Student as he walked away.
‘It is not half as useful as Logic, for it does not prove anything, and
it is always telling one of things that are not going to happen, and
making one believe things that are not true. In fact, it is quite
unpractical, and, as in this age to be practical is everything, I shall
go back to Philosophy and study Metaphysics.’
So he returned to his room and pulled out a great dusty book, and
began to read.
The Selfish Giant

Every afternoon, as they were coming from school, the children


used to go and play in the Giant’s garden.

It was a large lovely garden, with soft green grass. Here and there
over the grass stood beautiful flowers like stars, and there were
twelve peach-trees that in the spring-time broke out into delicate
blossoms of pink and pearl, and in the autumn bore rich fruit. The
birds sat on the trees and sang so sweetly that the children used to
stop their games in order to listen to them. ‘How happy we are
here!’ they cried to each other.
One day the Giant came back. He had been to visit his friend the
Cornish ogre, and had stayed with him for seven years. After the
seven years were over he had said all that he had to say, for his
conversation was limited, and he determined to return to his own
castle. When he arrived he saw the children playing in the garden.
‘What are you doing here?’ he cried in a very gruff voice, and the
children ran away.
‘My own garden is my own garden,’ said the Giant; ‘any one can
understand that, and I will allow nobody to play in it but myself So
he built a high wall all round it, and put up a notice-board.
He was a very selfish Giant.
The poor children had now nowhere to play. They tried to play on
the road, but the road was very dusty and full of hard stones, and
they did not like it. They used to wander round the high wall when
their lessons were over, and talk about the beautiful garden inside.
‘How happy we were there,’ they said to each other.
Then the Spring came, and all over the country there were little
blossoms and little birds. Only in the garden of the Selfish Giant it
was still Winter. The birds did not care to sing in it as there were no
children, and the trees forgot to blossom. Once a beautiful flower
put its head out from the grass, but when it saw the notice-board it
was so sorry for the children that it slipped back into the ground
again, and went off to sleep. The only people who were pleased
were the Snow and the Frost. ‘spring has forgotten this garden,’ they
cried, ‘so we will live here all the year round.’ The Snow covered up
the grass with her great white cloak, and the Frost painted all the
trees silver. Then they invited the North Wind to stay with them,
and he came. He was wrapped in furs, and he roared all day about
the garden, and blew the chimney-pots down. ‘this is a delightful
spot,’ he said, ‘we must ask the Hail on a visit.’ So the Hail came.
Every day for three hours he rattled on the roof of the castle till he
broke most of the slates, and then he ran round and round the
garden as fast as he could go. He was dressed in grey, and his breath
was like ice.
‘I cannot understand why the Spring is so late in coming,’ said the
Selfish Giant, as he sat at the window and looked out at his cold
white garden; I hope there will be a change in the weather.’
But the Spring never came, nor the Summer. The Autumn gave
golden fruit to every garden, but to the Giant’s garden she gave
none. ‘He is too selfish,’ she said. So it was always Winter there, and
the North Wind, and the Hail, and the Frost, and the Snow danced
about through the trees.
One morning the Giant was lying awake in bed when he heard
some lovely music. It sounded so sweet to his ears that he thought it
must be the King’s musicians passing by. It was really only a little
linnet singing outside his window, but it was so long since he had
heard a bird sing in his garden that it seemed to him to be the most
beautiful music in the world. Then the Hail stopped dancing over
his head, and the North Wind ceased roaring, and a delicious
perfume came to him through the open casement. ‘I believe the
Spring has come at last,’ said the Giant; and he jumped out of bed
and looked out.
What did he see?
He saw a most wonderful sight. Through a little hole in the wall
the children had crept in, and they were sitting in the branches of
the trees. In every tree that he could see there was a little child. And
the trees were so glad to have the children back again that they had
covered themselves with blossoms, and were waving their arms
gently above the children’s heads. The birds were flying about and
twittering with delight, and the flowers were looking up through the
green grass and laughing. It was a lovely scene, only in one corner it
was still Winter. It was the farthest corner of the garden, and in it
was standing a little boy. He was so small that he could not reach
up to the branches of the tree, and he was wandering all round it,
crying bitterly. The poor tree was still quite covered with frost and
snow, and the North Wind was blowing and roaring above it. ‘Climb
up! little boy,’ said the Tree, and it bent its branches down as low as
it could; but the boy was too tiny.
And the Giant’s heart melted as he looked out. ‘How selfish I have
been!’ he said; ‘now I know why the Spring would not come here. I
will put that poor little boy on the top of the tree, and then I will
knock down the wall, and my garden shall be the children’s
playground for ever and ever.’ He was really very sorry for what he
had done.
So he crept downstairs and opened the front door quite softly, and
went out into the garden. But when the children saw him they were
so frightened that they all ran away, and the garden became Winter
again. Only the little boy did not run, for his eyes were so full of
tears that he did not see the Giant coming. And the Giant stole up
behind him and took him gently in his hand, and put him up into
the tree. And the tree broke at once into blossom, and the birds
came and sang on it, and the little boy stretched out his two arms
and flung them round the Giant’s neck, and kissed him. And the
other children, when they saw that the Giant was not wicked any
longer, came running back, and with them came the Spring. ‘It is
your garden now, little children,’ said the Giant, and he took a great
axe and knocked down the wall. And when the people were going to
market at twelve o’clock they found the Giant playing with the
children in the most beautiful garden they had ever seen.
All day long they played, and in the evening they came to the
Giant to bid him good-bye.
‘But where is your little companion?’ he said: ‘the boy I put into
the tree.’ The Giant loved him the best because he had kissed him.
‘We don’t know,’ answered the children; ‘he has gone away.’
‘You must tell him to be sure and come here to-morrow,’ said the
Giant. But the children said that they did not know where he lived,
and had never seen him before; and the Giant felt very sad.
Every afternoon, when school was over, the children came and
played with the Giant. But the little boy whom the Giant loved was
never seen again. The Giant was very kind to all the children, yet he
longed for his first little friend, and often spoke of him. ‘How I
would like to see him!’ he used to say.
Years went over, and the Giant grew very old and feeble. He
could not play about any more, so he sat in a huge armchair, and
watched the children at their games, and admired his garden. ‘I
have many beautiful flowers,’ he said; ‘but the children are the most
beautiful flowers of all.’
One winter morning he looked out of his window as he was
dressing. He did not hate the Winter now, for he knew that it was
merely the Spring asleep, and that the flowers were resting.
Suddenly he rubbed his eyes in wonder, and looked and looked. It
certainly was a marvellous sight. In the farthest corner of the garden
was a tree quite covered with lovely white blossoms. Its branches
were all golden, and silver fruit hung down from them, and
underneath it stood the little boy he had loved.
Downstairs ran the Giant in great joy, and out into the garden. He
hastened across the grass, and came near to the child. And when he
came quite close his face grew red with anger, and he said, ‘Who
hath dared to wound thee?’ For on the palms of the child’s hands
were the prints of two nails, and the prints of two nails were on the
little feet.
‘Who hath dared to wound thee?’ cried the Giant; ‘tell me, that I
may take my big sword and slay him.’
‘Nay!’ answered the child; ‘but these are the wounds of Love.’
‘Who art thou?’ said the Giant, and a strange awe fell on him, and
he knelt before the little child.
And the child smiled on the Giant, and said to him, ‘You let me
play once in your garden, to-day you shall come with me to my
garden, which is Paradise.’
And when the children ran in that afternoon, they found the Giant
lying dead under the tree, all covered with white blossoms.
The Devoted Friend

One morning the old Water-rat put his head out of his hole. He had
bright beady eyes and stiff grey whiskers, and his tail was like a
long bit of black india-rubber. The little ducks were swimming
about in the pond, looking just like a lot of yellow canaries, and
their mother, who was pure white with real red legs, was trying to
teach them how to stand on their heads in the water.

‘You will never be in the best society unless you can stand on
your heads,’ she kept saying to them; and every now and then she
showed them how it was done. But the little ducks paid no attention
to her. They were so young that they did not know what an
advantage it is to be in society at all.
‘What disobedient children!’ cried the old Water-rat; ‘they really
deserve to be drowned.’
‘Nothing of the kind,’ answered the Duck, ‘every one must make a
beginning, and parents cannot be too patient.’
‘Ah! I know nothing about the feelings of parents,’ said the Water-
rat; ‘I am not a family man. In fact, I have never been married, and I
never intend to be. Love is all very well in its way, but friendship is
much higher. Indeed, I know of nothing in the world that is either
nobler or rarer than a devoted friendship.’
‘And what, pray, is your idea of the duties of a devoted friend?’
asked a Green Linnet, who was sitting in a willow-tree hard by, and
had overheard the conversation.
‘Yes, that is just what I want to know,’ said the Duck, and she
swam away to the end of the pond, and stood upon her head, in
order to give her children a good example.
‘What a silly question!’ cried the Water-rat. ‘I should expect my
devoted friend to be devoted to me, of course.’
‘And what would you do in return?’ said the little bird, swinging
upon a silver spray, and flapping his tiny wings.
‘I don’t understand you,’ answered the Water-rat.
‘Let me tell you a story on the subject,’ said the Linnet.
‘Is the story about me?’ asked the Water-rat. ‘If so, I will listen to
it, for I am extremely fond of fiction.’
‘It is applicable to you,’ answered the Linnet; and he flew down,
and alighting upon the bank, he told the story of The Devoted
Friend.
‘Once upon a time,’ said the Linnet, ‘there was an honest little
fellow named Hans.’
‘Was he very distinguished?’ asked the Water-rat.
‘No,’ answered the Linnet, ‘I don’t think he was distinguished at
all, except for his kind heart, and his funny round good-humoured
face. He lived in a tiny cottage all by himself, and every day he
worked in his garden. In all the country-side there was no garden so
lovely as his. Sweet-william grew there, and Gilly-flowers, and
Shepherds’-purses, and Fair-maids of France. There were damask
Roses, and yellow Roses, lilac Crocuses, and gold, purple Violets and
white. Columbine and Ladysmock, Marjoram and Wild Basil, the
Cowslip and the Flower-de-luce,1 the Daffodil and the Clove-Pink
bloomed or blossomed in their proper order as the months went by,
one flower taking another flower’s place, so that there were always
beautiful things to look at, and pleasant odours to smell.
‘Little Hans had a great many friends, but the most devoted friend
of all was big Hugh the Miller. Indeed, so devoted was the rich
Miller to little Hans, that he [Hans] would never go by his garden
without leaning over the wall and plucking a large nosegay, or a
handful of sweet herbs, or filling his pockets with plums and
cherries if it was the fruit season.
‘“Real friends should have everything in common,” the Miller
used to say, and little Hans nodded and smiled, and felt very proud
of having a friend with such noble ideas.
‘Sometimes, indeed, the neighbours thought it strange that the
rich Miller never gave little Hans anything in return, though he had
a hundred sacks of flour stored away in his mill, and six milch cows,
and a large flock of woolly sheep; but Hans never troubled his head
about these things, and nothing gave him greater pleasure than to
listen to all the wonderful things the Miller used to say about the
unselfishness of true friendship.
‘So little Hans worked away in his garden. During the spring, the
summer, and the autumn he was very happy, but when the winter
came, and he had no fruit or flowers to bring to the market, he
suffered a good deal from cold and hunger, and often had to go to
bed without any supper but a few dried pears or some hard nuts. In
the winter, also, he was extremely lonely, as the Miller never came
to see him then.
‘“There is no good in my going to see little Hans as long as the
snow lasts,” the Miller used to say to his wife, “for when people are
in trouble they should be left alone, and not be bothered by visitors.
That at least is my idea about friendship, and I am sure I am right.
So I shall wait till the spring comes, and then I shall pay him a visit,
and he will be able to give me a large basket of primroses, and that
will make him so happy.”
‘“You are certainly very thoughtful about others,” answered the
Wife, as she sat in her comfortable armchair by the big pinewood
fire; “very thoughtful indeed. It is quite a treat to hear you talk
about friendship. I am sure the clergyman himself could not say
such beautiful things as you do, though he does live in a three-
storied house, and wears a gold ring on his little finger.”
‘“But could we not ask little Hans up here?” said the Miller’s
youngest son. “If poor Hans is in trouble I will give him half my
porridge, and show him my white rabbits.”
‘“What a silly boy you are!” cried the Miller; “I really don’t know
what is the use of sending you to school. You seem not to learn
anything. Why, if little Hans came up here, and saw our warm fire,
and our good supper, and our great cask of red wine, he might get
envious, and envy is a most terrible thing, and would spoil
anybody’s nature. I certainly will not allow Hans’s nature to be
spoiled. I am his best friend, and I will always watch over him, and
see that he is not led into any temptations. Besides, if Hans came
here, he might ask me to let him have some flour on credit, and that
I could not do. Flour is one thing, and friendship is another, and
they should not be confused. Why, the words are spelt differently,
and mean quite different things. Everybody can see that.”
‘“How well you talk!” said the Miller’s Wife, pouring herself out a
large glass of warm ale; “really I feel quite drowsy. It is just like
being in church.”
‘“Lots of people act well,” answered the Miller; “but very few
people talk well, which shows that talking is much the more
difficult thing of the two,2 and much the finer thing also;” and he
looked sternly across the table at his little son, who felt so ashamed
of himself that he hung his head down, and grew quite scarlet, and
began to cry into his tea. However, he was so young that you must
excuse him.’
‘Is that the end of the story?’ asked the Water-rat.
‘Certainly not,’ answered the Linnet, ‘that is the beginning.’
‘Then you are quite behind the age,’ said the Water-rat. ‘Every
good story-teller nowadays starts with the end, and then goes on to
the beginning, and concludes with the middle. That is the new
method. I heard all about it the other day from a critic who was
walking round the pond with a young man. He spoke of the matter
at great length, and I am sure he must have been right, for he had
blue spectacles and a bald head, and whenever the young man made
any remark, he always answered “Pooh!” But pray go on with your
story. I like the Miller immensely. I have all kinds of beautiful
sentiments myself, so there is a great sympathy between us.’
‘Well,’ said the Linnet, hopping now on one leg and now on the
other, ‘as soon as the winter was over, and the primroses began to
open their pale yellow stars, the Miller said to his wife that he
would go down and see little Hans.
‘“Why, what a good heart you have!” cried his wife; “you are
always thinking of others. And mind you take the big basket with
you for the flowers.”
‘So the Miller tied the sails of the windmill together with a strong
iron chain, and went down the hill with the basket on his arm.
‘“Good morning, little Hans,” said the Miller.
‘“Good morning,” said Hans, leaning on his spade, and smiling
from ear to ear.
‘“And how have you been all the winter?” said the Miller.
‘“Well, really,” cried Hans, “it is very good of you to ask, very
good indeed. I am afraid I had rather a hard time of it, but now the
spring has come, and I am quite happy, and all my flowers are doing
well.”
‘“We often talked of you during the winter, Hans,” said the Miller,
“and wondered how you were getting on.”
‘“That was kind of you,” said Hans; “I was half afraid you had
forgotten me.”
‘“Hans, I am surprised at you,” said the Miller; “friendship never
forgets. That is the wonderful thing about it, but I am afraid you
don’t understand the poetry of life. How lovely your primroses are
looking, by-the-bye!”
‘“They are certainly very lovely,” said Hans, “and it is a most
lucky thing for me that I have so many. I am going to bring them
into the market and sell them to the Burgomaster’s daughter, and
buy back my wheelbarrow with the money.”
‘“Buy back your wheelbarrow? You don’t mean to say you have
sold it? What a very stupid thing to do!”
‘“Well, the fact is,” said Hans, “that I was obliged to. You see the
winter was a very bad time for me, and I really had no money at all
to buy bread with. So I first sold the silver buttons off my Sunday
coat, and then I sold my silver chain, and then I sold my big pipe,
and at last I sold my wheelbarrow. But I am going to buy them all
back again now.”
‘“Hans,” said the Miller, “I will give you my wheelbarrow. It is not
in very good repair; indeed, one side is gone, and there is something
wrong with the wheel-spokes; but in spite of that I will give it to
you. I know it is very generous of me, and a great many people
would think me extremely foolish for parting with it, but I am not
like the rest of the world. I think that generosity is the essence of
friendship, and, besides, I have got a new wheelbarrow for myself.
Yes, you may set your mind at ease, I will give you my
wheelbarrow.”
‘“Well, really, that is generous of you,” said little Hans, and his
funny round face glowed all over with pleasure. “I can easily put it
in repair, as I have a plank of wood in the house.”
‘“A plank of wood!” said the Miller; “why, that is just what I want
for the roof of my barn. There is a very large hole in it, and the corn
will all get damp if I don’t stop it up. How lucky you mentioned it!
It is quite remarkable how one good action always breeds another. I
have given you my wheelbarrow, and now you are going to give me
your plank. Of course, the wheelbarrow is worth far more than the
plank, but true friendship never notices things like that. Pray get it
at once, and I will set to work at my barn this very day.”
‘“Certainly,” cried little Hans, and he ran into the shed and
dragged the plank out.
‘“It is not a very big plank,” said the Miller, looking at it, “and I
am afraid that after I have mended my barn-roof there won’t be any
left for you to mend the wheelbarrow with; but, of course, that is
not my fault. And now, as I have given you my wheelbarrow, I am
sure you would like to give me some flowers in return. Here is the
basket, and mind you fill it quite full.”
‘“Quite full?” said little Hans, rather sorrowfully, for it was really
a very big basket, and he knew that if he filled it he would have no
flowers left for the market, and he was very anxious to get his silver
buttons back.
‘“Well, really,” answered the Miller, “as I have given you my
wheelbarrow, I don’t think that it is much to ask you for a few
flowers. I may be wrong, but I should have thought that friendship,
true friendship, was quite free from selfishness of any kind.”
‘“My dear friend, my best friend,” cried little Hans, “you are
welcome to all the flowers in my garden. I would much sooner have
your good opinion than my silver buttons, any day;” and he ran and
plucked all his pretty primroses, and filled the Miller’s basket.
‘“Good-bye, little Hans,” said the Miller, as he went up the hill
with the plank on his shoulder, and the big basket in his hand.
‘“Good-bye,” said little Hans, and he began to dig away quite
merrily, he was so pleased about the wheelbarrow.
‘The next day he was nailing up some honeysuckle against the
porch, when he heard the Miller’s voice calling to him from the
road. So he jumped off the ladder, and ran down the garden, and
looked over the wall.
‘There was the Miller with a large sack of flour on his back.
‘“Dear little Hans,” said the Miller, “would you mind carrying this
sack of flour for me to market?”
‘“Oh, I am so sorry,” said Hans, “but I am really very busy to-day.
I have got all my creepers to nail up, and all my flowers to water,
and all my grass to roll.”
‘“Well, really,” said the Miller, “I think that, considering that I am
going to give you my wheelbarrow, it is rather unfriendly of you to
refuse.”
‘“Oh, don’t say that,” cried little Hans, “I wouldn’t be unfriendly
for the whole world;” and he ran in for his cap, and trudged off with
the big sack on his shoulders.
‘It was a very hot day, and the road was terribly dusty, and before
Hans had reached the sixth milestone he was so tired that he had to
sit down and rest. However, he went on bravely, and at last he
reached the market. After he had waited there some time, he sold
the sack of flour for a very good price, and then he returned home
at once, for he was afraid that if he stopped too late he might meet
some robbers on the way.
‘“It has certainly been a hard day,” said little Hans to himself as
he was going to bed, “but I am glad I did not refuse the Miller, for
he is my best friend, and, besides, he is going to give me his
wheelbarrow.”
‘Early the next morning the Miller came down to get the money
for his sack of flour, but little Hans was so tired that he was still in
bed.
‘“Upon my word,” said the Miller, “you are very lazy. Really,
considering that I am going to give you my wheelbarrow, I think
you might work harder. Idleness is a great sin, and I certainly don’t
like any of my friends to be idle or sluggish. You must not mind my
speaking quite plainly to you. Of course I should not dream of doing
so if I were not your friend. But what is the good of friendship if one
cannot say exactly what one means? Anybody can say charming
things and try to please and to flatter, but a true friend always says
unpleasant things, and does not mind giving pain. Indeed, if he is a
really true friend he prefers it, for he knows that then he is doing
good.”
‘“I am very sorry,” said little Hans, rubbing his eyes and pulling
off his night-cap, “but I was so tired that I thought I would lie in bed
for a little time, and listen to the birds singing. Do you know that I
always work better after hearing the birds sing?”
‘“Well, I am glad of that,” said the Miller, clapping little Hans on
the back, “for I want you to come up to the mill as soon as you are
dressed, and mend my barn-roof for me.”
‘Poor little Hans was very anxious to go and work in his garden,
for his flowers had not been watered for two days, but he did not
like to refuse the Miller, as he was such a good friend to him.
‘“Do you think it would be unfriendly of me if I said I was busy?”
he inquired in a shy and timid voice.
‘“Well, really,” answered the Miller, “I do not think it is much to
ask of you, considering that I am going to give you my
wheelbarrow; but of course if you refuse I will go and do it myself.”
‘“Oh! on no account,” cried little Hans; and he jumped out of bed,
and dressed himself, and went up to the barn.
‘He worked there all day long, till sunset, and at sunset the Miller
came to see how he was getting on.
‘“Have you mended the hole in the roof yet, little Hans?” cried the
Miller in a cheery voice.
‘“It is quite mended,” answered little Hans, coming down the
ladder.
‘“Ah!” said the Miller, “there is no work so delightful as the work
one does for others.”
‘“It is certainly a great privilege to hear you talk,” answered little
Hans, sitting down and wiping his forehead, “a very great privilege.
But I am afraid I shall never have such beautiful ideas as you have.”
‘“Oh! they will come to you,” said the Miller, “but you must take
more pains. At present you have only the practice of friendship;
some day you will have the theory also.”
‘“Do you really think I shall?” asked little Hans.
‘“I have no doubt of it,” answered the Miller; “but now that you
have mended the roof, you had better go home and rest, for I want
you to drive my sheep to the mountain to-morrow.”
‘Poor little Hans was afraid to say anything to this, and early the
next morning the Miller brought his sheep round to the cottage, and
Hans started off with them to the mountain. It took him the whole
day to get there and back; and when he returned he was so tired
that he went off to sleep in his chair, and did not wake up till it was
broad daylight.
‘“What a delightful time I shall have in my garden,” he said, and
he went to work at once.
‘But somehow he was never able to look after his flowers at all,
for his friend the Miller was always coming round and sending him
off on long errands, or getting him to help at the mill. Little Hans
was very much distressed at times, as he was afraid his flowers
would think he had forgotten them, but he consoled himself by the
reflection that the Miller was his best friend. “Besides,” he used to
say, “he is going to give me his wheelbarrow, and that is an act of
pure generosity.”
‘So little Hans worked away for the Miller, and the Miller said all
kinds of beautiful things about friendship, which Hans took down in
a note-book, and used to read over at night, for he was a very good
scholar.
‘Now it happened that one evening little Hans was sitting by his
fireside when a loud rap came at the door. It was a very wild night,
and the wind was blowing and roaring round the house so terribly
that at first he thought it was merely the storm. But a second rap
came, and then a third, louder than either of the others.
‘“It is some poor traveller,” said little Hans to himself, and he ran
to the door.
‘There stood the Miller with a lantern in one hand and a big stick
in the other.
‘“Dear little Hans,” cried the Miller, “I am in great trouble. My
little boy has fallen off a ladder and hurt himself, and I am going for
the Doctor. But he lives so far away, and it is such a bad night, that
it has just occurred to me that it would be much better if you went
instead of me. You know I am going to give you my wheelbarrow,
and so it is only fair that you should do something for me in return.”
‘“Certainly,” cried little Hans, “I take it quite as a compliment
your coming to me, and I will start off at once. But you must lend
me your lantern, as the night is so dark that I am afraid I might fall
into the ditch.”
‘“I am very sorry,” answered the Miller, “but it is my new lantern,
and it would be a great loss to me if anything happened to it.”
‘“Well, never mind, I will do without it,” cried little Hans, and he
took down his great fur coat, and his warm scarlet cap, and tied a
muffler round his throat, and started off.
‘What a dreadful storm it was! The night was so black that little
Hans could hardly see, and the wind was so strong that he could
scarcely stand. However, he was very courageous, and after he had
been walking about three hours, he arrived at the Doctor’s house,
and knocked at the door.
‘“Who is there?” cried the Doctor, putting his head out of his
bedroom window.
‘“Little Hans, Doctor.”
‘“What do you want, little Hans?”
‘“The Miller’s son has fallen from a ladder, and has hurt himself,
and the Miller wants you to come at once.”
‘“All right!” said the Doctor; and he ordered his horse, and his big
boots, and his lantern, and came downstairs, and rode off in the
direction of the Miller’s house, little Hans trudging behind him.
‘But the storm grew worse and worse, and the rain fell in torrents,
and little Hans could not see where he was going, or keep up with
the horse. At last he lost his way, and wandered off on the moor,
which was a very dangerous place, as it was full of deep holes, and
there poor little Hans was drowned. His body was found the next
day by some goatherds, floating in a great pool of water, and was
brought back by them to the cottage.
‘Everybody went to little Hans’s funeral, as he was so popular,
and the Miller was the chief mourner.
‘“As I was his best friend,” said the Miller, “it is only fair that I
should have the best place;” so he walked at the head of the
procession in a long black cloak, and every now and then he wiped
his eyes with a big pocket-handkerchief.
‘“Little Hans is certainly a great loss to every one,” said the
Blacksmith, when the funeral was over, and they were all seated
comfortably in the inn, drinking spiced wine and eating sweet cakes.
‘“A great loss to me at any rate,” answered the Miller; “why, I had
as good as given him my wheelbarrow, and now I really don’t know
what to do with it. It is very much in my way at home, and it is in
such bad repair that I could not get anything for it if I sold it. I will
certainly take care not to give away anything again. One always
suffers for being generous.” ‘
‘Well?’ said the Water-rat, after a long pause.
‘Well, that is the end,’ said the Linnet.
‘But what became of the Miller?’ asked the Water-rat.
‘Oh! I really don’t know,’ replied the Linnet; ‘and I am sure that I
don’t care.’
‘It is quite evident then that you have no sympathy in your
nature,’ said the Water-rat.
‘I am afraid you don’t quite see the moral of the story,’ remarked
the Linnet.
‘The what?’ screamed the Water-rat.
‘The moral.’
‘Do you mean to say that the story has a moral?’
‘Certainly,’ said the Linnet.
‘Well, really,’ said the Water-rat, in a very angry manner, ‘I think
you should have told me that before you began. If you had done so,
I certainly would not have listened to you; in fact, I should have
said “Pooh,” like the critic. However, I can say it now;’ so he
shouted out ‘Pooh’ at the top of his voice, gave a whisk with his tail,
and went back into his hole.
‘And how do you like the Water-rat?’ asked the Duck, who came
paddling up some minutes afterwards. ‘He has a great many good
points, but for my own part I have a mother’s feelings, and I can
never look at a confirmed bachelor without the tears coming into
my eyes.’
‘I am rather afraid that I have annoyed him,’ answered the Linnet.
‘The fact is, that I told him a story with a moral.’
‘Ah! that is always a very dangerous thing to do,’3 said the Duck.
And I quite agree with her.
The Remarkable Rocket

The King’s son was going to be married, so there were general


rejoicings. He had waited a whole year for his bride, and at last she
had arrived. She was a Russian Princess, and had driven all the way
from Finland in a sledge drawn by six reindeer. The sledge was
shaped like a great golden swan, and between the swan’s wings lay
the little Princess herself. Her long ermine cloak reached right down
to her feet, on her head was a tiny cap of silver tissue, and she was
as pale as the Snow Palace in which she had always lived. So pale
was she that as she drove through the streets all the people
wondered. ‘she is like a white rose!’ they cried, and they threw
down flowers on her from the balconies.

At the gate of the Castle the Prince was waiting to receive her. He
had dreamy violet eyes, and his hair was like fine gold. When he
saw her he sank upon one knee, and kissed her hand.
‘Your picture was beautiful,’ he murmured, ‘but you are more
beautiful than your picture;’ and the little Princess blushed.
‘she was like a white rose before,’ said a young Page to his
neighbour, ‘but she is like a red rose now;’ and the whole Court was
delighted.
For the next three days everybody went about saying, ‘White rose,
Red rose, Red rose, White rose;’ and the King gave orders that the
Page’s salary was to be doubled. As he received no salary at all this
was not of much use to him, but it was considered a great honour,
and was duly published in the Court Gazette.
When the three days were over the marriage was celebrated. It
was a magnificent ceremony, and the bride and bridegroom walked
hand in hand under a canopy of purple velvet embroidered with
little pearls. Then there was a State Banquet, which lasted for five
hours. The Prince and Princess sat at the top of the Great Hall and
drank out of a cup of clear crystal. Only true lovers could drink out
of this cup, for if false lips touched it, it grew grey and dull and
cloudy.
‘It is quite clear that they love each other,’ said the little Page, ‘as
clear as crystal!’ and the King doubled his salary a second time.
‘What an honour!’ cried all the courtiers.
After the banquet there was to be a Ball. The bride and
bridegroom were to dance the Rose-dance together, and the King
had promised to play the flute. He played very badly, but no one
had ever dared to tell him so, because he was the King. Indeed, he
only knew two airs, and was never quite certain which one he was
playing; but it made no matter, for, whatever he did, everybody
cried out, ‘Charming! charming!’
The last item on the programme was a grand display of fireworks,
to be let off exactly at midnight. The little Princess had never seen a
firework in her life, so the King had given orders that the Royal
Pyrotechnist1 should be in attendance on the day of her marriage.
‘What are fireworks like?’ she had asked the Prince, one morning,
as she was walking on the terrace.
‘They are like the Aurora Borealis,’ said the King, who always
answered questions that were addressed to other people, ‘only much
more natural.2 I prefer them to stars myself, as you always know
when they are going to appear, and they are as delightful as my own
flute-playing. You must certainly see them.’
So at the end of the King’s garden a great stand had been set up,
and as soon as the Royal Pyrotechnist had put everything in its
proper place, the fireworks began to talk to each other.
‘The world is certainly very beautiful,’ cried a little Squib. ‘Just
look at those yellow tulips. Why! if they were real crackers they
could not be lovelier. I am very glad I have travelled. Travel
improves the mind wonderfully, and does away with all one’s
prejudices.’
‘The King’s garden is not the world, you foolish squib,’ said a big
Roman Candle; ‘the world is an enormous place, and it would take
you three days to see it thoroughly.’
‘Any place you love is the world to you,’ exclaimed a pensive
Catharine Wheel, who had been attached to an old deal box in early
life, and prided herself on her broken heart; ‘but love is not
fashionable any more, the poets have killed it. They wrote so much
about it that nobody believed them, and I am not surprised. True
love suffers, and is silent. I remember myself once – But it is no
matter now. Romance is a thing of the past.’
‘Nonsense!’ said the Roman Candle, ‘Romance never dies. It is like
the moon, and lives for ever. The bride and bridegroom, for
instance, love each other very dearly. I heard all about them this
morning from a brown-paper cartridge, who happened to be staying
in the same drawer as myself, and knew the latest Court news.’
But the Catharine Wheel shook her head. ‘Romance is dead,
Romance is dead, Romance is dead,’ she murmured. She was one of
those people who think that, if you say the same thing over and
over a great many times, it becomes true in the end.
Suddenly, a sharp, dry cough was heard, and they all looked
round.
It came from a tall, supercilious-looking Rocket, who was tied to
the end of a long stick. He always coughed before he made any
observation, so as to attract attention.
‘Ahem! ahem!’ he said, and everybody listened except the poor
Catharine Wheel, who was still shaking her head, and murmuring,
‘Romance is dead.’
‘Order! order!’ cried out a Cracker. He was something of a
politician, and had always taken a prominent part in the local
elections, so he knew the proper Parliamentary expressions to use.
‘Quite dead,’ whispered the Catharine Wheel, and she went off to
sleep.
As soon as there was perfect silence, the Rocket coughed a third
time and began. He spoke with a very slow, distinct voice, as if he
was dictating his memoirs, and always looked over the shoulder of
the person to whom he was talking. In fact, he had a most
distinguished manner.
‘How fortunate it is for the King’s son,’ he remarked, ‘that he is to
be married on the very day on which I am to be let off. Really, if it
had been arranged beforehand, it could not have turned out better
for him; but Princes are always lucky.’
‘Dear me!’ said the little Squib, ‘I thought it was quite the other
way, and that we were to be let off in the Prince’s honour.’
‘It may be so with you,’ he answered; ‘indeed, I have no doubt
that it is, but with me it is different. I am a very remarkable Rocket,
and come of remarkable parents. My mother was the most
celebrated Catharine Wheel of her day, and was renowned for her
graceful dancing. When she made her great public appearance she
spun round nineteen times before she went out, and each time that
she did so she threw into the air seven pink stars. She was three feet
and a half in diameter, and made of the very best gunpowder. My
father was a Rocket like myself, and of French extraction. He flew so
high that the people were afraid that he would never come down
again. He did, though, for he was of a kindly disposition, and he
made a most brilliant descent in a shower of golden rain. The
newspapers wrote about his performance in very flattering terms.
Indeed, the Court Gazette called him a triumph of Pylotechnic3 art.’
‘Pyrotechnic, Pyrotechnic, you mean,’ said a Bengal Light;4 ‘I
know it is Pyrotechnic, for I saw it written on my own canister.’
‘Well, I said Pylotechnic,’ answered the Rocket, in a severe tone of
voice, and the Bengal Light felt so crushed that he began at once to
bully the little squibs, in order to show that he was still a person of
some importance.
‘I was saying,’ continued the Rocket, T was saying – What was I
saying?’
‘You were talking about yourself,’ replied the Roman Candle.
‘Of course; I knew I was discussing some interesting subject when
I was so rudely interrupted. I hate rudeness and bad manners of
every kind, for I am extremely sensitive. No one in the whole world
is so sensitive as I am, I am quite sure of that.’
‘What is a sensitive person?’ said the Cracker to the Roman
Candle.
‘A person who, because he has corns himself, always treads on
other people’s toes,’ answered the Roman Candle in a low whisper;
and the Cracker nearly exploded with laughter.
‘Pray, what are you laughing at?’ inquired the Rocket; ‘I am not
laughing.’
‘I am laughing because I am happy,’ replied the Cracker.
‘That is a very selfish reason,’ said the Rocket angrily. ‘What right
have you to be happy? You should be thinking about others. In fact,
you should be thinking about me. I am always thinking about
myself, and I expect everybody else to do the same. That is what is
called sympathy. It is a beautiful virtue, and I possess it in a high
degree. Suppose, for instance, anything happened to me to-night,
what a misfortune that would be for every one! The Prince and
Princess would never be happy again, their whole married life
would be spoiled; and as for the King, I know he would not get over
it. Really, when I begin to reflect on the importance of my position,
I am almost moved to tears.’
‘If you want to give pleasure to others,’ cried the Roman Candle,
‘you had better keep yourself dry.’
‘Certainly,’ exclaimed the Bengal Light, who was now in better
spirits; ‘that is only common sense.’
‘Common sense, indeed!’ said the Rocket indignantly; ‘you forget
that I am very uncommon, and very remarkable. Why, anybody can
have common sense, provided that they have no imagination. But I
have imagination, for I never think of things as they really are; I
always think of them as being quite different. As for keeping myself
dry, there is evidently no one here who can at all appreciate an
emotional nature. Fortunately for myself, I don’t care. The only
thing that sustains one through life is the consciousness of the
immense inferiority of everybody else, and this is a feeling that I
have always cultivated. But none of you have any hearts. Here you
are laughing and making merry just as if the Prince and Princess
had not just been married.’
‘Well, really,’ exclaimed a small Fire-balloon, ‘why not? It is a
most joyful occasion, and when I soar up into the air I intend to tell
the stars all about it. You will see them twinkle when I talk to them
about the pretty bride.’
‘Ah! what a trivial view of life!’ said the Rocket; ‘but it is only
what I expected. There is nothing in you; you are hollow and empty.
Why, perhaps the Prince and Princess may go to live in a country
where there is a deep river, and perhaps they may have one only
son, a little fair-haired boy with violet eyes like the Prince himself;
and perhaps some day he may go out to walk with his nurse; and
perhaps the nurse may go to sleep under a great elder-tree; and
perhaps the little boy may fall into the deep river and be drowned.
What a terrible misfortune! Poor people, to lose their only son! It is
really too dreadful! I shall never get over it.’
‘But they have not lost their only son,’ said the Roman Candle; ‘no
misfortune has happened to them at all.’
‘I never said that they had,’ replied the Rocket; ‘I said that they
might. If they had lost their only son there would be no use in
saying anything more about the matter. I hate people who cry over
spilt milk. But when I think that they might lose their only son, I
certainly am very much affected.’
‘You certainly are!’ cried the Bengal Light. ‘In fact, you are the
most affected person I ever met.’
‘You are the rudest person I ever met,’ said the Rocket, ‘and you
cannot understand my friendship for the Prince.’
‘Why, you don’t even know him,’ growled the Roman Candle.
‘I never said I knew him,’ answered the Rocket. ‘I dare say that if I
knew him I should not be his friend at all. It is a very dangerous
thing to know one’s friends.’
‘You had really better keep yourself dry,’ said the Fire-balloon.
‘That is the important thing.’
‘Very important for you, I have no doubt,’ answered the Rocket,
‘but I shall weep if I choose;’ and he actually burst into real tears,
which flowed down his stick like rain-drops, and nearly drowned
two little beetles, who were just thinking of setting up house
together, and were looking for a nice dry spot to live in.
‘He must have a truly romantic nature,’ said the Catharine Wheel,
‘for he weeps when there is nothing at all to weep about;’ and she
heaved a deep sigh, and thought about the deal box.
But the Roman Candle and the Bengal Light were quite indignant,
and kept saying, ‘Humbug! humbug!’ at the top of their voices. They
were extremely practical, and whenever they objected to anything
they called it humbug.
Then the moon rose like a wonderful silver shield; and the stars
began to shine, and a sound of music came from the palace.
The Prince and Princess were leading the dance. They danced so
beautifully that the tall white lilies peeped in at the window and
watched them, and the great red poppies nodded their heads and
beat time.
Then ten o’clock struck, and then eleven, and then twelve, and at
the last stroke of midnight every one came out on the terrace, and
the King sent for the Royal Pyrotechnist.
‘Let the fireworks begin,’ said the King; and the Royal
Pyrotechnist made a low bow, and marched down to the end of the
garden. He had six attendants with him, each of whom carried a
lighted torch at the end of a long pole.
It was certainly a magnificent display.
Whizz! Whizz! went the Catharine Wheel, as she spun round and
round. Boom! Boom! went the Roman Candle. Then the Squibs
danced all over the place, and the Bengal Lights made everything
look scarlet. ‘Good-bye,’ cried the Fire-balloon, as he soared away
dropping tiny blue sparks. Bang! Bang! answered the Crackers, who
were enjoying themselves immensely. Every one was a great success
except the Remarkable Rocket. He was so damp with crying that he
could not go off at all. The best thing in him was the gunpowder,
and that was so wet with tears that it was of no use. All his poor
relations, to whom he would never speak, except with a sneer, shot
up into the sky like wonderful golden flowers with blossoms of fire.
Huzza! Huzza! cried the Court; and the little Princess laughed with
pleasure.
‘I suppose they are reserving me for some grand occasion,’ said
the Rocket; ‘no doubt that is what it means,’ and he looked more
supercilious than ever.
The next day the workmen came to put everything tidy. ‘This is
evidently a deputation,’ said the Rocket; ‘I will receive them with
becoming dignity:’ so he put his nose in the air, and began to frown
severely as if he were thinking about some very important subject.
But they took no notice of him at all till they were just going away.
Then one of them caught sight of him. ‘Hallo!’ he cried, ‘what a bad
rocket!’ and he threw him over the wall into the ditch.
‘BAD Rocket? BAD Rocket?’ he said, as he whirled through the
air; ‘impossible! GRAND Rocket, that is what the man said. BAD and
GRAND sound very much the same, indeed they often are the same;’
and he fell into the mud.
‘It is not comfortable here,’ he remarked, ‘but no doubt it is some
fashionable watering-place, and they have sent me away to recruit
my health. My nerves are certainly very much shattered, and I
require rest.’
Then a little Frog, with bright jewelled eyes, and a green mottled
coat, swam up to him.
‘A new arrival, I see!’ said the Frog. ‘Well, after all there is
nothing like mud. Give me rainy weather and a ditch, and I am
quite happy. Do you think it will be a wet afternoon? I am sure I
hope so, but the sky is quite blue and cloudless. What a pity!’
‘Ahem! ahem!’ said the Rocket, and he began to cough.
‘What a delightful voice you have!’ cried the Frog. ‘Really it is
quite like a croak, and croaking is of course the most musical sound
in the world. You will hear our glee-club5 this evening. We sit in the
old duck-pond close by the farmer’s house, and as soon as the moon
rises we begin. It is so entrancing that everybody lies awake to listen
to us. In fact, it was only yesterday that I heard the farmer’s wife say
to her mother that she could not get a wink of sleep at night on
account of us. It is most gratifying to find oneself so popular.’
‘Ahem! ahem!’ said the Rocket angrily. He was very much
annoyed that he could not get a word in.
‘A delightful voice, certainly,’ continued the Frog; ‘I hope you will
come over to the duck-pond. I am off to look for my daughters. I
have six beautiful daughters, and I am so afraid the Pike may meet
them. He is a perfect monster, and would have no hesitation in
breakfasting off them. Well, good-bye: I have enjoyed our
conversation very much, I assure you.’
‘Conversation, indeed!’ said the Rocket. ‘You have talked the
whole time yourself. That is not conversation.’
‘Somebody must listen,’ answered the Frog, ‘and I like to do all
the talking myself. It saves time, and prevents arguments.’
‘But I like arguments,’ said the Rocket.
‘I hope not,’ said the Frog complacently. ‘Arguments are
extremely vulgar, for everybody in good society holds exactly the
same opinions. Good-bye a second time; I see my daughters in the
distance;’ and the little Frog swam away.
‘You are a very irritating person,’ said the Rocket, ‘and very ill-
bred. I hate people who talk about themselves, as you do, when one
wants to talk about oneself, as I do. It is what I call selfishness, and
selfishness is a most detestable thing, especially to any one of my
temperament, for I am well known for my sympathetic nature. In
fact, you should take example by me, you could not possibly have a
better model. Now that you have the chance you had better avail
yourself of it, for I am going back to Court almost immediately. I am
a great favourite at Court; in fact, the Prince and Princess were
married yesterday in my honour. Of course you know nothing of
these matters, for you are a provincial.’
‘There is no good talking to him,’ said a Dragon-fly, who was
sitting on the top of a large brown bulrush; ‘no good at all, for he
has gone away.’
‘Well, that is his loss, not mine,’ answered the Rocket. ‘I am not
going to stop talking to him merely because he pays no attention. I
like hearing myself talk. It is one of my greatest pleasures. I often
have long conversations all by myself, and I am so clever that
sometimes I don’t understand a single word of what I am saying.’6
‘Then you should certainly lecture on Philosophy,’ said the
Dragon-fly; and he spread a pair of lovely gauze wings and soared
away into the sky.
‘How very silly of him not to stay here!’ said the Rocket. ‘I am
sure that he has not often got such a chance of improving his mind.
However, I don’t care a bit. Genius like mine is sure to be
appreciated some day;’ and he sank down a little deeper into the
mud.
After some time a large White Duck swam up to him. She had
yellow legs, and webbed feet, and was considered a great beauty on
account of her waddle.
‘Quack, quack, quack,’ she said. ‘What a curious shape you are!
May I ask were you born like that, or is it the result of an accident?’
‘It is quite evident that you have always lived in the country,’
answered the Rocket, ‘otherwise you would know who I am.
However, I excuse your ignorance. It would be unfair to expect
other people to be as remarkable as oneself. You will no doubt be
surprised to hear that I can fly up into the sky, and come down in a
shower of golden rain.’
‘I don’t think much of that,’ said the Duck, ‘as I cannot see what
use it is to any one. Now, if you could plough the fields like the ox,
or draw a cart like the horse, or look after the sheep like the collie-
dog, that would be something.’
‘My good creature,’ cried the Rocket in a very haughty tone of
voice, ‘I see that you belong to the lower orders. A person of my
position is never useful. We have certain accomplishments, and that
is more than sufficient. I have no sympathy myself with industry of
any kind, least of all with such industries as you seem to
recommend. Indeed, I have always been of opinion that hard work
is simply the refuge of people who have nothing whatever to do.’7
‘Well, well,’ said the Duck, who was of a very peaceable
disposition, and never quarrelled with any one, ‘everybody has
different tastes. I hope, at any rate, that you are going to take up
your residence here.’
‘Oh! dear no,’ cried the Rocket. ‘I am merely a visitor, a
distinguished visitor. The fact is that I find this place rather tedious.
There is neither society here, nor solitude. In fact, it is essentially
suburban. I shall probably go back to Court, for I know that I am
destined to make a sensation in the world.’
‘I had thoughts of entering public life once myself,’ remarked the
Duck; ‘there are so many things that need reforming. Indeed, I took
the chair at a meeting some time ago, and we passed resolutions
condemning everything that we did not like. However, they did not
seem to have much effect. Now I go in for domesticity, and look
after my family.’
‘I am made for public life,’ said the Rocket, ‘and so are all my
relations, even the humblest of them. Whenever we appear we
excite great attention. I have not actually appeared myself, but
when I do so it will be a magnificent sight. As for domesticity, it
ages one rapidly, and distracts one’s mind from higher things.’
‘Ah! the higher things of life, how fine they are!’ said the Duck;
‘and that reminds me how hungry I feel:’ and she swam away down
the stream, saying, ‘Quack, quack, quack.’
‘Come back! come back!’ screamed the Rocket, ‘I have a great
deal to say to you;’ but the Duck paid no attention to him. ‘I am glad
that she has gone,’ he said to himself, ‘she has a decidedly middle-
class mind;’ and he sank a little deeper still into the mud, and began
to think about the loneliness of genius, when suddenly two little
boys in white smocks came running down the bank, with a kettle
and some faggots.
‘This must be the deputation,’ said the Rocket, and he tried to
look very dignified.
‘Hallo!’ cried one of the boys, ‘look at this old stick! I wonder how
it came here;’ and he picked the Rocket out of the ditch.
‘OLD Stick!’ said the Rocket, ‘impossible! GOLD Stick, that is what
he said. Gold Stick is very complimentary. In fact, he mistakes me
for one of the Court dignitaries!’8
‘Let us put it into the fire!’ said the other boy, ‘it will help to boil
the kettle.’
So they piled the faggots together, and put the Rocket on top, and
lit the fire.
‘This is magnificent,’ cried the Rocket, ‘they are going to let me
off in broad daylight, so that every one can see me.’
‘We will go to sleep now,’ they said, ‘and when we wake up the
kettle will be boiled;’ and they lay down on the grass, and shut their
eyes.
The Rocket was very damp, so he took a long time to burn. At
last, however, the fire caught him.
‘Now I am going off!’ he cried, and he made himself very stiff and
straight. ‘I know I shall go much higher than the stars, much higher
than the moon, much higher than the sun. In fact, I shall go so high
that –’
Fizz! Fizz! Fizz! and he went straight up into the air.
‘Delightful!’ he cried, ‘I shall go on like this for ever. What a
success I am!’
But nobody saw him.
Then he began to feel a curious tingling sensation all over him.
‘Now I am going to explode,’ he cried. ‘I shall set the whole world
on fire, and make such a noise, that nobody will talk about anything
else for a whole year.’ And he certainly did explode. Bang! Bang!
Bang! went the gunpowder. There was no doubt about it.
But nobody heard him, not even the two little boys, for they were
sound asleep.
Then all that was left of him was the stick, and this fell down on
the back of a Goose who was taking a walk by the side of the ditch.
‘Good heavens!’ cried the Goose. ‘It is going to rain sticks;’ and
she rushed into the water.
‘I knew I should create a great sensation,’ gasped the Rocket, and
he went out.
The Portrait of Mr. W.H.

The Portrait of Mr. W. H.

I had been dining with Erskine in his pretty little house in Birdcage
Walk,1 and we were sitting in the library over our coffee and
cigarettes, when the question of literary forgeries happened to turn
up in conversation. I cannot at present remember how it was that
we stuck upon this somewhat curious topic, as it was at that time,
but I know that we had a long discussion about Macpherson,
Ireland, and Chatterton,2 and that with regard to the last I insisted
that his so-called forgeries were merely the result of an artistic
desire for perfect representation; that we had no right to quarrel
with an artist for the conditions under which he chooses to present
his work; and that all Art being to a certain degree a mode of acting,
an attempt to realise one’s own personality on some imaginative
plane3 out of reach of the trammelling accidents and limitations of
real life, to censure an artist for a forgery was to confuse an ethical
with an aesthetical problem.

Erskine, who was a good deal older than I was, and had been
listening to me with the amused deference of a man of forty,
suddenly put his hand upon my shoulder and said to me, ‘What
would you say about a young man who had a strange theory about a
certain work of art, believed in his theory, and committed a forgery
in order to prove it?’
‘Ah! that is quite a different matter,’ I answered.
Erskine remained silent for a few moments, looking at the thin
grey threads of smoke that were rising from his cigarette. ‘Yes,’ he
said, after a pause, ‘quite different.’
There was something in the tone of his voice, a slight touch of
bitterness perhaps, that excited my curiosity. ‘Did you ever know
anybody who did that?’ I cried.
‘Yes,’ he answered, throwing his cigarette into the fire, – ‘a great
friend of mine, Cyril Graham.4 He was very fascinating, and very
foolish, and very heartless. However, he left me the only legacy I
ever received in my life.’
‘What was that?’ I exclaimed. Erskine rose from his seat, and
going over to a tall inlaid cabinet that stood between the two
windows, unlocked it, and came back to where I was sitting, holding
in his hand a small panel picture set in an old and somewhat
tarnished Elizabethan frame.
It was a full-length portrait of a young man in late sixteenth-
century costume, standing by a table, with his right hand resting on
an open book. He seemed about seventeen years of age, and was of
quite extraordinary personal beauty, though evidently somewhat
effeminate. Indeed, had it not been for the dress and the closely
cropped hair, one would have said that the face, with its dreamy
wistful eyes, and its delicate scarlet lips, was the face of a girl. In
manner, and especially in the treatment of the hands, the picture
reminded one of François Clouet’s later work.5 The black velvet
doublet with its fantastically gilded points, and the peacock-blue
background against which it showed up so pleasantly, and from
which it gained such luminous value of colour, were quite in
Clouet’s style; and the two masks of Tragedy and Comedy that hung
somewhat formally from the marble pedestal had that hard severity
of touch – so different from the facile grace of the Italians – which
even at the Court of France the great Flemish master never
completely lost, and which in itself has always been a characteristic
of the northern temper.
‘It is a charming thing,’ I cried; ‘but who is this wonderful young
man, whose beauty Art has so happily preserved for us?’
‘This is the portrait of Mr. W. H.,’ said Erskine, with a sad smile. It
might have been a chance effect of light, but it seemed to me that
his eyes were quite bright with tears.
‘Mr. W. H.!’ I exclaimed; ‘who was Mr. W. H.?’
‘Don’t you remember?’ he answered; ‘look at the book on which
his hand is resting.’
‘I see there is some writing there, but I cannot make it out,’ I
replied.
‘Take this magnifying-glass and try,’ said Erskine, with the same
sad smile still playing about his mouth.
I took the glass, and moving the lamp a little nearer, I began to
spell out the crabbed sixteenth-century handwriting. ‘To the onlie
begetter of these insuing sonnets’… ‘Good heavens!’ I cried, ‘is this
Shakespeare’s Mr. W. H.?’
‘Cyril Graham used to say so,’ muttered Erskine.
‘But it is not a bit like Lord Pembroke,’6 I answered. ‘I know the
Penshurst portraits7 very well. I was staying near there a few weeks
ago.’
‘Do you really believe then that the Sonnets are addressed to Lord
Pembroke?’ he asked.
‘I am sure of it,’ I answered. ‘Pembroke, Shakespeare, and Mrs.
Mary Fitton8 are the three personages of the Sonnets; there is no
doubt at all about it.’
‘Well, I agree with you,’ said Erskine, ‘but I did not always think
so. I used to believe – well, I suppose I used to believe in Cyril
Graham and his theory.’
‘And what was that?’ I asked, looking at the wonderful portrait,
which had already begun to have a strange fascination for me.
‘It is a long story,’ said Erskine, taking the picture away from me –
rather abruptly I thought at the time – ‘a very long story; but if you
care to hear it, I will tell it to you.’
‘I love theories about the Sonnets,’ I cried; ‘but I don’t think I am
likely to be converted to any new idea. The matter has ceased to be
a mystery to any one. Indeed, I wonder that it ever was a mystery.’
‘As I don’t believe in the theory, I am not likely to convert you to
it,’ said Erskine, laughing; ‘but it may interest you.’
‘Tell it to me, of course,’ I answered. ‘If it is half as delightful as
the picture, I shall be more than satisfied.’
‘Well,’ said Erskine, lighting a cigarette, ‘I must begin by telling
you about Cyril Graham himself. He and I were at the same house at
Eton. I was a year or two older than he was, but we were immense
friends, and did all our work and all our play together. There was,
of course, a good deal more play than work, but I cannot say that I
am sorry for that. It is always an advantage not to have received a
sound commercial education, and what I learned in the playing
fields at Eton9 has been quite as useful to me as anything I was
taught at Cambridge. I should tell you that Cyril’s father and mother
were both dead. They had been drowned in a horrible yachting
accident off the Isle of Wight. His father had been in the diplomatic
service, and had married a daughter, the only daughter, in fact, of
old Lord Crediton, who became Cyril’s guardian after the death of
his parents. I don’t think that Lord Crediton cared very much for
Cyril. He had never really forgiven his daughter for marrying a man
who had no title. He was an extraordinary old aristocrat, who swore
like a costermonger, and had the manners of a farmer. I remember
seeing him once on Speech-day. He growled at me, gave me a
sovereign, and told me not to grow up “a damned Radical” like my
father. Cyril had very little affection for him, and was only too glad
to spend most of his holidays with us in Scotland. They never really
got on together at all. Cyril thought him a bear, and he thought
Cyril effeminate. He was effeminate, I suppose, in some things,
though he was a very good rider and a capital fencer. In fact he got
the foils before he left Eton. But he was very languid in his manner,
and not a little vain of his good looks, and had a strong objection to
football. The two things that really gave him pleasure were poetry
and acting. At Eton he was always dressing up and reciting
Shakespeare, and when we went up to Trinity he became a member
of the A.D.C.10 his first term. I remember I was always very jealous
of his acting. I was absurdly devoted to him; I suppose because we
were so different in some things. I was a rather awkward, weakly
lad, with huge feet, and horribly freckled. Freckles run in Scotch
families just as gout does in English families. Cyril used to say that
of the two he preferred the gout; but he always set an absurdly high
value on personal appearance, and once read a paper before our
debating society to prove that it was better to be good-looking than
to be good.11 He certainly was wonderfully handsome. People who
did not like him, Philistines12 and college tutors, and young men
reading for the Church, used to say that he was merely pretty; but
there was a great deal more in his face than mere prettiness. I think
he was the most splendid creature I ever saw, and nothing could
exceed the grace of his movements, the charm of his manner. He
fascinated everybody who was worth fascinating, and a great many
people who were not. He was often wilful and petulant, and I used
to think him dreadfully insincere. It was due, I think, chiefly to his
inordinate desire to please. Poor Cyril! I told him once that he was
contented with very cheap triumphs, but he only laughed. He was
horribly spoiled. All charming people, I fancy, are spoiled. It is the
secret of their attraction.
‘However, I must tell you about Cyril’s acting. You know that no
actresses are allowed to play at the A. D. C. At least they were not in
my time. I don’t know how it is now. Well, of course Cyril was
always cast for the girls’ parts, and when As You Like It was
produced he played Rosalind. It was a marvellous performance. In
fact, Cyril Graham was the only perfect Rosalind I have ever seen. It
would be impossible to describe to you the beauty, the delicacy, the
refinement of the whole thing. It made an immense sensation, and
the horrid little theatre, as it was then, was crowded every night.
Even when I read the play now I can’t help thinking of Cyril. It
might have been written for him. The next term he took his degree,
and came to London to read for the diplomatic.13 But he never did
any work. He spent his days in reading Shakespeare’s Sonnets, and
his evenings at the theatre. He was, of course, wild to go on the
stage. It was all that I and Lord Crediton could do to prevent him.
Perhaps if he had gone on the stage he would be alive now. It is
always a silly thing to give advice, but to give good advice is
absolutely fatal.14 I hope you will never fall into that error. If you
do, you will be sorry for it.
‘Well, to come to the real point of the story, one day I got a letter
from Cyril asking me to come round to his rooms that evening. He
had charming chambers in Piccadilly overlooking the Green Park,15
and as I used to go to see him every day, I was rather surprised at
his taking the trouble to write. Of course I went, and when I arrived
I found him in a state of great excitement. He told me that he had at
last discovered the true secret of Shakespeare’s Sonnets; that all the
scholars and critics had been entirely on the wrong tack; and that he
was the first who, working purely by internal evidence, had found
out who Mr. W. H. really was. He was perfectly wild with delight,
and for a long time would not tell me his theory. Finally, he
produced a bundle of notes, took his copy of the Sonnets off the
mantelpiece, and sat down and gave me a long lecture on the whole
subject.
‘He began by pointing out that the young man to whom
Shakespeare addressed these strangely passionate poems must have
been somebody who was a really vital factor in the development of
his dramatic art, and that this could not be said either of Lord
Pembroke or Lord Southampton.16 Indeed, whoever he was, he
could not have been anybody of high birth, as was shown very
clearly by the 25th Sonnet, in which Shakespeare contrasts himself
with those who are “great princes’ favourites;” says quite frankly –

“Let those who are in favour with their stars

Of public honour and proud titles boast,

Whilst I, whom fortune of such triumph bars,

Unlook’d for joy in that I honour most;”

and ends the sonnet by congratulating himself on the mean state of


him he so adored:

“Then happy I, that loved and am beloved

Where I may not remove nor be removed.”


This sonnet Cyril declared would be quite unintelligible if we
fancied that it was addressed to either the Earl of Pembroke or the
Earl of Southampton, both of whom were men of the highest
position in England and fully entitled to be called “great princes”;
and he in corroboration of his view read me Sonnets CXXIV and
CXXV, in which Shakespeare tells us that his love is not “the child of
state,” that it “suffers not in smiling pomp,” but is “builded far from
accident.” I listened with a good deal of interest, for I don’t think
the point had ever been made before; but what followed was still
more curious, and seemed to me at the time to entirely dispose of
Pembroke’s claim. We know from Meres17 that the Sonnets had been
written before 1598, and Sonnet CIV informs us that Shakespeare’s
friendship for Mr. W. H. had been already in existence for three
years. Now Lord Pembroke, who was born in 1580, did not come to
London till he was eighteen years of age, that is to say till 1598, and
Shakespeare’s acquaintance with Mr. W. H. must have begun in
1594, or at the latest in 1595. Shakespeare, accordingly, could not
have known Lord Pembroke till after the Sonnets had been written.

‘Cyril pointed out also that Pembroke’s father did not the till
1601; whereas it was evident from the line,

“You had a father, let your son say so,”

that the father of Mr. W. H. was dead in 1598. Besides, it was


absurd to imagine that any publisher of the time, and the preface is
from the publisher’s hand,18 would have ventured to address
William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke, as Mr. W. H.; the case of Lord
Buckhurst being spoken of as Mr. Sackville19 being not really a
parallel instance, as Lord Buckhurst was not a peer, but merely the
younger son of a peer, with a courtesy title, and the passage in
England’s Parnassus, where he is so spoken of, is not a formal and
stately dedication, but simply a casual allusion. So far for Lord
Pembroke, whose supposed claims Cyril easily demolished while I
sat by in wonder. With Lord Southampton Cyril had even less
difficulty. Southampton became at a very early age the lover of
Elizabeth Vernon,20 so he needed no entreaties to marry; he was not
beautiful; he did not resemble his mother, as Mr. W. H. did –

“Thou art thy mother’s glass, and she in thee

Calls back the lovely April of her prime;”

and, above all, his Christian name was Henry, whereas the punning
sonnets (CXXXV and CXL III) show that the Christian name of
Shakespeare’s friend was the same as his own – Will.

‘As for the other suggestions of unfortunate commentators, that


Mr. W. H. is a misprint for Mr. W. S., meaning Mr. William
Shakespeare; that “Mr. W. H. all” should be read “Mr. W. Hall”; that
Mr. W. H. is Mr. William Hathaway; and that a full stop should be
placed after “wisheth,” making Mr. W. H. the writer and not the
subject of the dedication,21 – Cyril got rid of them in a very short
time; and it is not worth while to mention his reasons, though I
remember he sent me off into a fit of laughter by reading to me, I
am glad to say not in the original, some extracts from a German
commentator called Barnstorff, who insisted that Mr. W. H. was no
less a person than “Mr. William Himself.”22 Nor would he allow for
a moment that the Sonnets are mere satires on the work of
Drayton23 and John Davies of Hereford.24 To him, as indeed to me,
they were poems of serious and tragic import, wrung out of the
bitterness of Shakespeare’s heart, and made sweet by the honey of
his lips. Still less would he admit that they were merely a
philosophical allegory, and that in them Shakespeare is addressing
his Ideal Self, or Ideal Manhood, or the Spirit of Beauty, or the
Reason, or the Divine Logos, or the Catholic Church.25 He felt, as
indeed I think we all must feel, that the Sonnets are addressed to an
individual, – to a particular young man whose personality for some
reason seems to have filled the soul of Shakespeare with terrible joy
and no less terrible despair.

‘Having in this manner cleared the way as it were, Cyril asked me


to dismiss from my mind any preconceived ideas I might have
formed on the subject, and to give a fair and unbiassed hearing to
his own theory. The problem he pointed out was this: Who was that
young man of Shakespeare’s day who, without being of noble birth
or even of noble nature, was addressed by him in terms of such
passionate adoration that we can but wonder at the strange worship,
and are almost afraid to turn the key that unlocks the mystery of the
poet’s heart? Who was he whose physical beauty was such that it
became the very corner-stone of Shakespeare’s art; the very source
of Shakespeare’s inspiration; the very incarnation of Shakespeare’s
dreams? To look upon him as simply the object of certain love-
poems is to miss the whole meaning of the poems: for the art of
which Shakespeare talks in the Sonnets is not the art of the Sonnets
themselves, which indeed were to him but slight and secret things –
it is the art of the dramatist to which he is always alluding; and he
to whom Shakespeare said –

“Though art all my art, and dost advance

As high as learning my rude ignorance,” –

he to whom he promised immortality,

“Where breath most breathes, even in the mouth of men,” –

was surely none other than the boy-actor for whom he created Viola
and Imogen, Juliet and Rosalind, Portia and Desdemona, and
Cleopatra26 herself. This was Cyril Graham’s theory, evolved as you
see purely from the Sonnets themselves, and depending for its
acceptance not so much on demonstrable proof or formal evidence,
but on a kind of spiritual and artistic sense, by which alone he
claimed could the true meaning of the poems be discerned. I
remember his reading to me that fine sonnet –

“How can my Muse want subject to invent,

While thou dost breathe, that pour’st into my verse

Thine own sweet argument, too excellent

For every vulgar paper to rehearse?

O, give thyself the thanks, if aught in me

Worthy perusal stand against thy sight;

For who’s so dumb that cannot write to thee,

When thou thyself dost give invention light?

Be thou the tenth Muse, ten times more in worth

Than those old nine which rhymers invocate;

And he that calls on thee, let him bring forth

Eternal numbers to outlive long date”

– and pointing out how completely it corroborated his theory; and


indeed he went through all the Sonnets carefully, and showed, or
fancied that he showed, that, according to his new explanation of
their meaning, things that had seemed obscure, or evil, or
exaggerated, became clear and rational, and of high artistic import,
illustrating Shakespeare’s conception of the true relations between
the art of the actor and the art of the dramatist.

‘It is of course evident that there must have been in Shakespeare’s


company some wonderful boy-actor of great beauty, to whom he
intrusted the presentation of his noble heroines; for Shakespeare
was a practical theatrical manager as well as an imaginative poet,
and Cyril Graham had actually discovered the boy-actor’s name. He
was Will, or, as he preferred to call him, Willie Hughes.27 The
Christian name he found of course in the punning sonnets, CXXXV
and CXLIII; the surname was, according to him, hidden in the
eighth28 line of the 20th Sonnet, where Mr. W. H. is described as –
“A man in hew, all Hews in his controwling.”

‘In the original edition of the Sonnets “Hews” is printed with a


capital letter and in italics, and this, he claimed, showed clearly that
a play on words was intended, his view receiving a good deal of
corroboration from those sonnets in which curious puns are made
on the words “use” and “usury.” Of course I was converted at once,
and Willie Hughes became to me as real a person as Shakespeare.
The only objection I made to the theory was that the name of Willie
Hughes does not occur in the list of the actors of Shakespeare’s
company as it is printed in the first folio. Cyril, however, pointed
out that the absence of Willie Hughes’s name from this list really
corroborated the theory, as it was evident from Sonnet LXXXVI that
Willie Hughes had abandoned Shakespeare’s company to play at a
rival theatre, probably in some of Chapman’s plays.29 It is in
reference to this that in the great sonnet on Chapman Shakespeare
said to Willie Hughes –

“But when your countenance filled up his line,

Then lacked I matter; that enfeebled mine” –

the expression “when your countenance filled up his line” referring


obviously to the beauty of the young actor giving life and reality
and added charm to Chapman’s verse, the same idea being also put
forward in the 79th Sonnet –
“Whilst I alone did call upon thy aid,

My verse alone had all thy gentle grace,

But now my gracious numbers are decayed,

And my sick Muse does give another place;”

and in the immediately preceding sonnet, where Shakespeare says –

“Every alien pen has got my use

And under thee their poesy disperse,”

the play upon words (use = Hughes) being of course obvious, and
the phrase “under thee their poesy disperse,” meaning “by your
assistance as an actor bring their plays before the people.”

‘It was a wonderful evening, and we sat up almost till dawn


reading and re-reading the Sonnets. After some time, however, I
began to see that before the theory could be placed before the world
in a really perfected form, it was necessary to get some independent
evidence about the existence of this young actor Willie Hughes. If
this could be once established, there could be no possible doubt
about his identity with Mr. W. H.; but otherwise the theory would
fall to the ground. I put this forward very strongly to Cyril, who was
a good deal annoyed at what he called my Philistine30 tone of mind,
and indeed was rather bitter upon the subject. However, I made him
promise that in his own interest he would not publish his discovery
till he had put the whole matter beyond the reach of doubt; and for
weeks and weeks we searched the registers of City churches, the
Alleyn MSS at Dulwich, the Record Office, the papers of the Lord
Chamberlain31 – everything, in fact, that we thought might contain
some allusion to Willie Hughes. We discovered nothing, of course,
and every day the existence of Willie Hughes seemed to me to
become more problematical. Cyril was in a dreadful state, and used
to go over the whole question day after day, entreating me to
believe; but I saw the one flaw in the theory, and I refused to be
convinced till the actual existence of Willie Hughes, a boy-actor of
Elizabethan days, had been placed beyond the reach of doubt or
cavil.
‘One day Cyril left town to stay with his grandfather, I thought at
the time, but I afterwards heard from Lord Crediton that this was
not the case; and about a fortnight afterwards I received a telegram
from him, handed in at Warwick, asking me to be sure to come and
dine with him that evening at eight o’clock. When I arrived, he said
to me, “The only apostle who did not deserve proof was S. Thomas,
and S. Thomas was the only apostle who got it.” I asked him what
he meant. He answered that he had not merely been able to
establish the existence in the sixteenth century of a boy-actor of the
name of Willie Hughes, but to prove by the most conclusive
evidence that he was the Mr. W. H. of the Sonnets. He would not
tell me anything more at the time; but after dinner he solemnly
produced the picture I showed you, and told me that he had
discovered it by the merest chance nailed to the side of an old chest
that he had bought at a farmhouse in Warwickshire. The chest itself,
which was a very fine example of Elizabethan work, he had, of
course, brought with him, and in the centre of the front panel the
initials W. H. were undoubtedly carved. It was this monogram that
had attracted his attention, and he told me that it was not till he had
had the chest in his possession for several days that he had thought
of making any careful examination of the inside. One morning,
however, he saw that one of the sides of the chest was much thicker
than the other, and looking more closely, he discovered that a
framed panel picture was clamped against it. On taking it out, he
found it was the picture that is now lying on the sofa. It was very
dirty, and covered with mould; but he managed to clean it, and, to
his great joy, saw that he had fallen by mere chance on the one
thing for which he had been looking. Here was an authentic portrait
of Mr. W. H., with his hand resting on the dedicatory page of the
Sonnets, and on the frame itself could be faintly seen the name of
the young man written in black uncial letters on a faded gold
ground, “Master Will. Hews.”
‘Well, what was I to say? It never occurred to me for a moment
that Cyril Graham was playing a trick on me, or that he was trying
to prove his theory by means of a forgery.’
‘But is it a forgery?’ I asked.
‘Of course it is,’ said Erskine. ‘It is a very good forgery; but it is a
forgery none the less. I thought at the time that Cyril was rather
calm about the whole matter; but I remember he more than once
told me that he himself required no proof of the kind, and that he
thought the theory complete without it. I laughed at him, and told
him that without it the theory would fall to the ground, and I
warmly congratulated him on the marvellous discovery. We then
arranged that the picture should be etched or facsimiled, and placed
as the frontispiece to Cyril’s edition of the Sonnets; and for three
months we did nothing but go over each poem line by line, till we
had settled every difficulty of text or meaning. One unlucky day I
was in a print-shop in Holborn, when I saw upon the counter some
extremely beautiful drawings in silver-point. I was so attracted by
them that I bought them; and the proprietor of the place, a man
called Rawlings, told me that they were done by a young painter of
the name of Edward Merton, who was very clever, but as poor as a
church mouse. I went to see Merton some days afterwards, having
got his address from the print-seller, and found a pale, interesting
young man, with a rather common-looking wife – his model, as I
subsequently learned. I told him how much I admired his drawings,
at which he seemed very pleased, and I asked him if he would show
me some of his other work. As we were looking over a portfolio, full
of really very lovely things, – for Merton had a most delicate and
delightful touch, – I suddenly caught sight of a drawing of the
picture of Mr. W. H. There was no doubt whatever about it. It was
almost a facsimile – the only difference being that the two masks of
Tragedy and Comedy were not suspended from the marble table as
they are in the picture, but were lying on the floor at the young
man’s feet. “Where on earth did you get that?” I said. He grew
rather confused, and said – “Oh, that is nothing. I did not know it
was in this portfolio. It is not a thing of any value.” “It is what you
did for Mr. Cyril Graham,” exclaimed his wife; “and if this
gentleman wishes to buy it, let him have it.” “For Mr. Cyril
Graham?” I repeated. “Did you paint the picture of Mr. W. H.?” “I
don’t understand what you mean,” he answered, growing very red.
Well, the whole thing was quite dreadful. The wife let it all out. I
gave her five pounds when I was going away. I can’t bear to think of
it now; but of course I was furious. I went off at once to Cyril’s
chambers, waited there for three hours before he came in, with that
horrid lie staring me in the face, and told him I had discovered his
forgery. He grew very pale, and said – “I did it purely for your sake.
You would not be convinced in any other way. It does not affect the
truth of the theory.” “The truth of the theory!” – I exclaimed; “the
less we talk about that the better. You never even believed in it
yourself. If you had, you would not have committed a forgery to
prove it.” High words passed between us; we had a fearful quarrel. I
daresay I was unjust. The next morning he was dead.’
‘Dead!’ I cried.
‘Yes; he shot himself with a revolver. Some of the blood splashed
upon the frame of the picture, just where the name had been
painted. By the time I arrived – his servant had sent for me at once –
the police were already there. He had left a letter for me, evidently
written in the greatest agitation and distress of mind.’
‘What was in it?’ I asked.
‘Oh, that he believed absolutely in Willie Hughes; that the forgery
of the picture had been done simply as a concession to me, and did
not in the slightest degree invalidate the truth of the theory; and
that in order to show me how firm and flawless his faith in the
whole thing was, he was going to offer his life as a sacrifice to the
secret of the Sonnets. It was a foolish, mad letter. I remember he
ended by saying that he intrusted to me the Willie Hughes theory,
and that it was for me to present it to the world, and to unlock the
secret of Shakespeare’s heart.’
‘It is a most tragic story,’ I cried; ‘but why have you not carried
out his wishes?’
Erskine shrugged his shoulders. ‘Because it is a perfectly unsound
theory from beginning to end,’ he answered.
‘My dear Erskine,’ I said, getting up from my seat, ‘you are
entirely wrong about the whole matter. It is the only perfect key to
Shakespeare’s Sonnets that has ever been made. It is complete in
every detail. I believe in Willie Hughes.’
‘Don’t say that,’ said Erskine gravely; ‘I believe there is something
fatal about the idea, and intellectually there is nothing to be said for
it. I have gone into the whole matter, and I assure you the theory is
entirely fallacious. It is plausible up to a certain point. Then it stops.
For heaven’s sake, my dear boy, don’t take up the subject of Willie
Hughes. You will break your heart over it.’
‘Erskine,’ I answered, ‘it is your duty to give this theory to the
world. If you will not do it, I will. By keeping it back you wrong the
memory of Cyril Graham, the youngest and the most splendid of all
the martyrs of literature. I entreat you to do him justice. He died for
this thing, – don’t let his death be in vain.’
Erskine looked at me in amazement. ‘You are carried away by the
sentiment of the whole story,’ he said. ‘You forget that a thing is not
necessarily true because a man dies for it. I was devoted to Cyril
Graham. His death was a horrible blow to me. I did not recover it
for years. I don’t think I have ever recovered it. But Willie Hughes?
There is nothing in the idea of Willie Hughes. No such person ever
existed. As for bringing the whole thing before the world – the
world thinks that Cyril Graham shot himself by accident. The only
proof of his suicide was contained in the letter to me, and of this
letter the public never heard anything. To the present day Lord
Crediton thinks that the whole thing was accidental.’
‘Cyril Graham sacrificed his life to a great idea,’ I answered; ‘and
if you will not tell of his martyrdom, tell at least of his faith.’
‘His faith,’ said Erskine, ‘was fixed in a thing that was false, in a
thing that was unsound, in a thing that no Shakespearean scholar
would accept for a moment. The theory would be laughed at. Don’t
make a fool of yourself, and don’t follow a trail that leads nowhere.
You start by assuming the existence of the very person whose
existence is the thing to be proved. Besides, everybody knows that
the Sonnets were addressed to Lord Pembroke. The matter is settled
once for all.’
‘The matter is not settled!’ I exclaimed. ‘I will take up the theory
where Cyril Graham left it, and I will prove to the world that he was
right.’
‘Silly boy!’ said Erskine. ‘Go home: it is after two, and don’t think
about Willie Hughes any more. I am sorry I told you anything about
it, and very sorry indeed that I should have converted you to a thing
in which I don’t believe.’
‘You have given me the key to the greatest mystery of modern
literature,’ I answered; ‘and I shall not rest till I have made you
recognise, till I have made everybody recognise, that Cyril Graham
was the most subtle Shakespearean critic of our day.’
As I walked home through St. James’s Park the dawn was just
breaking over London. The white swans were lying asleep on the
polished lake, and the gaunt Palace32 looked purple against the
pale-green sky. I thought of Cyril Graham, and my eyes filled with
tears.

II

It was past twelve o’clock when I awoke, and the sun was streaming
in through the curtains of my room in long slanting beams of dusty
gold. I told my servant that I would be at home to no one; and after
I had had a cup of chocolate and a petit-pain, 33 I took down from
the book-shelf my copy of Shakespeare’s Sonnets, and began to go
carefully through them. Every poem seemed to me to corroborate
Cyril Graham’s theory. I felt as if I had my hand upon Shakespeare’s
heart, and was counting each separate throb and pulse of passion. I
thought of the wonderful boy-actor, and saw his face in every line.
Two sonnets, I remember, struck me particularly: they were the
53rd and the 67th. In the first of these, Shakespeare, complimenting
Willie Hughes on the versatility of his acting, on his wide range of
parts, a range extending from Rosalind to Juliet, and from Beatrice
to Ophelia,34 says to him –

‘What is your substance, whereof are you made,

That millions of strange shadows on you tend?

Since every one hath, every one, one shade,

And you, but one, can every shadow lend’ –

lines that would be unintelligible if they were not addressed to an


actor, for the word ‘shadow’ had in Shakespeare’s day a technical
meaning connected with the stage. ‘The best in this kind are but
shadows,’ says Theseus of the actors, in the Midsummer Night’s
Dream, and there are many similar allusions in the literature of the
day. These sonnets evidently belonged to the series in which
Shakespeare discusses the nature of the actor’s art, and of the
strange and rare temperament that is essential to the perfect stage-
player. ‘How is it,’ says Shakespeare to Willie Hughes, ‘that you
have so many personalities?’ and then he goes on to point out that
his beauty is such that it seems to realise every form and phase of
fancy, to embody each dream of the creative imagination – an idea
that is still further expanded in the sonnet that immediately follows,
where, beginning with the fine thought,
‘O, how much more doth beauty beauteous seem

By that sweet ornament which truth doth give!’

Shakespeare invites us to notice how the truth of acting, the truth of


visible presentation on the stage, adds to the wonder of poetry,
giving life to its loveliness, and actual reality to its ideal form. And
yet, in the 67th Sonnet, Shakespeare calls upon Willie Hughes to
abandon the stage with its artificiality, its false mimic life of painted
face and unreal costume, its immoral influences and suggestions, its
remoteness from the true world of noble action and sincere
utterance.

‘Ah! wherefore with infection should he live,

And with his presence grace impiety,

That sin by him advantage should achieve,

And lace itself with his society?

Why should false painting imitate his cheek

And steal dead seeming of his living hue?

Why should poor beauty indirectly seek

Roses of shadow, since his rose is true?’

It may seem strange that so great a dramatist as Shakespeare, who


realised his own perfection as an artist and his humanity as a man
on the ideal plane of stage-writing and stage-playing, should have
written in these terms about the theatre; but we must remember
that in Sonnets CX and CXI Shakespeare shows us that he too was
wearied of the world of puppets, and full of shame at having made
himself ‘a motley to the view.’ The IIIth Sonnet is especially bitter: –

‘O, for my sake do you with Fortune chide

The guilty goddess of my harmful deeds,

That did not better for my life provide

Than public means which public manners breeds.

Thence comes it that my name receives a brand,

And almost thence my nature is subdued

To what it works in, like the dyer’s hand:

Pity me, then, and wish I were renewed’ –

and there are many signs elsewhere of the same feeling, signs
familiar to all real students of Shakespeare.

One point puzzled me immensely as I read the Sonnets, and it was


days before I struck on the true interpretation, which indeed Cyril
Graham himself seems to have missed. I could not understand how
it was that Shakespeare set so high a value on his young friend
marrying. He himself had married young, and the result had been
unhappiness, and it was not likely that he would have asked Willie
Hughes to commit the same error. The boy-player of Rosalind had
nothing to gain from marriage, or from the passions of real life. The
early sonnets, with their strange entreaties to have children, seemed
to me a jarring note. The explanation of the mystery came on me
quite suddenly, and I found it in the curious dedication. It will be
remembered that the dedication runs as follows: –
‘TO THE ONLIE BEGETTER OF

     THESE INSUING SONNETS

MR W. H. ALL HAPPINESSE

       AND THAT ETERNITIE

                 PROMISED BY

     OUR EVER-LIVING POET

                    WISHETH

       THE WELL-WISHING

          ADVENTURER IN

                    SETTING

                    FORTH.

                         T. T.

Some scholars have supposed that the word ‘begetter’ in this


dedication means simply the procurer of the Sonnets for Thomas
Thorpe35 the publisher; but this view is now generally abandoned,
and the highest authorities are quite agreed that it is to be taken in
the sense of inspirer, the metaphor being drawn from the analogy of
physical life. Now I saw that the same metaphor was used by
Shakespeare himself all through the poems, and this set me on the
right track. Finally I made my great discovery. The marriage that
Shakespeare proposes for Willie Hughes is the ‘marriage with his
Muse,’ an expression which is definitely put forward in the 82nd
Sonnet, where, in the bitterness of his heart at the defection of the
boy-actor for whom he had written his greatest parts, and whose
beauty had indeed suggested them, he opens his complaint by
saying –

‘I’ll grant thou wert not married to my Muse.’

The children he begs him to beget are no children of flesh and


blood, but more immortal children of undying fame. The whole
cycle of the early sonnets is simply Shakespeare’s invitation to Willie
Hughes to go upon the stage and become a player. How barren and
profitless a thing, he says, is this beauty of yours if it be not used: –

‘When forty winters shall besiege thy brow,

And dig deep trenches in thy beauty’s field,

Thy youth’s proud livery, so gazed on now,

Will be a tattered weed, of small worth held:

Then being asked where all thy beauty lies,

Where all the treasure of thy lusty days,

To say, within thine own deep-sunken eyes,

Were an all-eating shame and thriftless praise.’

You must create something in art: my verse ‘is thine, and born of
thee;’ only listen to me, and I will ‘bring forth eternal numbers to
outlive long date,’ and you shall people with forms of your own
image the imaginary world of the stage. These children that you
beget, he continues, will not wither away, as mortal children do, but
you shall live in them and in my plays: do but –
‘Make thee another self, for love of me,

That beauty still may live in thine or thee!’

I collected all the passages that seemed to me to corroborate this


view, and they produced a strong impression on me, and showed me
how complete Cyril Graham’s theory really was. I also saw that it
was quite easy to separate those lines in which he speaks of the
Sonnets themselves from those in which he speaks of his great
dramatic work. This was a point that had been entirely overlooked
by all critics up to Cyril Graham’s day. And yet it was one of the
most important points in the whole series of poems. To the Sonnets
Shakespeare was more or less indifferent. He did not wish to rest his
fame on them. They were to him his ‘slight Muse,’36 as he calls
them, and intended, as Meres tells us, for private circulation only
among a few, a very few, friends. Upon the other hand he was
extremely conscious of the high artistic value of his plays, and
shows a noble self-reliance upon his dramatic genius. When he says
to Willie Hughes: –

‘But thy eternal summer shall not fade,

Nor lose possession of that fair thou owest;

Nor shall Death brag thou wander’st in his shade,

When in eternal lines to time thou growest;


So long as men can breathe or eyes can see,

So long lives this and this gives life to thee;’ –


the expression ‘eternal lines’ clearly alludes to one of his plays that
he was sending him at the time, just as the concluding couplet
points to his confidence in the probability of his plays being always
acted. In his address to the Dramatic Muse (Sonnets C and CI), we
find the same feeling.

‘Where art thou, Muse, that thou forget’st so long

To speak of that which gives thee all thy might?

Spends thou thy fury on some worthless song,

Darkening thy power to lend base subjects light?’

he cries, and he then proceeds to reproach the mistress of Tragedy


and Comedy for her ‘neglect of Truth in Beauty dyed,’ and says –

‘Because he needs no praise, wilt thou be dumb?

Excuse not silence so; for’t lies in thee

To make him much outlive a gilded tomb,

And to be praised of ages yet to be.


Then do thy office, Muse; I teach thee how

To make him seem long hence as he shows now.’

It is, however, perhaps in the 55th Sonnet that Shakespeare gives to


this idea its fullest expression. To imagine that the ‘powerful rhyme’
of the second line refers to the sonnet itself, is to entirely mistake
Shakespeare’s meaning. It seemed to me that it was extremely likely,
from the general character of the sonnet, that a particular play was
meant, and that the play was none other but Romeo and Juliet.
‘Not marble, nor the gilded monuments

Of princes, shall outlive this powerful rhyme;

But you shall shine more bright in these contents

Than unswept stone besmeared with sluttish time.

When wasteful wars shall statues overturn,

And broils root out the work of masonry,

Not Mars his sword nor war’s quick fire shall burn

The living record of your memory.

‘Gainst death and all-oblivious enmity

Shall you pace forth; your praise shall still find room

Even in the eyes of all posterity

That wear this world out to the ending doom.

So, till the judgment that yourself arise,

You live in this, and dwell in lovers’ eyes.’

It was also extremely suggestive to note how here as elsewhere


Shakespeare promised Willie Hughes immortality in a form that
appealed to men’s eyes – that is to say, in a spectacular form, in a
play that is to be looked at.

For two weeks I worked hard at the Sonnets, hardly ever going
out, and refusing all invitations. Every day I seemed to be
discovering something new, and Willie Hughes became to me a kind
of spiritual presence, an ever-dominant personality. I could almost
fancy that I saw him standing in the shadow of my room, so well
had Shakespeare drawn him, with his golden hair, his tender flower-
like grace, his dreamy deep-sunken eyes, his delicate mobile limbs,
and his white lily hands. His very name fascinated me. Willie
Hughes! Willie Hughes! How musically it sounded! Yes; who else
but he could have been the master-mistress of Shakespeare’s
passion,a the lord of his love to whom he was bound in vassalage,b
the delicate minion of pleasure,c the rose of the whole world,d the
herald of the springe decked in the proud livery of youth,f the lovely
boy whom it was sweet music to hear,g and whose beauty was the
very raiment of Shakespeare’s heart,h as it was the keystone of his
dramatic power? How bitter now seemed the whole tragedy of his
desertion and his shame! – shame that he made sweet and lovelyi by
the mere magic of his personality, but that was none the less shame.
Yet as Shakespeare forgave him, should not we forgive him also? I
did not care to pry into the mystery of his sin.

His abandonment of Shakespeare’s theatre was a different matter,


and I investigated it at great length. Finally I came to the conclusion
that Cyril Graham had been wrong in regarding the rival dramatist
of the 80th Sonnet as Chapman. It was obviously Marlowe37 who
was alluded to. At the time the Sonnets were written, such an
expression as ‘the proud full sail of his great verse’ could not have
been used of Chapman’s work, however applicable it might have
been to the style of his later Jacobean plays. No: Marlowe was
clearly the rival dramatist of whom Shakespeare spoke in such
laudatory terms; and that

‘Affable familiar ghost

Which nightly gulls him with intelligence,’


was the Mephistopheles of his Doctor Faustus.38 No doubt, Marlowe
was fascinated by the beauty and grace of the boy-actor, and lured
him away from the Blackfriars’ Theatre,39 that he might play the
Gaveston of his Edward II. 40 That Shakespeare had the legal right to
retain Willie Hughes in his own company is evident from Sonnet
LXXXVII, where he says: –

‘Farewell! thou are too dear for my possessing,

And like enough thou know’st thy estimate:

The charter of thy worth gives thee releasing;

My bonds in thee are all determinate.

For how do I hold thee but by thy granting?

And for that riches where is my deserving?

The cause of this fair gift in me is wanting,

And so my patent back again is swerving.

Thyself thou gavest, thy own work then not knowing,

Or me, to whom thou gavest it, else mistaking;

So thy great gift, upon misprision growing,

Comes home again, on better judgment making.


Thus have I had thee, as a dream doth flatter,

In sleep a king, but waking no such matter.’

But him whom he could not hold by love, he would not hold by
force. Willie Hughes became a member of Lord Pembroke’s
company, and, perhaps in the open yard of the Red Bull Tavern,41
played the part of King Edward’s delicate minion.42 On Marlowe’s
death, he seems to have returned to Shakespeare, who, whatever his
fellow-partners may have thought of the matter, was not slow to
forgive the wilfulness and treachery of the young actor.
How well, too, had Shakespeare drawn the temperament of the
stage-player! Willie Hughes was one of those

‘That do not do the thing they most do show,

Who, moving others, are themselves as stone.’

He could act love, but could not feel it, could mimic passion without
realising it.

‘In many’s looks the false heart’s history

Is writ in moods and frowns and wrinkles strange,’

but with Willie Hughes it was not so. ‘Heaven,’ says Shakespeare, in
a sonnet of mad idolatry –

‘Heaven in thy creation did decree

That in thy face sweet love should ever dwell;

Whate’er thy thoughts or thy heart’s workings be,

Thy looks should nothing thence but sweetness tell.’

In his ‘inconstant mind’ and his ‘false heart,’ it was easy to


recognise the insincerity and treachery that somehow seem
inseparable from the artistic nature, as in his love of praise, that
desire for immediate recognition that characterises all actors. And
yet, more fortunate in this than other actors, Willie Hughes was to
know something of immortality. Inseparably connected with
Shakespeare’s plays, he was to live in them.

‘Your name from hence immortal life shall have,

Though I, once gone, to all the world must die:

The earth can yield me but a common grave,

When you entombed in men’s eyes shall lie.

Your monument shall be my gentle verse,

Which eyes not yet created shall o’er-read,

And tongues to be your being shall rehearse

When all the breathers of this world are dead.’

There were endless allusions, also, to Willie Hughes’s power over his
audience, – the ‘gazers,’ as Shakespeare calls them; but perhaps the
most perfect description of his wonderful mastery over dramatic art
was in The Lover’s Complaint 43 where Shakespeare says of him: –

‘In him a plenitude of subtle matter,

Applied to cautels, all strange forms receives,

Of burning blushes, or of weeping water,

Or swooning paleness; and he takes and leaves,

In either’s aptness, as it best deceives,

To blush at speeches rank, to weep at woes,

Or to turn white and swoon at tragic shows.


*
So on the tip of his subduing tongue,

All kinds of arguments and questions deep,

All replication prompt and reason strong,

For his advantage still did wake and sleep,

To make the weeper laugh, the laugher weep,


He had the dialect and the different skill,

Catching all passions in his craft of will.’

Once I thought that I had really found Willie Hughes in


Elizabethan literature. In a wonderfully graphic account of the last
days of the great Earl of Essex, his chaplain, Thomas Knell,44 tells us
that the night before the Earl died, ‘he called William Hewes, which
was his musician, to play upon the virginals and to sing. “Play,” said
he, “my song, Will Hewes, and I will sing it myself.” So he did it
most joyfully, not as the howling swan, which, still looking down,
waileth her end, but as a sweet lark, lifting up his hands and casting
up his eyes to his God, with this mounted the crystal skies, and
reached with his unwearied tongue the top of highest heavens.’
Surely the boy who played on the virginals to the dying father of
Sidney’s Stella45 was none other but the Will Hews to whom
Shakespeare dedicated the Sonnets, and whom he tells us was
himself sweet ‘music to hear.’ Yet Lord Essex died in 1576, when
Shakespeare himself was but twelve years of age. It was impossible
that his musician could have been the Mr. W. H. of the Sonnets.
Perhaps Shakespeare’s young friend was the son of the player upon
the virginals? It was at least something to have discovered that Will
Hews was an Elizabethan name.46 Indeed the name Hews seemed to
have been closely connected with music and the stage. The first
English actress was the lovely Margaret Hews, whom Prince Rupert
so madly loved.47 What more probable than that between her and
Lord Essex’s musician had come the boy-actor of Shakespeare’s
plays? But the proofs, the links – where were they? Alas! I could not
find them. It seemed to me that I was always on the brink of
absolute verification, but that I could never really attain to it.
From Willie Hughes’s life I soon passed to thoughts of his death. I
used to wonder what had been his end.
Perhaps he had been one of those English actors who in 1604
went across sea to Germany and played before the great Duke Henry
Julius of Brunswick, himself a dramatist of no mean order, and at
the Court of that strange Elector of Brandenburg,48 who was so
enamoured of beauty that he was said to have bought for his weight
in amber the young son of a travelling Greek merchant, and to have
given pageants in honour of his slave all through that dreadful
famine year of 1606 – 7, when the people died of hunger in the very
streets of the town, and for the space of seven months there was no
rain. We know at any rate that Romeo and Juliet was brought out at
Dresden in 1613, along with Hamlet and King Lear, and it was surely
to none other than Willie Hughes that in 1615 the death-mask of
Shakespeare was brought by the hand of one of the suite of the
English ambassador, pale token of the passing away of the great
poet who had so dearly loved him. Indeed there would have been
something peculiarly fitting in the idea that the boy-actor, whose
beauty had been so vital an element in the realism and romance of
Shakespeare’s art, should have been the first to have brought to
Germany the seed of the new culture, and was in his way the
precursor of that Aufklarung 49 or Illumination of the eighteenth
century, that splendid movement which, though begun by Lessing
and Herder, and brought to its full and perfect issue by Goethe, was
in no small part helped on by another actor – Friedrich Schroeder50
– who awoke the popular consciousness, and by means of the
feigned passions and mimetic methods of the stage showed the
intimate, the vital, connection between life and literature. If this
was so, – and there was certainly no evidence against it, – it was not
improbable that Willie Hughes was one of those English comedians
(mimae quidam ex Britannia, as the old chronicle calls them), who
were slain at Nuremberg51 in a sudden uprising of the people, and
were secretly buried in a little vineyard outside the city by some
young men ‘who had found pleasure in their performances, and of
whom some had sought to be instructed in the mysteries of the new
art.’ Certainly no more fitting place could there be for him to whom
Shakespeare said, ‘thou art all my art,’ than this little vineyard
outside the city walls. For was it not from the sorrows of Dionysos
that Tragedy sprang?52 Was not the light laughter of Comedy, with
its careless merriment and quick replies, first heard on the lips of
the Sicilian vine-dressers? Nay, did not the purple and red stain of
the wine-froth on face and limbs give the first suggestion of the
charm and fascination of disguise – the desire for self-concealment,
the sense of the value of objectivity thus showing itself in the rude
beginnings of the art? At any rate, wherever he lay – whether in the
little vineyard at the gate of the Gothic town, or in some dim
London churchyard amidst the roar and bustle of our great city – no
gorgeous monument marked his resting-place. His true tomb, as
Shakespeare saw, was the poet’s verse, his true monument the
permanence of the drama. So had it been with others whose beauty
had given a new creative impulse to their age. The ivory body of the
Bithynian slave rots in the green ooze of the Nile, and on the yellow
hills of the Cerameicus is strewn the dust of the young Athenian; but
Antinous lives in sculpture, and Charmides in philosophy.53

III
After three weeks had elapsed, I determined to make a strong appeal
to Erskine to do justice to the memory of Cyril Graham, and to give
to the world his marvellous interpretation of the Sonnets – the only
interpretation that thoroughly explained the problem. I have not
any copy of my letter, I regret to say, nor have I been able to lay my
hand upon the original; but I remember that I went over the whole
ground, and covered sheets of paper with passionate reiteration of
the arguments and proofs that my study had suggested to me. It
seemed to me that I was not merely restoring Cyril Graham to his
proper place in literary history, but rescuing the honour of
Shakespeare himself from the tedious memory of a commonplace
intrigue. I put into the letter all my enthusiasm. I put into the letter
all my faith.
No sooner, in fact, had I sent it off than a curious reaction came
over me. It seemed to me that I had given away my capacity for
belief in the Willie Hughes theory of the Sonnets, that something
had gone out of me, as it were, and that I was perfectly indifferent
to the whole subject. What was it that had happened? It is difficult
to say. Perhaps, by finding perfect expression for a passion, I had
exhausted the passion itself. Emotional forces, like the forces of
physical life, have their positive limitations. Perhaps the mere effort
to convert any one to a theory involves some form of renunciation
of the power of credence. Perhaps I was simply tired of the whole
thing, and, my enthusiasm having burnt out, my reason was left to
its own unimpassioned judgment. However it came about, and I
cannot pretend to explain it, there was no doubt that Willie Hughes
suddenly became to me a mere myth, an idle dream, the boyish
fancy of a young man who, like most ardent spirits, was more
anxious to convince others than to be himself convinced.
As I had said some very unjust and bitter things to Erskine in my
letter, I determined to go and see him at once, and to make my
apologies to him for my behaviour. Accordingly, the next morning I
drove down to Birdcage Walk, and found Erskine sitting in his
library, with the forged picture of Willie Hughes in front of him.
‘My dear Erskine!’ I cried, ‘I have come to apologise to you.’
‘To apologise to me?’ he said. ‘What for?’
‘For my letter,’ I answered.
‘You have nothing to regret in your letter,’ he said. ‘On the
contrary, you have done me the greatest service in your power. You
have shown me that Cyril Graham’s theory is perfectly sound.’
‘You don’t mean to say that you believe in Willie Hughes?’ I
exclaimed.
‘Why not?’ he rejoined. ‘You have proved the thing to me. Do you
think I cannot estimate the value of evidence?’
‘But there is no evidence at all,’ I groaned, sinking into a chair.
‘When I wrote to you I was under the influence of a perfectly silly
enthusiasm. I had been touched by the story of Cyril Graham’s
death, fascinated by his romantic theory, enthralled by the wonder
and novelty of the whole idea. I see now that the theory is based on
a delusion. The only evidence for the existence of Willie Hughes is
that picture in front of you, and the picture is a forgery. Don’t be
carried away by mere sentiment in this matter. Whatever romance
may have to say about the Willie Hughes theory, reason is dead
against it.’
‘I don’t understand you,’ said Erskine, looking at me in
amazement. ‘Why, you yourself have convinced me by your letter
that Willie Hughes is an absolute reality. Why have you changed
your mind? Or is all that you have been saying to me merely a
joke?’
‘I cannot explain it to you,’ I rejoined, ‘but I see now that there is
really nothing to be said in favour of Cyril Graham’s interpretation.
The Sonnets are addressed to Lord Pembroke. For heaven’s sake
don’t waste your time in a foolish attempt to discover a young
Elizabethan actor who never existed, and to make a phantom
puppet the centre of the great cycle of Shakespeare’s Sonnets.’
‘I see that you don’t understand the theory,’ he replied.
‘My dear Erskine,’ I cried, ‘not understand it! Why, I feel as if I
had invented it. Surely my letter shows you that I not merely went
into the whole matter, but that I contributed proofs of every kind.
The one flaw in the theory is that it presupposes the existence of the
person whose existence is the subject of dispute. If we grant that
there was in Shakespeare’s company a young actor of the name of
Willie Hughes, it is not difficult to make him the object of the
Sonnets. But as we know that there was no actor of this name in the
company of the Globe Theatre,54 it is idle to pursue the
investigation further.’
‘But that is exactly what we don’t know,’ said Erskine. ‘It is quite
true that his name does not occur in the list given in the first folio;
but, as Cyril pointed out, that is rather a proof in favour of the
existence of Willie Hughes than against it, if we remember his
treacherous desertion of Shakespeare for a rival dramatist.’
We argued the matter over for hours, but nothing that I could say
could make Erskine surrender his faith in Cyril Graham’s
interpretation. He told me that he intended to devote his life to
proving the theory, and that he was determined to do justice to
Cyril Graham’s memory. I entreated him, laughed at him, begged of
him, but it was of no use. Finally we parted, not exactly in anger,
but certainly with a shadow between us. He thought me shallow, I
thought him foolish. When I called on him again, his servant told
me that he had gone to Germany.
Two years afterwards, as I was going into my club, the hall-porter
handed me a letter with a foreign postmark. It was from Erskine,
and written at the Hotel d’Angleterre, Cannes.55 When I had read it I
was filled with horror, though I did not quite believe that he would
be so mad as to carry his resolve into execution. The gist of the
letter was that he had tried in every way to verify the Willie Hughes
theory, and had failed, and that as Cyril Graham had given his life
for this theory, he himself had determined to give his own life also
to the same cause. The concluding words of the letter were these: ‘I
still believe in Willie Hughes; and by the time you receive this, I
shall have died by my own hand for Willie Hughes’s sake: for his
sake, and for the sake of Cyril Graham, whom I drove to his death
by my shallow scepticism and ignorant lack of faith. The truth was
once revealed to you, and you rejected it. It comes to you now
stained with the blood of two lives, – do not turn away from it.’
It was a horrible moment. I felt sick with misery, and yet I could
not believe it. To the for one’s theological beliefs is the worst use a
man can make of his life, but to the for a literary theory! It seemed
impossible.
I looked at the date. The letter was a week old. Some unfortunate
chance had prevented my going to the club for several days, or I
might have got it in time to save him. Perhaps it was not too late. I
drove off to my rooms, packed up my things, and started by the
night-mail from Charing Cross.56 The journey was intolerable. I
thought I would never arrive. As soon as I did I drove to the Hotel
d’Angleterre. They told me that Erskine had been buried two days
before, in the English cemetery. There was something horribly
grotesque about the whole tragedy. I said all kinds of wild things,
and the people in the hall looked curiously at me.
Suddenly Lady Erskine, in deep mourning, passed across the
vestibule. When she saw me she came up to me, murmured
something about her poor son, and burst into tears. I led her into
her sitting-room. An elderly gentleman was there waiting for her. It
was the English doctor.
We talked a great deal about Erskine, but I said nothing about his
motive for committing suicide. It was evident that he had not told
his mother anything about the reason that had driven him to so
fatal, so mad an act. Finally Lady Erskine rose and said, ‘George left
you something as a memento. It was a thing he prized very much. I
will get it for you.’
As soon as she had left the room I turned to the doctor and said,
‘What a dreadful shock it must have been to Lady Erskine! I wonder
that she bears it as well as she does.’
‘Oh, she knew for months past that it was coming,’ he answered.
‘Knew it for months past!’ I cried. ‘But why didn’t she stop him?
Why didn’t she have him watched? He must have been mad.’
The doctor stared at me. ‘I don’t know what you mean,’ he said.
‘Well,’ I cried, ‘if a mother knows that her son is going to commit
suicide –’
‘Suicide!’ he answered. ‘Poor Erskine did not commit suicide. He
died of consumption. He came here to die. The moment I saw him I
knew that there was no hope. One lung was almost gone, and the
other was very much affected. Three days before he died he asked
me was there any hope. I told him frankly that there was none, and
that he had only a few days to live. He wrote some letters, and was
quite resigned, retaining his senses to the last.’
At that moment Lady Erskine entered the room with the fatal
picture of Willie Hughes in her hand. ‘When George was dying he
begged me to give you this,’ she said. As I took it from her, her tears
fell on my hand.
The picture hangs now in my library, where it is very much
admired by my artistic friends. They have decided that it is not a
Clouet, but an Ouvry.57 I have never cared to tell them its true
history. But sometimes, when I look at it, I think that there is really
a great deal to be said for the Willie Hughes theory of Shakespeare’s
Sonnets.
A House of Pomegranates

To Constance Mary Wilde1

The Young King

To Margaret, Lady Brooke1

It was the night before the day fixed for his coronation, and the
young King was sitting alone in his beautiful chamber. His courtiers
had all taken their leave of him, bowing their heads to the ground,
according to the ceremonious usage of the day, and had retired to
the Great Hall of the Palace, to receive a few last lessons from the
Professor of Etiquette; there being some of them who had still quite
natural manners, which in a courtier is, I need hardly say, a very
grave offence.

The lad – for he was only a lad, being but sixteen years of age –
was not sorry at their departure, and had flung himself back with a
deep sigh of relief on the soft cushions of his embroidered couch,
lying there, wild-eyed and open-mouthed, like a brown woodland
Faun,2 or some young animal of the forest newly snared by the
hunters.
And, indeed, it was the hunters who had found him, coming upon
him almost by chance as, bare-limbed and pipe in hand, he was
following the flock of the poor goatherd who had brought him up,
and whose son he had always fancied himself to be. The child of the
old King’s only daughter by a secret marriage with one much
beneath her in station – a stranger, some said, who, by the
wonderful magic of his lute-playing, had made the young Princess
love him; while others spoke of an artist from Rimini, to whom the
Princess had shown much, perhaps too much honour, and who had
suddenly disappeared from the city, leaving his work in the
Cathedral unfinished – he had been, when but a week old, stolen
away from his mother’s side, as she slept, and given into the charge
of a common peasant and his wife, who were without children of
their own, and lived in a remote part of the forest, more than a
day’s ride from the town. Grief, or the plague, as the court physician
stated, or, as some suggested, a swift Italian poison administered in
a cup of spiced wine, slew, within an hour of her wakening, the
white girl who had given him birth, and as the trusty messenger
who bare the child across his saddle-bow stooped from his weary
horse and knocked at the rude door of the goatherd’s hut, the body
of the Princess was being lowered into an open grave that had been
dug in a deserted churchyard, beyond the city gates, a grave where,
it was said, that another body was also lying, that of a young man of
marvellous and foreign beauty, whose hands were tied behind him
with a knotted cord, and whose breast was stabbed with many red
wounds.
Such, at least, was the story that men whispered to each other.
Certain it was that the old King, when on his death-bed, whether
moved by remorse for his great sin, or merely desiring that the
kingdom should not pass away from his line, had had the lad sent
for, and, in the presence of the Council, had acknowledged him as
his heir.
And it seems that from the very first moment of his recognition he
had shown signs of that strange passion for beauty that was destined
to have so great an influence over his life. Those who accompanied
him to the suite of rooms set apart for his service, often spoke of the
cry of pleasure that broke from his lips when he saw the delicate
raiment and rich jewels that had been prepared for him, and of the
almost fierce joy with which he flung aside his rough leathern tunic
and coarse sheepskin cloak. He missed, indeed, at times the fine
freedom of his forest life, and was always apt to chafe at the tedious
Court ceremonies that occupied so much of each day, but the
wonderful palace – foyeuse,3 as they called it – of which he now
found himself lord, seemed to him to be a new world fresh-
fashioned for his delight; and as soon as he could escape from the
council-board or audience-chamber, he would run down the great
staircase, with its lions of gilt bronze and its steps of bright
porphyry, and wander from room to room, and from corridor to
corridor, like one who was seeking to find in beauty an anodyne
from pain, a sort of restoration from sickness.
Upon these journeys of discovery, as he would call them – and,
indeed, they were to him real voyages through a marvellous land,
he would sometimes be accompanied by the slim, fair-haired Court
pages, with their floating mandes, and gay fluttering ribands; but
more often he would be alone, feeling through a certain quick
instinct, which was almost a divination, that the secrets of art are
best learned in secret, and that Beauty, like Wisdom, loves the
lonely worshipper.

Many curious stories were related about him at this period. It was
said that a stout Burgomaster, who had come to deliver a florid
oratorical address on behalf of the citizens of the town, had caught
sight of him kneeling in real adoration before a great picture that
had just been brought from Venice, and that seemed to herald the
worship of some new gods. On another occasion he had been missed
for several hours, and after a lengthened search had been discovered
in a little chamber in one of the northern turrets of the palace
gazing, as one in a trance, at a Greek gem carved with the figure of
Adonis.4 He had been seen, so the tale ran, pressing his warm lips to
the marble brow of an antique statue that had been discovered in
the bed of the river on the occasion of the building of the stone
bridge, and was inscribed with the name of the Bithynian slave of
Hadrian.5 He had passed a whole night in noting the effect of the
moonlight on a silver image of Endymion.6

All rare and costly materials had certainly a great fascination for
him, and in his eagerness to procure them he had sent away many
merchants, some to traffic for amber with the rough fisher-folk of
the north seas, some to Egypt to look for that curious green
turquoise which is found only in the tombs of kings, and is said to
possess magical properties, some to Persia for silken carpets and
painted pottery, and others to India to buy gauze and stained ivory,
moonstones and bracelets of jade, sandalwood and blue enamel and
shawls of fine wool.
But what had occupied him most was the robe he was to wear at
his coronation, the robe of tissued gold, and the ruby-studded
crown, and the sceptre with its rows and rings of pearls. Indeed, it
was of this that he was thinking to-night, as he lay back on his
luxurious couch, watching the great pinewood log that was burning
itself out on the open hearth. The designs, which were from the
hands of the most famous artists of the time, had been submitted to
him many months before, and he had given orders that the artificers
were to toil night and day to carry them out, and that the whole
world was to be searched for jewels that would be worthy of their
work. He saw himself in fancy standing at the high altar of the
cathedral in the fair raiment of a King, and a smile played and
lingered about his boyish lips, and lit up with a bright lustre his
dark woodland eyes.
After some time he rose from his seat, and leaning against the
carved penthouse of the chimney, looked round at the dimly-lit
room. The walls were hung with rich tapestries representing the
Triumph of Beauty. A large press, inlaid with agate and lapislazuli,
filled one corner, and facing the window stood a curiously wrought
cabinet with lacquer panels of powdered and mosaiced gold, on
which were placed some delicate goblets of Venetian glass, and a
cup of dark-veined onyx. Pale poppies were broidered on the silk
coverlet of the bed, as though they had fallen from the tired hands
of sleep, and tall reeds of fluted ivory bare up the velvet canopy,
from which great tufts of ostrich plumes sprang, like white foam, to
the pallid silver of the fretted ceiling. A laughing Narcissus7 in green
bronze held a polished mirror above its head. On the table stood a
flat bowl of amethyst.
Outside he could see the huge dome of the cathedral, looming like
a bubble over the shadowy houses, and the weary sentinels pacing
up and down on the misty terrace by the river. Far away, in an
orchard, a nightingale was singing. A faint perfume of jasmine came
through the open window. He brushed his brown curls back from
his forehead, and taking up a lute, let his fingers stray across the
cords. His heavy eyelids drooped, and a strange languor came over
him. Never before had he felt so keenly, or with such exquisite joy,
the magic and the mystery of beautiful things.
When midnight sounded from the clock-tower he touched a bell,
and his pages entered and disrobed him with much ceremony,
pouring rose-water over his hands, and strewing flowers on his
pillow. A few moments after that they had left the room, he fell
asleep.

And as he slept he dreamed a dream, and this was his dream.

He thought that he was standing in a long, low attic, amidst the


whirr and clatter of many looms. The meagre daylight peered in
through the grated windows, and showed him the gaunt figures of
the weavers bending over their cases. Pale, sickly-looking children
were crouched on the huge crossbeams. As the shuttles dashed
through the warp they lifted up the heavy battens, and when the
shuttles stopped they let the battens fall and pressed the threads
together. Their faces were pinched with famine, and their thin
hands shook and trembled. Some haggard women were seated at a
table sewing. A horrible odour filled the place. The air was foul and
heavy, and the walls dripped and streamed with damp.
The young King went over to one of the weavers, and stood by
him and watched him.
And the weaver looked at him angrily, and said, ‘Why art thou
watching me? Art thou a spy set on us by our master?’
‘Who is thy master?’ asked the young King.
‘Our master!’ cried the weaver, bitterly. ‘He is a man like myself.
Indeed, there is but this difference between us – that he wears fine
clothes while I go in rags, and that while I am weak from hunger he
suffers not a little from overfeeding.’
‘The land is free,’ said the young King, ‘and thou art no man’s
slave.’
‘In war,’ answered the weaver, ‘the strong make slaves of the
weak, and in peace the rich make slaves of the poor. We must work
to live, and they give us such mean wages that we die. We toil for
them all day long, and they heap up gold in their coffers, and our
children fade away before their time, and the faces of those we love
become hard and evil. We tread out the grapes, and another drinks
the wine. We sow the corn, and our own board is empty. We have
chains, though no eye beholds them; and are slaves, though men
call us free.’
‘Is it so with all?’ he asked.
‘It is so with all,’ answered the weaver, ‘with the young as well as
with the old, with the women as well as with the men, with the
little children as well as with those who are stricken in years. The
merchants grind us down, and we must needs do their bidding. The
priest rides by and tells his beads, and no man has care of us.
Through our sunless lanes creeps Poverty with her hungry eyes, and
Sin with his sodden face follows close behind her. Misery wakes us
in the morning, and Shame sits with us at night. But what are these
things to thee? Thou art not one of us. Thy face is too happy.’ And
he turned away scowling, and threw the shuttle across the loom,
and the young King saw that it was threaded with a thread of gold.
And a great terror seized upon him, and he said to the weaver,
‘What robe is this that thou art weaving?’
‘It is the robe for the coronation of the young King,’ he answered;
‘what is that to thee?’
And the young King gave a loud cry and woke, and lo! he was in
his own chamber, and through the window he saw the great honey-
coloured moon hanging in the dusky air.

And he fell asleep again and dreamed, and this was his dream.
He thought that he was lying on the deck of a huge galley that
was being rowed by a hundred slaves. On a carpet by his side the
master of the galley was seated. He was black as ebony, and his
turban was of crimson silk. Great earrings of silver dragged down
the thick lobes of his ears, and in his hands he had a pair of ivory
scales.
The slaves were naked, but for a ragged loincloth, and each man
was chained to his neighbour. The hot sun beat brightly upon them,
and the negroes ran up and down the gangway and lashed them
with whips of hide. They stretched out their lean arms and pulled
the heavy oars through the water. The salt spray flew from the
blades.
At last they reached a little bay, and began to take soundings. A
light wind blew from the shore, and covered the deck and the great
lateen sail8 with a fine red dust. Three Arabs mounted on wild asses
rode out and threw spears at them. The master of the galley took a
painted bow in his hand and shot one of them in the throat. He fell
heavily into the surf, and his companions galloped away. A woman
wrapped in a yellow veil followed slowly on a camel, looking back
now and then at the dead body.
As soon as they had cast anchor and hauled down the sail, the
negroes went into the hold and brought up a long rope-ladder,
heavily weighted with lead. The master of the galley threw it over
the side, making the ends fast to two iron stanchions. Then the
negroes seized the youngest of the slaves, and knocked his gyves off,
and filled his nostrils and his ears with wax, and tied a big stone
round his waist. He crept wearily down the ladder, and disappeared
into the sea. A few bubbles rose where he sank. Some of the other
slaves peered curiously over the side. At the prow of the galley sat a
shark-charmer, beating monotonously upon a drum.
After some time the diver rose up out of the water, and clung
panting to the ladder with a pearl in his right hand. The negroes
seized it from him, and thrust him back. The slaves fell asleep over
their oars.
Again and again he came up, and each time that he did so he
brought with him a beautiful pearl. The master of the galley
weighed them, and put them into a little bag of green leather.
The young King tried to speak, but his tongue seemed to cleave to
the roof of his mouth, and his lips refused to move. The negroes
chattered to each other, and began to quarrel over a string of bright
beads. Two cranes flew round and round the vessel.
Then the diver came up for the last time, and the pearl that he
brought with him was fairer than all the pearls of Ormuz,9 for it was
shaped like the full moon, and whiter than the morning star. But his
face was strangely pale, and as he fell upon the deck the blood
gushed from his ears and nostrils. He quivered for a little, and then
he was still. The negroes shrugged their shoulders, and threw the
body overboard.
And the master of the galley laughed, and, reaching out, he took
the pearl, and when he saw it he pressed it to his forehead and
bowed. ‘It shall be,’ he said, ‘for the sceptre of the young King,’ and
he made a sign to the negroes to draw up the anchor.
And when the young King heard this he gave a great cry, and
woke, and through the window he saw the long grey fingers of the
dawn clutching at the fading stars.

And he fell asleep again, and dreamed, and this was his dream.

He thought that he was wandering through a dim wood, hung


with strange fruits and with beautiful poisonous flowers. The adders
hissed at him as he went by, and the bright parrots flew screaming
from branch to branch. Huge tortoises lay asleep upon the hot mud.
The trees were full of apes and peacocks.
On and on he went, till he reached the outskirts of the wood, and
there he saw an immense multitude of men toiling in the bed of a
dried-up river. They swarmed up the crag like ants. They dug deep
pits in the ground and went down into them. Some of them cleft the
rocks with great axes; others grabbled in the sand. They tore up the
cactus by its roots, and trampled on the scarlet blossoms. They
hurried about, calling to each other, and no man was idle.
From the darkness of a cavern Death and Avarice watched them,
and Death said, ‘I am weary; give me a third of them and let me go.’
But Avarice shook her head. ‘They are my servants,’ she
answered.
And Death said to her, ‘What hast thou in thy hand?’
‘I have three grains of corn,’ she answered; ‘what is that to thee?’
‘Give me one of them,’ cried Death, ‘to plant in my garden; only
one of them, and I will go away.’
‘I will not give thee anything,’ said Avarice, and she hid her hand
in the fold of her raiment.
And Death laughed, and took up a and dipped it into a pool of
water, and out of the cup rose Ague. She passed through the great
multitude, and a third of them lay dead. A cold mist followed her,
and the water-snakes ran by her side.
And when Avarice saw that a third of the multitude was dead she
beat her breast and wept. She beat her barren bosom, and cried
aloud. ‘Thou hast slain a third of my servants,’ she cried, ‘get thee
gone. There is war in the mountains of Tartary,10 and the kings of
each side are calling to thee. The Afghans have slain the black ox,
and are marching to battle. They have beaten upon their shields
with their spears, and have put on their helmets of iron. What is my
valley to thee, that thou shouldst tarry in it? Get thee gone, and
come here no more.’
‘Nay,’ answered Death, ‘but till thou hast given me a grain of corn
I will not go.’
But Avarice shut her hand, and clenched her teeth. ‘I will not give
thee anything,’ she muttered.
And Death laughed, and took up a black stone, and threw it into
the forest, and out of a thicket of wild hemlock came Fever in a robe
of flame. She passed through the multitude, and touched them, and
each man that she touched died. The grass withered beneath her
feet as she walked.
And Avarice shuddered, and put ashes on her head. ‘Thou art
cruel,’ she cried; ‘thou art cruel. There is famine in the walled cities
of India, and the cisterns of Samarcand have run dry. There is
famine in the walled cities of Egypt, and the locusts have come up
from the desert. The Nile has not overflowed its banks, and the
priests have cursed Isis and Osiris.11 Get thee gone to those who
need thee, and leave me my servants.’
‘Nay,’ answered Death, ‘but till thou hast given me a grain of corn
I will not go.’
‘I will not give thee anything,’ said Avarice.
And Death laughed again, and he whistled through his fingers,
and a woman came flying through the air. Plague was written upon
her forehead, and a crowd of lean vultures wheeled round her. She
covered the valley with her wings, and no man was left alive.
And Avarice fled shrieking through the forest, and Death leaped
upon his red horse and galloped away,12 and his galloping was
faster than the wind.
And out of the slime at the bottom of the valley crept dragons and
horrible things with scales, and the jackals came trotting along the
sand, sniffing up the air with their nostrils.
And the young King wept, and said: ‘Who were these men, and for
what were they seeking?’
‘For rubies for a king’s crown,’ answered one who stood behind
him.
And the young King started, and, turning round, he saw a man
habited as a pilgrim and holding in his hand a mirror of silver.
And he grew pale, and said: ‘For what king?’
And the pilgrim answered: ‘Look in this mirror, and thou shalt see
him.’
And he looked in the mirror, and, seeing his own face, he gave a
great cry and woke, and the bright sunlight was streaming into the
room, and from the trees of the garden and pleasaunce13 the birds
were singing.

And the Chamberlain and the high officers of State came in and
made obeisance to him, and the pages brought him the robe of
tissued gold, and set the crown and the sceptre before him.

And the young King looked at them, and they were beautiful.
More beautiful were they than aught that he had ever seen. But he
remembered his dreams, and he said to his lords: ‘Take these things
away, for I will not wear them.’
And the courtiers were amazed, and some of them laughed, for
they thought that he was jesting.
But he spake sternly to them again, and said: ‘Take these things
away, and hide them from me. Though it be the day of my
coronation, I will not wear them. For on the loom of Sorrow, and by
the white hands of Pain, has this my robe been woven. There is
Blood in the heart of the ruby, and Death in the heart of the pearl.’
And he told them his three dreams.
And when the courtiers heard them they looked at each other and
whispered, saying: ‘Surely he is mad; for what is a dream but a
dream, and a vision but a vision? They are not real things that one
should heed them. And what have we to do with the lives of those
who toil for us? Shall a man not eat bread till he has seen the sower,
nor drink wine till he has talked with the vinedresser?’
And the Chamberlain spake to the young King, and said, ‘My lord,
I pray thee set aside these black thoughts of thine, and put on this
fair robe, and set this crown upon thy head. For how shall the
people know that thou art a king, if thou hast not a king’s raiment?’
And the young King looked at him. ‘Is it so, indeed?’ he
questioned. ‘Will they not know me for a king if I have not a king’s
raiment?’
‘They will not know thee, my lord,’ cried the Chamberlain.
‘I had thought that there had been men who were kinglike,’ he
answered, ‘but it may be as thou sayest. And yet I will not wear this
robe, nor will I be crowned with this crown, but even as I came to
the palace so will I go forth from it.’
And he bade them all leave him, save one page whom he kept as
his companion, a lad a year younger than himself. Him he kept for
his service, and when he had bathed himself in clear water, he
opened a great painted chest, and from it he took the leathern tunic
and rough sheepskin cloak that he had worn when he had watched
on the hillside the shaggy goats of the goatherd. These he put on,
and in his hand he took his rude shepherd’s staff.
And the little page opened his big blue eyes in wonder, and said
smiling to him, ‘My lord, I see thy robe and thy sceptre, but where is
thy crown?’
And the young King plucked a spray of wild briar that was
climbing over the balcony, and bent it, and made a circlet of it, and
set it on his own head.
‘This shall be my crown,’ he answered.
And thus attired he passed out of his chamber into the Great Hall,
where the nobles were waiting for him.
And the nobles made merry, and some of them cried out to him,
‘My lord, the people wait for their king, and thou showest them a
beggar,’ and others were wrath and said, ‘He brings shame upon our
state, and is unworthy to be our master.’ But he answered them not
a word, but passed on, and went down the bright porphyry
staircase, and out through the gates of bronze, and mounted upon
his horse, and rode towards the cathedral, the little page running
beside him.
And the people laughed and said, ‘It is the King’s fool who is
riding by,’ and they mocked him.
And he drew rein and said, ‘Nay, but I am the King.’ And he told
them his three dreams.
And a man came out of the crowd and spake bitterly to him, and
said, ‘Sir, knowest thou not that out of the luxury of the rich cometh
the life of the poor? By your pomp we are nurtured, and your vices
give us bread. To toil for a hard master is bitter, but to have no
master to toil for is more bitter still. Thinkest thou that the ravens
will feed us? And what cure hast thou for these things? Wilt thou
say to the buyer, “Thou shalt buy for so much,” and to the seller,
“Thou shalt sell at this price?” I trow not. Therefore go back to thy
Palace and put on thy purple and fine linen. What hast thou to do
with us, and what we suffer?’
‘Are not the rich and the poor brothers?’ asked the young King.
‘Aye,’ answered the man, ‘and the name of the rich brother is
Cain.’
And the young King’s eyes filled with tears, and he rode on
through the murmurs of the people, and the little page grew afraid
and left him.

And when he reached the great portal of the cathedral, the soldiers
thrust their halberts out and said, ‘What dost thou seek here? None
enters by this door but the King.’

And his face flushed with anger, and he said to them, ‘I am the
King,’ and waved their halberts aside and passed in.
And when the old Bishop saw him coming in his goatherd’s dress,
he rose up in wonder from his throne, and went to meet him, and
said to him, ‘My son, is this a king’s apparel? And with what crown
shall I crown thee, and what sceptre shall I place in thy hand?
Surely this should be to thee a day of joy, and not a day of
abasement.’
‘Shall Joy wear what Grief has fashioned?’ said the young King.
And he told him his three dreams.
And when the Bishop had heard them he knit his brows, and said,
‘My son, I am an old man, and in the winter of my days, and I know
that many evil things are done in the wide world. The fierce robbers
come down from the mountains, and carry off the little children,
and sell them to the Moors. The lions lie in wait for the caravans,
and leap upon the camels. The wild boar roots up the corn in the
valley, and the foxes gnaw the vines upon the hill. The pirates lay
waste the sea-coast and burn the ships of the fishermen, and take
their nets from them. In the salt-marshes live the lepers; they have
houses of wattled reeds, and none may come nigh them. The
beggars wander through the cities, and eat their food with the dogs.
Canst thou make these things not to be? Wilt thou take the leper for
thy bedfellow, and set the beggar at thy board? Shall the lion do thy
bidding, and the wild boar obey thee? Is not He who made misery
wiser than thou art? Wherefore I praise thee not for this that thou
hast done, but I bid thee ride back to the Palace and make thy face
glad, and put on the raiment that beseemeth a king, and with the
crown of gold I will crown thee, and the sceptre of pearl will I place
in thy hand. And as for thy dreams, think no more of them. The
burden of this world is too great for one man to bear, and the
world’s sorrow too heavy for one heart to suffer.’
‘Sayest thou that in this house?’ said the young King, and he
strode past the Bishop, and climbed up the steps of the altar, and
stood before the image of Christ.
He stood before the image of Christ, and on his right hand and on
his left were the marvellous vessels of gold, the chalice with the
yellow wine, and the vial with the holy oil. He knelt before the
image of Christ, and the great candles burned brightly by the
jewelled shrine, and the smoke of the incense curled in thin blue
wreaths through the dome. He bowed his head in prayer, and the
priests in their stiff copes crept away from the altar.
And suddenly a wild tumult came from the street outside, and in
entered the nobles with drawn swords and nodding plumes, and
shields of polished steel. ‘Where is this dreamer of dreams?’14 they
cried. ‘Where is this King, who is apparelled like a beggar – this boy
who brings shame upon our state? Surely we will slay him, for he is
unworthy to rule over us.’
And the young King bowed his head again, and prayed, and when
he had finished his prayer he rose up, and turning round he looked
at them sadly.
And lo! through the painted windows came the sunlight streaming
upon him, and the sunbeams wove round him a tissued robe that
was fairer than the robe that had been fashioned for his pleasure.
The dead staff blossomed,15 and bare lilies that were whiter than
pearls. The dry thorn blossomed, and bare roses that were redder
than rubies. Whiter than fine pearls were the lilies, and their stems
were of bright silver. Redder than male rubies were the roses, and
their leaves were of beaten gold.
He stood there in the raiment of a king, and the gates of the
jewelled shrine flew open, and from the crystal of the many-rayed
monstrance16 shone a marvellous and mystical light. He stood there
in a king’s raiment, and the Glory of God filled the place, and the
saints in their carven niches seemed to move. In the fair raiment of
a king he stood before them, and the organ pealed out its music, and
the trumpeters blew upon their trumpets, and the singing boys sang.
And the people fell upon their knees in awe, and the nobles
sheathed their swords and did homage, and the Bishop’s face grew
pale, and his hands trembled. ‘A greater than I hath crowned thee,’
he cried, and he knelt before him.
And the young King came down from the high altar, and passed
home through the midst of the people. But no man dared look upon
his face, for it was like the face of an angel.
The Birthday of the Infanta1

To Mrs William H. Grenfell,2 of Taplow Court

It was the birthday of the Infanta. She was just twelve years of age,
and the sun was shining brightly in the gardens of the palace.

Although she was a real Princess and the Infanta of Spain, she had
only one birthday every year, just like the children of quite poor
people, so it was naturally a matter of great importance to the
whole country that she should have a really fine day for the
occasion. And a really fine day it certainly was. The tall striped
tulips stood straight up upon their stalks, like long rows of soldiers,
and looked defiantly across the grass at the roses, and said: ‘We are
quite as splendid as you are now.’ The purple butterflies fluttered
about with gold dust on their wings, visiting each flower in turn; the
little lizards crept out of the crevices of the wall, and lay basking in
the white glare; and the pomegranates split and cracked with the
heat, and showed their bleeding red hearts. Even the pale yellow
lemons, that hung in such profusion from the mouldering trellis and
along the dim arcades, seemed to have caught a richer colour from
the wonderful sunlight, and the magnolia trees opened their great
globe-like blossoms of folded ivory, and filled the air with a sweet
heavy perfume.
The little Princess herself walked up and down the terrace with
her companions, and played at hide and seek round the stone vases
and the old moss-grown statues. On ordinary days she was only
allowed to play with children of her own rank, so she had always to
play alone, but her birthday was an exception, and the King had
given orders that she was to invite any of her young friends whom
she liked to come and amuse themselves with her. There was a
stately grace about these slim Spanish children as they glided about,
the boys with their large-plumed hats and short fluttering cloaks,
the girls holding up the trains of their long brocaded gowns, and
shielding the sun from their eyes with huge fans of black and silver.
But the Infanta was the most graceful of all, and the most tastefully
attired, after the somewhat cumbrous fashion of the day. Her robe
was of grey satin, the skirt and the wide puffed sleeves heavily
embroidered with silver, and the stiff corset studded with rows of
fine pearls. Two tiny slippers with big pink rosettes peeped out
beneath her dress as she walked. Pink and pearl was her great gauze
fan, and in her hair, which like an aureole of faded gold stood out
stiffly round her pale little face, she had a beautiful white rose.
From a window in the palace the sad melancholy King watched
them. Behind him stood his brother, Don Pedro of Aragon, whom he
hated, and his confessor, the Grand Inquisitor of Granada, sat by his
side. Sadder even than usual was the King, for as he looked at the
Infanta bowing with childish gravity to the assembling courtiers, or
laughing behind her fan at the grim Duchess of Albuquerque who
always accompanied her, he thought of the young Queen, her
mother, who but a short time before – so it seemed to him – had
come from the gay country of France, and had withered away in the
sombre splendour of the Spanish court, dying just six months after
the birth of her child, and before she had seen the almonds blossom
twice in the orchard, or plucked the second year’s fruit from the old
gnarled fig-tree that stood in the centre of the now grass-grown
courtyard. So great had been his love for her that he had not
suffered even the grave to hide her from him. She had been
embalmed by a Moorish physician, who in return for this service
had been granted his life, which for heresy and suspicion of magical
practices had been already forfeited, men said, to the Holy Office,
and her body was still lying on its tapestried bier in the black
marble chapel of the Palace, just as the monks had borne her in on
that windy March day nearly twelve years before. Once every month
the King, wrapped in a dark cloak and with a muffled lantern in his
hand, went in and knelt by her side, calling out, ‘Mi reina! Mi
reina!’3 and sometimes breaking through the formal etiquette that in
Spain governs every separate action of life, and sets limits even to
the sorrow of a King, he would clutch at the pale jewelled hands in
a wild agony of grief, and try to wake by his mad kisses the cold
painted face.
To-day he seemed to see her again, as he had seen her first at the
Castle of Fontainebleau, when he was but fifteen years of age, and
she still younger. They had been formally betrothed on that
occasion by the Papal Nuncio4 in the presence of the French King
and all the Court, and he had returned to the Escurial5 bearing with
him a little ringlet of yellow hair, and the memory of two childish
lips bending down to kiss his hand as he stepped into his carriage.
Later on had followed the marriage, hastily performed at Burgos, a
small town on the frontier between the two countries, and the grand
public entry into Madrid with the customary celebration of high
mass at the Church of La Atocha, and a more than usually solemn
auto-da-fé,6 in which nearly three hundred heretics, amongst whom
were many Englishmen, had been delivered over to the secular arm
to be burned.
Certainly he had loved her madly, and to the ruin, many thought,
of his country, then at war with England for the possession of the
empire of the New World. He had hardly ever permitted her to be
out of his sight; for her, he had forgotten, or seemed to have
forgotten, all grave affairs of State; and, with that terrible blindness
that passion brings upon its servants, he had failed to notice that the
elaborate ceremonies by which he sought to please her did but
aggravate the strange malady from which she suffered. When she
died he was, for a time, like one bereft of reason. Indeed, there is no
doubt but that he would have formally abdicated and retired to the
great Trappist monastery at Granada, of which he was already
titular Prior, had he not been afraid to leave the little Infanta at the
mercy of his brother, whose cruelty, even in Spain, was notorious,
and who was suspected by many of having caused the Queen’s death
by means of a pair of poisoned gloves that he had presented to her
on the occasion of her visiting his castle in Aragon. Even after the
expiration of the three years of public mourning that he had
ordained throughout his whole dominions by royal edict, he would
never suffer his ministers to speak about any new alliance, and
when the Emperor himself sent to him, and offered him the hand of
the lovely Archduchess of Bohemia, his niece, in marriage, he bade
the ambassadors tell their master that the King of Spain was already
wedded to Sorrow, and that though she was but a barren bride he
loved her better than Beauty; an answer that cost his crown the rich
provinces of the Netherlands, which soon after, at the Emperor’s
instigation, revolted against him under the leadership of some
fanatics of the Reformed Church.
His whole married life, with its fierce, fiery-coloured joys and the
terrible agony of its sudden ending, seemed to come back to him to-
day as he watched the Infanta playing on the terrace. She had all
the Queen’s pretty petulance of manner, the same wilful way of
tossing her head, the same proud curved beautiful mouth, the same
wonderful smile – vrai sourire de France7 indeed – as she glanced up
now and then at the window, or stretched out her little hand for the
stately Spanish gentlemen to kiss. But the shrill laughter of the
children grated on his ears, and the bright pitiless sunlight mocked
his sorrow, and a dull odour of strange spices, spices such as
embalmers use, seemed to taint – or was it fancy? – the clear
morning air. He buried his face in his hands, and when the Infanta
looked up again the curtains had been drawn, and the King had
retired.
She made a little moue8 of disappointment, and shrugged her
shoulders. Surely he might have stayed with her on her birthday.
What did the stupid State-affairs matter? Or had he gone to that
gloomy chapel, where the candles were always burning, and where
she was never allowed to enter? How silly of him, when the sun was
shining so brightly, and everybody was so happy! Besides, he would
miss the sham bull-fight for which the trumpet was already
sounding, to say nothing of the puppet show and the other
wonderful things. Her uncle and the Grand Inquisitor were much
more sensible. They had come out on the terrace, and paid her nice
compliments. So she tossed her pretty head, and taking Don Pedro
by the hand, she walked slowly down the steps towards a long
pavilion of purple silk that had been erected at the end of the
garden, the other children following in strict order of precedence,
those who had the longest names going first.
A procession of noble boys, fantastically dressed as toreadors,
came out to meet her, and the young Count of Tierra-Nueva, a
wonderfully handsome lad of about fourteen years of age,
uncovering his head with all the grace of a born hidalgo and
grandee9 of Spain, led her solemnly into a little gilt and ivory chair
that was placed on a raised dais above the arena. The children
grouped themselves all round, fluttering their big fans and
whispering to each other, and Don Pedro and the Grand Inquisitor
stood laughing at the entrance. Even the Duchess – the Camerera-
Mayor10 she was called – a thin, hard-featured woman with a yellow
ruff, did not look quite so bad-tempered as usual, and something
like a chill smile flitted across her wrinkled face and twitched her
thin bloodless lips.
It certainly was a marvellous bull-fight, and much nicer, the
Infanta thought, than the real bull-fight that she had been brought
to see at Seville, on the occasion of the visit of the Duke of Parma to
her father. Some of the boys pranced about on richly-caparisoned
hobby-horses brandishing long javelins with gay streamers of bright
ribands attached to them; others went on foot waving their scarlet
cloaks before the bull, and vaulting lightly over the barrier when he
charged them; and as for the bull himself, he was just like a live
bull, though he was only made of wicker-work and stretched hide,
and sometimes insisted on running round the arena on his hind legs,
which no live bull ever dreams of doing. He made a splendid fight
of it too, and the children got so excited that they stood up upon the
benches, and waved their lace handkerchiefs and cried out: Bravo
toro! Bravo toro!11 just as sensibly as if they had been grown-up
people. At last, however, after a prolonged combat, during which
several of the hobby-horses were gored through and through, and
their riders dismounted, the young Count of Tierra-Nueva brought
the bull to his knees, and having obtained permission from the
Infanta to give the coup de grâce, he plunged his wooden sword into
the neck of the animal with such violence that the head came right
off, and disclosed the laughing face of little Monsieur de Lorraine,
the son of the French Ambassador at Madrid.
The arena was then cleared amidst much applause, and the dead
hobby-horses dragged solemnly away by two Moorish pages in
yellow and black liveries, and after a short interlude, during which a
French posture-master performed upon the tight-rope, some Italian
puppets appeared in the semi-classical tragedy of Sophonisba12 on
the stage of a small theatre that had been built up for the purpose.
They acted so well, and their gestures were so extremely natural,
that at the close of the play the eyes of the Infanta were quite dim
with tears. Indeed some of the children really cried, and had to be
comforted with sweetmeats, and the Grand Inquisitor himself was so
affected that he could not help saying to Don Pedro that it seemed
to him intolerable that things made simply out of wood and
coloured wax, and worked mechanically by wires, should be so
unhappy and meet with such terrible misfortunes.
An African juggler followed, who brought in a large flat basket
covered with a red cloth, and having placed it in the centre of the
arena, he took from his turban a curious reed pipe, and blew
through it. In a few moments the cloth began to move, and as the
pipe grew shriller and shriller two green and gold snakes put out
their strange wedge-shaped heads and rose slowly up, swaying to
and fro with the music as a plant sways in the water. The children,
however, were rather frightened at their spotted hoods and quick
darting tongues, and were much more pleased when the juggler
made a tiny orange-tree grow out of the sand and bear pretty white
blossoms and clusters of real fruit; and when he took the fan of the
little daughter of the Marquess de Las-Torres, and changed it into a
blue bird that flew all round the pavilion and sang, their delight and
amazement knew no bounds. The solemn minuet, too, performed by
the dancing boys from the church of Nuestra Señora Del Pilar, was
charming. The Infanta had never before seen this wonderful
ceremony which takes place every year at May-time in front of the
high altar of the Virgin, and in her honour; and indeed none of the
royal family of Spain had entered the great cathedral of Saragossa
since a mad priest, supposed by many to have been in the pay of
Elizabeth of England, had tried to administer a poisoned wafer to
the Prince of the Asturias. So she had known only by hearsay of
‘Our Lady’s Dance,’ as it was called, and it certainly was a beautiful
sight. The boys wore old-fashioned court dresses of white velvet,
and their curious three-cornered hats were fringed with silver and
surmounted with huge plumes of ostrich feathers, the dazzling
whiteness of their costumes, as they moved about in the sunlight,
being still more accentuated by their swarthy faces and long black
hair. Everybody was fascinated by the grave dignity with which
they moved through the intricate figures of the dance, and by the
elaborate grace of their slow gestures, and stately bows, and when
they had finished their performance and doffed their great plumed
hats to the Infanta, she acknowledged their reverence with much
courtesy, and made a vow that she would send a large wax candle to
the shrine of Our Lady of Pilar in return for the pleasure that she
had given her.
A troop of handsome Egyptians – as the gipsies were termed in
those days – then advanced into the arena, and sitting down cross-
legs, in a circle, began to play softly upon their zithers, moving their
bodies to the tune, and humming, almost below their breath, a low
dreamy air. When they caught sight of Don Pedro they scowled at
him, and some of them looked terrified, for only a few weeks before
he had had two of their tribe hanged for sorcery in the market-place
at Seville, but the pretty Infanta charmed them as she leaned back
peeping over her fan with her great blue eyes, and they felt sure
that one so lovely as she was could never be cruel to anybody. So
they played on very gently and just touching the cords of the zithers
with their long pointed nails, and their heads began to nod as
though they were falling asleep. Suddenly, with a cry so shrill that
all the children were startled and Don Pedro’s hand clutched at the
agate pommel of his dagger, they leapt to their feet and whirled
madly round the enclosure beating their tambourines, and
chaunting some wild love-song in their strange guttural language.
Then at another signal they all flung themselves again to the ground
and lay there quite still, the dull strumming of the zithers being the
only sound that broke the silence. After that they had done this
several times, they disappeared for a moment and came back
leading a brown shaggy bear by a chain, and carrying on their
shoulders some little Barbary apes. The bear stood upon his head
with the utmost gravity, and the wizened apes played all kinds of
amusing tricks with two gipsy boys who seemed to be their masters,
and fought with tiny swords, and fired off guns, and went through a
regular soldier’s drill just like the King’s own bodyguard. In fact the
gipsies were a great success.
But the funniest part of the whole morning’s entertainment, was
undoubtedly the dancing of the little Dwarf. When he stumbled into
the arena, waddling on his crooked legs and wagging his huge
misshapen head from side to side, the children went off into a loud
shout of delight, and the Infanta herself laughed so much that the
Camerera was obliged to remind her that although there were many
precedents in Spain for a King’s daughter weeping before her equals,
there were none for a Princess of the blood royal making so merry
before those who were her inferiors in birth. The Dwarf, however,
was really quite irresistible, and even at the Spanish Court, always
noted for its cultivated passion for the horrible, so fantastic a little
monster had never been seen. It was his first appearance, too. He
had been discovered only the day before, running wild through the
forest, by two of the nobles who happened to have been hunting in
a remote part of the great cork-wood that surrounded the town, and
had been carried off by them to the Palace as a surprise for the
Infanta, his father, who was a poor charcoal-burner, being but too
well pleased to get rid of so ugly and useless a child. Perhaps the
most amusing thing about him was his complete unconsciousness of
his own grotesque appearance. Indeed he seemed quite happy and
full of the highest spirits. When the children laughed, he laughed as
freely and as joyously as any of them, and at the close of each dance
he made them each the funniest of bows, smiling and nodding at
them just as if he was really one of themselves, and not a little
misshapen thing that Nature, in some humorous mood, had
fashioned for others to mock at. As for the Infanta, she absolutely
fascinated him. He could not keep his eyes off her, and seemed to
dance for her alone, and when at the close of the performance,
remembering how she had seen the great ladies of the Court throw
bouquets to Caffarelli the famous Italian treble, whom the Pope had
sent from his own chapel to Madrid that he might cure the King’s
melancholy by the sweetness of his voice, she took out of her hair
the beautiful white rose, and partly for a jest and partly to tease the
Camerera, threw it to him across the arena with her sweetest smile,
he took the whole matter quite seriously, and pressing the flower to
his rough coarse lips he put his hand upon his heart, and sank on
one knee before her, grinning from ear to ear, and with his little
bright eyes sparkling with pleasure.

This so upset the gravity of the Infanta that she kept on laughing
long after the little Dwarf had run out of the arena, and expressed a
desire to her uncle that the dance should be immediately repeated.
The Camerera, however, on the plea that the sun was too hot,
decided that it would be better that her Highness should return
without delay to the Palace, where a wonderful feast had been
already prepared for her, including a real birthday cake with her
own initials worked all over it in painted sugar and a lovely silver
flag waving from the top. The Infanta accordingly rose up with
much dignity, and having given orders that the little dwarf was to
dance again for her after the hour of siesta, and conveyed her
thanks to the young Count of Tierra-Nueva for his charming
reception, she went back to her apartments, the children following
in the same order in which they had entered.

Now when the little Dwarf heard that he was to dance a second time
before the Infanta, and by her own express command, he was so
proud that he ran out into the garden, kissing the white rose in an
absurd ecstasy of pleasure, and making the most uncouth and
clumsy gestures of delight.

The Flowers were quite indignant at his daring to intrude into


their beautiful home, and when they saw him capering up and down
the walks, and waving his arms above his head in such a ridiculous
manner, they could not restrain their feelings any longer.
‘He is really far too ugly to be allowed to play in any place where
we are,’ cried the Tulips.
‘He should drink poppy-juice, and go to sleep for a thousand
years,’ said the great scarlet Lilies, and they grew quite hot and
angry.
‘He is a perfect horror!’ screamed the Cactus. ‘Why, he is twisted
and stumpy, and his head is completely out of proportion with his
legs. Really he makes me feel prickly all over, and if he comes near
me I will sting him with my thorns.’
‘And he has actually got one of my best blooms,’ exclaimed the
White Rose-Tree. ‘I gave it to the Infanta this morning myself, as a
birthday present, and he has stolen it from her.’ And she called out:
‘Thief, thief, thief!’ at the top of her voice.
Even the red Geraniums, who did not usually give themselves airs,
and were known to have a great many poor relations themselves,
curled up in disgust when they saw him, and when the Violets
meekly remarked that though he was certainly extremely plain, still
he could not help it, they retorted with a good deal of justice that
that was his chief defect, and that there was no reason why one
should admire a person because he was incurable; and, indeed,
some of the Violets themselves felt that the ugliness of the little
Dwarf was almost ostentatious, and that he would have shown much
better taste if he had looked sad, or at least pensive, instead of
jumping about merrily, and throwing himself into such grotesque
and silly attitudes.
As for the old Sundial, who was an extremely remarkable
individual, and had once told the time of day to no less a person
than the Emperor Charles V himself, he was so taken aback by the
little Dwarf’s appearance, that he almost forgot to mark two whole
minutes with his long shadowy finger, and could not help saying to
the great milk-white Peacock, who was sunning herself on the
balustrade, that every one knew that the children of Kings were
Kings, and that the children of charcoal-burners were charcoal-
burners, and that it was absurd to pretend that it wasn’t so; a
statement with which the Peacock entirely agreed, and indeed
screamed out, ‘Certainly, certainly,’ in such a loud, harsh voice, that
the gold-fish who lived in the basin of the cool splashing fountain
put their heads out of the water, and asked the huge stone Tritons13
what on earth was the matter.
But somehow the Birds liked him. They had seen him often in the
forest, dancing about like an elf after the eddying leaves, or
crouched up in the hollow of some old oak-tree, sharing his nuts
with the squirrels. They did not mind his being ugly, a bit. Why,
even the nightingale herself, who sang so sweetly in the orange
groves at night that sometimes the Moon leaned down to listen, was
not much to look at after all; and, besides, he had been kind to
them, and during that terribly bitter winter, when there were no
berries on the trees, and the ground was as hard as iron, and the
wolves had come down to the very gates of the city to look for food,
he had never once forgotten them, but had always given them
crumbs out of his little hunch of black bread, and divided with them
whatever poor breakfast he had.
So they flew round and round him, just touching his cheek with
their wings as they passed, and chattered to each other, and the
little Dwarf was so pleased that he could not help showing them the
beautiful white rose, and telling them that the Infanta herself had
given it to him because she loved him.
They did not understand a single word of what he was saying, but
that made no matter, for they put their heads on one side, and
looked wise, which is quite as good as understanding a thing, and
very much easier.
The Lizards also took an immense fancy to him, and when he
grew tired of running about and flung himself down on the grass to
rest, they played and romped all over him, and tried to amuse him
in the best way they could. ‘Every one cannot be as beautiful as a
lizard,’ they cried; ‘that would be too much to expect. And, though
it sounds absurd to say so, he is really not so ugly after all,
provided, of course, that one shuts one’s eyes, and does not look at
him.’ The Lizards were extremely philosophical by nature, and often
sat thinking for hours and hours together, when there was nothing
else to do, or when the weather was too rainy for them to go out.
The Flowers, however, were excessively annoyed at their
behaviour, and at the behaviour of the birds. ‘It only shows,’ they
said, ‘what a vulgarising effect this incessant rushing and flying
about has. Well-bred people always stay exactly in the same place,
as we do. No one ever saw us hopping up and down the walks, or
galloping madly through the grass after dragon-flies. When we do
want change of air, we send for the gardener, and he carries us to
another bed. This is dignified, and as it should be. But birds and
lizards have no sense of repose, and indeed birds have not even a
permanent address. They are mere vagrants like the gipsies, and
should be treated in exactly the same manner.’ So they put their
noses in the air, and looked very haughty, and were quite delighted
when after some time they saw the little Dwarf scramble up from
the grass, and make his way across the terrace to the palace.
‘He should certainly be kept indoors for the rest of his natural
life,’ they said. ‘Look at his hunched back, and his crooked legs,’ and
they began to titter.
But the little Dwarf knew nothing of all this. He liked the birds
and the lizards immensely, and thought that the flowers were the
most marvellous things in the whole world, except of course the
Infanta, but then she had given him the beautiful white rose, and
she loved him, and that made a great difference. How he wished
that he had gone back with her! She would have put him on her
right hand, and smiled at him, and he would have never left her
side, but would have made her his playmate, and taught her all
kinds of delightful tricks. For though he had never been in a palace
before, he knew a great many wonderful things. He could make
little cages out of rushes for the grasshoppers to sing in, and fashion
the long-jointed bamboo into the pipe that Pan14 loves to hear. He
knew the cry of every bird, and could call the starlings from the
tree-top, or the heron from the mere. He knew the trail of every
animal, and could track the hare by its delicate footprints, and the
boar by the trampled leaves. All the wild-dances he knew, the mad
dance in red raiment with the autumn, the light dance in blue
sandals over the corn, the dance with white snow-wreaths in winter,
and the blossom-dance through the orchards in spring. He knew
where the wood-pigeons built their nests, and once when a fowler
had snared the parent birds, he had brought up the young ones
himself, and had built a little dovecot for them in the cleft of a
pollard elm. They were quite tame, and used to feed out of his
hands every morning. She would like them, and the rabbits that
scurried about in the long fern, and the jays with their steely
feathers and black bills, and the hedgehogs that could curl
themselves up into prickly balls, and the great wise tortoises that
crawled slowly about, shaking their heads and nibbling at the young
leaves. Yes, she must certainly come to the forest and play with him.
He would give her his own little bed, and would watch outside the
window till dawn, to see that the wild horned cattle did not harm
her, nor the gaunt wolves creep too near the hut. And at dawn he
would tap at the shutters and wake her, and they would go out and
dance together all the day long. It was really not a bit lonely in the
forest. Sometimes a Bishop rode through on his white mule, reading
out of a painted book. Sometimes in their green velvet caps, and
their jerkins of tanned deerskin, the falconers passed by, with
hooded hawks on their wrists. At vintage time came the grape-
treaders, with purple hands and feet, wreathed with glossy ivy and
carrying dripping skins of wine; and the charcoal-burners sat round
their huge braziers at night, watching the dry logs charring slowly
in the fire, and roasting chestnuts in the ashes, and the robbers
came out of their caves and made merry with them. Once, too, he
had seen a beautiful procession winding up the long dusty road to
Toledo. The monks went in front singing sweetly, and carrying
bright banners and crosses of gold, and then, in silver armour, with
matchlocks and pikes, came the soldiers, and in their midst walked
three barefooted men, in strange yellow dresses painted all over
with wonderful figures, and carrying lighted candles in their hands.
Certainly there was a great deal to look at in the forest, and when
she was tired he would find a soft bank of moss for her, or carry her
in his arms, for he was very strong, though he knew that he was not
tall. He would make her a necklace of red bryony berries, that
would be quite as pretty as the white berries that she wore on her
dress, and when she was tired of them, she could throw them away,
and he would find her others. He would bring her acorn-cups and
dew-drenched anemones, and tiny glow-worms to be stars in the
pale gold of her hair.
But where was she? He asked the white rose, and it made him no
answer. The whole palace seemed asleep, and even where the
shutters had not been closed, heavy curtains had been drawn across
the windows to keep out the glare. He wandered all round looking
for some place through which he might gain an entrance, and at last
he caught sight of a little private door that was lying open. He
slipped through, and found himself in a splendid hall, far more
splendid, he feared, than the forest, there was so much more gilding
everywhere, and even the floor was made of great coloured stones,
fitted together into a sort of geometrical pattern. But the little
Infanta was not there, only some wonderful white statues that
looked down on him from their jasper pedestals, with sad blank eyes
and strangely smiling lips.

At the end of the hall hung a richly embroidered curtain of black


velvet, powdered with suns and stars, the King’s favourite devices,
and broidered on the colour he loved best. Perhaps she was hiding
behind that? He would try at any rate.
So he stole quietly across, and drew it aside. No; there was only
another room, though a prettier room, he thought, than the one he
had just left. The walls were hung with a many-figured green arras
of needle-wrought tapestry representing a hunt, the work of some
Flemish artists who had spent more than seven years in its
composition. It had once been the chamber of Jean le Fou, as he was
called, that mad King who was so enamoured of the chase, that he
had often tried in his delirium to mount the huge rearing horses,
and to drag down the stag on which the great hounds were leaping,
sounding his hunting horn, and stabbing with his dagger at the pale
flying deer. It was now used as the council-room, and on the centre
table were lying the red portfolios of the ministers, stamped with
the gold tulips of Spain, and with the arms and emblems of the
house of Hapsburg.
The little Dwarf looked in wonder all round him, and was half-
afraid to go on. The strange silent horsemen that galloped so swiftly
through the long glades without making any noise, seemed to him
like those terrible phantoms of whom he had heard the charcoal-
burners speaking – the Comprachos, who hunt only at night, and if
they meet a man, turn him into a hind, and chase him. But he
thought of the pretty Infanta, and took courage. He wanted to find
her alone, and to tell her that he too loved her. Perhaps she was in
the room beyond.
He ran across the soft Moorish carpets, and opened the door. No!
She was not here either. The room was quite empty.
It was a throne-room, used for the reception of foreign
ambassadors, when the King, which of late had not been often,
consented to give them a personal audience; the same room in
which, many years before, envoys had appeared from England to
make arrangements for the marriage of their Queen, then one of the
Catholic sovereigns of Europe, with the Emperor’s eldest son. The
hangings were of gilt Cordovan leather, and a heavy gilt chandelier
with branches for three hundred wax lights hung down from the
black and white ceiling. Underneath a great canopy of gold cloth, on
which the lions and towers of Castile were broidered in seed pearls,
stood the throne itself, covered with a rich pall of black velvet
studded with silver tulips and elaborately fringed with silver and
pearls. On the second step of the throne was placed the kneeling-
stool of the Infanta, with its cushion of cloth of silver tissue, and
below that again, and beyond the limit of the canopy, stood the
chair for the Papal Nuncio, who alone had the right to be seated in
the King’s presence on the occasion of any public ceremonial, and
whose Cardinal’s hat, with its tangled scarlet tassels, lay on a purple
tabouret15 in front. On the wall, facing the throne, hung a life-sized
portrait of Charles V in hunting dress, with a great mastiff by his
side, and a picture of Philip II receiving the homage of the
Netherlands occupied the centre of the other wall. Between the
windows stood a black ebony cabinet, inlaid with plates of ivory, on
which the figures from Holbein’s Dance of Death16 had been graved
– by the hand, some said, of that famous master himself.
But the little Dwarf cared nothing for all this magnificence. He
would not have given his rose for all the pearls on the canopy, nor
one white petal of his rose for the throne itself. What he wanted was
to see the Infanta before she went down to the pavilion, and to ask
her to come away with him when he had finished his dance. Here,
in the Palace, the air was close and heavy, but in the forest the wind
blew free, and the sunlight with wandering hands of gold moved the
tremulous leaves aside. There were flowers, too, in the forest, not so
splendid, perhaps, as the flowers in the garden, but more sweetly
scented for all that; hyacinths in early spring that flooded with
waving purple the cool glens, and grassy knolls; yellow primroses
that nestled in little clumps round the gnarled roots of the oak-trees;
bright celandine, and blue speedwell, and irises lilac and gold.
There were grey catkins on the hazels, and the fox-gloves drooped
with the weight of their dappled bee-haunted cells. The chestnut
had its spires of white stars, and the hawthorn its pallid moons of
beauty. Yes: surely she would come if he could only find her! She
would come with him to the fair forest, and all day long he would
dance for her delight. A smile lit up his eyes at the thought, and he
passed into the next room.
Of all the rooms this was the brightest and the most beautiful. The
walls were covered with a pink-flowered Lucca damask,17 patterned
with birds and dotted with dainty blossoms of silver; the furniture
was of massive silver, festooned with florid wreaths, and swinging
Cupids; in front of the two large fire-places stood great screens
broidered with parrots and peacocks, and the floor, which was of
sea-green onyx, seemed to stretch far away into the distance. Nor
was he alone. Standing under the shadow of the doorway, at the
extreme end of the room, he saw a little figure watching him. His
heart trembled, a cry of joy broke from his lips, and he moved out
into the sunlight. As he did so, the figure moved out also, and he
saw it plainly.
The Infanta! It was a monster, the most grotesque monster he had
ever beheld. Not properly shaped, as all other people were, but
hunchbacked, and crooked-limbed, with huge lolling head and mane
of black hair. The little Dwarf frowned, and the monster frowned
also. He laughed, and it laughed with him, and held its hands to its
sides, just as he himself was doing. He made it a mocking bow, and
it returned him a low reverence. He went towards it, and it came to
meet him, copying each step that he made, and stopping when he
stopped himself. He shouted with amusement, and ran forward, and
reached out his hand, and the hand of the monster touched his, and
it was as cold as ice. He grew afraid, and moved his hand across,
and the monster’s hand followed it quickly. He tried to press on, but
something smooth and hard stopped him. The face of the monster
was now close to his own, and seemed full of terror. He brushed his
hair off his eyes. It imitated him. He struck at it, and it returned
blow for blow. He loathed it, and it made hideous faces at him. He
drew back, and it retreated.
What is it? He thought for a moment, and looked round at the rest
of the room. It was strange, but everything seemed to have its
double in this invisible wall of clear water. Yes, picture for picture
was repeated, and couch for couch. The sleeping Faun18 that lay in
the alcove by the doorway had its twin brother that slumbered, and
the silver Venus19 that stood in the sunlight held out her arms to a
Venus as lovely as herself.
Was it Echo?20 He had called to her once in the valley, and she
had answered him word for word. Could she mock the eye, as she
mocked the voice? Could she make a mimic world just like the real
world? Could the shadows of things have colour and life and
movement? Could it be that –?
He started, and taking from his breast the beautiful white rose, he
turned round, and kissed it. The monster had a rose of its own, petal
for petal the same! It kissed it with like kisses, and pressed it to its
heart with horrible gestures.
When the truth dawned upon him, he gave a wild cry of despair,
and fell sobbing to the ground. So it was he who was misshapen and
hunchbacked, foul to look at and grotesque. He himself was the
monster, and it was at him that all the children had been laughing,
and the little Princess who he had thought loved him – she too had
been merely mocking at his ugliness, and making merry over his
twisted limbs. Why had they not left him in the forest, where there
was no mirror to tell him how loathsome he was? Why had his
father not killed him, rather than sell him to his shame? The hot
tears poured down his cheeks, and he tore the white rose to pieces.
The sprawling monster did the same, and scattered the faint petals
in the air. It grovelled on the ground, and, when he looked at it, it
watched him with a face drawn with pain. He crept away, lest he
should see it, and covered his eyes with his hands. He crawled, like
some wounded thing, into the shadow, and lay there moaning.
And at that moment the Infanta herself came in with her
companions through the open window, and when they saw the ugly
little dwarf lying on the ground and beating the floor with his
clenched hands, in the most fantastic and exaggerated manner, they
went off into shouts of happy laughter, and stood all round him and
watched him.
‘His dancing was funny,’ said the Infanta; ‘but his acting is funnier
still. Indeed he is almost as good as the puppets, only of course not
quite so natural.’ And she fluttered her big fan, and applauded.
But the little Dwarf never looked up, and his sobs grew fainter
and fainter, and suddenly he gave a curious gasp, and clutched his
side. And then he fell back again, and lay quite still.
‘That is capital,’ said the Infanta, after a pause; ‘but now you must
dance for me.’
‘Yes,’ cried all the children, ‘you must get up and dance, for you
are as clever as the Barbary apes, and much more ridiculous.’
But the little Dwarf made no answer.
And the Infanta stamped her foot, and called out to her uncle,
who was walking on the terrace with the Chamberlain, reading
some despatches that had just arrived from Mexico where the Holy
Office had recently been established. ‘My funny little dwarf is
sulking,’ she cried, ‘you must wake him up, and tell him to dance for
me.’
They smiled at each other, and sauntered in, and Don Pedro
stooped down, and slapped the Dwarf on the cheek with his
embroidered glove. ‘You must dance,’ he said, ‘petit monstre.21 You
must dance. The Infanta of Spain and the Indies wishes to be
amused.’
But the little Dwarf never moved.
‘A whipping master should be sent for,’ said Don Pedro wearily,
and he went back to the terrace. But the Chamberlain looked grave,
and he knelt beside the little dwarf, and put his hand upon his
heart. And after a few moments he shrugged his shoulders, and rose
up, and having made a low bow to the Infanta, he said:
‘Mi bella Princesa, your funny little dwarf will never dance again.
It is a pity, for he is so ugly that he might have made the King
smile.’
‘But why will he not dance again?’ asked the Infanta, laughing.
‘Because his heart is broken,’ answered the Chamberlain.
And the Infanta frowned, and her dainty rose-leaf lips curled in
pretty disdain. ‘For the future let those who come to play with me
have no hearts,’ she cried, and she ran out into the garden.
The Fisherman and his Soul

To H. S. H. Alice, Princess of Monaco1

Every evening the young Fisherman went out upon the sea, and
threw his nets into the water.

When the wind blew from the land he caught nothing, or but little
at best, for it was a bitter and black-winged wind, and rough waves
rose up to meet it. But when the wind blew to the shore, the fish
came in from the deep, and swam into the meshes of his nets, and
he took them to the market-place and sold them.
Every evening he went out upon the sea, and one evening the net
was so heavy that hardly could he draw it into the boat. And he
laughed, and said to himself, ‘Surely I have caught all the fish that
swim, or snared some dull monster that will be a marvel to men, or
some thing of horror that the great Queen will desire,’ and putting
forth all his strength, he tugged at the coarse ropes till, like lines of
blue enamel round a vase of bronze, the long veins rose up on his
arms. He tugged at the thin ropes, and nearer and nearer came the
circle of flat corks, and the net rose at last to the top of the water.
But no fish at all was in it, nor any monster or thing of horror, but
only a little Mermaid lying fast asleep.
Her hair was as a wet fleece of gold, and each separate hair as a
thread of fine gold in a cup of glass. Her body was as white ivory,
and her tail was of silver and pearl. Silver and pearl was her tail,
and the green weeds of the sea coiled round it; and like sea-shells
were her ears, and her lips were like sea-coral. The cold waves
dashed over her cold breasts, and the salt glistened upon her
eyelids.
So beautiful was she that when the young Fisherman saw her he
was filled with wonder, and he put out his hand and drew the net
close to him, and leaning over the side he clasped her in his arms.
And when he touched her, she gave a cry like a startled sea-gull and
woke, and looked at him in terror with her mauve-amethyst eyes,
and struggled that she might escape. But he held her tightly to him,
and would not suffer her to depart.
And when she saw that she could in no way escape from him, she
began to weep, and said, ‘I pray thee let me go, for I am the only
daughter of a King, and my father is aged and alone.’
But the young Fisherman answered, ‘I will not let thee go save
thou makest me a promise that whenever I call thee, thou wilt come
and sing to me, for the fish delight to listen to the song of the Sea-
folk, and so shall my nets be full.’
‘Wilt thou in very truth let me go, if I promise thee this?’ cried the
Mermaid.
‘In very truth I will let thee go,’ said the young Fisherman.
So she made him the promise he desired and sware it by the oath
of the Sea-folk. And he loosened his arms from about her, and she
sank down into the water, trembling with a strange fear.
Every evening the young Fisherman went out upon the sea, and
called to the Mermaid, and she rose out of the water and sang to
him. Round and round her swam the dolphins, and the wild gulls
wheeled above her head.

And she sang a marvellous song. For she sang of the Sea-folk who
drive their flocks from cave to cave, and carry the little calves on
their shoulders; of the Tritons2 who have long green beards, and
hairy breasts, and blow through twisted conches when the King
passes by; of the palace of the King which is all of amber, with a
roof of clear emerald, and a pavement of bright pearl; and of the
gardens of the sea where the great filigrane3 fans of coral wave all
day long and the fish dart about like silver birds, and the anemones
cling to the rocks, and the pinks burgeon in the ribbed yellow sand.
She sang of the big whales that come down from the north seas and
have sharp icicles hanging to their fins; of the Sirens4 who tell of
such wonderful things that the merchants have to stop their ears
with wax lest they should hear them, and leap into the water and be
drowned; of the sunken galleys with their tall masts, and the frozen
sailors clinging to the rigging, and the mackerel swimming in and
out of the open portholes; of the little barnacles who are great
travellers, and cling to the keels of the ships and go round and
round the world; and of the cuttlefish who live in the sides of the
cliffs and stretch out their long black arms, and can make night
come when they will it. She sang of the nautilus5 who has a boat of
her own that is carved out of an opal and steered with a silken sail;
of the happy Mermen who play upon harps and can charm the great
Kraken6 to sleep; of the little children who catch hold of the slippery
porpoises and ride laughing upon their backs; of the Mermaids who
lie in the white foam and hold out their arms to the mariners; and of
the sea-lions with their curved tusks, and the sea-horses with their
floating manes.
And as she sang, all the tunny-fish came in from the deep to listen
to her, and the young Fisherman threw his nets round them and
caught them, and others he took with a spear. And when his boat
was well-laden, the Mermaid would sink down into the sea, smiling
at him.
Yet would she never come near him that he might touch her.
Oftentimes he called to her and prayed of her, but she would not;
and when he sought to seize her she dived into the water as a seal
might dive, nor did he see her again that day. And each day the
sound of her voice became sweeter to his ears. So sweet was her
voice that he forgot his nets and his cunning, and had no care of his
craft. Vermilion-finned and with eyes of bossy gold, the tunnies
went by in shoals, but he heeded them not. His spear lay by his side
unused, and his baskets of plaited osier7 were empty. With lips
parted, and eyes dim with wonder, he sat idle in his boat and
listened, listening till the sea-mists crept round him, and the
wandering moon stained his brown limbs with silver.
And one evening he called to her, and said: ‘Little Mermaid, little
Mermaid, I love thee. Take me for thy bridegroom, for I love thee.’
But the Mermaid shook her head. ‘Thou hast a human soul,’ she
answered. ‘If only thou wouldst send away thy soul, then could I
love thee.’
And the young Fisherman said to himself, ‘Of what use is my soul
to me? I cannot see it. I may not touch it. I do not know it. Surely I
will send it away from me, and much gladness shall be mine.’ And a
cry of joy broke from his lips, and standing up in the painted boat,
he held out his arms to the Mermaid. ‘I will send my soul away,’ he
cried, ‘and you shall be my bride, and I will be thy bridegroom, and
in the depth of the sea we will dwell together, and all that thou hast
sung of thou shalt show me, and all that thou desirest I will do, nor
shall our lives be divided.’
And the little Mermaid laughed for pleasure, and hid her face in
her hands.
‘But how shall I send my soul from me?’ cried the young
Fisherman. ‘Tell me how I may do it, and lo! it shall be done.’
‘Alas! I know not,’ said the little Mermaid: ‘the Sea-folk have no
souls.’ And she sank down into the deep, looking wistfully at him.

Now early on the next morning, before the sun was the span of a
man’s hand above the hill, the young Fisherman went to the house
of the Priest and knocked three times at the door.

The novice looked out through the wicket, and when he saw who
it was, he drew back the latch and said to him, ‘Enter.’
And the young Fisherman passed in, and knelt down on the sweet-
smelling rushes of the floor, and cried to the Priest who was reading
out of the Holy Book and said to him, ‘Father, I am in love with one
of the Sea-folk, and my soul hindereth me from having my desire.
Tell me how I can send my soul away from me, for in truth I have
no need of it. Of what value is my soul to me? I cannot see it. I may
not touch it. I do not know it.’
And the Priest beat his breast, and answered, ‘Alack, alack, thou
art mad, or hast eaten of some poisonous herb, for the soul is the
noblest part of man, and was given to us by God that we should
nobly use it. There is no thing more precious than a human soul, nor
any earthly thing that can be weighted with it. It is worth all the
gold that is in the world, and is more precious than the rubies of the
kings. Therefore, my son, think not any more of this matter, for it is
a sin that may not be forgiven. And as for the Sea-folk, they are lost,
and they who would traffic with them are lost also. They are as the
beasts of the field that know not good from evil, and for them the
Lord has not died.’
The young Fisherman’s eyes filled with tears when he heard the
bitter words of the Priest, and he rose up from his knees and said to
him, ‘Father, the Fauns8 live in the forest and are glad, and on the
rocks sit the Mermen with their harps of red gold. Let me be as they
are, I beseech thee, for their days are as the days of flowers. And as
for my soul, what doth my soul profit me, if it stand between me
and the thing that I love?’
‘The love of the body is vile,’ cried the Priest, knitting his brows,
‘and vile and evil are the pagan things God suffers to wander
through His world. Accursed be the Fauns of the woodland, and
accursed be the singers of the sea! I have heard them at night-time,
and they have sought to lure me from my beads. They tap at the
window, and laugh. They whisper into my ears the tale of their
perilous joys. They tempt me with temptations, and when I would
pray they make mouths at me. They are lost, I tell thee, they are
lost. For them there is no heaven nor hell, and in neither shall they
praise God’s name.’
‘Father,’ cried the young Fisherman, ‘thou knowest not what thou
sayest. Once in my net I snared the daughter of a King. She is fairer
than the morning star, and whiter than the moon. For her body I
would give my soul, and for her love I would surrender heaven. Tell
me what I ask of thee, and let me go in peace.’
‘Away! Away!’ cried the Priest: ‘thy leman9 is lost, and thou shalt
be lost with her.’ And he gave him no blessing, but drove him from
his door.
And the young Fisherman went down into the market-place, and
he walked slowly, and with bowed head, as one who is in sorrow.
And when the merchants saw him coming, they began to whisper
to each other, and one of them came forth to meet him, and called
him by name, and said to him, ‘What hast thou to sell?’
‘I will sell thee my soul,’ he answered: ‘I pray thee buy it of me,
for I am weary of it. Of what use is my soul to me? I cannot see it. I
may not touch it. I do not know it.’
But the merchants mocked at him, and said, ‘Of what use is a
man’s soul to us? It is not worth a clipped piece of silver. Sell us thy
body for a slave, and we will clothe thee in sea-purple, and put a
ring upon thy finger, and make thee the minion of the great Queen.
But talk not of the soul, for to us it is nought, nor has it any value
for our service.’
And the young Fisherman said to himself: ‘How strange a thing
this is! The Priest telleth me that the soul is worth all the gold in the
world, and the merchants say that it is not worth a clipped piece of
silver.’ And he passed out of the market-place, and went down to
the shore of the sea, and began to ponder on what he should do.

And at noon he remembered how one of his companions, who was a


gatherer of samphire,10 had told him of a certain young Witch who
dwelt in a cave at the head of the bay and was very cunning in her
witcheries. And he set to and ran, so eager was he to get rid of his
soul, and a cloud of dust followed him as he sped round the sand of
the shore. By the itching of her palm the young Witch knew his
coming, and she laughed and let down her red hair. With her red
hair falling around her, she stood at the opening of the cave, and in
her hand she had a spray of wild hemlock that was blossoming.

‘What d’ye lack? What d’ye lack?’ she cried, as he came panting
up the steep, and bent down before her. ‘Fish for thy net, when the
wind is foul? I have a little reed-pipe, and when I blow on it the
mullet come sailing into the bay. But it has a price, pretty boy, it
has a price. What d’ye lack? What d’ye lack? A storm to wreck the
ships, and wash the chests of rich treasure ashore? I have more
storms than the wind has, for I serve one who is stronger than the
wind, and with a sieve and a pail of water I can send the great
galleys to the bottom of the sea. But I have a price, pretty boy, I
have a price. What d’ye lack? What d’ye lack? I know a flower that
grows in the valley, none knows it but I. It has purple leaves, and a
star in its heart, and its juice is as white as milk. Shouldst thou
touch with this flower the hard lips of the Queen, she would follow
thee all over the world. Out of the bed of the King she would rise,
and over the whole world she would follow thee. And it has a price,
pretty boy, it has a price. What d’ye lack? What d’ye lack? I can
pound a toad in a mortar, and make broth of it, and stir the broth
with a dead man’s hand. Sprinkle it on thine enemy while he sleeps,
and he will turn into a black viper, and his own mother will slay
him. With a wheel I can draw the Moon from heaven, and in a
crystal I can show thee Death. What d’ye lack? What d’ye lack? Tell
me thy desire, and I will give it thee, and thou shalt pay me a price,
pretty boy, thou shalt pay me a price.’
‘My desire is but for a little thing,’ said the young Fisherman, ‘yet
hath the Priest been wroth with me, and driven me forth. It is but
for a little thing, and the merchants have mocked at me, and denied
me. Therefore am I come to thee, though men call thee evil, and
whatever be thy price I shall pay it.’
‘What wouldst thou?’ asked the Witch, coming near to him.
‘I would send my soul away from me,’ answered the young
Fisherman.
The Witch grew pale, and shuddered, and hid her face in her blue
mantle. ‘Pretty boy, pretty boy,’ she muttered, ‘that is a terrible
thing to do.’
He tossed his brown curls and laughed. ‘My soul is nought to me,’
he answered. ‘I cannot see it. I may not touch it. I do not know it.’
‘What wilt thou give me if I tell thee?’ asked the Witch, looking
down at him with her beautiful eyes.
‘Five pieces of gold,’ he said, ‘and my nets, and the wattled house
where I live, and the painted boat in which I sail. Only tell me how
to get rid of my soul, and I will give thee all that I possess.’
She laughed mockingly at him, and struck him with the spray of
hemlock. ‘I can turn the autumn leaves into gold,’ she answered,
‘and I can weave the pale moonbeams into silver if I will it. He
whom I serve is richer than all the kings of this world and has their
dominions.’
‘What then shall I give thee,’ he cried, ‘if thy price be neither gold
nor silver?’
The Witch stroked his hair with her thin white hand. ‘Thou must
dance with me, pretty boy,’ she murmured, and she smiled at him as
she spoke.
‘Nought but that?’ cried the young Fisherman in wonder, and he
rose to his feet.
‘Nought but that,’ she answered, and she smiled at him again.
‘Then at sunset in some secret place we shall dance together,’ he
said, ‘and after that we have danced thou shalt tell me the thing
which I desire to know.’
She shook her head. ‘When the moon is full, when the moon is
full,’ she muttered. Then she peered all round, and listened. A blue
bird rose screaming from its nest and circled over the dunes, and
three spotted birds rustled through the coarse grey grass and
whistled to each other. There was no other sound save the sound of
a wave fretting the smooth pebbles below. So she reached out her
hand, and drew him near to her and put her dry lips close to his ear.
‘To-night thou must come to the top of the mountain,’ she
whispered. ‘It is a Sabbath, and He will be there.’
The young Fisherman started and looked at her, and she showed
her white teeth and laughed. ‘Who is He of whom thou speakest?’
he asked.
‘It matters not,’ she answered. ‘Go thou to-night, and stand under
the branches of the hornbeam, and wait for my coming. If a black
dog run towards thee, strike it with a rod of willow, and it will go
away. If an owl speak to thee, make it no answer. When the moon is
full I shall be with thee, and we will dance together on the grass.’
‘But wilt thou swear to me to tell me how I may send my soul
from me?’ he made question.
She moved out into the sunlight, and through her red hair rippled
the wind. ‘By the hoofs of the goat I swear it,’ she made answer.
‘Thou art the best of the witches,’ cried the young Fisherman, ‘and
I will surely dance with thee to-night on the top of the mountain. I
would indeed that thou hadst asked of me either gold or silver. But
such as thy price is thou shalt have it, for it is but a little thing.’ And
he doffed his cap to her, and bent his head low, and ran back to the
town filled with a great joy.
And the Witch watched him as he went, and when he had passed
from her sight she entered her cave, and having taken a mirror from
a box of carved cedarwood, she set it up on a frame and burned
vervain11 on lighted charcoal before it, and peered through the coils
of the smoke. And after a time she clenched her hands in anger. ‘He
should have been mine,’ she muttered, ‘I am as fair as she is.’

And that evening, when the moon had risen, the young Fisherman
climbed up to the top of the mountain, and stood under the
branches of the hornbeam. Like a targe12 of polished metal the
round sea lay at his feet, and the shadows of the fishing boats
moved in the little bay. A great owl, with yellow sulphurous eyes,
called to him by his name, but he made it no answer. A black dog
ran towards him and snarled. He struck it with a rod of willow, and
it went away whining.

At midnight the witches came flying through the air like bats.
‘Phew!’ they cried, as they lit upon the ground, ‘there is some one
here we know not!’ and they sniffed about, and chattered to each
other, and made signs. Last of all came the young Witch, with her
red hair streaming in the wind. She wore a dress of gold tissue
embroidered with peacocks’ eyes, and a little cap of green velvet
was on her head.
‘Where is he, where is he?’ shrieked the witches when they saw
her, but she only laughed, and ran to the hornbeam, and taking the
Fisherman by the hand she led him out into the moonlight and
began to dance.
Round and round they whirled, and the young Witch jumped so
high that he could see the scarlet heels of her shoes. Then right
across the dancers came the sound of the galloping of a horse, but
no horse was to be seen, and he felt afraid.
‘Faster,’ cried the Witch, and she threw her arms about his neck,
and her breath was hot upon his face. ‘Faster, faster!’ she cried, and
the earth seemed to spin beneath his feet, and his brain grew
troubled, and a great terror fell on him, as of some evil thing that
was watching him, and at last he became aware that under the
shadow of a rock there was a figure that had not been there before.
It was a man dressed in a suit of black velvet, cut in the Spanish
fashion. His face was strangely pale, but his lips were like a proud
red flower. He seemed weary, and was leaning back toying in a
listless manner with the pommel of his dagger. On the grass beside
him lay a plumed hat, and a pair of riding gloves gauntleted with
gilt lace, and sewn with seed-pearls wrought into a curious device.
A short cloak lined with sables hung from his shoulder, and his
delicate white hands were gemmed with rings. Heavy eyelids
drooped over his eyes. The young Fisherman watched him, as one
snared in a spell. At last their eyes met, and wherever he danced it
seemed to him that the eyes of the man were upon him. He heard
the Witch laugh, and caught her by the waist, and whirled her
madly round and round. Suddenly a dog bayed in the wood, and the
dancers stopped, and going up two by two, knelt down, and kissed
the man’s hands. As they did so, a little smile touched his proud lips,
as a bird’s wing touches the water and makes it laugh. But there was
disdain in it. He kept looking at the young Fisherman.
‘Come! let us worship,’ whispered the Witch, and she led him up,
and a great desire to do as she besought him seized on him, and he
followed her. But when he came close, and without knowing why he
did it, he made on his breast the sign of the Cross, and called upon
the holy name.
No sooner had he done so than the witches screamed like hawks
and flew away, and the pallid face that had been watching him
twitched with a spasm of pain. The man went over to a little wood,
and whistled. A jennet with silver trappings came running to meet
him. As he leapt upon the saddle he turned round, and looked at the
young Fisherman sadly.
And the Witch with the red hair tried to fly away also, but the
Fisherman caught her by her wrists, and held her fast.
‘Loose me,’ she cried, ‘and let me go. For thou hast named what
should not be named, and shown the sign that may not be looked
at.’
‘Nay,’ he answered, ‘but I will not let thee go till thou hast told
me the secret.’
‘What secret?’ said the Witch, wrestling with him like a wild cat,
and biting her foam-flecked lips.
‘Thou knowest,’ he made answer.
Her grass-green eyes grew dim with tears, and she said to the
Fisherman, ‘Ask me anything but that!’
He laughed, and held her all the more tightly.
And when she saw that she could not free herself, she whispered
to him, ‘Surely I am as fair as the daughters of the sea, and as
comely as those that dwell in the blue waters,’ and she fawned on
him and put her face close to his.
But he thrust her back frowning, and said to her, ‘If thou keepest
not the promise that thou madest to me I will slay thee for a false
witch.’
She grew grey as a blossom of the Judas tree,13 and shuddered.
‘Be it so,’ she muttered. ‘It is thy soul and not mine. Do with it as
thou wilt.’ And she took from her girdle a little knife that had a
handle of green viper’s skin, and gave it to him.
‘What shall this serve me?’ he asked of her, wondering.
She was silent for a few moments, and a look of terror came over
her face. Then she brushed her hair back from her forehead, and
smiling strangely she said to him, ‘What men call the shadow of the
body is not the shadow of the body, but is the body of the soul.
Stand on the sea-shore with thy back to the moon, and cut away
from around thy feet thy shadow, which is thy soul’s body, and bid
thy soul leave thee, and it will do so.’
The young Fisherman trembled. ‘Is this true?’ he murmured.
‘It is true, and I would that I had not told thee of it,’ she cried,
and she clung to his knees weeping.
He put her from him and left her in the rank grass, and going to
the edge of the mountain he placed the knife in his belt, and began
to climb down.
And his Soul that was within him called out to him and said, ‘Lo! I
have dwelt with thee for all these years, and have been thy servant.
Send me not away from thee now, for what evil have I done thee?’
And the young Fisherman laughed. ‘Thou hast done me no evil,
but I have no need of thee,’ he answered. ‘The world is wide, and
there is Heaven also, and Hell, and that dim twilight house that lies
between. Go wherever thou wilt, but trouble me not, for my love is
calling to me.’
And his Soul besought him piteously, but he heeded it not, but
leapt from crag to crag, being sure-footed as a wild goat, and at last
he reached the level ground and the yellow shore of the sea.
Bronze-limbed and well-knit, like a statue wrought by a Grecian,
he stood on the sand with his back to the moon, and out of the foam
came white arms that beckoned to him, and out of the waves rose
dim forms that did him homage. Before him lay his shadow, which
was the body of his soul, and behind him hung the moon in the
honey-coloured air.
And his Soul said to him, ‘If indeed thou must drive me from thee,
send me not forth without a heart. The world is cruel, give me thy
heart to take with me.’
He tossed his head and smiled. ‘With what should I love my love
if I gave thee my heart?’ he cried.
‘Nay, but be merciful,’ said his Soul: ‘give me thy heart, for the
world is very cruel, and I am afraid.’
‘My heart is my love’s,’ he answered, ‘therefore tarry not, but get
thee gone.’
‘Should I not love also?’ asked his Soul.
‘Get thee gone, for I have no need of thee,’ cried the young
Fisherman, and he took the little knife with its handle of green
viper’s skin, and cut away his shadow from around his feet, and it
rose up and stood before him, and looked at him, and it was even as
himself.
He crept back, and thrust the knife into his belt, and a feeling of
awe came over him. ‘Get thee gone,’ he murmured, ‘and let me see
thy face no more.’
‘Nay, but we must meet again,’ said the Soul. Its voice was low
and flute-like, and its lips hardly moved while it spake.
‘How shall we meet?’ cried the young Fisherman. ‘Thou wilt not
follow me into the depths of the sea?’
‘Once every year I will come to this place, and call to thee,’ said
the Soul. ‘It may be that thou wilt have need of me.’
‘What need should I have of thee?’ cried the young Fisherman,
‘but be it as thou wilt,’ and he plunged into the water, and the
Tritons blew their horns, and the little Mermaid rose up to meet
him, and put her arms around his neck and kissed him on the
mouth.
And the Soul stood on the lonely beach and watched them. And
when they had sunk down into the sea, it went weeping away over
the marshes.

And after a year was over the Soul came down to the shore of the
sea and called to the young Fisherman, and he rose out of the deep,
and said, ‘Why dost thou call to me?’

And the Soul answered, ‘Come nearer, that I may speak with thee,
for I have seen marvellous things.’
So he came nearer, and couched in the shallow water, and leaned
his head upon his hand and listened.

And the Soul said to him, ‘When I left thee I turned my face to the
East and journeyed. From the East cometh everything that is wise.
Six days I journeyed, and on the morning of the seventh day I came
to a hill that is in the country of the Tartars.14 I sat down under the
shade of a tamarisk tree to shelter myself from the sun. The land
was dry, and burnt up with the heat. The people went to and fro
over the plain like flies crawling upon a disk of polished copper.

‘When it was noon a cloud of red dust rose up from the flat rim of
the land. When the Tartars saw it, they strung their painted bows,
and having leapt upon their little horses they galloped to meet it.
The women fled screaming to the waggons, and hid themselves
behind the felt curtains.
‘At twilight the Tartars returned, but five of them were missing,
and of those that came back not a few had been wounded. They
harnessed their horses to the waggons and drove hastily away.
Three jackals came out of a cave and peered after them. Then they
sniffed up the air with their nostrils, and trotted off in the opposite
direction.
‘When the moon rose I saw a camp-fire burning on the plain, and
went towards it. A company of merchants were seated round it on
carpets. Their camels were picketed behind them, and the negroes
who were their servants were pitching tents of tanned skin upon the
sand, and making a high wall of the prickly pear.
‘As I came near them, the chief of the merchants rose up and drew
his sword, and asked me my business.
‘I answered that I was a Prince in my own land, and that I had
escaped from the Tartars, who had sought to make me their slave.
The chief smiled, and showed me five heads fixed upon long reeds
of bamboo.
‘Then he asked me who was the prophet of God, and I answered
him Mohammed.
‘When he heard the name of the false prophet, he bowed and took
me by the hand, and placed me by his side. A negro brought me
some mare’s milk in a wooden dish, and a piece of lamb’s flesh
roasted.
‘At daybreak we started on our journey. I rode on a red-haired
camel by the side of the chief, and a runner ran before us carrying a
spear. The men of war were on either hand, and the mules followed
with the merchandise. There were forty camels in the caravan, and
the mules were twice forty in number.
‘We went from the country of the Tartars into the country of those
who curse the Moon. We saw the Gryphons15 guarding their gold on
the white rocks, and the scaled Dragons sleeping in their caves. As
we passed over the mountains we held our breath lest the snows
might fall on us, and each man tied a veil of gauze before his eyes.
As we passed through the valleys the Pygmies shot arrows at us
from the hollows of the trees, and at night time we heard the wild
men beating on their drums. When we came to the Tower of Apes
we set fruits before them, and they did not harm us. When we came
to the Tower of Serpents we gave them warm milk in bowls of brass,
and they let us go by. Three times in our journey we came to the
banks of the Oxus. We crossed it on rafts of wood with great
bladders of blown hide. The river-horses raged against us and
sought to slay us. When the camels saw them they trembled.
‘The kings of each city levied tolls on us, but would not suffer us
to enter their gates. They threw us bread over the walls, little maize-
cakes baked in honey and cakes of fine flour filled with dates. For
every hundred baskets we gave them a bead of amber.
‘When the dwellers in the villages saw us coming, they poisoned
the wells and fled to the hill-summits. We fought with the Magadae
who are born old, and grow younger and younger every year, and
the when they are little children; and with the Laktroi who say that
they are the sons of tigers, and paint themselves yellow and black;
and with the Aurantes who bury their dead on the tops of trees, and
themselves live in dark caverns lest the Sun, who is their god,
should slay them; and with the Krimnians who worship a crocodile,
and give it earrings of green glass, and feed it with butter and fresh
fowls; and with the Agazonbae, who are dog-faced; and with the
Sibans, who have horses’ feet, and run more swiftly than horses. A
third of our company died in battle, and a third died of want. The
rest murmured against me, and said that I had brought them an evil
fortune. I took a horned adder from beneath a stone and let it sting
me. When they saw that I did not sicken they grew afraid.
‘In the fourth month we reached the city of Illel. It was night time
when we came to the grove that is outside the walls, and the air was
sultry, for the Moon was travelling in Scorpion. We took the ripe
pomegranates from the trees, and brake them and drank their sweet
juices. Then we lay down on our carpets and waited for the dawn.
‘And at dawn we rose and knocked at the gate of the city. It was
wrought out of red bronze, and carved with sea-dragons and
dragons that have wings. The guards looked down from the
battlements and asked us our business. The interpreter of the
caravan answered that we had come from the island of Syria with
much merchandise. They took hostages, and told us that they would
open the gate to us at noon, and bade us tarry till then.
‘When it was noon they opened the gate, and as we entered in the
people came crowding out of the houses to look at us, and a crier
went round the city crying through a shell. We stood in the market-
place, and the negroes uncorded the bales of figured cloths and
opened the carved chests of sycamore. And when they had ended
their task, the merchants set forth their strange wares, the waxed
linen from Egypt and the painted linen from the country of the
Ethiops, the purple sponges from Tyre and the blue hangings from
Sidon, the cups of cold amber and the fine vessels of glass and the
curious vessels of burnt clay. From the roof of a house a company of
women watched us. One of them wore a mask of gilded leather.
‘And on the first day the priests came and bartered with us, and
on the second day came the nobles, and on the third day came the
craftsmen and the slaves. And this is their custom with all
merchants as long as they tarry in the city.
‘And we tarried for a moon, and when the moon was waning, I
wearied and wandered away through the streets of the city and
came to the garden of its god. The priests in their yellow robes
moved silently through the green trees, and on a pavement of black
marble stood the rose-red house in which the god had his dwelling.
Its doors were of powdered lacquer, and bulls and peacocks were
wrought on them in raised and polished gold. The tiled roof was of
sea-green porcelain, and the jutting eaves were festooned with little
bells. When the white doves flew past, they struck the bells with
their wings and made them tinkle.
‘In front of the temple was a pool of clear water paved with
veined onyx. I lay down beside it, and with my pale fingers I
touched the broad leaves. One of the priests came towards me and
stood behind me. He had sandals on his feet, one of soft serpent-skin
and the other of birds’ plumage. On his head was a mitre of black
felt decorated with silver crescents. Seven yellows were woven into
his robe, and his frizzed hair was stained with antimony.
‘After a little while he spake to me, and asked me my desire.
‘I told him that my desire was to see the god.
‘“The god is hunting,” said the priest, looking strangely at me
with his small slanting eyes.
‘“Tell me in what forest, and I will ride with him,” I answered.
‘He combed out the soft fringes of his tunic with his long pointed
nails. “The god is asleep,” he murmured.
‘“Tell me on what couch, and I will watch by him,” I answered.
‘“The god is at the feast,” he cried.
‘“If the wine be sweet I will drink it with him, and if it be bitter I
will drink it with him also,” was my answer.
‘He bowed his head in wonder, and, taking me by the hand, he
raised me up, and led me into the temple.
‘And in the first chamber I saw an idol seated on a throne of
jasper bordered with great orient pearls. It was carved out of ebony,
and in stature was of the stature of a man. On its forehead was a
ruby, and thick oil dripped from its hair on to its thighs. Its feet
were red with the blood of a newly-slain kid, and its loins girt with
a copper belt that was studded with seven beryls.
‘And I said to the priest, “Is this the god?” And he answered me,
“This is the god.”
‘“Show me the god,” I cried, “or I will surely slay thee.” And I
touched his hand, and it became withered.
‘And the priest besought me, saying, “Let my lord heal his servant,
and I will show him the god.”
‘So I breathed with my breath upon his hand, and it became
whole again, and he trembled and led me into the second chamber,
and I saw an idol standing on a lotus of jade hung with great
emeralds. It was carved out of ivory, and in stature was twice the
stature of a man. On its forehead was a chrysolite, and its breasts
were smeared with myrrh and cinnamon. In one hand it held a
crooked sceptre of jade, and in the other a round crystal. It ware
buskins of brass, and its thick neck was circled with a circle of
selenites.16
‘And I said to the priest, “Is this the god?” And he answered me,
“This is the god.”
‘“Show me the god,” I cried, “or I will surely slay thee.” And I
touched his eyes, and they became blind.
‘And the priest besought me, saying, “Let my lord heal his servant,
and I will show him the god.”
‘So I breathed with my breath upon his eyes, and the sight came
back to them, and he trembled again, and led me into the third
chamber, and lo! there was no idol in it, nor image of any kind, but
only a mirror of round metal set on an altar of stone.
‘And I said to the priest, “Where is the god?”
‘And he answered me: “There is no god but this mirror that thou
seest, for this is the Mirror of Wisdom. And it reflecteth all things
that are in heaven and on earth, save only the face of him who
looketh into it. This it reflecteth not, so that he who looketh into it
may be wise. Many other mirrors are there, but they are mirrors of
Opinion. This only is the Mirror of Wisdom. And they who possess
this mirror know everything, nor is there anything hidden from
them. And they who possess it not have not Wisdom. Therefore is it
the god, and we worship it.” And I looked into the mirror, and it
was even as he had said to me.
‘And I did a strange thing, but what I did matters not, for in a
valley that is but a day’s journey from this place have I hidden the
Mirror of Wisdom. Do but suffer me to enter into thee again and be
thy servant, and thou shalt be wiser than all the wise men, and
Wisdom shall be thine. Suffer me to enter into thee, and none will
be as wise as thou.’
But the young Fisherman laughed. ‘Love is better than Wisdom,’
he cried, ‘and the little Mermaid loves me.’
‘Nay, but there is nothing better than Wisdom,’ said the Soul.
‘Love is better,’ answered the young Fisherman, and he plunged
into the deep, and the Soul went weeping away over the marshes.

And after the second year was over the Soul came down to the shore
of the sea, and called to the young Fisherman, and he rose out of the
deep and said, ‘Why dost thou call to me?’

And the Soul answered, ‘Come nearer that I may speak with thee,
for I have seen marvellous things.’
So he came nearer, and couched in the shallow water, and leaned
his head upon his hand and listened.
And the Soul said to him, ‘When I left thee, I turned my face to
the South and journeyed. From the South cometh everything that is
precious. Six days I journeyed along the highways that lead to the
city of Ashter, along the dusty red-dyed highways by which the
pilgrims are wont to go did I journey, and on the morning of the
seventh day I lifted up my eyes, and lo! the city lay at my feet, for it
is in a valley.
‘There are nine gates to this city, and in front of each gate stands
a bronze horse that neighs when the Bedouins come down from the
mountains. The walls are cased with copper, and the watch-towers
on the walls are roofed with brass. In every tower stands an archer
with a bow in his hand. At sunrise he strikes with an arrow on a
gong, and at sunset he blows through a horn of horn.
‘When I sought to enter, the guards stopped me and asked of me
who I was. I made answer that I was a Dervish and on my way to
the city of Mecca, where there was a green veil on which the Koran
was embroidered in silver letters by the hands of the angels. They
were filled with wonder, and entreated me to pass in.
‘Inside it is even as a bazaar. Surely thou shouldst have been with
me. Across the narrow streets the gay lanterns of paper flutter like
large butterflies. When the wind blows over the roofs they rise and
fall as painted bubbles do. In front of their booths sit the merchants
on silken carpets. They have straight black beards, and their turbans
are covered with golden sequins, and long strings of amber and
carved peach-stones glide through their cool fingers. Some of them
sell galbanum and nard,17 and curious perfumes from the islands of
the Indian Sea, and the thick oil of red roses, and myrrh and little
nail-shaped cloves. When one stops to speak to them, they throw
pinches of frankincense upon a charcoal brazier and make the air
sweet. I saw a Syrian who held in his hands a thin rod like a reed.
Grey threads of smoke came from it, and its odour as it burned was
as the odour of the pink almond in spring. Others sell silver
bracelets embossed all over with creamy blue turquoise stones, and
anklets of brass wire fringed with little pearls, and tigers’ claws set
in gold, and the claws of that gilt cat, the leopard, set in gold also,
and earrings of pierced emerald, and finger-rings of hollowed jade.
From the teahouses comes the sound of the guitar, and the opium-
smokers with their white smiling faces look out at the passers-by.
‘Of a truth thou shouldst have been with me. The wine-sellers
elbow their way through the crowd with great black skins on their
shoulders. Most of them sell the wine of Schiraz,18 which is as sweet
as honey. They serve it in little metal cups and strew rose leaves
upon it. In the market-place stand the fruitsellers, who sell all kinds
of fruit: ripe figs, with their bruised purple flesh, melons, smelling of
musk and yellow as topazes, citrons and rose-apples and clusters of
white grapes, round red-gold oranges, and oval lemons of green
gold. Once I saw an elephant go by. Its trunk was painted with
vermilion and turmeric, and over its ears it had a net of crimson silk
cord. It stopped opposite one of the booths and began eating the
oranges, and the man only laughed. Thou canst not think how
strange a people they are. When they are glad they go to the bird-
sellers and buy of them a caged bird, and set it free that their joy
may be greater, and when they are sad they scourge themselves
with thorns that their sorrow may not grow less.
‘One evening I met some negroes carrying a heavy palanquin19
through the bazaar. It was made of gilded bamboo, and the poles
were of vermilion lacquer studded with brass peacocks. Across the
windows hung thin curtains of muslin embroidered with beetles’
wings and with tiny seed-pearls, and as it passed by a pale-faced
Circassian20 looked out and smiled at me. I followed behind, and the
negroes hurried their steps and scowled. But I did not care. I felt a
great curiosity come over me.
‘At last they stopped at a square white house. There were no
windows to it, only a little door like the door of a tomb. They set
down the palanquin and knocked three times with a copper
hammer. An Armenian in a caftan of green leather peered through
the wicket, and when he saw them he opened, and spread a carpet
on the ground, and the woman stepped out. As she went in, she
turned round and smiled at me again. I had never seen any one so
pale.
‘When the moon rose I returned to the same place and sought for
the house, but it was no longer there. When I saw that, I knew who
the woman was, and wherefore she had smiled at me.
‘Certainly thou shouldst have been with me. On the feast of the
New Moon the young Emperor came forth from his palace and went
into the mosque to pray. His hair and beard were dyed with rose-
leaves, and his cheeks were powdered with a fine gold dust. The
palms of his feet and hands were yellow with saffron.
‘At sunrise he went forth from his palace in a robe of silver, and at
sunset he returned to it again in a robe of gold. The people flung
themselves on the ground and hid their faces, but I would not do so.
I stood by the stall of a seller of dates and waited. When the
Emperor saw me, he raised his painted eyebrows and stopped. I
stood quite still, and made him no obeisance. The people marvelled
at my boldness, and counselled me to flee from the city. I paid no
heed to them, but went and sat with the sellers of strange gods, who
by reason of their craft are abominated. When I told them what I
had done, each of them gave me a god and prayed me to leave
them.
‘That night, as I lay on a cushion in the tea-house that is in the
Street of Pomegranates, the guards of the Emperor entered and led
me to the palace. As I went in they closed each door behind me, and
put a chain across it. Inside was a great court with an arcade
running all round. The walls were of white alabaster, set here and
there with blue and green tiles. The pillars were of green marble,
and the pavement of a kind of peach-blossom marble. I had never
seen anything like it before.
‘As I passed across the court two veiled women looked down from
a balcony and cursed me. The guards hastened on, and the butts of
the lances rang upon the polished floor. They opened a gate of
wrought ivory, and I found myself in a watered garden of seven
terraces. It was planted with tulip-cups and moonflowers, and silver-
studded aloes.21 Like a slim reed of crystal a fountain hung in the
dusky air. The cypress-trees were like burnt-out torches. From one
of them a nightingale was singing.
‘At the end of the garden stood a little pavilion. As we approached
it two eunuchs came out to meet us. Their fat bodies swayed as they
walked, and they glanced curiously at me with their yellow-lidded
eyes. One of them drew aside the captain of the guard, and in a low
voice whispered to him. The other kept munching scented pastilles,
which he took with an affected gesture out of an oval box of lilac
enamel.
‘After a few moments the captain of the guard dismissed the
soldiers. They went back to the palace, the eunuchs following slowly
behind and plucking the sweet mulberries from the trees as they
passed. Once the elder of the two turned round, and smiled at me
with an evil smile.
‘Then the captain of the guard motioned me towards the entrance
of the pavilion. I walked on without trembling, and drawing the
heavy curtain aside I entered in.
‘The young Emperor was stretched on a couch of dyed lion skins,
and a ger-falcon22 perched upon his wrist. Behind him stood a brass-
turbaned Nubian, naked down to the waist, and with heavy earrings
in his split ears. On a table by the side of the couch lay a mighty
scimitar of steel.
‘When the Emperor saw me he frowned, and said to me, “What is
thy name? Knowest thou not that I am Emperor of this city?” But I
made him no answer.
‘He pointed with his finger at the scimitar, and the Nubian seized
it, and rushing forward struck at me with great violence. The blade
whizzed through me, and did me no hurt. The man fell sprawling on
the floor, and, when he rose up, his teeth chattered with terror and
he hid himself behind the couch.
‘The Emperor leapt to his feet, and taking a lance from a stand of
arms, he threw it at me. I caught it in its flight, and brake the shaft
into two pieces. He shot at me with an arrow, but I held up my
hands and it stopped in mid-air. Then he drew a dagger from a belt
of white leather, and stabbed the Nubian in the throat lest the slave
should tell of his dishonour. The man writhed like a trampled snake,
and a red foam bubbled from his lips.
‘As soon as he was dead the Emperor turned to me, and when he
had wiped away the bright sweat from his brow with a little napkin
of purfled and purple silk, he said to me, “Art thou a prophet, that I
may not harm thee, or the son of a prophet that I can do thee no
hurt? I pray thee leave my city to-night, for while thou art in it I am
no longer its lord.”
‘And I answered him, “I will go for half of thy treasure. Give me
half of thy treasure, and I will go away.”
‘He took me by the hand, and led me out into the garden. When
the captain of the guard saw me, he wondered. When the eunuchs
saw me, their knees shook and they fell upon the ground in fear.
‘There is a chamber in the palace that has eight walls of red
porphyry,23 and a brass-scaled ceiling hung with lamps. The
Emperor touched one of the walls and it opened, and we passed
down a corridor that was lit with many torches. In niches upon each
side stood great wine-jars filled to the brim with silver pieces. When
we reached the centre of the corridor the Emperor spake the word
that may not be spoken, and a granite door swung back on a secret
spring, and he put his hands before his face lest his eyes should be
dazzled.
‘Thou couldst not believe how marvellous a place it was. There
were huge tortoise-shells full of pearls, and hollowed moon-stones of
great size piled up with red rubies. The gold was stored in coffers of
elephant-hide, and the gold-dust in leather bottles. There were opals
and sapphires, the former in cups of crystal, and the latter in cups of
jade. Round green emeralds were ranged in order upon thin plates
of ivory, and in one corner were silk bags filled, some with
turquoise-stones, and others with beryls. The ivory horns were
heaped with purple amethysts, and the horns of brass with
chalcedonies and sards.24 The pillars, which were of cedar, were
hung with strings of yellow lynx-stones. In the flat oval shields there
were carbuncles, both wine-coloured and coloured like grass. And
yet I have told thee but a tithe of what was there.
‘And when the Emperor had taken away his hands from before his
face he said to me: “This is my house of treasure, and half that is in
it is thine, even as I promised to thee. And I will give thee camels
and camel drivers, and they shall do thy bidding and take thy share
of the treasure to whatever part of the world thou desirest to go.
And the thing shall be done to-night, for I would not that the Sun,
who is my father, should see that there is in my city a man whom I
cannot slay.”
‘But I answered him, “The gold that is here is thine, and the silver
also is thine, and thine are the precious jewels and the things of
price. As for me, I have no need of these. Nor shall I take aught from
thee but that little ring that thou wearest on the finger of thy hand.”
‘And the Emperor frowned. “It is but a ring of lead,” he cried,
“nor has it any value. Therefore take thy half of the treasure and go
from my city.”
‘“Nay,” I answered, “but I will take nought but that leaden ring,
for I know what is written within it, and for what purpose.”
‘And the Emperor trembled, and besought me and said, “Take all
the treasure and go from my city. The half that is mine shall be
thine also.”
‘And I did a strange thing, but what I did matters not, for in a
cave that is but a day’s journey from this place have I hidden the
Ring of Riches. It is but a day’s journey from this place, and it waits
for thy coming. He who has this Ring is richer than all the kings of
the world. Come therefore and take it, and the world’s riches shall
be thine.’
But the young Fisherman laughed. ‘Love is better than Riches,’ he
cried, ‘and the little Mermaid loves me.’
‘Nay, but there is nothing better than Riches,’ said the Soul.
‘Love is better,’ answered the young Fisherman, and he plunged
into the deep, and the Soul went weeping away over the marshes.

And after the third year was over, the Soul came down to the shore
of the sea, and called to the young Fisherman, and he rose out of the
deep and said, ‘Why dost thou call to me?’

And the Soul answered, ‘Come nearer, that I may speak with thee,
for I have seen marvellous things.’
So he came nearer, and couched in the shallow water, and leaned
his head upon his hand and listened.
And the Soul said to him, ‘In a city that I know of there is an inn
that standeth by a river. I sat there with sailors who drank of two
different coloured wines, and ate bread made of barley, and little
salt fish served in bay leaves with vinegar. And as we sat and made
merry, there entered to us an old man bearing a leathern carpet and
a lute that had two horns of amber. And when he had laid out the
carpet on the floor, he struck with a quill on the wire strings of his
lute, and a girl whose face was veiled ran in and began to dance
before us. Her face was veiled with a veil of gauze, but her feet were
naked. Naked were her feet, and they moved over the carpet like
little white pigeons. Never have I seen anything so marvellous, and
the city in which she dances is but a day’s journey from this place.’
Now when the young Fisherman heard the words of his Soul, he
remembered that the little Mermaid had no feet and could not
dance. And a great desire came over him, and he said to himself ‘It
is but a day’s journey, and I can return to my love,’ and he laughed,
and stood up in the shallow water, and strode towards the shore.
And when he had reached the dry shore he laughed again, and
held out his arms to his Soul. And his Soul gave a great cry of joy
and ran to meet him, and entered into him, and the young
Fisherman saw stretched before him upon the sand that shadow of
the body that is the body of the Soul.
And his Soul said to him, ‘Let us not tarry, but get hence at once,
for the Sea-gods are jealous, and have monsters that do their
bidding.’
So they made haste, and all that night they journeyed beneath the
moon, and all the next day they journeyed beneath the sun, and on
the evening of the day they came to a city.

And the young Fisherman said to his Soul, ‘Is this the city in
which she dances of whom thou didst speak to me?’
And his Soul answered him, ‘It is not this city, but another.
Nevertheless let us enter in.’
So they entered in and passed through the streets, and as they
passed through the Street of the Jewellers the young Fisherman saw
a fair silver cup set forth in a booth. And his Soul said to him, ‘Take
that silver cup and hide it.’
So he took the cup and hid it in the fold of his tunic, and they
went hurriedly out of the city.
And after that they had gone a league from the city, the young
Fisherman frowned, and flung the cup away, and said to his Soul,
‘Why didst thou tell me to take this cup and hide it, for it was an
evil thing to do?’
But his Soul answered him, ‘Be at peace, be at peace.’
And on the evening of the second day they came to a city, and the
young Fisherman said to his Soul, ‘Is this the city in which she
dances of whom thou didst speak to me?’
And his Soul answered him, ‘It is not this city, but another.
Nevertheless let us enter in.’
So they entered in and passed through the streets, and as they
passed through the Street of the Sellers of Sandals, the young
Fisherman saw a child standing by a jar of water. And his Soul said
to him, ‘Smite that child.’ So he smote the child till it wept, and
when he had done this they went hurriedly out of the city.
And after that they had gone a league from the city the young
Fisherman grew wrath, and said to his Soul, ‘Why didst thou tell me
to smite the child, for it was an evil thing to do?’
But his Soul answered him, ‘Be at peace, be at peace.’
And on the evening of the third day they came to a city, and the
young Fisherman said to his Soul, ‘Is this the city in which she
dances of whom thou didst speak to me?’
And his Soul answered him, ‘It may be that it is this city,
therefore let us enter in.’
So they entered in and passed through the streets, but nowhere
could the young Fisherman find the river or the inn that stood by its
side. And the people of the city looked curiously at him, and he
grew afraid and said to his Soul, ‘Let us go hence, for she who
dances with white feet is not here.’
But his Soul answered, ‘Nay, but let us tarry, for the night is dark
and there will be robbers on the way.’
So he sat him down in the market-place and rested, and after a
time there went by a hooded merchant who had a cloak of cloth of
Tartary, and bare a lantern of pierced horn at the end of a jointed
reed. And the merchant said to him, ‘Why dost thou sit in the
market-place, seeing that the booths are closed and the bales
corded?’
And the young Fisherman answered him, ‘I can find no inn in this
city, nor have I any kinsman who might give me shelter.’
‘Are we not all kinsmen?’ said the merchant. ‘And did not one
God make us? Therefore come with me, for I have a guest-chamber.’
So the young Fisherman rose up and followed the merchant to his
house. And when he had passed through a garden of pomegranates
and entered into the house, the merchant brought him rose-water in
a copper dish that he might wash his hands, and ripe melons that he
might quench his thirst, and set a bowl of rice and a piece of roasted
kid before him.
And after that he had finished, the merchant led him to the guest-
chamber, and bade him sleep and be at rest. And the young
Fisherman gave him thanks, and kissed the ring that was on his
hand, and flung himself down on the carpets of dyed goat’s-hair.
And when he had covered himself with a covering of black lamb’s-
wool he fell asleep.
And three hours before dawn, and while it was still night, his Soul
waked him, and said to him, ‘Rise up and go to the room of the
merchant, even to the room in which he sleepeth, and slay him, and
take from him his gold, for we have need of it.’
And the young Fisherman rose up and crept towards the room of
the merchant, and over the feet of the merchant there was lying a
curved sword, and the tray by the side of the merchant held nine
purses of gold. And he reached out his hand and touched the sword,
and when he touched it the merchant started and awoke, and
leaping up seized himself the sword and cried to the young
Fisherman, ‘Dost thou return evil for good, and pay with the
shedding of blood for the kindness that I have shown thee?’
And his Soul said to the young Fisherman, ‘Strike him,’ and he
struck him so that he swooned, and he seized then the nine purses
of gold, and fled hastily through the garden of pomegranates, and
set his face to the star that is the star of morning.
And when they had gone a league from the city, the young
Fisherman beat his breast, and said to his Soul, ‘Why didst thou bid
me slay the merchant and take his gold? Surely thou art evil.’
But his Soul answered him, ‘Be at peace, be at peace.’
‘Nay,’ cried the young Fisherman, ‘I may not be at peace, for all
that thou hast made me to do I hate. Thee also I hate, and I bid thee
tell me wherefore thou hast wrought with me in this wise.’
And his Soul answered him, ‘When thou didst send me forth into
the world thou gavest me no heart, so I learned to do all these
things and love them.’
‘What sayest thou?’ murmured the young Fisherman.
‘Thou knowest,’ answered his Soul, ‘thou knowest it well. Hast
thou forgotten that thou gavest me no heart? I trow not. And so
trouble not thyself nor me, but be at peace, for there is no pain that
thou shalt not give away, nor any pleasure that thou shalt not
receive.’
And when the young Fisherman heard these words he trembled
and said to his Soul, ‘Nay, but thou art evil, and hast made me
forget my love, and hast tempted me with temptations, and hast set
my feet in the ways of sin.’
And his Soul answered him, ‘Thou hast not forgotten that when
thou didst send me forth into the world thou gavest me no heart.
Come, let us go to another city, and make merry, for we have nine
purses of gold.’
But the young Fisherman took the nine purses of gold, and flung
them down, and trampled on them.
‘Nay,’ he cried, ‘but I will have nought to do with thee, nor will I
journey with thee anywhere, but even as I sent thee away before, so
will I send thee away now, for thou hast wrought me no good.’ And
he turned his back to the moon, and with the little knife that had
the handle of green viper’s skin he strove to cut from his feet that
shadow of the body which is the body of the Soul.
Yet his Soul stirred not from him, nor paid heed to his command,
but said to him, ‘The spell that the Witch told thee avails thee no
more, for I may not leave thee, nor mayest thou drive me forth.
Once in his life may a man send his Soul away, but he who
receiveth back his Soul must keep it with him for ever, and this is
his punishment and his reward.’
And the young Fisherman grew pale and clenched his hands and
cried, ‘She was a false Witch in that she told me not that.’
‘Nay,’ answered his Soul, ‘but she was true to Him she worships,
and whose servant she will be ever.’
And when the young Fisherman knew that he could no longer get
rid of his Soul, and that it was an evil Soul and would abide with
him always, he fell upon the ground weeping bitterly.

And when it was day the young Fisherman rose up and said to his
Soul, ‘I will bind my hands that I may not do thy bidding, and close
my lips that I may not speak thy words, and I will return to the
place where she whom I love has her dwelling. Even to the sea will I
return, and to the little bay where she is wont to sing, and I will call
to her and tell her the evil I have done and the evil thou hast
wrought on me.’

And his Soul tempted him and said, ‘Who is thy love that thou
shouldst return to her? The world has many fairer than she is. There
are the dancing-girls of Samaris who dance in the manner of all
kinds of birds and beasts. Their feet are painted with henna, and in
their hands they have little copper bells. They laugh while they
dance, and their laughter is as clear as the laughter of water. Come
with me and I will show them to thee. For what is this trouble of
thine about the things of sin? Is that which is pleasant to eat not
made for the eater? Is there poison in that which is sweet to drink?
Trouble not thyself, but come with me to another city. There is a
little city hard by in which there is a garden of tulip-trees. And there
dwell in this comely garden white peacocks and peacocks that have
blue breasts. Their tails when they spread them to the sun are like
disks of ivory and like gilt disks. And she who feeds them dances for
their pleasure, and sometimes she dances on her hands and at other
times she dances with her feet. Her eyes are coloured with
stibium,25 and her nostrils are shaped like the wings of a swallow.
From a hook in one of her nostrils hangs a flower that is carved out
of a pearl. She laughs while she dances, and the silver rings that are
about her ankles tinkle like bells of silver. And so trouble not thyself
any more, but come with me to this city.’
But the young Fisherman answered not his Soul, but closed his
lips with the seal of silence and with a tight cord bound his hands,
and journeyed back to the place from which he had come, even to
the little bay where his love had been wont to sing. And ever did his
Soul tempt him by the way, but he made it no answer, nor would he
do any of the wickedness that it sought to make him to do, so great
was the power of the love that was within him.
And when he had reached the shore of the sea, he loosed the cord
from his hands, and took the seal of silence from his lips, and called
to the little Mermaid. But she came not to his call, though he called
to her all day long and besought her.
And his Soul mocked him and said, ‘Surely thou hast but little joy
out of thy love. Thou art as one who in time of dearth pours water
into a broken vessel. Thou givest away what thou hast, and nought
is given to thee in return. It were better for thee to come with me,
for I know where the Valley of Pleasure lies, and what things are
wrought there.’
But the young Fisherman answered not his Soul, but in a cleft of
the rock he built himself a house of wattles, and abode there for the
space of a year. And every morning he called to the Mermaid, and
every noon he called to her again, and at night- time he spake her
name. Yet never did she rise out of the sea to meet him, nor in any
place of the sea could he find her, though he sought for her in the
caves and in the green water, in the pools of the tide and in the
wells that are at the bottom of the deep.
And ever did his Soul tempt him with evil, and whisper of terrible
things. Yet did it not prevail against him, so great was the power of
his love.
And after the year was over, the Soul thought within himself, ‘I
have tempted my master with evil, and his love is stronger than I
am. I will tempt him now with good, and it may be that he will
come with me.’
So he spake to the young Fisherman and said, ‘I have told thee of
the joy of the world, and thou hast turned a deaf ear to me. Suffer
me now to tell thee of the world’s pain, and it may be that thou wilt
hearken. For of a truth, pain is the Lord of this world, nor is there
anyone who escapes from its net. There be some who lack raiment,
and others who lack bread. There be widows who sit in purple, and
widows who sit in rags. To and fro over the fens go the lepers, and
they are cruel to each other. The beggars go up and down on the
highways, and their wallets are empty. Through the streets of the
cities walks Famine, and the Plague sits at their gates. Come, let us
go forth and mend these things, and make them not to be.
Wherefore shouldst thou tarry here calling to thy love, seeing she
comes not to thy call? And what is love, that thou shouldst set this
high store upon it?’
But the young Fisherman answered it nought, so great was the
power of his love. And every morning he called to the Mermaid, and
every noon he called to her again, and at night-time he spake her
name. Yet never did she rise out of the sea to meet him, nor in any
place of the sea could he find her, though he sought for her in the
rivers of the sea, and in the valleys that are under the waves, in the
sea that the night makes purple, and in the sea that the dawn leaves
grey.
And after the second year was over, the Soul said to the young
Fisherman at night-time, and as he sat in the wattled house alone,
‘Lo! now I have tempted thee with evil, and I have tempted thee
with good, and thy love is stronger than I am. Wherefore will I
tempt thee no longer, but I pray thee to suffer me to enter thy heart,
that I may be one with thee even as before.’
‘Surely thou mayest enter,’ said the young Fisherman, ‘for in the
days when with no heart thou didst go through the world thou must
have much suffered.’
‘Alas!’ cried his Soul, ‘I can find no place of entrance, so
compassed about with love is this heart of thine.’
‘Yet I would that I could help thee,’ said the young Fisherman.
And as he spake there came a great cry of mourning from the sea,
even the cry that men hear when one of the Sea-folk is dead. And
the young Fisherman leapt up, and left his wattled house, and ran
down to the shore. And the black waves came hurrying to the shore,
bearing with them a burden that was whiter than silver. White as
the surf it was, and like a flower it tossed on the waves. And the surf
took it from the waves, and the foam took it from the surf, and the
shore received it, and lying at his feet the young Fisherman saw the
body of the little Mermaid. Dead at his feet it was lying.
Weeping as one smitten with pain he flung himself down beside
it, and he kissed the cold red of the mouth, and toyed with the wet
amber of the hair. He flung himself down beside it on the sand,
weeping as one trembling with joy, and in his brown arms he held it
to his breast. Cold were the lips, yet he kissed them. Salt was the
honey of the hair, yet he tasted it with a bitter joy. He kissed the
closed eyelids, and the wild spray that lay upon their cups was less
salt than his tears.
And to the dead thing he made confession. Into the shells of its
ears he poured the harsh wine of his tale. He put the little hands
round his neck, and with his fingers he touched the thin reed of the
throat. Bitter, bitter was his joy, and full of strange gladness was his
pain.
The black sea came nearer, and the white foam moaned like a
leper. With white claws of foam the sea grabbled at the shore. From
the palace of the Sea-King came the cry of mourning again, and far
out upon the sea the great Tritons blew hoarsely upon their horns.
‘Flee away,’ said his Soul, ‘for ever doth the sea come nigher, and
if thou tarriest it will slay thee. Flee away, for I am afraid, seeing
that thy heart is closed against me by reason of the greatness of thy
love. Flee away to a place of safety. Surely thou wilt not send me
without a heart into another world?’
But the young Fisherman listened not to his Soul, but called on
the little Mermaid and said, ‘Love is better than wisdom, and more
precious than riches, and fairer than the feet of the daughters of
men. The fires cannot destroy it, nor can the waters quench it. I
called on thee at dawn, and thou didst not come to my call. The
moon heard thy name, yet hadst thou no heed of me. For evilly had
I left thee, and to my own hurt had I wandered away. Yet ever did
thy love abide with me, and ever was it strong, nor did aught
prevail against it, though I have looked upon evil and looked upon
good. And now that thou art dead, surely I will the with thee also.’
And his Soul besought him to depart, but he would not, so great
was his love. And the sea came nearer, and sought to cover him
with its waves, and when he knew that the end was at hand he
kissed with mad lips the cold lips of the Mermaid, and the heart that
was within him brake. And as through the fulness of his love his
heart did break, the Soul found an entrance and entered in, and was
one with him even as before. And the sea covered the young
Fisherman with its waves.
And in the morning the Priest went forth to bless the sea, for it had
been troubled. And with him went the monks and the musicians,
and the candle-bearers, and the swingers of censers, and a great
company.

And when the Priest reached the shore he saw the young
Fisherman lying drowned in the surf, and clasped in his arms was
the body of the little Mermaid. And he drew back frowning, and
having made the sign of the cross, he cried aloud and said, ‘I will
not bless the sea nor anything that is in it. Accursed be the Sea-folk,
and accursed be all they who traffic with them. And as for him who
for love’s sake forsook God, and so lieth here with his leman slain
by God’s judgment, take up his body and the body of his leman, and
bury them in the corner of the Field of the Fullers,26 and set no
mark above them, nor sign of any kind, that none may know the
place of their resting. For accursed were they in their lives, and
accursed shall they be in their deaths also.’
And the people did as he commanded them, and in the corner of
the Field of the Fullers, where no sweet herbs grew, they dug a deep
pit, and laid the dead things within it.
And when the third year was over, and on a day that was a holy
day, the Priest went up to the chapel, that he might show to the
people the wounds of the Lord, and speak to them about the wrath
of God.
And when he had robed himself with his robes, and entered in
and bowed himself before the altar, he saw that the altar was
covered with strange flowers that never had he seen before. Strange
were they to look at, and of curious beauty, and their beauty
troubled him, and their odour was sweet in his nostrils. And he felt
glad, and understood not why he was glad.
And after that he had opened the tabernacle, and incensed the
monstrance27 that was in it, and shown the fair wafer to the people,
and hid it again behind the veil of veils, he began to speak to the
people, desiring to speak to them of the wrath of God. But the
beauty of the white flowers troubled him, and their odour was sweet
in his nostrils, and there came another word into his lips, and he
spake not of the wrath of God, but of the God whose name is Love.
And why he so spake, he knew not.
And when he had finished his word the people wept, and the
Priest went back to the sacristy, and his eyes were full of tears. And
the deacons came in and began to unrobe him, and took from him
the alb and the girdle, the maniple and the stole.28 And he stood as
one in a dream.
And after that they had unrobed him, he looked at them and said,
‘What are the flowers that stand on the altar, and whence do they
come?’
And they answered him, ‘What flowers they are we cannot tell,
but they come from the corner of the Fullers’ Field.’ And the Priest
trembled, and returned to his own house and prayed.
And in the morning, while it was still dawn, he went forth with
the monks and the musicians, and the candle-bearers and the
swingers of censers, and a great company, and came to the shore of
the sea, and blessed the sea, and all the wild things that are in it.
The Fauns also he blessed, and the little things that dance in the
woodland, and the bright-eyed things that peer through the leaves.
All the things in God’s world he blessed, and the people were filled
with joy and wonder. Yet never again in the corner of the Fullers’
Field grew flowers of any kind, but the field remained barren even
as before. Nor came the Sea-folk into the bay as they had been wont
to do, for they went to another part of the sea.
The Star-Child

To Miss Margot Tennant1

Once upon a time two poor Woodcutters were making their way
home through a great pine-forest. It was winter, and a night of bitter
cold. The snow lay thick upon the ground, and upon the branches of
the trees: the frost kept snapping the little twigs on either side of
them, as they passed: and when they came to the Mountain-Torrent
she was hanging motionless in air, for the Ice-King had kissed her.

So cold was it that even the animals and the birds did not know
what to make of it.
‘Ugh!’ snarled the Wolf, as he limped through the brushwood with
his tail between his legs, ‘this is perfectly monstrous weather. Why
doesn’t the Government look to it?’
‘Weet! weet! weet!’ twittered the green Linnets, ‘the old Earth is
dead, and they have laid her out in her white shroud.’
‘The Earth is going to be married, and this is her bridal dress,’
whispered the Turtle-doves to each other. Their little pink feet were
quite frost-bitten, but they felt that it was their duty to take a
romantic view of the situation.
‘Nonsense!’ growled the Wolf. ‘I tell you that it is all the fault of
the Government, and if you don’t believe me I shall eat you.’ The
Wolf had a thoroughly practical mind, and was never at a loss for a
good argument.
‘Well, for my own part,’ said the Woodpecker, who was a born
philosopher, ‘I don’t care an atomic theory for explanations. If a
thing is so, it is so, and at present it is terribly cold.’
Terribly cold it certainly was. The little Squirrels, who lived inside
the tall fir-tree, kept rubbing each other’s noses to keep themselves
warm, and the Rabbits curled themselves up in their holes, and did
not venture even to look out of doors. The only people who seemed
to enjoy it were the great horned Owls. Their feathers were quite
stiff with rime, but they did not mind, and they rolled their large
yellow eyes, and called out to each other across the forest, ‘Tu-whit!
Tu-whoo! Tu-whit! Tu-whoo! what delightful weather we are
having!’
On and on went the two Woodcutters, blowing lustily upon their
fingers, and stamping with their huge iron-shod boots upon the
caked snow. Once they sank into a deep drift, and came out as white
as millers are, when the stones are grinding; and once they slipped
on the hard smooth ice where the marsh-water was frozen, and their
faggots fell out of their bundles, and they had to pick them up and
bind them together again; and once they thought that they had lost
their way, and a great terror seized on them, for they knew that the
Snow is cruel to those who sleep in her arms. But they put their
trust in the good Saint Martin, who watches over all travellers, and
retraced their steps, and went warily, and at last they reached the
outskirts of the forest, and saw, far down in the valley beneath
them, the lights of the village in which they dwelt.
So overjoyed were they at their deliverance that they laughed
aloud, and the Earth seemed to them like a flower of silver, and the
Moon like a flower of gold.
Yet, after that they had laughed they became sad, for they
remembered their poverty, and one of them said to the other, ‘Why
did we make merry, seeing that life is for the rich, and not for such
as we are? Better that we had died of cold in the forest, or that some
wild beast had fallen upon us and slain us.’
‘Truly,’ answered his companion, ‘much is given to some, and
little is given to others. Injustice has parcelled out the world, nor is
there equal division of aught save of sorrow.’
But as they were bewailing their misery to each other this strange
thing happened. There fell from heaven a very bright and beautiful
star. It slipped down the side of the sky, passing by the other stars in
its course, and, as they watched it wondering, it seemed to them to
sink behind a clump of willow-trees that stood hard by a little
sheepfold no more than a stone’s throw away.
‘Why! there is a crock of gold for whoever finds it,’ they cried,
and they set to and ran, so eager were they for the gold.
And one of them ran faster than his mate, and outstripped him,
and forced his way through the willows, and came out on the other
side, and lo! there was indeed a thing of gold lying on the white
snow. So he hastened towards it, and stooping down placed his
hands upon it, and it was a cloak of golden tissue, curiously
wrought with stars, and wrapped in many folds. And he cried out to
his comrade that he had found the treasure that had fallen from the
sky, and when his comrade had come up, they sat them down in the
snow, and loosened the folds of the cloak that they might divide the
pieces of gold. But, alas! no gold was in it, nor silver, nor, indeed,
treasure of any kind, but only a little child who was asleep.
And one of them said to the other: ‘This is a bitter ending to our
hope, nor have we any good fortune, for what doth a child profit to
a man? Let us leave it here, and go our way, seeing that we are poor
men, and have children of our own whose bread we may not give to
another.’
But his companion answered him: ‘Nay, but it were an evil thing
to leave the child to perish here in the snow, and though I am as
poor as thou art, and have many mouths to feed, and but little in
the pot, yet will I bring it home with me, and my wife shall have
care of it.’
So very tenderly he took up the child, and wrapped the cloak
around it to shield it from the harsh cold, and made his way down
the hill to the village, his comrade marvelling much at his
foolishness and softness of heart.
And when they came to the village, his comrade said to him,
‘Thou hast the child, therefore give me the cloak, for it is meet that
we should share.’
But he answered him: ‘Nay, for the cloak is neither mine nor
thine, but the child’s only,’ and he bade him Godspeed, and went to
his own house and knocked.
And when his wife opened the door and saw that her husband had
returned safe to her, she put her arms round his neck and kissed
him, and took from his back the bundle of faggots, and brushed the
snow off his boots, and bade him come in.
But he said to her, ‘I have found something in the forest, and I
have brought it to thee to have care of it,’ and he stirred not from
the threshold.
‘What is it?’ she cried. ‘Show it to me, for the house is bare, and
we have need of many things.’ And he drew the cloak back, and
showed her the sleeping child.
‘Alack, goodman!’ she murmured, ‘have we not children of our
own, that thou must needs bring a changeling to sit by the hearth?
And who knows if it will not bring us bad fortune? And how shall
we tend it?’ And she was wroth against him.
‘Nay, but it is a Star-Child,’ he answered; and he told her the
strange manner of the finding of it.
But she would not be appeased, but mocked at him, and spoke
angrily, and cried: ‘Our children lack bread, and shall we feed the
child of another? Who is there who careth for us? And who giveth
us food?’
‘Nay, but God careth for the sparrows even, and feedeth them,’ he
answered.
‘Do not the sparrows die of hunger in the winter?’ she asked. ‘And
is it not winter now?’ And the man answered nothing, but stirred
not from the threshold.
And a bitter wind from the forest came in through the open door,
and made her tremble, and she shivered, and said to him: ‘Wilt thou
not close the door? There cometh a bitter wind into the house, and I
am cold.’
‘Into a house where a heart is hard cometh there not always a
bitter wind?’ he asked. And the woman answered him nothing, but
crept closer to the fire.
And after a time she turned round and looked at him, and her
eyes were full of tears. And he came in swiftly, and placed the child
in her arms, and she kissed it, and laid it in a little bed where the
youngest of their own children was lying. And on the morrow the
Woodcutter took the curious cloak of gold and placed it in a great
chest, and a chain of amber that was round the child’s neck his wife
took and set it in the chest also.

So the Star-Child was brought up with the children of the


Woodcutter, and sat at the same board with them, and was their
playmate. And every year he became more beautiful to look at, so
that all those who dwelt in the village were filled with wonder, for,
while they were swarthy and black-haired, he was white and
delicate as sawn ivory, and his curls were like the rings of the
daffodil. His lips, also, were like the petals of a red flower, and his
eyes were like violets by a river of pure water, and his body like the
narcissus of a field where the mower comes not.

Yet did his beauty work him evil. For he grew proud, and cruel,
and selfish. The children of the Woodcutter, and the other children
of the village, he despised, saying that they were of mean parentage,
while he was noble, being sprung from a Star, and he made himself
master over them, and called them his servants. No pity had he for
the poor, or for those who were blind or maimed or in any way
afflicted, but would cast stones at them and drive them forth on to
the highway, and bid them beg their bread elsewhere, so that none
save the outlaws came twice to that village to ask for alms. Indeed,
he was as one enamoured of beauty, and would mock at the weakly
and ill-favoured, and make jest of them; and himself he loved, and
in summer, when the winds were still, he would lie by the well in
the priest’s orchard and look down at the marvel of his own face,
and laugh for the pleasure he had in his fairness.
Often did the Woodcutter and his wife chide him, and say: ‘We
did not deal with thee as thou dealest with those who are left
desolate, and have none to succour them. Wherefore art thou so
cruel to all who need pity?’
Often did the old priest send for him, and seek to teach him the
love of living things, saying to him: ‘The fly is thy brother. Do it no
harm. The wild birds that roam through the forest have their
freedom. Snare them not for thy pleasure. God made the blind-worm
and the mole, and each has its place. Who art thou to bring pain
into God’s world? Even the cattle of the field praise Him.’
But the Star-Child heeded not their words, but would frown and
flout, and go back to his companions, and lead them. And his
companions followed him, for he was fair, and fleet of foot, and
could dance, and pipe, and make music. And wherever the Star-
Child led them they followed, and whatever the Star-Child bade
them do, that did they. And when he pierced with a sharp reed the
dim eyes of the mole, they laughed, and when he cast stones at the
leper they laughed also. And in all things he ruled them, and they
became hard of heart, even as he was.

Now there passed one day through the village a poor beggar-
woman. Her garments were torn and ragged, and her feet were
bleeding from the rough road on which she had travelled, and she
was in very evil plight. And being weary she sat her down under a
chestnut-tree to rest.

But when the Star-Child saw her, he said to his companions, ‘See!
There sitteth a foul beggar-woman under that fair and green-leaved
tree. Come, let us drive her hence, for she is ugly and ill-favoured.’
So he came near and threw stones at her, and mocked her, and
she looked at him with terror in her eyes, nor did she move her gaze
from him. And when the Woodcutter, who was cleaving logs in a
haggard2 hard by, saw what the Star-Child was doing, he ran up and
rebuked him, and said to him: ‘Surely thou art hard of heart and
knowest not mercy, for what evil has this poor woman done to thee
that thou shouldst treat her in this wise?’
And the Star-Child grew red with anger, and stamped his foot
upon the ground, and said, ‘Who art thou to question me what I do?
I am no son of thine to do thy bidding.’
‘Thou speakest truly,’ answered the Woodcutter, ‘yet did I show
thee pity when I found thee in the forest.’
And when the woman heard these words she gave a loud cry, and
fell into a swoon. And the Woodcutter carried her to his own house,
and his wife had care of her, and when she rose up from the swoon
into which she had fallen, they set meat and drink before her, and
bade her have comfort.
But she would neither eat nor drink, but said to the Woodcutter,
‘Didst thou not say that the child was found in the forest? And was
it not ten years from this day?’
And the Woodcutter answered, ‘Yea, it was in the forest that I
found him, and it is ten years from this day.’
‘And what signs didst thou find with him?’ she cried. ‘Bare he not
upon his neck a chain of amber? Was not round him a cloak of gold
tissue broidered with stars?’
‘Truly,’ answered the Woodcutter, ‘it was even as thou sayest.’
And he took the cloak and the amber chain from the chest where
they lay, and showed them to her.
And when she saw them she wept for joy, and said, ‘He is my
little son whom I lost in the forest. I pray thee send for him quickly,
for in search of him have I wandered over the whole world.’
So the Woodcutter and his wife went out and called to the Star-
Child, and said to him, ‘Go into the house, and there shalt thou find
thy mother, who is waiting for thee.’
So he ran in, filled with wonder and great gladness. But when he
saw her who was waiting there, he laughed scornfully and said,
‘Why, where is my mother? For I see none here but this vile beggar-
woman.’
And the woman answered him, ‘I am thy mother.’
‘Thou art mad to say so,’ cried the Star-Child angrily. ‘I am no son
of thine, for thou art a beggar, and ugly, and in rags. Therefore get
thee hence, and let me see thy foul face no more.’
‘Nay, but thou art indeed my little son, whom I bare in the forest,’
she cried, and she fell on her knees, and held out her arms to him.
‘The robbers stole thee from me, and left thee to die,’ she
murmured, ‘but I recognised thee when I saw thee, and the signs
also have I recognised, the cloak of golden tissue and the
amberchain. Therefore I pray thee come with me, for over the whole
world have I wandered in search of thee. Come with me, my son, for
I have need of thy love.’
But the Star-Child stirred not from his place, but shut the doors of
his heart against her, nor was there any sound heard save the sound
of the woman weeping for pain.
And at last he spoke to her, and his voice was hard and bitter. ‘If
in very truth thou art my mother,’ he said, ‘it had been better hadst
thou stayed away, and not come here to bring me to shame, seeing
that I thought I was the child of some Star, and not a beggar’s child,
as thou tellest me that I am. Therefore get thee hence, and let me
see thee no more.’
‘Alas! my son,’ she cried, ‘wilt thou not kiss me before I go? For I
have suffered much to find thee.
‘Nay,’ said the Star-Child, ‘but thou art too foul to look at, and
rather would I kiss the adder or the toad than thee.’
So the woman rose up, and went away into the forest weeping
bitterly, and when the Star-Child saw that she had gone, he was
glad, and ran back to his playmates that he might play with them.
But when they beheld him coming, they mocked him and said,
‘Why, thou art as foul as the toad, and as loathsome as the adder.
Get thee hence, for we will not suffer thee to play with us,’ and they
drave him out of the garden.
And the Star-Child frowned and said to himself, ‘What is this that
they say to me? I will go to the well of water and look into it, and it
shall tell me of my beauty.’
So he went to the well of water and looked into it, and lo! his face
was as the face of a toad, and his body was scaled like an adder.
And he flung himself down on the grass and wept, and said to
himself, ‘Surely this has come upon me by reason of my sin. For I
have denied my mother, and driven her away, and been proud, and
cruel to her. Wherefore I will go and seek her through the whole
world, nor will I rest till I have found her.’
And there came to him the little daughter of the Woodcutter, and
she put her hand upon his shoulder and said, ‘What doth it matter if
thou hast lost thy comeliness? Stay with us, and I will not mock at
thee.’
And he said to her, ‘Nay, but I have been cruel to my mother, and
as a punishment has this evil been sent to me. Wherefore I must go
hence, and wander through the world till I find her, and she give me
her forgiveness.’
So he ran away into the forest and called out to his mother to
come to him, but there was no answer. All day long he called to her,
and when the sun set he lay down to sleep on a bed of leaves, and
the birds and the animals fled from him, for they remembered his
cruelty, and he was alone save for the toad that watched him, and
the slow adder that crawled past.
And in the morning he rose up, and plucked some bitter berries
from the trees and ate them, and took his way through the great
wood, weeping sorely. And of everything that he met he made
inquiry if perchance they had seen his mother.
He said to the Mole, ‘Thou canst go beneath the earth. Tell me, is
my mother there?’
And the Mole answered, ‘Thou hast blinded mine eyes. How
should I know?’
He said to the Linnet, ‘Thou canst fly over the tops of the tall
trees, and canst see the whole world. Tell me, canst thou see my
mother?’
And the Linnet answered, ‘Thou hast clipt my wings for thy
pleasure. How should I fly?’
And to the little Squirrel who lived in the fir-tree, and was lonely,
he said, ‘Where is my mother?’
And the Squirrel answered, ‘Thou hast slain mine. Dost thou seek
to slay thine also?’
And the Star-Child wept and bowed his head, and prayed
forgiveness of God’s things, and went on through the forest, seeking
for the beggar-woman. And on the third day he came to the other
side of the forest and went down into the plain.
And when he passed through the villages the children mocked
him, and threw stones at him, and the carlots3 would not suffer him
even to sleep in the byres lest he might bring mildew on the stored
corn, so foul was he to look at, and their hired men drave him away,
and there was none who had pity on him. Nor could he hear
anywhere of the beggar-woman who was his mother, though for the
space of three years he wandered over the world, and often seemed
to see her on the road in front of him, and would call to her, and
run after her till the sharp flints made his feet to bleed. But overtake
her he could not, and those who dwelt by the way did ever deny
that they had seen her, or any like to her, and they made sport of
his sorrow.
For the space of three years he wandered over the world, and in
the world there was neither love nor loving-kindness nor charity for
him, but it was even such a world as he had made for himself in the
days of his great pride.

And one evening he came to the gate of a strong-walled city that


stood by a river, and, weary and footsore though he was, he made
to enter in. But the soldiers who stood on guard dropped their
halberts across the entrance, and said roughly to him, ‘What is thy
business in the city?’

‘I am seeking for my mother,’ he answered, ‘and I pray ye to


suffer me to pass, for it may be that she is in this city.’
But they mocked at him, and one of them wagged a black beard,
and set down his shield and cried, ‘Of a truth, thy mother will not
be merry when she sees thee, for thou art more ill-favoured than the
toad of the marsh, or the adder that crawls in the fen. Get thee
gone. Get thee gone. Thy mother dwells not in this city.’
And another, who held a yellow banner in his hand, said to him,
‘Who is thy mother, and wherefore art thou seeking for her?’
And he answered, ‘My mother is a beggar even as I am, and I have
treated her evilly, and I pray ye to suffer me to pass that she may
give me her forgiveness, if it be that she tarrieth in this city.’ But
they would not, and pricked him with their spears.
And, as he turned away weeping, one whose armour was inlaid
with gilt flowers, and on whose helmet couched a lion that had
wings, came up and made inquiry of the soldiers who it was who
had sought entrance. And they said to him, ‘It is a beggar and the
child of a beggar, and we have driven him away.’
‘Nay,’ he cried, laughing, ‘but we will sell the foul thing for a
slave, and his price shall be the price of a bowl of sweet wine.’
And an old and evil-visaged man who was passing by called out,
and said, ‘I will buy him for that price,’ and, when he had paid the
price, he took the Star-Child by the hand and led him into the city.
And after that they had gone through many streets they came to a
little door that was set in a wall that was covered with a
pomegranate tree. And the old man touched the door with a ring of
graved jasper and it opened, and they went down five steps of brass
into a garden filled with black poppies and green jars of burnt clay.
And the old man took then from his turban a scarf of figured silk,
and bound with it the eyes of the Star-Child, and drave him in front
of him. And when the scarf was taken off his eyes, the Star-Child
found himself in a dungeon, that was lit by a lantern of horn.
And the old man set before him some mouldy bread on a trencher
and said, ‘Eat,’ and some brackish water in a cup and said, ‘Drink,’
and when he had eaten and drunk, the old man went out, locking
the door behind him and fastening it with an iron chain.

And on the morrow the old man, who was indeed the subtlest of the
magicians of Libya and had learned his art from one who dwelt in
the tombs of the Nile, came in to him and frowned at him, and said,
‘In a wood that is nigh to the gate of this city of Giaours4 there are
three pieces of gold. One is of white gold, and another is of yellow
gold, and the gold of the third one is red. To-day thou shalt bring
me the piece of white gold, and if thou bringest it not back, I will
beat thee with a hundred stripes. Get thee away quickly, and at
sunset I will be waiting for thee at the door of the garden. See that
thou bringest the white gold, or it shall go ill with thee, for thou art
my slave, and I have bought thee for the price of a bowl of sweet
wine.’ And he bound the eyes of the Star-Child with the scarf of
figured silk, and led him through the house, and through the garden
of poppies, and up the five steps of brass. And having opened the
little door with his ring he set him in the street.

And the Star-Child went out of the gate of the city, and came to
the wood of which the Magician had spoken to him.
Now this wood was very fair to look at from without, and seemed
full of singing birds and of sweet-scented flowers, and the Star-Child
entered it gladly. Yet did its beauty profit him little, for wherever he
went harsh briars and thorns shot up from the ground and
encompassed him, and evil nettles stung him, and the thistle pierced
him with her daggers, so that he was in sore distress. Nor could he
anywhere find the piece of white gold of which the Magician had
spoken, though he sought for it from morn to noon, and from noon
to sunset. And at sunset he set his face towards home, weeping
bitterly, for he knew what fate was in store for him.
But when he had reached the outskirts of the wood, he heard
from a thicket a cry as of someone in pain. And forgetting his own
sorrow he ran back to the place, and saw there a little Hare caught
in a trap that some hunter had set for it.
And the Star-Child had pity on it, and released it, and said to it, ‘I
am myself but a slave, yet may I give thee thy freedom.’
And the Hare answered him, and said: ‘Surely thou hast given me
freedom, and what shall I give thee in return?’
And the Star-Child said to it, ‘I am seeking for a piece of white
gold, nor can I anywhere find it, and if I bring it not to my master
he will beat me.’
‘Come thou with me,’ said the Hare, ‘and I will lead thee to it, for
I know where it is hidden, and for what purpose.’
So the Star-Child went with the Hare, and lo! in the cleft of a
great oak-tree he saw the piece of white gold that he was seeking.
And he was filled with joy, and seized it, and said to the Hare, ‘The
service that I did to thee thou hast rendered back again many times
over, and the kindness that I showed thee thou hast repaid a
hundred fold.’
‘Nay,’ answered the Hare, ‘but as thou dealt with me, so I did deal
with thee,’ and it ran away swiftly, and the Star-Child went towards
the city.
Now at the gate of the city there was seated one who was a leper.
Over his face hung a cowl of grey linen, and through the eyelets his
eyes gleamed like red coals. And when he saw the Star-Child
coming, he struck upon a wooden bowl, and clattered his bell, and
called out to him, and said, ‘Give me a piece of money, or I must the
of hunger. For they have thrust me out of the city, and there is no
one who has pity on me.’
‘Alas!’ cried the Star-Child, ‘I have but one piece of money in my
wallet, and if I bring it not to my master he will beat me, for I am
his slave.’
But the leper entreated him, and prayed of him, till the Star-Child
had pity, and gave him the piece of white gold.
And when he came to the Magician’s house, the Magician opened
to him, and brought him in, and said to him, ‘Hast thou the piece of
white gold?’ And the Star-Child answered, ‘I have it not.’ So the
Magician fell upon him, and beat him, and set before him an empty
trencher, and said, ‘Eat,’ and an empty cup, and said, ‘Drink,’ and
flung him again into the dungeon.
And on the morrow the Magician came to him, and said, ‘If to-day
thou bringest me not the piece of yellow gold, I will surely keep
thee as my slave, and give thee three hundred stripes.’
So the Star-Child went to the wood, and all day long he searched
for the piece of yellow gold, but nowhere could he find it. And at
sunset he sat him down and began to weep, and as he was weeping
there came to him the little Hare that he had rescued from the trap.
And the Hare said to him, ‘Why art thou weeping? And what dost
thou seek in the wood?’
And the Star-Child answered, ‘I am seeking for a piece of yellow
gold that is hidden here, and if I find it not my master will beat me,
and keep me as a slave.’
‘Follow me,’ cried the Hare, and it ran through the wood till it
came to a pool of water. And at the bottom of the pool the piece of
yellow gold was lying.
‘How shall I thank thee?’ said the Star-Child, ‘for lo! this is the
second time that you have succoured me.’
‘Nay, but thou hadst pity on me first,’ said the Hare, and it ran
away swiftly.
And the Star-Child took the piece of yellow gold, and put it in his
wallet, and hurried to the city. But the leper saw him coming, and
ran to meet him, and knelt down and cried, ‘Give me a piece of
money or I shall the of hunger.’
And the Star-Child said to him, ‘I have in my wallet but one piece
of yellow gold, and if I bring it not to my master he will beat me
and keep me as his slave.’
But the leper entreated him sore, so that the Star-Child had pity
on him, and gave him the piece of yellow gold.
And when he came to the Magician’s house, the Magician opened
to him, and brought him in, and said to him, ‘Hast thou the piece of
yellow gold?’ And the Star-Child said to him, ‘I have it not.’ So the
Magician fell upon him, and beat him, and loaded him with chains,
and cast him again into the dungeon.
And on the morrow the Magician came to him, and said, ‘If to-day
thou bringest me the piece of red gold I will set thee free, but if thou
bringest it not I will surely slay thee.’
So the Star-Child went to the wood, and all day long he searched
for the piece of red gold, but nowhere could he find it. And at
evening he sat him down, and wept, and as he was weeping there
came to him the little Hare.
And the Hare said to him, ‘The piece of red gold that thou seekest
is in the cavern that is behind thee. Therefore weep no more but be
glad.’
‘How shall I reward thee,’ cried the Star-Child, ‘for lo! this is the
third time thou hast succoured me.’
‘Nay, but thou hadst pity on me first,’ said the Hare, and it ran
away swiftly.
And the Star-Child entered the cavern, and in its farthest corner
he found the piece of red gold. So he put it in his wallet, and
hurried to the city. And the leper seeing him coming, stood in the
centre of the road, and cried out, and said to him, ‘Give me the
piece of red money, or I must die,’ and the Star-Child had pity on
him again, and gave him the piece of red gold, saying, ‘Thy need is
greater than mine.’ Yet was his heart heavy, for he knew what evil
fate awaited him.

But lo! as he passed through the gate of the city, the guards bowed
down and made obeisance to him, saying, ‘How beautiful is our
lord!’ and a crowd of citizens followed him, and cried out, ‘Surely
there is none so beautiful in the whole world!’ so that the Star-Child
wept, and said to himself, ‘They are mocking me, and making light
of my misery.’ And so large was the concourse of the people, that he
lost the threads of his way, and found himself at last in a great
square, in which there was a palace of a King.
And the gate of the palace opened, and the priests and the high
officers of the city ran forth to meet him, and they abased
themselves before him, and said, ‘Thou art our lord for whom we
have been waiting, and the son of our King.’
And the Star-Child answered them and said, ‘I am no king’s son,
but the child of a poor beggar-woman. And how say ye that I am
beautiful, for I know that I am evil to look at?’
Then he, whose armour was inlaid with gilt flowers, and on
whose helmet couched a lion that had wings, held up a shield, and
cried, ‘How saith my lord that he is not beautiful?’
And the Star-Child looked, and lo! his face was even as it had
been, and his comeliness had come back to him, and he saw that in
his eyes which he had not seen there before.
And the priests and the high officers knelt down and said to him,
‘It was prophesied of old that on this day should come he who was
to rule over us. Therefore, let our lord take this crown and this
sceptre, and be in his justice and mercy our King over us.’
But he said to them, ‘I am not worthy, for I have denied the
mother who bare me, nor may I rest till I have found her, and
known her forgiveness. Therefore, let me go, for I must wander
again over the world, and may not tarry here, though ye bring me
the crown and the sceptre.’
And as he spake he turned his face from them towards the street
that led to the gate of the city, and lo! amongst the crowd that
pressed round the soldiers, he saw the beggar-woman who was his
mother, and at her side stood the leper, who had sat by the road.
And a cry of joy broke from his lips, and he ran over, and
kneeling down he kissed the wounds on his mother’s feet, and wet
them with his tears. He bowed his head in the dust, and sobbing, as
one whose heart might break, he said to her: ‘Mother, I denied thee
in the hour of my pride. Accept me in the hour of my humility.
Mother, I gave thee hatred. Do thou give me love. Mother, I rejected
thee. Receive thy child now.’ But the beggar-woman answered him
not a word.
And he reached out his hands, and clasped the white feet of the
leper, and said to him: ‘Thrice did I give thee of my mercy. Bid my
mother speak to me once.’ But the leper answered him not a word.
And he sobbed again, and said: ‘Mother, my suffering is greater
than I can bear. Give me thy forgiveness, and let me go back to the
forest.’ And the beggar-woman put her hand on his head, and said
to him, ‘Rise,’ and the leper put his hand on his head, and said to
him ‘Rise,’ also.
And he rose up from his feet, and looked at them, and lo! they
were a King and a Queen.
And the Queen said to him, ‘This is thy father whom thou hast
succoured.’
And the King said, ‘This is thy mother, whose feet thou hast
washed with thy tears.’
And they fell on his neck and kissed him, and brought him into
the palace, and clothed him in fair raiment, and set the crown upon
his head, and the sceptre in his hand, and over the city that stood by
the river he ruled, and was its lord. Much justice and mercy did he
show to all, and the evil Magician he banished, and to the
Woodcutter and his wife he sent many rich gifts, and to their
children he gave high honour. Nor would he suffer any to be cruel
to bird or beast, but taught love and loving-kindness and charity,
and to the poor he gave bread, and to the naked he gave raiment,
and there was peace and plenty in the land.
Yet ruled he not long, so great had been his suffering, and so
bitter the fire of his testing, for after the space of three years he
died. And he who came after him ruled evilly.
Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime and Other Stories

Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime and Other Stories

A study of duty

It was Lady Windermere’s1 last reception before Easter, and


Bentinck House was even more crowded than usual. Six Cabinet
Ministers had come on from the Speaker’s Levée2 in their stars and
ribands, all the pretty women wore their smartest dresses, and at the
end of the picture-gallery stood the Princess Sophia of Carlsrühe, a
heavy Tartar-looking lady, with tiny black eyes and wonderful
emeralds, talking bad French at the top of her voice, and laughing
immoderately at everything that was said to her. It was certainly a
wonderful medley of people. Gorgeous peeresses chatted affably to
violent Radicals, popular preachers brushed coat-tails with eminent
sceptics, a perfect bevy of bishops kept following a stout prima-
donna from room to room, on the staircase stood several Royal
Academicians, disguised as artists, and it was said that at one time
the supper-room was absolutely crammed with geniuses. In fact, it
was one of Lady Windermere’s best nights, and the Princess stayed
till nearly half-past eleven.
As soon as she had gone, Lady Windermere returned to the
picture-gallery, where a celebrated political economist3 was
solemnly explaining the scientific theory of music to an indignant
virtuoso from Hungary, and began to talk to the Duchess of Paisley.
She looked wonderfully beautiful with her grand ivory throat, her
large blue forget-me-not eyes, and her heavy coils of golden hair. Or
pur 4 they were – not that pale straw colour that nowadays usurps
the gracious name of gold, but such gold as is woven into sunbeams
or hidden in strange amber; and they gave to her face something of
the frame of a saint, with not a little of the fascination of a sinner.5
She was a curious psychological study. Early in life she had
discovered the important truth that nothing looks so like innocence
as an indiscretion; and by a series of reckless escapades, half of
them quite harmless, she had acquired all the privileges of a
personality. She had more than once changed her husband; indeed,
Debrett credits her with three marriages; but as she had never
changed her lover, the world had long ago ceased to talk scandal
about her. She was now forty years of age, childless, and with that
inordinate passion for pleasure which is the secret of remaining
young.
Suddenly she looked eagerly round the room, and said, in her
clear contralto voice, ‘Where is my cheiromantist?’6
‘Your what, Gladys?’ exclaimed the Duchess, giving an
involuntary start.
‘My cheiromantist, Duchess; I can’t live without him at present.’
‘Dear Gladys! you are always so original,’ murmured the Duchess,
trying to remember what a cheiromantist really was, and hoping it
was not the same as a cheiropodist.
‘He comes to see my hand twice a week regularly,’ continued
Lady Windermere, ‘and is most interesting about it.’
‘Good heavens!’ said the Duchess to herself, ‘he is a sort of
cheiropodist after all. How very dreadful. I hope he is a foreigner at
any rate. It wouldn’t be quite so bad then.’
‘I must certainly introduce him to you.’
‘Introduce him!’ cried the Duchess; ‘you don’t mean to say he is
here?’ and she began looking about for a small tortoise-shell fan and
a very tattered lace shawl, so as to be ready to go at a moment’s
notice.
‘Of course he is here, I would not dream of giving a party without
him. He tells me I have a pure psychic hand, and that if my thumb
had been the least little bit shorter, I should have been a confirmed
pessimist, and gone into a convent.’
‘Oh, I see!’ said the Duchess, feeling very much relieved; ‘he tells
fortunes, I suppose?’
‘And misfortunes, too,’ answered Lady Windermere, ‘any amount
of them. Next year, for instance, I am in great danger, both by land
and sea, so I am going to live in a balloon, and draw up my dinner
in a basket every evening. It is all written down on my little finger,
or on the palm of my hand, I forget which.’
‘But surely that is tempting Providence, Gladys.’
‘My dear Duchess, surely Providence can resist temptation by this
time.7 I think every one should have their hands told once a month,
so as to know what not to do. Of course, one does it all the same,
but it is so pleasant to be warned. Now, if some one doesn’t go and
fetch Mr. Podgers at once, I shall have to go myself.’
‘Let me go, Lady Windermere,’ said a tall handsome young man,
who was standing by, listening to the conversation with an amused
smile.
‘Thanks so much, Lord Arthur; but I am afraid you wouldn’t
recognise him.’
‘If he is as wonderful as you say, Lady Windermere, I couldn’t
well miss him. Tell me what he is like, and I’ll bring him to you at
once.’
‘Well, he is not a bit like a cheiromantist. I mean he is not
mysterious, or esoteric, or romantic-looking. He is a little, stout
man, with a funny, bald head, and great gold-rimmed spectacles;
something between a family doctor and a country attorney. I’m
really very sorry, but it is not my fault. People are so annoying. All
my pianists look exactly like poets, and all my poets look exactly
like pianists; and I remember last season asking a most dreadful
conspirator to dinner, a man who had blown up ever so many
people, and always wore a coat of mail, and carried a dagger up his
shirt-sleeve; and do you know that when he came he looked just like
a nice old clergyman, and cracked jokes all the evening? Of course,
he was very amusing, and all that, but I was awfully disappointed;
and when I asked him about the coat of mail, he only laughed, and
said it was far too cold to wear in England. Ah, here is Mr. Podgers!
Now, Mr. Podgers, I want you to tell the Duchess of Paisley’s hand.
Duchess, you must take your glove off. No, not the left hand, the
other.’
‘Dear Gladys, I really don’t think it is quite right,’ said the
Duchess, feebly unbuttoning a rather soiled kid glove.
‘Nothing interesting ever is,’ said Lady Windermere: ‘on a fait le
monde ainsi.8 But I must introduce you. Duchess, this is Mr. Podgers,
my pet cheiromantist. Mr. Podgers, this is the Duchess of Paisley,
and if you say that she has a larger mountain of the moon than I
have, I will never believe in you again.’
‘I am sure, Gladys, there is nothing of the kind in my hand,’ said
the Duchess gravely.
‘Your Grace is quite right,’ said Mr. Podgers, glancing at the little
fat hand with its short square fingers, ‘the mountain of the moon is
not developed. The line of life, however, is excellent. Kindly bend
the wrist. Thank you. Three distinct lines on the rascette! 9 You will
live to a great age, Duchess, and be extremely happy. Ambition –
very moderate, line of intellect not exaggerated, line of heart –’
‘Now, do be indiscreet, Mr. Podgers,’ cried Lady Windermere.
‘Nothing would give me greater pleasure,’ said Mr. Podgers,
bowing, ‘if the Duchess ever had been, but I am sorry to say that I
see great permanence of affection, combined with a strong sense of
duty.’
‘Pray go on, Mr. Podgers,’ said the Duchess, looking quite pleased.
‘Economy is not the least of your Grace’s virtues,’ continued Mr.
Podgers, and Lady Windermere went off into fits of laughter.
‘Economy is a very good thing,’ remarked the Duchess
complacently; ‘when I married Paisley he had eleven castles, and
not a single house fit to live in.’
‘And now he has twelve houses, and not a single castle,’ cried
Lady Windermere.
‘Well, my dear,’ said the Duchess, ‘I like –’
‘Comfort,’ said Mr. Podgers, ‘and modern improvements, and hot
water laid on in every bedroom. Your Grace is quite right. Comfort
is the only thing our civilisation can give us.’
‘You have told the Duchess’s character admirably, Mr. Podgers,
and now you must tell Lady Flora’s;’ and in answer to a nod from
the smiling hostess, a tall girl, with sandy Scotch hair, and high
shoulder-blades, stepped awkwardly from behind the sofa, and held
out a long, bony hand with spatulate10 fingers.
‘Ah, a pianist! I see,’ said Mr. Podgers, ‘an excellent pianist, but
perhaps hardly a musician. Very reserved, very honest, and with a
great love of animals.’
‘Quite true!’ exclaimed the Duchess, turning to Lady Winder-mere,
‘absolutely true! Flora keeps two dozen collie dogs at Macloskie, and
would turn our town house into a menagerie if her father would let
her.’
‘Well, that is just what I do with my house every Thursday
evening,’ cried Lady Windermere, laughing, ‘only I like lions better
than collie dogs.’11
‘Your one mistake, Lady Windermere,’ said Mr. Podgers, with a
pompous bow.
‘If a woman can’t make her mistakes charming, she is only a
female,’ was the answer. ‘But you must read some more hands for
us. Come, Sir Thomas, show Mr. Podgers yours;’ and a genial-
looking old gentleman, in a white waistcoat, came forward, and
held out a thick rugged hand, with a very long third finger.
‘An adventurous nature; four long voyages in the past, and one to
come. Been shipwrecked three times. No, only twice, but in danger
of a shipwreck your next journey. A strong Conservative, very
punctual, and with a passion for collecting curiosities. Had a severe
illness between the ages of sixteen and eighteen. Was left a fortune
when about thirty. Great aversion to cats and Radicals.’
‘Extraordinary!’ exclaimed Sir Thomas; ‘you must really tell my
wife’s hand, too.’
‘Your second wife’s,’ said Mr. Podgers quietly, still keeping Sir
Thomas’s hand in his. ‘Your second wife’s. I shall be charmed;’ but
Lady Marvel, a melancholy-looking woman, with brown hair and
sentimental eyelashes, entirely declined to have her past or her
future exposed; and nothing that Lady Windermere could do would
induce Monsieur de Koloff, the Russian Ambassador, even to take
his gloves off. In fact, many people seemed afraid to face the odd
little man with his stereotyped smile, his gold spectacles, and his
bright, beady eyes; and when he told poor Lady Fermor, right out
before every one, that she did not care a bit for music, but was
extremely fond of musicians, it was generally felt that cheiromancy
was a most dangerous science, and one that ought not to be
encouraged, except in a tête-à-tête.
Lord Arthur Savile, however, who did not know anything about
Lady Fermor’s unfortunate story, and who had been watching Mr.
Podgers with a great deal of interest, was filled with an immense
curiosity to have his own hand read, and feeling somewhat shy
about putting himself forward, crossed over the room to where Lady
Windermere was sitting, and, with a charming blush, asked her if
she thought Mr. Podgers would mind.
‘Of course, he won’t mind,’ said Lady Windermere, ‘that is what
he is here for. All my lions, Lord Arthur, are performing lions, and
jump through hoops whenever I ask them. But I must warn you
beforehand that I shall tell Sybil everything. She is coming to lunch
with me to-morrow, to talk about bonnets, and if Mr. Podgers finds
out that you have a bad temper, or a tendency to gout, or a wife
living in Bayswater,12 I shall certainly let her know all about it.’
Lord Arthur smiled, and shook his head. ‘I am not afraid,’ he
answered. ‘Sybil knows me as well as I know her.’
‘Ah! I am a little sorry to hear you say that. The proper basis for
marriage is a mutual misunderstanding.13 No, I am not at all
cynical, I have merely got experience, which, however, is very much
the same thing. Mr. Podgers, Lord Arthur Savile is dying to have his
hand read. Don’t tell him that he is engaged to one of the most
beautiful girls in London, because that appeared in the Morning Post
14 a month ago.
‘Dear Lady Windermere,’ cried the Marchioness of Jedburgh, ‘do
let Mr. Podgers stay here a little longer. He has just told me I should
go on the stage, and I am so interested.’
‘If he has told you that, Lady Jedburgh, I shall certainly take him
away. Come over at once, Mr. Podgers, and read Lord Arthur’s
hand.’
‘Well,’ said Lady Jedburgh, making a little moue 15 as she rose
from the sofa, ‘if I am not to be allowed to go on the stage, I must be
allowed to be part of the audience at any rate.’
‘Of course; we are all going to be part of the audience,’ said Lady
Windermere; ‘and now, Mr. Podgers, be sure and tell us something
nice. Lord Arthur is one of my special favourites.’
But when Mr. Podgers saw Lord Arthur’s hand he grew curiously
pale, and said nothing. A shudder seemed to pass through him, and
his great bushy eyebrows twitched convulsively, in an odd, irritating
way they had when he was puzzled. Then some huge beads of
perspiration broke out on his yellow forehead, like a poisonous dew,
and his fat fingers grew cold and clammy.
Lord Arthur did not fail to notice these strange signs of agitation,
and, for the first time in his life, he himself felt fear. His impulse
was to rush from the room, but he restrained himself. It was better
to know the worst, whatever it was, than to be left in this hideous
uncertainty.
‘I am waiting, Mr. Podgers,’ he said.
‘We are all waiting,’ cried Lady Windermere, in her quick,
impatient manner, but the cheiromantist made no reply.
‘I believe Arthur is going on the stage,’ said Lady Jedburgh, ‘and
that, after your scolding, Mr. Podgers is afraid to tell him so.’
Suddenly Mr. Podgers dropped Lord Arthur’s right hand, and
seized hold of his left, bending down so low to examine it that the
gold rims of his spectacles seemed almost to touch the palm. For a
moment his face became a white mask of horror, but he soon
recovered his sang-froid, and looking up at Lady Windermere, said
with a forced smile, ‘It is the hand of a charming young man.’
‘Of course it is!’ answered Lady Windermere, ‘but will he be a
charming husband? That is what I want to know.’
‘All charming young men are,’ said Mr. Podgers.
‘I don’t think a husband should be too fascinating,’ murmured
Lady Jedburgh pensively, ‘it is so dangerous.’
‘My dear child, they never are too fascinating,’ cried Lady
Windermere. ‘But what I want are details. Details are the only things
that interest. What is going to happen to Lord Arthur?’
‘Well, within the next few months Lord Arthur will go on a
voyage –’
‘Oh yes, his honeymoon, of course!’
‘And lose a relative.’
‘Not his sister, I hope?’ said Lady Jedburgh, in a piteous tone of
voice.
‘Certainly not his sister,’ answered Mr. Podgers, with a
deprecating wave of the hand, ‘a distant relative merely.’
‘Well, I am dreadfully disappointed,’ said Lady Windermere. ‘I
have absolutely nothing to tell Sybil to-morrow. No one cares about
distant relatives nowadays. They went out of fashion years ago.
However, I suppose she had better have a black silk by her; it
always does for church, you know. And now let us go to supper.
They are sure to have eaten everything up, but we may find some
hot soup. François used to make excellent soup once, but he is so
agitated about politics at present, that I never feel quite certain
about him. I do wish General Boulanger16 would keep quiet.
Duchess, I am sure you are tired?’
‘Not at all, dear Gladys,’ answered the Duchess, waddling towards
the door. ‘I have enjoyed myself immensely, and the cheiropodist, I
mean the cheiromantist, is most interesting. Flora, where can my
tortoise-shell fan be? Oh, thank you, Sir Thomas, so much. And my
lace shawl, Flora? Oh, thank you, Sir Thomas, very kind, I’m sure;’
and the worthy creature finally managed to get downstairs without
dropping her scent-bottle more than twice.
All this time Lord Arthur Savile had remained standing by the
fireplace, with the same feeling of dread over him, the same
sickening sense of coming evil. He smiled sadly at his sister, as she
swept past him on Lord Plymdale’s arm, looking lovely in her pink
brocade and pearls, and he hardly heard Lady Windermere when
she called to him to follow her. He thought of Sybil Merton, and the
idea that anything could come between them made his eyes dim
with tears.
Looking at him, one would have said that Nemesis had stolen the
shield of Pallas, and shown him the Gorgon’s head.17 He seemed
turned to stone, and his face was like marble in its melancholy. He
had lived the delicate and luxurious life of a young man of birth and
fortune, a life exquisite in its freedom from sordid care, its beautiful
boyish insouciance; and now for the first time he became conscious
of the terrible mystery of Destiny, of the awful meaning of Doom.
How mad and monstrous it all seemed! Could it be that written on
his hand, in characters that he could not read himself, but that
another could decipher, was some fearful secret of sin, some blood-
red sign of crime? Was there no escape possible? Were we no better
than chessmen, moved by an unseen power, vessels the potter
fashions at his fancy, for honour or for shame? His reason revolted
against it, and yet he felt that some tragedy was hanging over him,
and that he had been suddenly called upon to bear an intolerable
burden. Actors are so fortunate. They can choose whether they will
appear in tragedy or in comedy, whether they will suffer or make
merry, laugh or shed tears. But in real life it is different. Most men
and women are forced to perform parts for which they have no
qualifications. Our Guildensterns play Hamlet for us, and our
Hamlets have to jest like Prince Hal.18 The world is a stage, but the
play is badly cast.
Suddenly Mr. Podgers entered the room. When he saw Lord
Arthur he started, and his coarse, fat face became a sort of greenish-
yellow colour. The two men’s eyes met, and for a moment there was
silence.
‘The Duchess has left one of her gloves here, Lord Arthur, and has
asked me to bring it to her,’ said Mr. Podgers finally. ‘Ah, I see it on
the sofa! Good evening.’
‘Mr. Podgers, I must insist on your giving me a straightforward
answer to a question I am going to put to you.’
‘Another time, Lord Arthur, but the Duchess is anxious. I am
afraid I must go.’
‘You shall not go. The Duchess is in no hurry.’
‘Ladies should not be kept waiting, Lord Arthur,’ said Mr. Podgers,
with his sickly smile.
‘The fair sex is apt to be impatient.’
Lord Arthur’s finely-chiselled lips curled in petulant disdain. The
poor Duchess seemed to him of very little importance at that
moment. He walked across the room to where Mr. Podgers was
standing, and held his hand out.
‘Tell me what you saw there,’ he said. ‘Tell me the truth. I must
know it. I am not a child.’
Mr. Podgers’s eyes blinked behind his gold-rimmed spectacles,
and he moved uneasily from one foot to the other, while his fingers
played nervously with a flash watch-chain.
‘What makes you think that I saw anything in your hand, Lord
Arthur, more than I told you?’
‘I know you did, and I insist on your telling me what it was. I will
pay you. I will give you a cheque for a hundred pounds.’
The green eyes flashed for a moment, and then became dull again.
‘Guineas?’19 said Mr. Podgers at last, in a low voice.
‘Certainly. I will send you a cheque to-morrow. What is your
club?’
‘I have no club. That is to say, not just at present. My address is –,
but allow me to give you my card;’ and producing a bit of gilt-edged
pasteboard from his waistcoat pocket, Mr. Podgers handed it, with a
low bow, to Lord Arthur, who read on it,

‘My hours are from ten to four,’ murmured Mr. Podgers


mechanically, ‘and I make a reduction for families.’
‘Be quick,’ cried Lord Arthur, looking very pale, and holding his
hand out.
Mr. Podgers glanced nervously round, and drew the heavy
portière20 across the door.
‘It will take a little time, Lord Arthur, you had better sit down.’
‘Be quick, sir,’ cried Lord Arthur again, stamping his foot angrily
on the polished floor.
Mr. Podgers smiled, drew from his breast-pocket a small
magnifying glass, and wiped it carefully with his handkerchief.

‘I am quite ready,’ he said.

II

Ten minutes later, with face blanched by terror, and eyes wild with
grief, Lord Arthur Savile rushed from Bentinck House, crushing his
way through the crowd of fur-coated footmen that stood round the
large striped awning, and seeming not to see or hear anything. The
night was bitter cold, and the gas-lamps round the square flared and
flickered in the keen wind; but his hands were hot with fever, and
his forehead burned like fire. On and on he went, almost with the
gait of a drunken man. A policeman looked curiously at him as he
passed, and a beggar, who slouched from an archway to ask for
alms, grew frightened, seeing misery greater than his own. Once he
stopped under a lamp, and looked at his hands. He thought he could
detect the stain of blood already upon them, and a faint cry broke
from his trembling lips.

Murder! that is what the cheiromantist had seen there. Murder!


The very night seemed to know it, and the desolate wind to howl it
in his ear. The dark corners of the streets were full of it. It grinned
at him from the roofs of the houses.
First he came to the Park,21 whose sombre woodland seemed to
fascinate him. He leaned wearily up against the railings, cooling his
brow against the wet metal, and listening to the tremulous silence of
the trees. ‘Murder! murder!’ he kept repeating, as though iteration
could dim the horror of the word. The sound of his own voice made
him shudder, yet he almost hoped that Echo might hear him, and
wake the slumbering city from its dreams. He felt a mad desire to
stop the casual passer-by, and tell him everything.
Then he wandered across Oxford Street into narrow, shameful
alleys. Two women with painted faces mocked at him as he went
by. From a dark courtyard came a sound of oaths and blows,
followed by shrill screams, and, huddled upon a damp doorstep, he
saw the crook-backed forms of poverty and eld.22 A strange pity
came over him. Were these children of sin and misery predestined to
their end, as he to his? Were they, like him, merely the puppets of a
monstrous show?
And yet it was not the mystery, but the comedy of suffering that
struck him; its absolute uselessness, its grotesque want of meaning.
How incoherent everything seemed! How lacking in all harmony!
He was amazed at the discord between the shallow optimism of the
day, and the real facts of existence. He was still very young.
After a time he found himself in front of Marylebone Church. The
silent roadway looked like a long riband of polished silver, flecked
here and there by the dark arabesques of waving shadows. Far into
the distance curved the line of flickering gas-lamps, and outside a
little walled-in house stood a solitary hansom,23 the driver asleep
inside. He walked hastily in the direction of Portland Place, now
and then looking round, as though he feared that he was being
followed. At the corner of Rich Street stood two men, reading a
small bill upon a hoarding. An odd feeling of curiosity stirred him,
and he crossed over. As he came near, the word ‘Murder,’ printed in
black letters, met his eye. He started, and a deep flush came into his
cheek. It was an advertisement offering a reward for any
information leading to the arrest of a man of medium height,
between thirty and forty years of age, wearing a billy-cock hat,24 a
black coat, and check trousers, and with a scar upon his right cheek.
He read it over and over again, and wondered if the wretched man
would be caught, and how he had been scarred. Perhaps, some day,
his own name might be placarded on the walls of London. Some
day, perhaps, a price would be set on his head also.
The thought made him sick with horror. He turned on his heel,
and hurried on into the night.
Where he went he hardly knew. He had a dim memory of
wandering through a labyrinth of sordid houses, of being lost in a
giant web of sombre streets, and it was bright dawn when he found
himself at last in Piccadilly Circus. As he strolled home towards
Belgrave Square, he met the great waggons on their way to Covent
Garden. The white-smocked carters, with their pleasant sunburnt
faces and coarse curly hair, strode sturdily on, cracking their whips,
and calling out now and then to each other; on the back of a huge
grey horse, the leader of a jangling team, sat a chubby boy, with a
bunch of primroses in his battered hat, keeping tight hold of the
mane with his little hands, and laughing; and the great piles of
vegetables looked like masses of jade against the morning sky, like
masses of green jade against the pink petals of some marvellous
rose. Lord Arthur felt curiously affected, he could not tell why.
There was something in the dawn’s delicate loveliness that seemed
to him inexpressibly pathetic, and he thought of all the days that
break in beauty, and that set in storm. These rustics, too, with their
rough, good-humoured voices, and their nonchalant ways, what a
strange London they saw! A London free from the sin of night and
the smoke of day, a pallid, ghost-like city, a desolate town of tombs!
He wondered what they thought of it, and whether they knew
anything of its splendour and its shame, of its fierce, fiery-coloured
joys, and its horrible hunger, of all it makes and mars from morn to
eve.25 Probably it was to them merely a mart where they brought
their fruits to sell, and where they tarried for a few hours at most,
leaving the streets still silent, the houses still asleep. It gave him
pleasure to watch them as they went by. Rude as they were, with
their heavy, hobnailed shoes, and their awkward gait, they brought
a little of Arcady26 with them. He felt that they had lived with
Nature, and that she had taught them peace. He envied them all that
they did not know.
By the time he had reached Belgrave Square the sky was a faint
blue, and the birds were beginning to twitter in the gardens.

III

When Lord Arthur woke it was twelve o’clock, and the mid-day sun
was streaming through the ivory-silk curtains of his room. He got up
and looked out of the window. A dim haze of heat was hanging over
the great city, and the roofs of the houses were like dull silver. In
the flickering green of the square below some children were flitting
about like white butterflies, and the pavement was crowded with
people on their way to the Park. Never had life seemed lovelier to
him, never had the things of evil seemed more remote.

Then his valet brought him a cup of chocolate on a tray. After he


had drunk it, he drew aside a heavy portière of peach-coloured
plush, and passed into the bathroom. The light stole softly from
above, through thin slabs of transparent onyx, and the water in the
marble tank glimmered like a moonstone. He plunged hastily in, till
the cool ripples touched throat and hair, and then dipped his head
right under, as though he would have wiped away the stain of some
shameful memory. When he stepped out he felt almost at peace. The
exquisite physical conditions of the moment had dominated him, as
indeed often happens in the case of very finely-wrought natures, for
the senses, like fire, can purify as well as destroy.
After breakfast, he flung himself down on a divan, and lit a
cigarette.27 On the mantel-shelf, framed in dainty old brocade, stood
a large photograph of Sybil Merton, as he had seen her first at Lady
Noel’s ball. The small, exquisitely-shaped head drooped slightly to
one side, as though the thin, reed-like throat could hardly bear the
burden of so much beauty; the lips were slightly parted, and seemed
made for sweet music; and all the tender purity of girlhood looked
out in wonder from the dreaming eyes. With her soft, clinging dress
of crêpe-de-chine, 28 and her large leaf-shaped fan, she looked like
one of those delicate little figures men find in the olive-woods near
Tanagra;29 and there was a touch of Greek grace in her pose and
attitude. Yet she was not petite. She was simply perfectly
proportioned – a rare thing in an age when so many women are
either over life-size or insignificant.
Now as Lord Arthur looked at her, he was filled with the terrible
pity that is born of love. He felt that to marry her, with the doom of
murder hanging over his head, would be a betrayal like that of
Judas, a sin worse than any the Borgia30 had ever dreamed of. What
happiness could there be for them, when at any moment he might
be called upon to carry out the awful prophecy written in his hand?
What manner of life would be theirs while Fate still held this fearful
fortune in the scales? The marriage must be postponed, at all costs.
Of this he was quite resolved. Ardently though he loved the girl, and
the mere touch of her fingers, when they sat together, made each
nerve of his body thrill with exquisite joy, he recognised none the
less clearly where his duty lay, and was fully conscious of the fact
that he had no right to marry until he had committed the murder.
This done, he could stand before the altar with Sybil Merton, and
give his life into her hands without terror of wrongdoing. This done,
he could take her to his arms, knowing that she would never have to
blush for him, never have to hang her head in shame. But done it
must be first; and the sooner the better for both.
Many men in his position would have preferred the primrose path
of dalliance to the steep heights of duty; but Lord Arthur was too
conscientious to set pleasure above principle. There was more than
mere passion in his love; and Sybil was to him a symbol of all that is
good and noble. For a moment he had a natural repugnance against
what he was asked to do, but it soon passed away. His heart told
him that it was not a sin, but a sacrifice; his reason reminded him
that there was no other course open. He had to choose between
living for himself and living for others, and terrible though the task
laid upon him undoubtedly was, yet he knew that he must not suffer
selfishness to triumph over love. Sooner or later we are all called
upon to decide on the same issue – of us all, the same question is
asked. To Lord Arthur it came early in life – before his nature had
been spoiled by the calculating cynicism of middle-age, or his heart
corroded by the shallow, fashionable egotism of our day, and he felt
no hesitation about doing his duty. Fortunately also, for him, he was
no mere dreamer, or idle dilettante. Had he been so, he would have
hesitated, like Hamlet, and let irresolution mar his purpose. But he
was essentially practical. Life to him meant action, rather than
thought. He had that rarest of all things, common sense.
The wild, turbid feelings of the previous night had by this time
completely passed away, and it was almost with a sense of shame
that he looked back upon his mad wanderings from street to street,
his fierce emotional agony. The very sincerity of his sufferings made
them seem unreal to him now. He wondered how he could have
been so foolish as to rant and rave about the inevitable. The only
question that seemed to trouble him was, whom to make away with;
for he was not blind to the fact that murder, like the religions of the
Pagan world, requires a victim as well as a priest. Not being a
genius, he had no enemies, and indeed he felt that this was not the
time for the gratification of any personal pique or dislike, the
mission in which he was engaged being one of great and grave
solemnity. He accordingly made out a list of his friends and relatives
on a sheet of notepaper, and after careful consideration, decided in
favour of Lady Clementina Beauchamp, a dear old lady who lived in
Curzon Street, and was his own second cousin by his mother’s side.
He had always been very fond of Lady Clem, as every one called
her, and as he was very wealthy himself, having come into all Lord
Rugby’s property when he came of age, there was no possibility of
his deriving any vulgar monetary advantage by her death. In fact,
the more he thought over the matter, the more she seemed to him to
be just the right person, and, feeling that any delay would be unfair
to Sybil, he determined to make his arrangements at once.
The first thing to be done was, of course, to settle with the
cheiromantist; so he sat down at a small Sheraton31 writing-table
that stood near the window, drew a cheque for £105, payable to the
order of Mr. Septimus Podgers, and, enclosing it in an envelope, told
his valet to take it to West Moon Street. He then telephoned to the
stables for his hansom, and dressed to go out. As he was leaving the
room, he looked back at Sybil Merton’s photograph, and swore that,
come what may, he would never let her know what he was doing
for her sake, but would keep the secret of his self-sacrifice hidden
always in his heart.
On his way to the Buckingham,32 he stopped at a florist’s, and
sent Sybil a beautiful basket of narcissi, with lovely white petals and
staring pheasants’ eyes, and on arriving at the club, went straight to
the library, rang the bell, and ordered the waiter to bring him a
lemon-and-soda, and a book on Toxicology. He had fully decided
that poison was the best means to adopt in this troublesome
business. Anything like personal violence was extremely distasteful
to him, and besides, he was very anxious not to murder Lady
Clementina in any way that might attract public attention, as he
hated the idea of being lionised at Lady Winder-mere’s, or seeing his
name figuring in the paragraphs of vulgar society-newspapers. He
had also to think of Sybil’s father and mother, who were rather old-
fashioned people, and might possibly object to the marriage if there
was anything like a scandal, though he felt certain that if he told
them the whole facts of the case they would be the very first to
appreciate the motives that had actuated him. He had every reason,
then, to decide in favour of poison. It was safe, sure, and quiet, and
did away with any necessity for painful scenes, to which, like most
Englishmen, he had a rooted objection.
Of the science of poisons, however, he knew absolutely nothing,
and as the waiter seemed quite unable to find anything in the
library but Ruff’s Guide and Bailey’s Magazine, he examined the
book-shelves himself, and finally came across a handsomely-bound
edition of the Pharmacopoeia, and a copy of Erskine’s Toxicology,
edited by Sir Mathew Reid,33 the President of the Royal College of
Physicians, and one of the oldest members of the Buckingham,
having been elected in mistake for somebody else; a contretemps that
so enraged the Committee, that when the real man came up they
black-balled him unanimously. Lord Arthur was a good deal puzzled
at the technical terms used in both books, and had begun to regret
that he had not paid more attention to his classics at Oxford, when
in the second volume of Erskine, he found a very interesting and
complete account of the properties of aconit-ine,34 written in fairly
clear English. It seemed to him to be exactly the poison he wanted.
It was swift – indeed, almost immediate, in its effect – perfectly
painless, and when taken in the form of a gelatine capsule, the mode
recommended by Sir Mathew, not by any means unpalatable. He
accordingly made a note, upon his shirt-cuff, of the amount
necessary for a fatal dose, put the books back in their places, and
strolled up St. James’s Street, to Pestle and Humbey’s, the great
chemists. Mr. Pestle, who always attended personally on the
aristocracy, was a good deal surprised at the order, and in a very
deferential manner murmured something about a medical certificate
being necessary. However, as soon as Lord Arthur explained to him
that it was for a large Norwegian mastiff that he was obliged to get
rid of, as it showed signs of incipient rabies, and had already bitten
the coachman twice in the calf of the leg, he expressed himself as
being perfectly satisfied, complimented Lord Arthur on his
wonderful knowledge of Toxicology, and had the prescription made
up immediately.
Lord Arthur put the capsule into a pretty little silver bonbonnière
that he saw in a shop-window in Bond Street, threw away Pestle and
Humbey’s ugly pill-box, and drove off at once to Lady Clementina’s.
‘Well, monsieur le mauvais sujet,’35 cried the old lady, as he entered
the room, ‘why haven’t you been to see me all this time?’
‘My dear Lady Clem, I never have a moment to myself,’ said Lord
Arthur, smiling.
‘I suppose you mean that you go about all day long with Miss
Sybil Merton, buying chiffons and talking nonsense? I cannot
understand why people make such a fuss about being married. In
my day we never dreamed of billing and cooing in public, or in
private for that matter.’
‘I assure you I have not seen Sybil for twenty-four hours, Lady
Clem. As far as I can make out, she belongs entirely to her
milliners.’
‘Of course; that is the only reason you come to see an ugly old
woman like myself. I wonder you men don’t take warning. On a fait
des folies pour moi, 36 and here I am, a poor, rheumatic creature,
with a false front and a bad temper. Why, if it were not for dear
Lady Jansen, who sends me all the worst French novels she can find,
I don’t think I could get through the day. Doctors are no use at all,
except to get fees out of one. They can’t even cure my heartburn.’
‘I have brought you a cure for that, Lady Clem,’ said Lord Arthur
gravely. ‘It is a wonderful thing, invented by an American.’
‘I don’t think I like American inventions, Arthur. I am quite sure I
don’t. I read some American novels37 lately, and they were quite
nonsensical.’
‘Oh, but there is no nonsense at all about this, Lady Clem! I assure
you it is a perfect cure. You must promise to try it;’ and Lord Arthur
brought the little box out of his pocket, and handed it to her.
‘Well, the box is charming, Arthur. Is it really a present? That is
very sweet of you. And is this the wonderful medicine? It looks like
a bonbon. I’ll take it at once.’
‘Good heavens! Lady Clem,’ cried Lord Arthur, catching hold of
her hand, ‘you mustn’t do anything of the kind. It is a homoeopathic
medicine, and if you take it without having heartburn, it might do
you no end of harm. Wait till you have an attack, and take it then.
You will be astonished at the result.’
‘I should like to take it now,’ said Lady Clementina, holding up to
the light the little transparent capsule, with its floating bubble of
liquid aconitine. ‘I am sure it is delicious. The fact is that, though I
hate doctors, I love medicines. However, I’ll keep it till my next
attack.’
‘And when will that be?’ asked Lord Arthur eagerly. ‘Will it be
soon?’
‘I hope not for a week. I had a very bad time yesterday morning
with it. But one never knows.’
‘You are sure to have one before the end of the month then, Lady
Clem?’
‘I am afraid so. But how sympathetic you are to-day, Arthur!
Really, Sybil has done you a great deal of good. And now you must
run away, for I am dining with some very dull people, who won’t
talk scandal, and I know that if I don’t get my sleep now I shall
never be able to keep awake during dinner. Good-bye, Arthur, give
my love to Sybil, and thank you so much for the American
medicine.’
‘You won’t forget to take it, Lady Clem, will you?’ said Lord
Arthur, rising from his seat.
‘Of course I won’t, you silly boy. I think it is most kind of you to
think of me, and I shall write and tell you if I want any more.’
Lord Arthur left the house in high spirits, and with a feeling of
immense relief.
That night he had an interview with Sybil Merton. He told her
how he had been suddenly placed in a position of terrible difficulty,
from which neither honour nor duty would allow him to recede. He
told her that the marriage must be put off for the present, as until he
had got rid of his fearful entanglements, he was not a free man. He
implored her to trust him, and not to have any doubts about the
future. Everything would come right, but patience was necessary.
The scene took place in the conservatory of Mr. Merton’s house,
in Park Lane, where Lord Arthur had dined as usual. Sybil had never
seemed more happy, and for a moment Lord Arthur had been
tempted to play the coward’s part, to write to Lady Clementina for
the pill, and to let the marriage go on as if there was no such person
as Mr. Podgers in the world. His better nature, however, soon
asserted itself, and even when Sybil flung herself weeping into his
arms, he did not falter. The beauty that stirred his senses had
touched his conscience also. He felt that to wreck so fair a life for
the sake of a few months’ pleasure would be a wrong thing to do.

He stayed with Sybil till nearly midnight, comforting her and


being comforted in turn, and early the next morning he left for
Venice, after writing a manly, firm letter to Mr. Merton about the
necessary postponement of the marriage.

IV

In Venice he met his brother, Lord Surbiton, who happened to have


come over from Corfu in his yacht. The two young men spent a
delightful fortnight together. In the morning they rode on the Lido,
or glided up and down the green canals in their long black gondola;
in the afternoon they usually entertained visitors on the yacht; and
in the evening they dined at Florian’s, and smoked innumerable
cigarettes on the Piazza.38 Yet somehow Lord Arthur was not happy.
Every day he studied the obituary column in the Times, expecting to
see a notice of Lady Clementina’s death, but every day he was
disappointed. He began to be afraid that some accident had
happened to her, and often regretted that he had prevented her
taking the aconitine when she had been so anxious to try its effect.
Sybil’s letters, too, though full of love, and trust, and tenderness,
were often very sad in their tone, and sometimes he used to think
that he was parted from her for ever.

After a fortnight Lord Surbiton got bored with Venice, and


determined to run down the coast to Ravenna, as he heard that
there was some capital cock-shooting in the Pinetum.39 Lord Arthur,
at first, refused absolutely to come, but Surbiton, of whom he was
extremely fond, finally persuaded him that if he stayed at
Danielli’s40 by himself he would be moped to death, and on the
morning of the 15th they started, with a strong nor’-east wind
blowing, and a rather sloppy sea. The sport was excellent, and the
free, open-air life brought the colour back to Lord Arthur’s cheeks,
but about the 22nd he became anxious about Lady Clementina, and,
in spite of Surbiton’s remonstrances, came back to Venice by train.
As he stepped out of his gondola on to the hotel steps, the
proprietor came forward to meet him with a sheaf of telegrams.
Lord Arthur snatched them out of his hand, and tore them open.
Everything had been successful. Lady Clementina had died quite
suddenly on the night of the 17th!
His first thought was for Sybil, and he sent her off a telegram
announcing his immediate return to London. He then ordered his
valet to pack his things for the night mail, sent his gondoliers about
five times their proper fare, and ran up to his sitting-room with a
light step and a buoyant heart. There he found three letters waiting
for him. One was from Sybil herself, full of sympathy and
condolence. The others were from his mother, and from Lady
Clementina’s solicitor. It seemed that the old lady had dined with
the Duchess that very night, had delighted every one by her wit and
esprit, but had gone home somewhat early, complaining of
heartburn. In the morning she was found dead in her bed, having
apparently suffered no pain. Sir Mathew Reid had been sent for at
once, but, of course, there was nothing to be done, and she was to
be buried on the 22nd at Beauchamp Chalcote. A few days before
she died she had made her will, and left Lord Arthur her little house
in Curzon Street, and all her furniture, personal effects, and
pictures, with the exception of her collection of miniatures, which
was to go to her sister, Lady Margaret Rufford, and her amethyst
necklace, which Sybil Merton was to have. The property was not of
much value; but Mr. Mansfield the solicitor was extremely anxious
for Lord Arthur to return at once, if possible, as there were a great
many bills to be paid, and Lady Clementina had never kept any
regular accounts.
Lord Arthur was very much touched by Lady Clementina’s kind
remembrance of him, and felt that Mr. Podgers had a great deal to
answer for. His love of Sybil, however, dominated every other
emotion, and the consciousness that he had done his duty gave him
peace and comfort. When he arrived at Charing Cross, he felt
perfectly happy.
The Mertons received him very kindly, Sybil made him promise
that he would never again allow anything to come between them,
and the marriage was fixed for the 7th June. Life seemed to him
once more bright and beautiful, and all his old gladness came back
to him again.
One day, however, as he was going over the house in Gurzon
Street, in company with Lady Clementina’s solicitor and Sybil
herself, burning packages of faded letters, and turning out drawers
of odd rubbish, the young girl suddenly gave a little cry of delight.
‘What have you found, Sybil?’ said Lord Arthur, looking up from
his work, and smiling.
‘This lovely little silver bonbonnière, Arthur. Isn’t it quaint and
Dutch? Do give it to me! I know amethysts won’t become me till I
am over eighty.’
It was the box that had held the aconitine.
Lord Arthur started, and a faint blush came into his cheek. He had
almost entirely forgotten what he had done, and it seemed to him a
curious coincidence that Sybil, for whose sake he had gone through
all that terrible anxiety, should have been the first to remind him of
it.
‘Of course you can have it, Sybil. I gave it to poor Lady Clem
myself.’
‘Oh! thank you, Arthur; and may I have the bonbon too? I had no
notion that Lady Clementina liked sweets. I thought she was far too
intellectual.’
Lord Arthur grew deadly pale, and a horrible idea crossed his
mind.
‘Bonbon, Sybil? What do you mean?’ he said, in a slow, hoarse
voice.
‘There is one in it, that is all. It looks quite old and dusty, and I
have not the slightest intention of eating it. What is the matter,
Arthur? How white you look!’
Lord Arthur rushed across the room, and seized the box. Inside it
was the amber-coloured capsule, with its poison-bubble. Lady
Clementina had died a natural death after all!

The shock of the discovery was almost too much for him. He flung
the capsule into the fire, and sank on the sofa with a cry of despair.

Mr. Merton was a good deal distressed at the second postponement


of the marriage, and Lady Julia, who had already ordered her dress
for the wedding, did all in her power to make Sybil break off the
match. Dearly, however, as Sybil loved her mother, she had given
her whole life into Lord Arthur’s hands, and nothing that Lady Julia
could say could make her waver in her faith. As for Lord Arthur
himself, it took him days to get over his terrible disappointment,
and for a time his nerves were completely unstrung. His excellent
common sense, however, soon asserted itself, and his sound,
practical mind did not leave him long in doubt about what to do.
Poison having proved a complete failure, dynamite,41 or some other
form of explosive, was obviously the proper thing to try.

He accordingly looked again over the list of his friends and


relatives, and, after careful consideration, determined to blow up his
uncle, the Dean of Chichester. The Dean, who was a man of great
culture and learning, was extremely fond of clocks, and had a
wonderful collection of timepieces, ranging from the fifteenth
century to the present day, and it seemed to Lord Arthur that this
hobby of the good Dean’s offered him an excellent opportunity for
carrying out his scheme. Where to procure an explosive machine
was, of course, quite another matter. The London Directory gave
him no information on the point, and he felt that there was very
little use in going to Scotland Yard42 about it, as they never seemed
to know anything about the movements of the dynamite faction till
after an explosion had taken place, and not much even then.
Suddenly he thought of his friend Rouvaloff, a young Russian of
very revolutionary tendencies,43 whom he had met at Lady
Windermere’s in the winter. Count Rouvaloff was supposed to be
writing a life of Peter the Great, and to have come over to England
for the purpose of studying the documents relating to that Tsar’s
residence in this country as a ship carpenter;44 but it was generally
suspected that he was a Nihilist agent, and there was no doubt that
the Russian Embassy did not look with any favour upon his presence
in London. Lord Arthur felt that he was just the man for his purpose,
and drove down one morning to his lodgings in Bloomsbury, to ask
his advice and assistance.
‘So you are taking up politics seriously?’ said Count Rouvaloff,
when Lord Arthur had told him the object of his mission; but Lord
Arthur, who hated swagger of any kind, felt bound to admit to him
that he had not the slightest interest in social questions, and simply
wanted the explosive machine for a purely family matter, in which
no one was concerned but himself.
Count Rouvaloff looked at him for some moments in amazement,
and then seeing that he was quite serious, wrote an address on a
piece of paper, initialled it, and handed it to him across the table.
‘Scotland Yard would give a good deal to know this address, my
dear fellow.’
‘They shan’t have it,’ cried Lord Arthur, laughing; and after
shaking the young Russian warmly by the hand he ran downstairs,
examined the paper, and told the coachman to drive to Soho Square.
There he dismissed him, and strolled down Greek Street, till he
came to a place called Bayle’s Court. He passed under the archway,
and found himself in a curious cul-de-sac, that was apparently
occupied by a French Laundry, as a perfect network of clothes-lines
was stretched across from house to house, and there was a flutter of
white linen in the morning air. He walked right to the end, and
knocked at a little green house. After some delay, during which
every window in the court became a blurred mass of peering faces,
the door was opened by a rather rough-looking foreigner, who asked
him in very bad English what his business was. Lord Arthur handed
him the paper Count Rouvaloff had given him. When the man saw it
he bowed, and invited Lord Arthur into a very shabby front parlour
on the ground-floor, and in a few moments Herr Winckelkopf, as he
was called in England, bustled into the room, with a very wine-
stained napkin round his neck, and a fork in his left hand.
‘Count Rouvaloff has given me an introduction to you,’ said Lord
Arthur, bowing, ‘and I am anxious to have a short interview with
you on a matter of business. My name is Smith, Mr. Robert Smith,
and I want you to supply me with an explosive clock.’
‘Charmed to meet you, Lord Arthur,’ said the genial little German,
laughing. ‘Don’t look so alarmed, it is my duty to know everybody,
and I remember seeing you one evening at Lady Windermere’s. I
hope her ladyship is quite well. Do you mind sitting with me while I
finish my breakfast? There is an excellent pâté, and my friends are
kind enough to say that my Rhine wine is better than any they get
at the German Embassy,’ and before Lord Arthur had got over his
surprise at being recognised, he found himself seated in the back-
room, sipping the most delicious Marcobrünner45 out of a pale
yellow hock-glass marked with the Imperial monogram, and
chatting in the friendliest manner possible to the famous
conspirator.
‘Explosive clocks,’ said Herr Winckelkopf, ‘are not very good
things for foreign exportation, as, even if they succeed in passing the
Custom House, the train service is so irregular, that they usually go
off before they have reached their proper destination. If, however,
you want one for home use, I can supply you with an excellent
article, and guarantee that you will be satisfied with the result. May
I ask for whom it is intended? If it is for the police, or for any one
connected with Scotland Yard, I’m afraid I cannot do anything for
you. The English detectives are really our best friends, and I have
always found that by relying on their stupidity, we can do exactly
what we like. I could not spare one of them.’
‘I assure you,’ said Lord Arthur, ‘that it has nothing to do with the
police at all. In fact, the clock is intended for the Dean of
Chichester.’
‘Dear me! I had no idea that you felt so strongly about religion,
Lord Arthur. Few young men do nowadays.’
‘I am afraid you overrate me, Herr Winckelkopf,’ said Lord Arthur,
blushing. ‘The fact is, I really know nothing about theology.’
‘It is a purely private matter then?’
‘Purely private.’
Herr Winckelkopf shrugged his shoulders, and left the room,
returning in a few minutes with a round cake of dynamite about the
size of a penny, and a pretty little French clock, surmounted by an
ormolu figure of Liberty trampling on the hydra46 of Despotism.
Lord Arthur’s face brightened up when he saw it. ‘That is just
what I want,’ he cried, ‘and now tell me how it goes off.’
‘Ah! there is my secret,’ answered Herr Winckelkopf,
contemplating his invention with a justifiable look of pride; ‘let me
know when you wish it to explode, and I will set the machine to the
moment.’
‘Well, to-day is Tuesday, and if you could send it off at once –’
‘That is impossible; I have a great deal of important work on hand
for some friends of mine in Moscow. Still, I might send it off to-
morrow.’
‘Oh, it will be quite time enough!’ said Lord Arthur politely, ‘if it
is delivered to-morrow night or Thursday morning. For the moment
of the explosion, say Friday at noon exactly. The Dean is always at
home at that hour.’
‘Friday, at noon,’ repeated Herr Winckelkopf, and he made a note
to that effect in a large ledger that was lying on a bureau near the
fireplace.
‘And now,’ said Lord Arthur, rising from his seat, ‘pray let me
know how much I am in your debt.’
‘It is such a small matter, Lord Arthur, that I do not care to make
any charge. The dynamite comes to seven and sixpence, the clock
will be three pounds ten, and the carriage about five shillings. I am
only too pleased to oblige any friend of Count Rouvaloffs.’
‘But your trouble, Herr Winckelkopf?’
‘Oh, that is nothing! It is a pleasure to me. I do not work for
money; I live entirely for my art.’47
Lord Arthur laid down £4:2:6 on the table, thanked the little
German for his kindness, and, having succeeded in declining an
invitation to meet some Anarchists at a meat-tea48 on the following
Saturday, left the house and went off to the Park.
For the next two days he was in a state of the greatest excitement,
and on Friday at twelve o’clock he drove down to the Buckingham
to wait for news. All the afternoon the stolid hall-porter kept posting
up telegrams from various parts of the country giving the results of
horse-races, the verdicts in divorce suits, the state of the weather,
and the like, while the tape49 ticked out wearisome details about an
all-night sitting in the House of Commons, and a small panic on the
Stock Exchange. At four o’clock the evening papers came in, and
Lord Arthur disappeared into the library with the Pall Mall, the St.
James’s, the Globe, and the Echo, to the immense indignation of
Colonel Goodchild, who wanted to read the reports of a speech he
had delivered that morning at the Mansion House, on the subject of
South African Missions, and the advisability of having black Bishops
in every province, and for some reason or other had a strong
prejudice against the Evening News. None of the papers, however,
contained even the slightest allusion to Chichester, and Lord Arthur
felt that the attempt must have failed. It was a terrible blow to him,
and for a time he was quite unnerved. Herr Winckelkopf, whom he
went to see the next day, was full of elaborate apologies, and
offered to supply him with another clock free of charge, or with a
case of nitro-glycerine bombs at cost price. But he had lost all faith
in explosives, and Herr Winckelkopf himself acknowledged that
everything is so adulterated nowadays, that even dynamite can
hardly be got in a pure condition. The little German, however, while
admitting that something must have gone wrong with the
machinery, was not without hope that the clock might still go off,
and instanced the case of a barometer that he had once sent to the
military Governor at Odessa, which, though timed to explode in ten
days, had not done so for something like three months. It was quite
true that when it did go off, it merely succeeded in blowing a
housemaid to atoms, the Governor having gone out of town six
weeks before, but at least it showed that dynamite, as a destructive
force, was, when under the control of machinery, a powerful,
though a somewhat unpunctual agent. Lord Arthur was a little
consoled by this reflection, but even here he was destined to
disappointment, for two days afterwards, as he was going upstairs,
the Duchess called him into her boudoir, and showed him a letter
she had just received from the Deanery.
‘Jane writes charming letters,’ said the Duchess; ‘you must really
read her last. It is quite as good as the novels Mudie50 sends us.’

Lord Arthur seized the letter from her hand. It ran as follows:-

‘The Deanery, Chichester,

                              ‘27th May.

‘My Dearest Aunt,

‘Thank you so much for the flannel for the Dorcas Society,51
and also for the gingham. I quite agree with you that it is
nonsense their wanting to wear pretty things, but everybody is
so Radical and irreligious nowadays, that it is difficult to make
them see that they should not try and dress like the upper
classes. I am sure I don’t know what we are coming to. As
papa has often said in his sermons, we live in an age of
unbelief.

‘We have had great fun over a clock that an unknown


admirer sent papa last Thursday. It arrived in a wooden box
from London, carriage paid; and papa feels it must have been
sent by some one who had read his remarkable sermon, “Is
Licence Liberty?” for on the top of the clock was a figure of a
woman, with what papa said was the cap of Liberty52 on her
head. I didn’t think it very becoming myself, but papa said it
was historical, so I suppose it is all right. Parker unpacked it,
and papa put it on the mantelpiece in the library, and we were
all sitting there on Friday morning, when just as the clock
struck twelve, we heard a whirring noise, a little puff of smoke
came from the pedestal of the figure, and the goddess of
Liberty fell off, and broke her nose on the fender! Maria was
quite alarmed, but it looked so ridiculous, that James and I
went off into fits of laughter, and even papa was amused.
When we examined it, we found it was a sort of alarum clock,
and that, if you set it to a particular hour, and put some
gunpowder and a cap under a little hammer, it went off
whenever you wanted. Papa said it must not remain in the
library, as it made a noise, so Reggie carried it away to the
schoolroom, and does nothing but have small explosions all
day long. Do you think Arthur would like one for a wedding
present? I suppose they are quite fashionable in London. Papa
says they should do a great deal of good, as they show that
Liberty can’t last, but must fall down. Papa says Liberty was
invented at the time of the French Revolution.53 How awful it
seems!

‘I have now to go to the Dorcas, where I will read them your


most instructive letter. How true, dear aunt, your idea is, that
in their rank of life they should wear what is unbecoming. I
must say it is absurd, their anxiety about dress, when there are
so many more important things in this world, and in the next.
I am so glad your flowered poplin turned out so well, and that
your lace was not torn. I am wearing my yellow satin, that you
so kindly gave me, at the Bishop’s on Wednesday, and think it
will look all right. Would you have bows or not? Jennings says
that every one wears bows now, and that the underskirt
should be frilled. Reggie has just had another explosion, and
papa has ordered the clock to be sent to the stables. I don’t
think papa likes it so much as he did at first, though he is very
flattered at being sent such a pretty and ingenious toy. It
shows that people read his sermons, and profit by them.

‘Papa sends his love, in which James, and Reggie, and Maria
all unite, and, hoping that Uncle Cecil’s gout is better, believe
me, dear aunt, ever your affectionate niece,

‘Jane Percy
‘P.S. – Do tell me about the bows. Jennings insists they are the
fashion.’

Lord Arthur looked so serious and unhappy over the letter, that the
Duchess went into fits of laughter.

‘My dear Arthur,’ she cried, ‘I shall never show you a young lady’s
letter again! But what shall I say about the clock? I think it is a
capital invention, and I should like to have one myself.’
‘I don’t think much of them,’ said Lord Arthur, with a sad smile,
and, after kissing his mother, he left the room.
When he got upstairs, he flung himself on a sofa, and his eyes
filled with tears. He had done his best to commit this murder, but
on both occasions he had failed, and through no fault of his own. He
had tried to do his duty, but it seemed as if Destiny herself had
turned traitor. He was oppressed with the sense of the barrenness of
good intentions, of the futility of trying to be fine. Perhaps, it would
be better to break off the marriage altogether. Sybil would suffer, it
is true, but suffering could not really mar a nature so noble as hers.
As for himself, what did it matter? There is always some war in
which a man can die, some cause to which a man can give his life,
and as life had no pleasure for him, so death had no terror. Let
Destiny work out his doom. He would not stir to help her.
At half-past seven he dressed, and went down to the club.
Surbiton was there with a party of young men, and he was obliged
to dine with them. Their trivial conversation and idle jests did not
interest him, and as soon as coffee was brought he left them,
inventing some engagement in order to get away. As he was going
out of the club, the hall porter handed him a letter. It was from Herr
Winckelkopf, asking him to call down the next evening, and look at
an explosive umbrella, that went off as soon as it was opened. It was
the very latest invention, and had just arrived from Geneva. He tore
the letter up into fragments. He had made up his mind not to try
any more experiments. Then he wandered down to the Thames
Embankment, and sat for hours by the river. The moon peered
through a mane of tawny clouds, as if it were a lion’s eye, and
innumerable stars spangled the hollow vault, like gold dust
powdered on a purple dome. Now and then a barge swung out into
the turbid stream, and floated away with the tide, and the railway
signals changed from green to scarlet as the trains ran shrieking
across the bridge. After some time, twelve o’clock boomed from the
tall tower at Westminster, and at each stroke of the sonorous bell
the night seemed to tremble. Then the railway lights went out, one
solitary lamp left gleaming like a large ruby on a giant mast, and the
roar of the city became fainter.
At two o’clock he got up, and strolled towards Blackfriars. How
unreal everything looked! How like a strange dream! The houses on
the other side of the river seemed built out of darkness. One would
have said that silver and shadow had fashioned the world anew. The
huge dome of St. Paul’s loomed like a bubble through the dusky air.
As he approached Cleopatra’s Needle he saw a man leaning over
the parapet, and as he came nearer the man looked up, the gas-light
falling full upon his face.
It was Mr. Podgers, the cheiromantist! No one could mistake the
fat, flabby face, the gold-rimmed spectacles, the sickly feeble smile,
the sensual mouth.
Lord Arthur stopped. A brilliant idea flashed across him, and he
stole softly up behind. In a moment he had seized Mr. Podgers by
the legs, and flung him into the Thames. There was a coarse oath, a
heavy splash, and all was still. Lord Arthur looked anxiously over,
but could see nothing of the cheiromantist but a tall hat, pirouetting
in an eddy of moonlit water. After a time it also sank, and no trace
of Mr. Podgers was visible. Once he thought that he caught sight of
the bulky misshapen figure striking out for the staircase by the
bridge, and a horrible feeling of failure came over him, but it turned
out to be merely a reflection, and when the moon shone out from
behind a cloud it passed away. At last he seemed to have realised
the decree of destiny. He heaved a deep sigh of relief, and Sybil’s
name came to his lips.
‘Have you dropped anything, sir?’ said a voice behind him
suddenly.
He turned round, and saw a policeman with a bull’s-eye lantern.54
‘Nothing of importance, sergeant,’ he answered, smiling, and
hailing a passing hansom, he jumped in, and told the man to drive
to Belgrave Square.
For the next few days he alternated between hope and fear. There
were moments when he almost expected Mr. Podgers to walk into
the room, and yet at other times he felt that Fate could not be so
unjust to him. Twice he went to the cheiromantist’s address in West
Moon Street, but he could not bring himself to ring the bell. He
longed for certainty, and was afraid of it.

Finally it came. He was sitting in the smoking-room of the club


having tea, and listening rather wearily to Surbiton’s account of the
last comic song at the Gaiety,55 when the waiter came in with the
evening papers. He took up the St. James’s, and was listlessly turning
over its pages, when this strange heading caught his eye:

SUICIDE OF A CHEIROMANTIST.

He turned pale with excitement, and began to read. The


paragraph ran as follows:–

Yesterday morning, at seven o’clock, the body of Mr. Septimus R.


Podgers, the eminent cheiromantist, was washed on shore at
Greenwich, just in front of the Ship Hotel. The unfortunate
gentleman had been missing for some days, and considerable
anxiety for his safety had been felt in cheiromantic circles. It is
supposed that he committed suicide under the influence of a
temporary mental derangement, caused by overwork, and a verdict
to that effect was returned this afternoon by the coroner’s jury. Mr.
Podgers had just completed an elaborate treatise on the subject of
the Human Hand, that will shortly be published, when it will no
doubt attract much attention. The deceased was sixty-five years of
age, and does not seem to have left any relations.

Lord Arthur rushed out of the club with the paper still in his
hand, to the immense amazement of the hall-porter, who tried in
vain to stop him, and drove at once to Park Lane. Sybil saw him
from the window, and something told her that he was the bearer of
good news. She ran down to meet him, and, when she saw his face,
she knew that all was well.

‘My dear Sybil,’ cried Lord Arthur, ‘let us be married tomorrow!’

‘You foolish boy! Why the cake is not even ordered!’ said Sybil,
laughing through her tears.

VI

When the wedding took place, some three weeks later, St. Peter’s
was crowded with a perfect mob of smart people. The service was
read in a most impressive manner by the Dean of Chichester, and
everybody agreed that they had never seen a handsomer couple
than the bride and bridegroom. They were more than handsome,
however – they were happy. Never for a single moment did Lord
Arthur regret all that he had suffered for Sybil’s sake, while she, on
her side, gave him the best things a woman can give to any man –
worship, tenderness, and love. For them romance was not killed by
reality. They always felt young.
Some years afterwards, when two beautiful children had been
born to them, Lady Windermere came down on a visit to Alton
Priory, a lovely old place, that had been the Duke’s wedding present
to his son; and one afternoon as she was sitting with Lady Arthur
under a lime-tree in the garden, watching the little boy and girl as
they played up and down the rose-walk, like fitful sunbeams, she
suddenly took her hostess’s hand in hers, and said, ‘Are you happy,
Sybil?’
‘Dear Lady Windermere, of course I am happy. Aren’t you?’
‘I have no time to be happy, Sybil. I always like the last person
who is introduced to me; but, as a rule, as soon as I know people I
get tired of them.’
‘Don’t your lions satisfy you, Lady Windermere?’
‘Oh dear, no! lions are only good for one season. As soon as their
manes are cut, they are the dullest creatures going. Besides, they
behave very badly, if you are really nice to them. Do you remember
that horrid Mr. Podgers? He was a dreadful impostor. Of course, I
didn’t mind that at all, and even when he wanted to borrow money I
forgave him, but I could not stand his making love to me. He has
really made me hate cheiromancy. I go in for telepathy now. It is
much more amusing.’
‘You mustn’t say anything against cheiromancy here, Lady
Windermere; it is the only subject that Arthur does not like people
to chaff about. I assure you he is quite serious over it.’
‘You don’t mean to say that he believes in it, Sybil?’
‘Ask him, Lady Windermere, here he is;’ and Lord Arthur came up
the garden with a large bunch of yellow roses in his hand, and his
two children dancing round him.
‘Lord Arthur?’
‘Yes, Lady Windermere.’
‘You don’t mean to say that you believe in cheiromancy?’
‘Of course I do,’ said the young man, smiling.
‘But why?’
‘Because I owe to it all the happiness of my life,’ he murmured,
throwing himself into a wicker chair.
‘My dear Lord Arthur, what do you owe to it?’
‘Sybil,’ he answered, handing his wife the roses, and looking into
her violet eyes.
‘What nonsense!’ cried Lady Windermere. ‘I never heard such
nonsense in all my life.’
The Sphinx Without a Secret

An etching1

One afternoon I was sitting outside the Café de la Paix, watching the
splendour and shabbiness of Parisian life, and wondering over my
vermouth at the strange panorama of pride and poverty that was
passing before me, when I heard some one call my name. I turned
round, and saw Lord Murchison. We had not met since we had been
at college together, nearly ten years before, so I was delighted to
come across him again, and we shook hands warmly. At Oxford we
had been great friends. I had liked him immensely, he was so
handsome, so high-spirited, and so honourable. We used to say of
him that he would be the best of fellows, if he did not always speak
the truth, but I think we really admired him all the more for his
frankness. I found him a good deal changed. He looked anxious and
puzzled, and seemed to be in doubt about something. I felt it could
not be modern scepticism, for Murchison was the stoutest of Tories,
and believed in the Pentateuch2 as firmly as he believed in the
House of Peers; so I concluded that it was a woman, and asked him
if he was married yet.

‘I don’t understand women well enough,’ he answered.


‘My dear Gerald,’ I said, ‘women are meant to be loved, not to be
understood.’
‘I cannot love where I cannot trust,’ he replied.
‘I believe you have a mystery in your life, Gerald,’ I exclaimed;
‘tell me about it.’
‘Let us go for a drive,’ he answered, ‘it is too crowded here. No,
not a yellow carriage, any other colour – there, that darkgreen one
will do;’ and in a few moments we were trotting down the
boulevard in the direction of the Madeleine.
‘Where shall we go to?’ I said.
‘Oh, anywhere you like!’ he answered – ‘to the restaurant in the
Bois;3 we will dine there, and you shall tell me all about yourself.’
‘I want to hear about you first,’ I said. ‘Tell me your mystery.’
He took from his pocket a little silver-clasped morocco case, and
handed it to me. I opened it. Inside there was the photograph of a
woman. She was tall and slight, and strangely picturesque with her
large vague eyes and loosened hair. She looked like a clairvoyante,
and was wrapped in rich furs.
‘What do you think of that face?’ he said; ‘is it truthful?’
I examined it carefully. It seemed to me the face of some one who
had a secret, but whether that secret was good or evil I could not
say. Its beauty was a beauty moulded out of many mysteries – the
beauty, in fact, which is psychological, not plastic – and the faint
smile that just played across the lips was far too subtle to be really
sweet.
‘Well,’ he cried impatiently, ‘what do you say?’
‘She is the Gioconda in sables,’4 I answered. ‘Let me know all
about her.’
‘Not now,’ he said; ‘after dinner;’ and began to talk of other
things.
When the waiter brought us our coffee and cigarettes I reminded
Gerald of his promise. He rose from his seat, walked two or three
times up and down the room, and, sinking into an armchair, told me
the following story: –
‘One evening,’ he said, ‘I was walking down Bond Street about
five o’clock. There was a terrific crush of carriages, and the traffic
was almost stopped. Close to the pavement was standing a little
yellow brougham,5 which, for some reason or other, attracted my
attention. As I passed by there looked out from it the face I showed
you this afternoon. It fascinated me immediately. All that night I
kept thinking of it, and all the next day. I wandered up and down
that wretched Row,6 peering into every carriage, and waiting for the
yellow brougham; but I could not find ma belle inconnue,7 and at last
I began to think she was merely a dream. About a week afterwards I
was dining with Madame de Rastail. Dinner was for eight o’clock;
but at half-past eight we were still waiting in the drawing-room.
Finally the servant threw open the door, and announced Lady Alroy.
It was the woman I had been looking for. She came in very slowly,
looking like a moon-beam in grey lace, and, to my intense delight, I
was asked to take her in to dinner. After we had sat down I
remarked quite innocently, “I think I caught sight of you in Bond
Street some time ago, Lady Alroy.” She grew very pale, and said to
me in a low voice, “Pray do not talk so loud; you may be
overheard.” I felt miserable at having made such a bad beginning,
and plunged recklessly into the subject of the French plays. She
spoke very little, always in the same low musical voice, and seemed
as if she was afraid of some one listening. I fell passionately,
stupidly in love, and the indefinable atmosphere of mystery that
surrounded her excited my most ardent curiosity. When she was
going away, which she did very soon after dinner, I asked her if I
might call and see her. She hesitated for a moment, glanced round
to see if any one was near us, and then said, “Yes; to-morrow at a
quarter to five.” I begged Madame de Rastail to tell me about her;
but all that I could learn was that she was a widow with a beautiful
house in Park Lane, and as some scientific bore began a dissertation
on widows, as exemplifying the survival of the matrimonially fittest,
I left and went home.
‘The next day I arrived at Park Lane punctual to the moment, but
was told by the butler that Lady Alroy had just gone out. I went
down to the club quite unhappy and very much puzzled, and after
long consideration wrote her a letter, asking if I might be allowed to
try my chance some other afternoon. I had no answer for several
days, but at last I got a little note saying she would be at home on
Sunday at four, and with this extraordinary postscript: “Please do
not write to me here again; I will explain when I see you.” On
Sunday she received me, and was perfectly charming; but when I
was going away she begged of me, if I ever had occasion to write to
her again, to address my letter to “Mrs. Knox, care of Whittaker’s
Library, Green Street.” “There are reasons,” she said, “why I cannot
receive letters in my own house.”
‘All through the season I saw a great deal of her, and the
atmosphere of mystery never left her. Sometimes I thought that she
was in the power of some man, but she looked so unapproachable
that I could not believe it. It was really very difficult for me to come
to any conclusion, for she was like one of those strange crystals that
one sees in museums, which are at one moment clear, and at
another clouded. At last I determined to ask her to be my wife: I was
sick and tired of the incessant secrecy that she imposed on all my
visits, and on the few letters I sent her. I wrote to her at the library
to ask her if she could see me the following Monday at six. She
answered yes, and I was in the seventh heaven of delight. I was
infatuated with her: in spite of the mystery, I thought then – in
consequence of it, I see now. No; it was the woman herself I loved.
The mystery troubled me, maddened me. Why did chance put me in
its track?’
‘You discovered it, then?’ I cried.
‘I fear so,’ he answered. ‘You can judge for yourself.’
‘When Monday came round I went to lunch with my uncle, and
about four o’clock found myself in the Marylebone Road. My uncle,
you know, lives in Regent’s Park. I wanted to get to Piccadilly, and
took a short cut through a lot of shabby little streets. Suddenly I saw
in front of me Lady Alroy, deeply veiled and walking very fast. On
coming to the last house in the street, she went up the steps, took
out a latch-key, and let herself in. “Here is the mystery,” I said to
myself; and I hurried on and examined the house. It seemed a sort of
place for letting lodgings. On the doorstep lay her handkerchief,
which she had dropped. I picked it up and put it in my pocket. Then
I began to consider what I should do. I came to the conclusion that I
had no right to spy on her, and I drove down to the club. At six I
called to see her. She was lying on a sofa, in a tea-gown of silver
tissue looped up by some strange moonstones that she always wore.
She was looking quite lovely. “I am so glad to see you,” she said; “I
have not been out all day.” I stared at her in amazement, and
pulling the handkerchief out of my pocket, handed it to her. “You
dropped this in Cumnor Street this afternoon, Lady Alroy,” I said
very calmly. She looked at me in terror, but made no attempt to
take the handkerchief. “What were you doing there?” I asked. “What
right have you to question me?” she answered. “The right of a man
who loves you,” I replied; “I came here to ask you to be my wife.”
She hid her face in her hands, and burst into floods of tears. “You
must tell me,” I continued. She stood up, and, looking me straight in
the face, said, “Lord Murchison, there is nothing to tell you.” – “You
went to meet some one,” I cried; “this is your mystery.” She grew
dreadfully white, and said, “I went to meet no one.” – “Can’t you
tell the truth?” I exclaimed. “I have told it,” she replied. I was mad,
frantic; I don’t know what I said, but I said terrible things to her.
Finally I rushed out of the house. She wrote me a letter the next
day; I sent it back unopened, and started for Norway with Alan
Colville. After a month I came back, and the first thing I saw in the
Morning Post was the death of Lady Alroy. She had caught a chill at
the Opera, and had died in five days of congestion of the lungs.8 I
shut myself up and saw no one. I had loved her so much, I had
loved her so madly. Good God! how I had loved that woman!’
‘You went to the street, to the house in it?’ I said.
‘Yes,’ he answered.
‘One day I went to Cumnor Street. I could not help it; I was
tortured with doubt. I knocked at the door, and a respectable-
looking woman opened it to me. I asked her if she had any rooms to
let. “Well, sir,” she replied, “the drawing-rooms are supposed to be
let; but I have not seen the lady for three months, and as rent is
owing on them, you can have them.” – “Is this the lady?” I said,
showing the photograph. “That’s her, sure enough,” she exclaimed;
“and when is she coming back, sir?” – “The lady is dead,” I replied.
“Oh, sir, I hope not!” said the woman; “she was my best lodger. She
paid me three guineas a week merely to sit in my drawing-rooms
now and then.” – “She met some one here?” I said; but the woman
assured me that it was not so, that she always came alone, and saw
no one. “What on earth did she do here?” I cried. “She simply sat in
the drawing-room, sir, reading books, and sometimes had tea,” the
woman answered. I did not know what to say, so I gave her a
sovereign and went away. Now, what do you think it all meant? You
don’t believe the woman was telling the truth?’
‘I do.’
‘Then why did Lady Alroy go there?’
‘My dear Gerald,’ I answered, ‘Lady Alroy was simply a woman
with a mania for mystery. She took these rooms for the pleasure of
going there with her veil down, and imagining she was a heroine.
She had a passion for secrecy, but she herself was merely a Sphinx
without a secret.’
‘Do you really think so?’
‘I am sure of it,’ I replied.
He took out the morocco case, opened it, and looked at the
photograph. ‘I wonder?’ he said at last.
The Canterville Ghost

A Hylo-Idealistic Romance1

When Mr. Hiram B. Otis, the American Minister, bought Canterville


Chase, every one told him he was doing a very foolish thing, as
there was no doubt at all that the place was haunted. Indeed, Lord
Canterville himself, who was a man of the most punctilious honour,
had felt it his duty to mention the fact to Mr. Otis when they came
to discuss terms.

‘We have not cared to live in the place ourselves,’ said Lord
Canterville, ‘since my grand-aunt, the Dowager Duchess2 of Bolton,
was frightened into a fit, from which she never really recovered, by
two skeleton hands being placed on her shoulders as she was
dressing for dinner, and I feel bound to tell you, Mr. Otis, that the
ghost has been seen by several living members of my family, as well
as by the rector of the parish, the Rev. Augustus Dampier, who is a
Fellow of King’s College, Cambridge. After the unfortunate accident
to the Duchess, none of our younger servants would stay with us,
and Lady Canterville often got very little sleep at night, in
consequence of the mysterious noises that came from the corridor
and the library.’
‘My Lord,’ answered the Minister, ‘I will take the furniture and the
ghost at a valuation. I come from a modern country, where we have
everything that money can buy; and with all our spry young fellows
painting the Old World red, and carrying off your best actors and
prima-donnas, I reckon that if there were such a thing as a ghost in
Europe, we’d have it at home in a very short time in one of our
public museums, or on the road as a show.’
‘I fear that the ghost exists,’ said Lord Canterville, smiling,
‘though it may have resisted the overtures of your enterprising
impresarios. It has been well known for three centuries, since 1584
in fact, and always makes its appearance before the death of any
member of our family.’
‘Well, so does the family doctor for that matter, Lord Canterville.
But there is no such thing, sir, as a ghost, and I guess the laws of
Nature are not going to be suspended for the British aristocracy.’
‘You are certainly very natural in America,’3 answered Lord
Canterville, who did not quite understand Mr. Otis’s last
observation, ‘and if you don’t mind a ghost in the house, it is all
right. Only you must remember I warned you.’
A few weeks after this, the purchase was concluded, and at the
close of the season the Minister and his family went down to
Canterville Chase. Mrs. Otis, who, as Miss Lucretia R. Tappan, of
West 53rd Street, had been a celebrated New York belle, was now a
very handsome, middle-aged woman, with fine eyes, and a superb
profile. Many American ladies on leaving their native land adopt an
appearance of chronic ill-health, under the impression that it is a
form of European refinement, but Mrs. Otis had never fallen into
this error. She had a magnificent constitution, and a really
wonderful amount of animal spirits. Indeed, in many respects, she
was quite English, and was an excellent example of the fact that we
have really everything in common with America nowadays, except,
of course, language. Her eldest son, christened Washington by his
parents in a moment of patriotism, which he never ceased to regret,
was a fair-haired, rather good-looking young man, who had
qualified himself for American diplomacy by leading the German4 at
the Newport Casino for three successive seasons, and even in
London was well known as an excellent dancer. Gardenias and the
peerage were his only weaknesses. Otherwise he was extremely
sensible. Miss Virginia E. Otis was a little girl of fifteen, lithe and
lovely as a fawn, and with a fine freedom in her large blue eyes. She
was a wonderful amazon,5 and had once raced old Lord Bilton on
her pony twice round the park, winning by a length and a half, just
in front of the Achilles statue, to the huge delight of the young Duke
of Cheshire, who proposed for her on the spot, and was sent back to
Eton that very night by his guardians, in floods of tears. After
Virginia came the twins, who were usually called ‘The Stars and
Stripes,’ as they were always getting swished. They were delightful
boys, and with the exception of the worthy Minister the only true
republicans of the family.
As Canterville Chase is seven miles from Ascot, the nearest
railway station, Mr. Otis had telegraphed for a waggonette to meet
them, and they started on their drive in high spirits. It was a lovely
July evening, and the air was delicate with the scent of the
pinewoods. Now and then they heard a wood pigeon brooding over
its own sweet voice, or saw, deep in the rustling fern, the burnished
breast of the pheasant. Little squirrels peered at them from the
beech-trees as they went by, and the rabbits scudded away through
the brushwood and over the mossy knolls, with their white tails in
the air. As they entered the avenue of Canterville Chase, however,
the sky became suddenly overcast with clouds, a curious stillness
seemed to hold the atmosphere, a great flight of rooks passed
silently over their heads, and, before they reached the house, some
big drops of rain had fallen.
Standing on the steps to receive them was an old woman, neatly
dressed in black silk, with a white cap and apron. This was Mrs.
Umney, the housekeeper, whom Mrs. Otis, at Lady Canterville’s
earnest request, had consented to keep on in her former position.
She made them each a low curtsey as they alighted, and said in a
quaint, old-fashioned manner, ‘I bid you welcome to Canterville
Chase.’ Following her, they passed through the fine Tudor hall into
the library, a long, low room, panelled in black oak, at the end of
which was a large stained-glass window. Here they found tea laid
out for them, and, after taking off their wraps, they sat down and
began to look round, while Mrs. Umney waited on them.
Suddenly Mrs. Otis caught sight of a dull red stain on the floor
just by the fireplace and, quite unconscious of what it really
signified, said to Mrs. Umney, ‘I am afraid something has been spilt
there.’
‘Yes, madam,’ replied the old housekeeper in a low voice, ‘blood
has been spilt on that spot.’
‘How horrid,’ cried Mrs. Otis; ‘I don’t at all care for blood-stains in
a sitting-room. It must be removed at once.’
The old woman smiled, and answered in the same low, mysterious
voice, ‘It is the blood of Lady Eleanore de Canterville, who was
murdered on that very spot by her own husband, Sir Simon de
Canterville, in 1575. Sir Simon survived her nine years, and
disappeared suddenly under very mysterious circumstances. His
body has never been discovered, but his guilty spirit still haunts the
Chase. The blood-stain has been much admired by tourists and
others, and cannot be removed.’
‘That is all nonsense,’ cried Washington Otis; ‘Pinkerton’s
Champion Stain Remover and Paragon Detergent will clean it up in
no time,’ and before the terrified housekeeper could interfere he had
fallen upon his knees, and was rapidly scouring the floor with a
small stick of what looked like a black cosmetic. In a few moments
no trace of the blood-stain could be seen.
‘I knew Pinkerton would do it,’ he exclaimed triumphantly, as he
looked round at his admiring family; but no sooner had he said
these words than a terrible flash of lightening lit up the sombre
room, a fearful peal of thunder made them all start to their feet, and
Mrs. Umney fainted.
‘What a monstrous climate!’ said the American Minister calmly, as
he lit a long cheroot. ‘I guess the old country is so over-populated
that they have not enough decent weather for everybody. I have
always been of opinion that emigration is the only thing for
England.’
‘My dear Hiram,’ cried Mrs. Otis, ‘what can we do with a woman
who faints?’
‘Charge it to her like breakages,’ answered the Minister; ‘she
won’t faint after that;’ and in a few moments Mrs. Umney certainly
came to. There was no doubt, however, that she was extremely
upset, and she sternly warned Mr. Otis to beware of some trouble
coming to the house.

‘I have seen things with my own eyes, sir,’ she said, ‘that would
make any Christian’s hair stand on end, and many and many a night
I have not closed my eyes in sleep for the awful things that are done
here.’ Mr. Otis, however, and his wife warmly assured the honest
soul that they were not afraid of ghosts, and, after invoking the
blessings of Providence on her new master and mistress, and making
arrangements for an increase of salary, the old housekeeper tottered
off to her own room.

II

The storm raged fiercely all that night, but nothing of particular
note occurred. The next morning, however, when they came down
to breakfast, they found the terrible stain of blood once again on the
floor. ‘I don’t think it can be the fault of the Paragon Detergent,’
said Washington, ‘for I have tried it with everything. It must be the
ghost.’ He accordingly rubbed out the stain a second time, but the
second morning it appeared again. The third morning also it was
there, though the library had been locked up at night by Mr. Otis
himself, and the key carried upstairs. The whole family were now
quite interested; Mr. Otis began to suspect that he had been too
dogmatic in his denial of the existence of ghosts, Mrs. Otis expressed
her intention of joining the Psychical Society,6 and Washington
prepared a long letter to Messrs. Myers and Podmore on the subject
of the Permanence of Sanguineous Stains when connected with
Crime. That night all doubts about the objective existence of
phantas-mata were removed for ever.

The day had been warm and sunny; and, in the cool of the
evening, the whole family went out to drive. They did not return
home till nine o’clock, when they had a light supper. The
conversation in no way turned upon ghosts, so there were not even
those primary conditions of receptive expectation which so often
precede the presentation of psychical phenomena. The subjects
discussed, as I have since learned from Mr. Otis, were merely such
as form the ordinary conversation of cultured Americans of the
better class, such as the immense superiority of Miss Fanny
Davenport over Sara Bernhardt7 as an actress; the difficulty of
obtaining green corn, buckwheat cakes, and hominy,8 even in the
best English houses; the importance of Boston in the development of
the world-soul; the advantages of the baggage check system in
railway travelling; and the sweetness of the New York accent as
compared to the London drawl. No mention at all was made of the
supernatural, nor was Sir Simon de Canterville alluded to in any
way. At eleven o’clock the family retired, and by half-past all the
lights were out. Some time after, Mr. Otis was awakened by a
curious noise in the corridor, outside his room. It sounded like the
clank of metal, and seemed to be coming nearer every moment. He
got up at once, struck a match, and looked at the time. It was
exactly one o’clock. He was quite calm, and felt his pulse, which
was not at all feverish. The strange noise still continued, and with it
he heard distinctly the sound of footsteps. He put on his slippers,
took a small oblong phial out of his dressing-case, and opened the
door. Right in front of him he saw, in the wan moonlight, an old
man of terrible aspect.9 His eyes were as red burning coals; long
grey hair fell over his shoulders in matted coils; his garments, which
were of antique cut, were soiled and ragged, and from his wrists and
ankles hung heavy manacles and rusty gyves.
‘My dear sir,’ said Mr. Otis, ‘I really must insist on your oiling
those chains, and have brought you for that purpose a small bottle
of the Tammany Rising Sun Lubricator. It is said to be completely
efficacious upon one application, and there are several testimonials
to that effect on the wrapper from some of our most eminent native
divines. I shall leave it here for you by the bedroom candles, and
will be happy to supply you with more should you require it.’ With
these words the United States Minister laid the bottle down on a
marble table, and, closing his door, retired to rest.
For a moment the Canterville ghost stood quite motionless in
natural indignation; then, dashing the bottle violently upon the
polished floor, he fled down the corridor, uttering hollow groans,
and emitting a ghastly green light. Just, however, as he reached the
top of the great oak staircase, a door was flung open, two little
white-robed figures appeared, and a large pillow whizzed past his
head! There was evidently no time to be lost, so, hastily adopting
the Fourth Dimension of Space as a means of escape, he vanished
through the wainscoting, and the house became quite quiet.

On reaching a small secret chamber in the left wing, he leaned up


against a moonbeam to recover his breath, and began to try and
realise his position. Never, in a brilliant and uninterrupted career of
three hundred years, had he been so grossly insulted. He thought of
the Dowager Duchess, whom he had frightened into a fit as she
stood before the glass in her lace and diamonds; of the four
housemaids, who had gone off into hysterics when he merely
grinned at them through the curtains of one of the spare bedrooms;
of the rector of the parish, whose candle he had blown out as he
was coming late one night from the library, and who had been
under the care of Sir William Gull ever since, a perfect martyr to
nervous disorders; and of old Madame de Tremouillac, who, having
wakened up one morning early and seen a skeleton seated in an
armchair by the fire reading her diary, had been confined to her bed
for six weeks with an attack of brain fever, and, on her recovery,
had become reconciled to the Church, and broken off her
connection with that notorious sceptic Monsieur de Voltaire.10 He
remembered the terrible night when the wicked Lord Canterville
was found choking in his dressing-room, with the knave of
diamonds half-way down his throat, and confessed, just before he
died, that he had cheated Charles James Fox out of £50,000 at
Crockford’s11 by means of that very card, and swore that the ghost
had made him swallow it. All his great achievements came back to
him again, from the butler who had shot himself in the pantry
because he had seen a green hand tapping at the window pane, to
the beautiful Lady Stutfield,12 who was always obliged to wear a
black velvet band round her throat to hide the mark of five fingers
burnt upon her white skin, and who drowned herself at last in the
carp-pond at the end of the King’s Walk. With the enthusiastic
egotism of the true artist he went over his most celebrated
performances, and smiled bitterly to himself as he recalled to mind
his last appearance as ‘Red Reuben, or the Strangled Babe,’ his début
as ‘Gaunt Gibeon, the Blood-sucker of Bexley Moor,’ and the furore
he had excited one lovely June evening by merely playing ninepins
with his own bones upon the lawn-tennis ground. And after all this,
some wretched modern Americans were to come and offer him the
Rising Sun Lubricator, and throw pillows at his head! It was quite
unbearable. Besides, no ghost in history had ever been treated in
this manner. Accordingly, he determined to have vengeance, and
remained till daylight in an attitude of deep thought.

III
The next morning, when the Otis family met at breakfast, they
discussed the ghost at some length. The United States Minister was
naturally a little annoyed to find that his present had not been
accepted. ‘I have no wish,’ he said, ‘to do the ghost any personal
injury, and I must say that, considering the length of time he has
been in the house, I don’t think it is at all polite to throw pillows at
him’ – a very just remark, at which, I am sorry to say, the twins
burst into shouts of laughter. ‘Upon the other hand,’ he continued,
‘if he really declines to use the Rising Sun Lubricator, we shall have
to take his chains from him. It would be quite impossible to sleep,
with such a noise going on outside the bedrooms.’

For the rest of the week, however, they were undisturbed, the
only thing that excited any attention being the continual renewal of
the blood-stain on the library floor. This certainly was very strange,
as the door was always locked at night by Mr. Otis, and the
windows kept closely barred. The chameleon-like colour, also, of the
stain excited a good deal of comment. Some mornings it was a dull
(almost Indian) red, then it would be vermilion, then a rich purple,
and once when they came down for family prayers, according to the
simple rites of the Free American Reformed Episcopalian Church,
they found it a bright emerald-green. These kaleidoscopic changes
naturally amused the party very much, and bets on the subject were
freely made every evening. The only person who did not enter into
the joke was little Virginia, who, for some unexplained reason, was
always a good deal distressed at the sight of the blood-stain, and
very nearly cried the morning it was emerald-green.
The second appearance of the ghost was on Sunday night. Shortly
after they had gone to bed they were suddenly alarmed by a fearful
crash in the hall. Rushing downstairs, they found that a large suit of
old armour had become detached from its stand, and had fallen on
the stone floor, while, seated in a high-backed chair, was the
Canterville ghost, rubbing his knees with an expression of acute
agony on his face. The twins, having brought their pea-shooters
with them, at once discharged two pellets on him, with that
accuracy of aim which can only be attained by long and careful
practice on a writing-master, while the United States Minister
covered him with his revolver, and called upon him, in accordance
with Californian etiquette, to hold up his hands! The ghost started
up with a wild shriek of rage, and swept through them like a mist,
extinguishing Washington Otis’s candle as he passed, and so leaving
them all in total darkness. On reaching the top of the staircase he
recovered himself, and determined to give his celebrated peal of
demoniac laughter. This he had on more than one occasion found
extremely useful. It was said to have turned Lord Raker’s wig grey
in a single night, and had certainly made three of Lady Canterville’s
French governesses give warning before their month was up. He
accordingly laughed his most horrible laugh, till the old vaulted roof
rang and rang again, but hardly had the fearful echo died away
when a door opened, and Mrs. Otis came out in a light blue
dressing-gown. ‘I am afraid you are far from well,’ she said, ‘and
have brought you a bottle of Dr. Dobell’s tincture. If it is indigestion,
you will find it a most excellent remedy.’ The ghost glared at her in
fury, and began at once to make preparations for turning himself
into a large black dog, an accomplishment for which he was justly
renowned, and to which the family doctor always attributed the
permanent idiocy of Lord Canterville’s uncle, the Hon. Thomas
Horton. The sound of approaching footsteps, however, made him
hesitate in his fell purpose, so he contented himself with becoming
faintly phosphorescent, and vanished with a deep churchyard groan,
just as the twins had come up to him.
On reaching his room he entirely broke down, and became a prey
to the most violent agitation. The vulgarity of the twins, and the
gross materialism of Mrs. Otis, were naturally extremely annoying,
but what really distressed him most was, that he had been unable to
wear the suit of mail. He had hoped that even modern Americans
would be thrilled by the sight of a Spectre In Armour, if for no more
sensible reason, at least out of respect for their national poet
Longfellow,13 over whose graceful and attractive poetry he himself
had whiled away many a weary hour when the Cantervilles were up
in town. Besides, it was his own suit. He had worn it with great
success at the Kenilworth tournament, and had been highly
complimented on it by no less a person than the Virgin Queen
herself.14 Yet when he had put it on, he had been completely
overpowered by the weight of the huge breastplate and steel casque,
and had fallen heavily on the stone pavement, barking both his
knees severely, and bruising the knuckles of his right hand.
For some days after this he was extremely ill, and hardly stirred
out of his room at all, except to keep the blood-stain in proper
repair. However, by taking great care of himself, he recovered, and
resolved to make a third attempt to frighten the United States
Minister and his family. He selected Friday, the 17th of August, for
his appearance, and spent most of that day in looking over his
wardrobe, ultimately deciding in favour of a large slouched hat with
a red feather, a winding-sheet frilled at the wrists and neck, and a
rusty dagger. Towards evening a violent storm of rain came on, and
the wind was so high that all the windows and doors in the old
house shook and rattled. In fact, it was just such weather as he
loved. His plan of action was this. He was to make his way quietly
to Washington Otis’s room, gibber at him from the foot of the bed,
and stab himself three times in the throat to the sound of slow
music. He bore Washington a special grudge, being quite aware that
it was he who was in the habit of removing the famous Canterville
blood-stain, by means of Pinkerton’s Paragon Detergent. Having
reduced the reckless and foolhardy youth to a condition of abject
terror, he was then to proceed to the room occupied by the United
States Minister and his wife, and there to place a clammy hand on
Mrs. Otis’s forehead, while he hissed into her trembling husband’s
ear the awful secrets of the charnel-house. With regard to little
Virginia, he had not quite made up his mind. She had never insulted
him in any way, and was pretty and gentle. A few hollow groans
from the wardrobe, he thought, would be more than sufficient, or, if
that failed to wake her, he might grabble at the counterpane with
palsy-twitching fingers. As for the twins, he was quite determined to
teach them a lesson. The first thing to be done was, of course, to sit
upon their chests, so as to produce the stifling sensation of
nightmare. Then, as their beds were quite close to each other, to
stand between them in the form of a green, icy-cold corpse, till they
became paralysed with fear, and finally, to throw off the winding-
sheet, and crawl round the room, with white, bleached bones and
one rolling eyeball, in the character of ‘Dumb Daniel, or the
Suicide’s Skeleton,’ a rôle in which he had on more than one
occasion produced a great effect, and which he considered quite
equal to his famous part of ‘Martin the Maniac, or the Masked
Mystery.’
At half-past ten he heard the family going to bed. For some time
he was disturbed by wild shrieks of laughter from the twins, who,
with the light-hearted gaiety of schoolboys, were evidently amusing
themselves before they retired to rest, but at a quarter past eleven
all was still, and, as midnight sounded, he sallied forth. The owl
beat against the window panes, the raven croaked from the old yew-
tree, and the wind wandered moaning round the house like a lost
soul; but the Otis family slept unconscious of their doom, and high
above the rain and storm he could hear the steady snoring of the
Minister for the United States. He stepped stealthily out of the
wainscoting, with an evil smile on his cruel, wrinkled mouth, and
the moon hid her face in a cloud as he stole past the great oriel
window, where his own arms and those of his murdered wife were
blazoned in azure and gold. On and on he glided, like an evil
shadow, the very darkness seeming to loathe him as he passed. Once
he thought he heard something call, and stopped; but it was only
the baying of a dog from the Red Farm, and he went on, muttering
strange sixteenth-century curses, and ever and anon brandishing the
rusty dagger in the midnight air. Finally he reached the corner of
the passage that led to luckless Washington’s room. For a moment
he paused there, the wind blowing his long grey locks about his
head, and twisting into grotesque and fantastic folds the nameless
horror of the dead man’s shroud. Then the clock struck the quarter,
and he felt the time was come. He chuckled to himself, and turned
the corner; but no sooner had he done so, than, with a piteous wail
of terror, he fell back, and hid his blanched face in his long, bony
hands. Right in front of him was standing a horrible spectre,
motionless as a carven image, and monstrous as a madman’s dream!
Its head was bald and burnished; its face round, and fat, and white;
and hideous laughter seemed to have writhed its features into an
eternal grin. From the eyes streamed rays of scarlet light, the mouth
was a wide well of fire, and a hideous garment, like to his own,
swathed with its silent snows the Titan form.15 On its breast was a
placard with strange writing in antique characters, some scroll of
shame it seemed, some record of wild sins, some awful calendar of
crime, and, with its right hand, it bore aloft a falchion16 of gleaming
steel.
Never having seen a ghost before, he naturally was terribly
frightened, and, after a second hasty glance at the awful phantom,
he fled back to his room, tripping up in his long winding sheet as he
sped down the corridor, and finally dropping the rusty dagger into
the Minister’s jack-boots, where it was found in the morning by the
butler. Once in the privacy of his own apartment, he flung himself
down on a small pallet-bed, and hid his face under the clothes. After
a time, however, the brave old Canterville spirit asserted itself, and
he determined to go and speak to the other ghost as soon as it was
daylight. Accordingly, just as the dawn was touching the hills with
silver, he returned towards the spot where he had first laid eyes on
the grisly phantom, feeling that, after all, two ghosts were better
than one, and that, by the aid of his new friend, he might safely
grapple with the twins. On reaching the spot, however, a terrible
sight met his gaze. Something had evidently happened to the
spectre, for the light had entirely faded from its hollow eyes, the
gleaming falchion had fallen from its hand, and it was leaning up
against the wall in a strained and uncomfortable attitude. He rushed
forward and seized it in his arms, when, to his horror, the head
slipped off and rolled on the floor, the body assumed a recumbent
posture, and he found himself clasping a white dimity17 bed-curtain,
with a sweeping-brush, a kitchen cleaver, and a hollow turnip lying
at his feet! Unable to understand this curious transformation, he
clutched the placard with feverish haste, and there, in the grey
morning light, he read these fearful words:–
The whole thing flashed across him. He had been tricked, foiled,
and outwitted! The old Canterville look came into his eyes; he
ground his toothless gums together; and, raising his withered hands
high above his head, swore, according to the picturesque
phraseology of the antique school, that when Chanticleer18 had
sounded twice his merry horn, deeds of blood would be wrought,
and Murder walk abroad with silent feet.

Hardly had he finished this awful oath when, from the red-tiled
roof of a distant homestead, a cock crew. He laughed a long, low,
bitter laugh, and waited. Hour after hour he waited, but the cock,
for some strange reason, did not crow again. Finally, at half-past
seven, the arrival of the housemaids made him give up his fearful
vigil, and he stalked back to his room, thinking of his vain oath and
baffled purpose. There he consulted several books of ancient
chivalry, of which he was exceedingly fond, and found that, on
every occasion on which his oath had been used, Chanticleer had
always crowed a second time. ‘Perdition seize the naughty fowl,’ he
muttered, ‘I have seen the day when, with my stout spear, I would
have run him through the gorge, and made him crow for me an
‘twere in death!’ He then retired to a comfortable lead coffin, and
stayed there till evening.
IV

The next day the ghost was very weak and tired. The terrible
excitement of the last four weeks was beginning to have its effect.
His nerves were completely shattered, and he started at the slightest
noise. For five days he kept his room, and at last made up his mind
to give up the point of the blood-stain on the library floor. If the
Otis family did not want it, they clearly did not deserve it. They
were evidently people on a low, material plane of existence, and
quite incapable of appreciating the symbolic value of sensuous
phenomena. The question of phantasmic apparitions, and the
development of astral bodies, was of course quite a different matter,
and really not under his control. It was his solemn duty to appear in
the corridor once a week, and to gibber from the large oriel window
on the first and third Wednesdays in every month, and he did not
see how he could honourably escape from his obligations. It is quite
true that his life had been very evil, but, upon the other hand, he
was most conscientious in all things connected with the
supernatural. For the next three Saturdays, accordingly, he traversed
the corridor as usual between midnight and three o’clock, taking
every possible precaution against being either heard or seen. He
removed his boots, trod as lightly as possible on the old worm-eaten
boards, wore a large black velvet cloak, and was careful to use the
Rising Sun Lubricator for oiling his chains. I am bound to
acknowledge that it was with a good deal of difficulty that he
brought himself to adopt this last mode of protection. However, one
night, while the family were at dinner, he slipped into Mr. Otis’s
bedroom and carried off the bottle. He felt a little humiliated at
first, but afterwards was sensible enough to see that there was a
great deal to be said for the invention, and, to a certain degree, it
served his purpose. Still, in spite of everything, he was not left
unmolested. Strings were continually being stretched across the
corridor, over which he tripped in the dark, and on one occasion,
while dressed for the part of ‘Black Isaac, or the Huntsman of
Hogley Woods,’ he met with a severe fall, through treading on a
butter-slide, which the twins had constructed from the entrance of
the Tapestry Chamber to the top of the oak staircase. This last insult
so enraged him, that he resolved to make one final effort to assert
his dignity and social position, and determined to visit the insolent
young Etonians the next night in his celebrated character of
‘Reckless Rupert, or the Headless Earl.’

He had not appeared in this disguise for more than seventy years;
in fact, not since he had so frightened pretty Lady Barbara Modish
by means of it, that she suddenly broke off her engagement with the
present Lord Canterville’s grandfather, and ran away to Gretna
Green with handsome Jack Castleton, declaring that nothing in the
world would induce her to marry into a family that allowed such a
horrible phantom to walk up and down the terrace at twilight. Poor
Jack was afterwards shot in a duel by Lord Canterville on
Wandsworth Common, and Lady Barbara died of a broken heart at
Tunbridge Wells before the year was out, so, in every way, it had
been a great success. It was, however, an extremely difficult ‘make-
up,’ if I may use such a theatrical expression in connection with one
of the greatest mysteries of the supernatural, or, to employ a more
scientific term, the higher-natural world, and it took him fully three
hours to make his preparations. At last everything was ready, and he
was very pleased with his appearance. The big leather riding-boots
that went with the dress were just a little too large for him, and he
could only find one of the two horse-pistols, but, on the whole, he
was quite satisfied, and at a quarter past one he glided out of the
wainscoting and crept down the corridor. On reaching the room
occupied by the twins, which I should mention was called the Blue
Bed Chamber, on account of the colour of its hangings, he found the
door just ajar. Wishing to make an effective entrance, he flung it
wide open, when a heavy jug of water fell right down on him,
wetting him to the skin, and just missing his left shoulder by a
couple of inches. At the same moment he heard stifled shrieks of
laughter proceeding from the four-post bed. The shock to his
nervous system was so great that he fled back to his room as hard as
he could go, and the next day he was laid up with a severe cold. The
only thing that at all consoled him in the whole affair was the fact
that he had not brought his head with him, for, had he done so, the
consequences might have been very serious.
He now gave up all hope of ever frightening this rude American
family, and contented himself, as a rule, with creeping about the
passages in list slippers,19 with a thick red muffler round his throat
for fear of draughts, and a small arquebuse,20 in case he should be
attacked by the twins. The final blow he received occurred on the
19th of September. He had gone downstairs to the great entrance-
hall, feeling sure that there, at any rate, he would be quite
unmolested, and was amusing himself by making satirical remarks
on the large Saroni photographs21 of the United States Minister and
his wife, which had now taken the place of the Canterville family
pictures. He was simply but neatly clad in a long shroud, spotted
with churchyard mould, had tied up his jaw with a strip of yellow
linen, and carried a small lantern and a sexton’s spade. In fact, he
was dressed for the character of ‘Jonas the Graveless, or the Corpse-
Snatcher of Chertsey Barn,’ one of his most remarkable
impersonations, and one which the Cantervilles had every reason to
remember, as it was the real origin of their quarrel with their
neighbour, Lord Rufford. It was about a quarter past two o’clock in
the morning, and, as far as he could ascertain, no one was stirring.
As he was strolling towards the library, however, to see if there
were any traces left of the blood-stain, suddenly there leaped out on
him from a dark corner two figures, who waved their arms wildly
above their heads, and shrieked out ‘BOO!’ in his ear.
Seized with a panic, which, under the circumstances, was only
natural, he rushed for the staircase, but found Washington Otis
waiting for him there with the big garden-syringe; and being thus
hemmed in by his enemies on every side, and driven almost to bay,
he vanished into the great iron stove, which, fortunately for him,
was not lit, and had to make his way home through the flues and
chimneys, arriving at his own room in a terrible state of dirt,
disorder, and despair.
After this he was not seen again on any nocturnal expedition. The
twins lay in wait for him on several occasions, and strewed the
passages with nutshells every night to the great annoyance of their
parents and the servants, but it was of no avail. It was quite evident
that his feelings were so wounded that he would not appear. Mr.
Otis consequently resumed his great work on the history of the
Democratic Party, on which he had been engaged for some years;
Mrs. Otis organised a wonderful clam-bake,22 which amazed the
whole county; the boys took to lacrosse, euchre,23 poker, and other
American national games; and Virginia rode about the lanes on her
pony, accompanied by the young Duke of Cheshire, who had come
to spend the last week of his holidays at Canterville Chase. It was
generally assumed that the ghost had gone away, and, in fact, Mr.
Otis wrote a letter to that effect to Lord Canterville, who, in reply,
expressed his great pleasure at the news, and sent his best
congratulations to the Minister’s worthy wife.

The Otises, however, were deceived, for the ghost was still in the
house, and though now almost an invalid, was by no means ready to
let matters rest, particularly as he heard that among the guests was
the young Duke of Cheshire, whose grand-uncle, Lord Francis
Stilton, had once bet a hundred guineas24 with Colonel Carbury that
he would play dice with the Canterville ghost, and was found the
next morning lying on the floor of the card-room in such a helpless
paralytic state, that though he lived on to a great age, he was never
able to say anything again but ‘Double Sixes.’ The story was well
known at the time, though, of course, out of respect to the feelings
of the two noble families, every attempt was made to hush it up;
and a full account of all the circumstances connected with it will be
found in the third volume of Lord Tattle’s Recollections of the Prince
Regent and his Friends. The ghost, then, was naturally very anxious to
show that he had not lost his influence over the Stiltons, with
whom, indeed, he was distantly connected, his own first cousin
having been married en secondes noces25 to the Sieur de Bulkeley,
from whom, as every one knows, the Dukes of Cheshire are lineally
descended. Accordingly, he made arrangements for appearing to
Virginia’s little lover in his celebrated impersonation of ‘The
Vampire Monk, or, the Bloodless Benedictine,’ a performance so
horrible that when old Lady Startup saw it, which she did on one
fatal New Year’s Eve, in the year 1764, she went off into the most
piercing shrieks, which culminated in violent apoplexy, and died in
three days, after disinheriting the Cantervilles, who were her nearest
relations, and leaving all her money to her London apothecary. At
the last moment, however, his terror of the twins prevented his
leaving his room, and the little Duke slept in peace under the great
feathered canopy in the Royal Bedchamber, and dreamed of
Virginia.

V
A few days after this, Virginia and her curly-haired cavalier went
out riding on Brockley meadows, where she tore her habit so badly
in getting through a hedge, that, on their return home, she made up
her mind to go up by the back staircase so as not to be seen. As she
was running past the Tapestry Chamber, the door of which
happened to be open, she fancied she saw some one inside, and
thinking it was her mother’s maid, who sometimes used to bring her
work there, looked in to ask her to mend her habit. To her immense
surprise, however, it was the Canterville Ghost himself! He was
sitting by the window, watching the ruined gold of the yellowing
trees fly through the air, and the red leaves dancing madly down the
long avenue. His head was leaning on his hand, and his whole
attitude was one of extreme depression. Indeed, so forlorn, and so
much out of repair did he look, that little Virginia, whose first idea
had been to run away and lock herself in her room, was filled with
pity, and determined to try and comfort him. So light was her
footfall, and so deep his melancholy, that he was not aware of her
presence till she spoke to him.

‘I am so sorry for you,’ she said, ‘but my brothers are going back
to Eton to-morrow, and then, if you behave yourself, no one will
annoy you.’
‘It is absurd asking me to behave myself,’ he answered, looking
round in astonishment at the pretty little girl who had ventured to
address him, ‘quite absurd. I must rattle my chains, and groan
through keyholes, and walk about at night, if that is what you mean.
It is my only reason for existing.’
‘It is no reason at all for existing, and you know you have been
very wicked. Mrs. Umney told us, the first day we arrived here, that
you had killed your wife.’
‘Well, I quite admit it,’ said the Ghost petulantly, ‘but it was a
purely family matter, and concerned no one else.’
‘It is very wrong to kill any one,’ said Virginia, who at times had a
sweet Puritan gravity, caught from some old New England ancestor.
‘Oh, I hate the cheap severity of abstract ethics! My wife was very
plain, never had my ruffs properly starched, and knew nothing
about cookery. Why, there was a buck I had shot in Hogley Woods,
a magnificent pricket, and do you know how she had it sent up to
table? However, it is no matter now, for it is all over, and I don’t
think it was very nice of her brothers to starve me to death, though I
did kill her.’
‘Starve you to death? Oh, Mr. Ghost, I mean Sir Simon, are you
hungry? I have a sandwich in my case. Would you like it?’
‘No, thank you, I never eat anything now; but it is very kind of
you, all the same, and you are much nicer than the rest of your
horrid, rude, vulgar, dishonest family.’
‘Stop!’ cried Virginia, stamping her foot, ‘it is you who are rude,
and horrid, and vulgar, and as for dishonesty, you know you stole
the paints out of my box to try and furbish up that ridiculous blood-
stain in the library. First you took all my reds, including the
vermilion, and I couldn’t do any more sunsets, then you took the
emerald-green and the chrome-yellow, and finally I had nothing left
but indigo and Chinese white, and could only do moonlight scenes,
which are always depressing to look at, and not at all easy to paint.
I never told on you, though I was very much annoyed, and it was
most ridiculous, the whole thing; for who ever heard of emerald-
green blood?’
‘Well, really,’ said the Ghost, rather meekly, ‘what was I to do? It
is a very difficult thing to get real blood nowadays, and, as your
brother began it all with his Paragon Detergent, I certainly saw no
reason why I should not have your paints. As for colour, that is
always a matter of taste: the Cantervilles have blue blood, for
instance, the very bluest in England; but I know you Americans
don’t care for things of this kind.’
‘You know nothing about it, and the best thing you can do is to
emigrate and improve your mind. My father will be only too happy
to give you a free passage,26 and though there is a heavy duty on
spirits of every kind, there will be no difficulty about the Custom
House, as the officers are all Democrats. Once in New York, you are
sure to be a great success. I know lots of people there who would
give a hundred thousand dollars to have a grandfather, and much
more than that to have a family ghost.’
‘I don’t think I should like America.’
‘I suppose because we have no ruins and no curiosities,’ said
Virginia satirically.
‘No ruins! no curiosities!’ answered the Ghost; ‘you have your
navy and your manners.’27
‘Good evening; I will go and ask papa to get the twins an extra
week’s holiday.’
‘Please don’t go, Miss Virginia,’ he cried; ‘I am so lonely and so
unhappy, and I really don’t know what to do. I want to go to sleep
and I cannot.’
‘That’s quite absurd! You have merely to go to bed and blow out
the candle. It is very difficult sometimes to keep awake, especially at
church, but there is no difficulty at all about sleeping. Why, even
babies know how to do that, and they are not very clever.’
‘I have not slept for three hundred years,’ he said sadly, and
Virginia’s beautiful blue eyes opened in wonder; ‘for three hundred
years I have not slept, and I am so tired.’
Virginia grew quite grave, and her little lips trembled like rose-
leaves. She came towards him, and kneeling down at his side,
looked up into his old withered face.
‘Poor, poor Ghost,’ she murmured; ‘have you no place where you
can sleep?’
‘Far away beyond the pine woods,’ he answered, in a low dreamy
voice, ‘there is a little garden. There the grass grows long and deep,
there are the great white stars of the hemlock flower, there the
nightingale28 sings all night long. All night long he sings, and the
cold, crystal moon looks down, and the yew-tree spreads out its
giant arms over the sleepers.’
Virginia’s eyes grew dim with tears, and she hid her face in her
hands.
‘You mean the Garden of Death,’ she whispered.
‘Yes, Death. Death must be so beautiful. To lie in the soft brown
earth, with the grasses waving above one’s head, and listen to
silence. To have no yesterday, and no tomorrow. To forget time, to
forgive life, to be at peace. You can help me. You can open for me
the portals of Death’s house, for Love is always with you, and Love
is stronger than Death is.’
Virginia trembled, a cold shudder ran through her, and for a few
moments there was silence. She felt as if she was in a terrible
dream.
Then the Ghost spoke again, and his voice sounded like the
sighing of the wind.
‘Have you ever read the old prophecy on the library window?’

‘Oh, often,’ cried the little girl, looking up; ‘I know it quite well. It
is painted in curious black letters, and it is difficult to read. There
are only six lines:

When a golden girl can win

Prayer from out the lips of sin,

When the barren almond bears,

And a little child gives away its tears,

Then shall all the house be still

And peace come to Canterbille.


But I don’t know what they mean.’

‘They mean,’ he said sadly, ‘that you must weep with me for my
sins, because I have no tears, and pray with me for my soul, because
I have no faith, and then, if you have always been sweet, and good,
and gentle, the Angel of Death will have mercy on me. You will see
fearful shapes in darkness, and wicked voices will whisper in your
ear, but they will not harm you, for against the purity of a little
child the powers of Hell cannot prevail.’
Virginia made no answer, and the Ghost wrung his hands in wild
despair as he looked down at her bowed golden head. Suddenly she
stood up, very pale, and with a strange light in her eyes. ‘I am not
afraid,’ she said firmly, ‘and I will ask the Angel to have mercy on
you.’

He rose from his seat with a faint cry of joy, and taking her hand
bent over it with old-fashioned grace and kissed it. His fingers were
as cold as ice, and his lips burned like fire, but Virginia did not
falter, as he led her across the dusky room. On the faded green
tapestry were broidered little huntsmen. They blew their tasselled
horns and with their tiny hands waved to her to go back. ‘Go back!
little Virginia,’ they cried, ‘go back!’ but the Ghost clutched her
hand more tightly, and she shut her eyes against them. Horrible
animals with lizard tails, and goggle eyes, blinked at her from the
carven chimney-piece, and murmured ‘Beware! little Virginia,
beware! we may never see you again,’ but the Ghost glided on more
swiftly, and Virginia did not listen. When they reached the end of
the room he stopped, and muttered some words she could not
understand. She opened her eyes, and saw the wall slowly fading
away like a mist, and a great black cavern in front of her. A bitter
cold wind swept round them, and she felt something pulling at her
dress. ‘Quick, quick,’ cried the Ghost, ‘or it will be too late,’ and, in
a moment, the wainscoting had closed behind them, and the
Tapestry Chamber was empty.

VI

About ten minutes later, the bell rang for tea, and, as Virginia did
not come down, Mrs. Otis sent up one of the footmen to tell her.
After a little time he returned and said that he could not find Miss
Virginia anywhere. As she was in the habit of going out to the
garden every evening to get flowers for the dinner-table, Mrs. Otis
was not at all alarmed at first, but when six o’clock struck, and
Virginia did not appear, she became really agitated, and sent the
boys out to look for her, while she herself and Mr. Otis searched
every room in the house. At half past six the boys came back and
said that they could find no trace of their sister anywhere. They
were all now in the greatest state of excitement, and did not know
what to do, when Mr. Otis suddenly remembered that, some few
days before, he had given a band of gipsies permission to camp in
the park. He accordingly at once set off for Blackfell Hollow, where
he knew they were, accompanied by his eldest son and two of the
farm-servants. The little Duke of Cheshire, who was perfectly frantic
with anxiety, begged hard to be allowed to go too, but Mr. Otis
would not allow him, as he was afraid there might be a scuffle. On
arriving at the spot, however, he found that the gipsies had gone,
and it was evident that their departure had been rather sudden, as
the fire was still burning, and some plates were lying on the grass.
Having sent off Washington and the two men to scour the district,
he ran home, and despatched telegrams to all the police inspectors
in the county, telling them to look out for a little girl who had been
kidnapped by tramps or gipsies. He then ordered his horse to be
brought round, and, after insisting on his wife and the three boys
sitting down to dinner, rode off down the Ascot road with a groom.
He had hardly, however, gone a couple of miles, when he heard
somebody galloping after him, and, looking round, saw the little
Duke coming up on his pony, with his face very flushed and no hat.
‘I’m awfully sorry, Mr. Otis,’ gasped out the boy, ‘but I can’t eat any
dinner as long as Virginia is lost. Please, don’t be angry with me; if
you had let us be engaged last year, there would never have been all
this trouble. You won’t send me back, will you? I can’t go! I won’t
go!’

The Minister could not help smiling at the handsome young


scapegrace, and was a good deal touched at his devotion to Virginia,
so leaning down from his horse, he patted him kindly on the
shoulders, and said, ‘Well, Cecil, if you won’t go back I suppose you
must come with me, but I must get you a hat at Ascot.’
‘Oh, bother my hat! I want Virginia!’ cried the little Duke,
laughing, and they galloped on to the railway station. There Mr.
Otis inquired of the station-master if any one answering to the
description of Virginia had been seen on the platform, but could get
no news of her. The station-master, however, wired up and down
the line, and assured him that a strict watch would be kept for her,
and, after having bought a hat for the little Duke from a linen-
draper, who was just putting up his shutters, Mr. Otis rode off to
Bexley, a village about four miles away, which he was told was a
well-known haunt of the gipsies, as there was a large common next
to it. Here they roused up the rural policeman, but could get no
information from him, and, after riding all over the common, they
turned their horses’ heads homewards, and reached the Chase about
eleven o’clock, dead-tired and almost heart-broken. They found
Washington and the twins waiting for them at the gate-house with
lanterns, as the avenue was very dark. Not the slightest trace of
Virginia had been discovered. The gipsies had been caught on
Brockley meadows, but she was not with them, and they had
explained their sudden departure by saying that they had mistaken
the date of Chorton Fair, and had gone off in a hurry for fear they
might be late. Indeed, they had been quite distressed at hearing of
Virginia’s disappearance, as they were very grateful to Mr. Otis for
having allowed them to camp in his park, and four of their number
had stayed behind to help in the search. The carp-pond had been
dragged, and the whole Chase thoroughly gone over, but without
any result. It was evident that, for that night at any rate, Virginia
was lost to them; and it was in a state of the deepest depression that
Mr. Otis and the boys walked up to the house, the groom following
behind with the two horses and the pony. In the hall they found a
group of frightened servants, and lying on a sofa in the library was
poor Mrs. Otis, almost out of her mind with terror and anxiety, and
having her forehead bathed with eau-de-cologne by the old
housekeeper. Mr. Otis at once insisted on her having something to
eat, and ordered up supper for the whole party. It was a melancholy
meal, as hardly any one spoke, and even the twins were awestruck
and subdued, as they were very fond of their sister. When they had
finished, Mr. Otis, in spite of the entreaties of the little Duke,
ordered them all to bed, saving that nothing more could be done
that night, and that he would telegraph in the morning to Scotland
Yard for some detectives to be sent down immediately. Just as they
were passing out of the dining-room, midnight began to boom from
the clock tower, and when the last stroke sounded they heard a
crash and a sudden shrill cry; a dreadful peal of thunder shook the
house, a strain of unearthly music floated through the air, a panel at
the top of the staircase flew back with a loud noise, and out on the
landing, looking very pale and white, with a little casket in her
hand, stepped Virginia. In a moment they had all rushed up to her.
Mrs. Otis clasped her passionately in her arms, the Duke smothered
her with violent kisses, and the twins executed a wild war-dance
round the group.
‘Good heavens! child, where have you been?’ said Mr. Otis, rather
angrily, thinking that she had been playing some foolish trick on
them. ‘Cecil and I have been riding all over the country looking for
you, and your mother has been frightened to death. You must never
play these practical jokes any more.’
‘Except on the Ghost! except on the Ghost!’ shrieked the twins, as
they capered about.
‘My own darling, thank God you are found; you must never leave
my side again,’ murmured Mrs. Otis, as she kissed the trembling
child, and smoothed the tangled gold of her hair.
‘Papa,’ said Virginia quietly, ‘I have been with the Ghost. He is
dead, and you must come and see him. He had been very wicked,
but he was really sorry for all that he had done, and he gave me this
box of beautiful jewels before he died.’
The whole family gazed at her in mute amazement, but she was
quite grave and serious; and, turning round, she led them through
the opening in the wainscoting down a narrow secret corridor,
Washington following with a lighted candle, which he had caught
up from the table. Finally, they came to a great oak door, studded
with rusty nails. When Virginia touched it, it swung back on its
heavy hinges, and they found themselves in a little low room, with a
vaulted ceiling, and one tiny grated window. Imbedded in the wall
was a huge iron ring, and chained to it was a gaunt skeleton, that
was stretched out at full length on the stone floor, and seemed to be
trying to grasp with its long fleshless fingers an old-fashioned
trencher and ewer, that were placed just out of its reach. The jug
had evidently been once filled with water, as it was covered inside
with green mould. There was nothing on the trencher but a pile of
dust. Virginia knelt down beside the skeleton, and, folding her little
hands together, began to pray silently, while the rest of the party
looked on in wonder at the terrible tragedy whose secret was now
disclosed to them.
‘Hallo!’ suddenly exclaimed one of the twins, who had been
looking out of the window to try and discover in what wing of the
house the room was situated. ‘Hallo! the old withered almond-tree
has blossomed. I can see the flowers quite plainly in the moonlight.’
‘God has forgiven him,’ said Virginia gravely, as she rose to her
feet, and a beautiful light seemed to illumine her face.

‘What an angel you are!’ cried the young Duke, and he put his
arm round her neck, and kissed her.

VII

Four days after these curious incidents a funeral started from


Canterville Chase at about eleven o’clock at night. The hearse was
drawn by eight black horses, each of which carried on its head a
great tuft of nodding ostrich-plumes, and the leaden coffin was
covered by a rich purple pall, on which was embroidered in gold the
Canterville coat-of-arms. By the side of the hearse and the coaches
walked the servants with lighted torches, and the whole procession
was wonderfully impressive. Lord Canterville was the chief
mourner, having come up specially from Wales to attend the
funeral, and sat in the first carriage along with little Virginia. Then
came the United States Minister and his wife, then Washington and
the three boys, and in the last carriage was Mrs. Umney. It was
generally felt that, as she had been frightened by the ghost for more
than fifty years of her life, she had a right to see the last of him. A
deep grave had been dug in the corner of the churchyard, just under
the old yew-tree, and the service was read in the most impressive
manner by the Rev. Augustus Dampier. When the ceremony was
over, the servants, according to an old custom observed in the
Canterville family, extinguished their torches, and, as the coffin was
being lowered into the grave, Virginia stepped forward, and laid on
it a large cross made of white and pink almond-blossoms. As she did
so, the moon came out from behind a cloud, and flooded with its
silent silver the little churchyard, and from a distant copse a
nightingale began to sing. She thought of the ghost’s description of
the Garden of Death, her eyes became dim with tears, and she
hardly spoke a word during the drive home.

The next morning, before Lord Canterville went up to town, Mr.


Otis had an interview with him on the subject of the jewels the
ghost had given to Virginia. They were perfectly magnificent,
especially a certain ruby necklace with old Venetian setting, which
was really a superb specimen of sixteenth-century work, and their
value was so great that Mr. Otis felt considerable scruples about
allowing his daughter to accept them.
‘My lord,’ he said, ‘I know that in this country mortmain29 is held
to apply to trinkets as well as to land, and it is quite clear to me that
these jewels are, or should be, heirlooms in your family. I must beg
you, accordingly, to take them to London with you, and to regard
them simply as a portion of your property which has been restored
to you under certain strange conditions. As for my daughter, she is
merely a child, and has as yet, I am glad to say, but little interest in
such appurtenances of idle luxury. I am also informed by Mrs. Otis,
who, I may say, is no mean authority upon Art – having had the
privilege of spending several winters in Boston when she was a girl
– that these gems are of great monetary worth, and if offered for
sale would fetch a tall price. Under these circumstances, Lord
Canterville, I feel sure that you will recognise how impossible it
would be for me to allow them to remain in the possession of any
member of my family; and, indeed, all such vain gauds and toys,
however suitable or necessary to the dignity of the British
aristocracy, would be completely out of place among those who
have been brought up on the severe, and I believe immortal,
principles of Republican simplicity. Perhaps I should mention that
Virginia is very anxious that you should allow her to retain the box,
as a memento of your unfortunate but misguided ancestor. As it is
extremely old, and consequently a good deal out of repair, you may
perhaps think fit to comply with her request. For my own part, I
confess I am a good deal surprised to find a child of mine expressing
sympathy with mediaevalism in any form, and can only account for
it by the fact that Virginia was born in one of your London suburbs
shortly after Mrs. Otis had returned from a trip to Athens.’
Lord Canterville listened very gravely to the worthy Minister’s
speech, pulling his grey moustache now and then to hide an
involuntary smile, and when Mr. Otis had ended, he shook him
cordially by the hand, and said, ‘My dear sir, your charming little
daughter rendered my unlucky ancestor, Sir Simon, a very
important service, and I and my family are much indebted to her for
her marvellous courage and pluck. The jewels are clearly hers, and,
egad, I believe that if I were heartless enough to take them from
her, the wicked old fellow would be out of his grave in a fortnight,
leading me the devil of a life. As for their being heirlooms, nothing
is an heirloom that is not so mentioned in a will or legal document,
and the existence of these jewels has been quite unknown. I assure
you I have no more claim on them than your butler, and when Miss
Virginia grows up I daresay she will be pleased to have pretty things
to wear. Besides, you forget, Mr. Otis, that you took the furniture
and the ghost at a valuation, and anything that belonged to the
ghost passed at once into your possession, as, whatever activity Sir
Simon may have shown in the corridor at night, in point of law he
was really dead, and you acquired his property by purchase.’
Mr. Otis was a good deal distressed at Lord Canterville’s refusal,
and begged him to reconsider his decision, but the good-natured
peer was quite firm, and finally induced the Minister to allow his
daughter to retain the present the ghost had given her, and when, in
the spring of 1890, the young Duchess of Cheshire was presented at
the Queen’s first drawing-room on the occasion of her marriage, her
jewels were the universal theme of admiration. For Virginia
received the coronet, which is the reward of all good little American
girls,30 and was married to her boy-lover as soon as he came of age.
They were both so charming, and they loved each other so much,
that every one was delighted at the match, except the old
Marchioness of Dumbleton, who had tried to catch the Duke for one
of her seven unmarried daughters, and had given no less than three
expensive dinner-parties for that purpose, and, strange to say, Mr.
Otis himself. Mr. Otis was extremely fond of the young Duke
personally, but, theoretically, he objected to titles, and, to use his
own words, ‘was not without apprehension lest, amid the enervating
influences of a pleasure-loving aristocracy, the true principles of
Republican simplicity should be forgotten.’ His objections, however,
were completely overruled, and I believe that when he walked up
the aisle of St. George’s, Hanover Square, with his daughter leaning
on his arm, there was not a prouder man in the whole length and
breadth of England.
The Duke and Duchess, after the honeymoon was over, went
down to Canterville Chase, and on the day after their arrival they
walked over in the afternoon to the lonely churchyard by the pine-
woods. There had been a great deal of difficulty at first about the
inscription on Sir Simon’s tombstone, but finally it had been decided
to engrave on it simply the initials of the old gentleman’s name, and
the verse from the library window. The Duchess had brought with
her some lovely roses, which she strewed upon the grave, and after
they had stood by it for some time they strolled into the ruined
chancel of the old abbey. There the Duchess sat down on a fallen
pillar, while her husband lay at her feet smoking a cigarette and
looking up at her beautiful eyes. Suddenly he threw his cigarette
away, took hold of her hand, and said to her, ‘Virginia, a wife
should have no secrets from her husband.’
‘Dear Cecil! I have no secrets from you.’
‘Yes, you have,’ he answered, smiling, ‘you have never told me
what happened to you when you were locked up with the ghost.’
‘I have never told any one, Cecil,’ said Virginia gravely.
‘I know that, but you might tell me.’
‘Please don’t ask me, Cecil, I cannot tell you. Poor Sir Simon! I
owe him a great deal. Yes, don’t laugh, Cecil, I really do. He made
me see what Life is, and what Death signifies, and why Love is
stronger than both.’
The Duke rose and kissed his wife lovingly.
‘You can have your secret as long as I have your heart,’ he
murmured.
‘You have always had that, Cecil.’
‘And you will tell our children some day, won’t you?’
Virginia blushed.
The Model Millionaire

A note of admiration

Unless one is wealthy there is no use in being a charming fellow.


Romance is the privilege of the rich, not the profession of the
unemployed. The poor should be practical and prosaic. It is better to
have a permanent income than to be fascinating. These are the great
truths of modern life which Hughie Erskine never realised. Poor
Hughie! Intellectually, we must admit, he was not of much
importance. He never said a brilliant or even an ill-natured thing in
his life. But then he was wonderfully good-looking, with his crisp
brown hair, his clear-cut profile, and his grey eyes. He was as
popular with men as he was with women, and he had every
accomplishment except that of making money. His father had
bequeathed him his cavalry sword, and a History of the Peninsular
War in fifteen volumes. Hughie hung the first over his looking-glass,
put the second on a shelf between Ruff’s Guide and Bailey’s
Magazine,1 and lived on two hundred a year that an old aunt
allowed him. He had tried everything. He had gone on the Stock
Exchange for six months; but what was a butterfly to do among
bulls and bears?2 He had been a tea-merchant for a little longer, but
had soon tired of pekoe and souchong.3 Then he had tried selling
dry sherry. That did not answer; the sherry was a little too dry.
Ultimately he became nothing, a delightful, ineffectual young man
with a perfect profile and no profession.4

To make matters worse, he was in love. The girl he loved was


Laura Merton, the daughter of a retired Colonel who had lost his
temper and his digestion in India, and had never found either of
them again. Laura adored him, and he was ready to kiss her shoe-
strings. They were the handsomest couple in London, and had not a
penny-piece between them. The Colonel was very fond of Hughie,
but would not hear of any engagement.
‘Come to me, my boy, when you have got ten thousand pounds of
your own, and we will see about it,’ he used to say; and Hughie
looked very glum on those days, and had to go to Laura for
consolation.
One morning, as he was on his way to Holland Park, where the
Mertons lived, he dropped in to see a great friend of his, Alan
Trevor. Trevor was a painter. Indeed, few people escape that
nowadays. But he was also an artist, and artists are rather rare.
Personally he was a strange rough fellow, with a freckled face and a
red ragged beard. However, when he took up the brush he was a
real master, and his pictures were eagerly sought after. He had been
very much attracted by Hughie at first, it must be acknowledged,
entirely on account of his personal charm. ‘The only people a
painter should know,’ he used to say, ‘are people who are bête and
beautiful, people who are an artistic pleasure to look at and an
intellectual repose to talk to. Men who are dandies and women who
are darlings rule the world,5 at least they should do so.’ However,
after he got to know Hughie better, he liked him quite as much for
his bright buoyant spirits and his generous reckless nature, and had
given him the permanent entrée to his studio.
When Hughie came in he found Trevor putting the finishing
touches to a wonderful life-size picture of a beggar-man. The beggar
himself was standing on a raised platform in a corner of the studio.
He was a wizened old man, with a face like wrinkled parchment,
and a most piteous expression. Over his shoulders was flung a
coarse brown cloak, all tears and tatters; his thick boots were
patched and cobbled, and with one hand he leant on a rough stick,
while with the other he held out his battered hat for alms.
‘What an amazing model!’ whispered Hughie, as he shook hands
with his friend.
‘An amazing model?’ shouted Trevor at the top of his voice; ‘I
should think so! Such beggars as he are not to be met with every
day. A trouvaille, mon cher;6 a living Velasquez! My stars! what an
etching Rembrandt would have made of him!’
‘Poor old chap!’ said Hughie, ‘how miserable he looks! But I
suppose, to you painters, his face is his fortune?’
‘Certainly,’ replied Trevor, ‘you don’t want a beggar to look
happy, do you?’
‘How much does a model get for sitting?’ asked Hughie, as he
found himself a comfortable seat on a divan.
‘A shilling an hour.’
‘And how much do you get for your picture, Alan?’
‘Oh, for this I get two thousand!’
‘Pounds?’
‘Guineas. Painters, poets, and physicians always get guineas.’
‘Well, I think the model should have a percentage,’ cried Hughie,
laughing; ‘they work quite as hard as you do.’
‘Nonsense, nonsense! Why, look at the trouble of laying on the
paint alone, and standing all day long at one’s easel! It’s all very
well, Hughie, for you to talk, but I assure you that there are
moments when Art almost attains to the dignity of manual labour.
But you mustn’t chatter; I’m very busy. Smoke a cigarette, and keep
quiet.’
After some time the servant came in, and told Trevor that the
frame-maker wanted to speak to him.
‘Don’t run away, Hughie,’ he said, as he went out, ‘I will be back
in a moment.’
The old beggar-man took advantage of Trevor’s absence to rest for
a moment on a wooden bench that was behind him. He looked so
forlorn and wretched that Hughie could not help pitying him, and
felt in his pockets to see what money he had. All he could find was a
sovereign and some coppers. ‘Poor old fellow,’ he thought to
himself, ‘he wants it more than I do, but it means no hansoms for a
fortnight;’ and he walked across the studio and slipped the sovereign
into the beggar’s hand.
The old man started, and a faint smile flitted across his withered
lips. ‘Thank you, sir,’ he said, ‘thank you.’
Then Trevor arrived, and Hughie took his leave, blushing a little
at what he had done. He spent the day with Laura, got a charming
scolding for his extravagance, and had to walk home.
That night he strolled into the Palette Club about eleven o’clock,
and found Trevor sitting by himself in the smoking-room drinking
hock and seltzer.7
‘Well, Alan, did you get the picture finished all right?’ he said, as
he lit his cigarette.
‘Finished and framed, my boy!’ answered Trevor; ‘and, by-the-
bye, you have made a conquest. That old model you saw is quite
devoted to you. I had to tell him all about you – who you are, where
you live, what your income is, what prospects you have –’
‘My dear Alan,’ cried Hughie, ‘I shall probably find him waiting
for me when I go home. But of course you are only joking. Poor old
wretch! I wish I could do something for him. I think it is dreadful
that any one should be so miserable. I have got heaps of old clothes
at home – do you think he would care for any of them? Why, his
rags were falling to bits.’
‘But he looks splendid in them,’ said Trevor. ‘I wouldn’t paint him
in a frock-coat for anything. What you call rags I call romance. What
seems poverty to you is picturesqueness to me. However, I’ll tell him
of your offer.’
‘Alan,’ said Hughie seriously, ‘you painters are a heartless lot.’
‘An artist’s heart is his head,’ replied Trevor; ‘and besides, our
business is to realise the world as we see it, not to reform it as we
know it. A chacun son métier.8 And now tell me how Laura is. The
old model was quite interested in her.’
‘You don’t mean to say you talked to him about her?’ said Hughie.
‘Certainly I did. He knows all about the relentless colonel, the
lovely Laura, and the £10,000.’
‘You told that old beggar all my private affairs?’ cried Hughie,
looking very red and angry.
‘My dear boy,’ said Trevor, smiling, ‘that old beggar, as you call
him, is one of the richest men in Europe. He could buy all London
to-morrow without overdrawing his account. He has a house in
every capital, dines off gold plate, and can prevent Russia going to
war when he chooses.’
‘What on earth do you mean?’ exclaimed Hughie.
‘What I say,’ said Trevor. ‘The old man you saw to-day in the
studio was Baron Hausberg. He is a great friend of mine, buys all my
pictures and that sort of thing, and gave me a commission a month
ago to paint him as a beggar. Que voulez-vous? La fantaisie d’un
millionnaire!9 And I must say he made a magnificent figure in his
rags, or perhaps I should say in my rags; they are an old suit I got in
Spain.’
‘Baron Hausberg!’ cried Hughie. ‘Good heavens! I gave him a
sovereign!’ and he sank into an armchair the picture of dismay.
‘Gave him a sovereign!’ shouted Trevor, and he burst into a roar
of laughter. ‘My dear boy, you’ll never see it again. Son affaire c’est
l’argent des autres.’10
‘I think you might have told me, Alan,’ said Hughie sulkily, ‘and
not have let me make such a fool of myself.’
‘Well, to begin with, Hughie,’ said Trevor, ‘it never entered my
mind that you went about distributing alms in that reckless way. I
can understand your kissing a pretty model, but your giving a
sovereign to an ugly one – by Jove, no! Besides, the fact is that I
really was not at home to-day to any one; and when you came in I
didn’t know whether Hausberg would like his name mentioned. You
know he wasn’t in full dress.’
‘What a duffer he must think me!’ said Hughie.
‘Not at all. He was in the highest spirits after you left; kept
chuckling to himself and rubbing his old wrinkled hands together. I
couldn’t make out why he was so interested to know all about you;
but I see it all now. He’ll invest your sovereign for you, Hughie, pay
you the interest every six months, and have a capital story to tell
after dinner.’
‘I am an unlucky devil,’ growled Hughie. ‘The best thing I can do
is to go to bed; and, my dear Alan, you mustn’t tell any one. I
shouldn’t dare show my face in the Row.’11
‘Nonsense! It reflects the highest credit on your philanthropic
spirit, Hughie. And don’t run away. Have another cigarette, and you
can talk about Laura as much as you like.’
However, Hughie wouldn’t stop, but walked home, feeling very
unhappy, and leaving Alan Trevor in fits of laughter.
The next morning, as he was at breakfast, the servant brought him
up a card on which was written, ‘Monsieur Gustave Naudin, de la
part de12 M. le Baron Hausberg.’ ‘I suppose he has come for an
apology,’ said Hughie to himself; and he told the servant to show
the visitor up.
An old gentleman with gold spectacles and grey hair came into
the room, and said, in a slight French accent, ‘Have I the honour of
addressing Monsieur Erskine?’
Hughie bowed.
‘I have come from Baron Hausberg,’ he continued. ‘The Baron –’
‘I beg, sir, that you will offer him my sincerest apologies,’
stammered Hughie.
‘The Baron,’ said the old gentleman with a smile, ‘has
commissioned me to bring you this letter;’ and he extended a sealed
envelope.
On the outside was written, ‘A wedding present to Hugh Erskine
and Laura Merton, from an old beggar,’ and inside was a cheque for
£10,000.
When they were married Alan Trevor was the best-man, and the
Baron made a speech at the wedding-breakfast.
‘Millionaire models,’ remarked Alan, ‘are rare enough; but, by
Jove, model millionaires are rarer still!’
Poems in Prose

The Artist

One evening there came into his soul the desire to fashion an image
of The Pleasure that abideth for a Moment. And he went forth into the
world to look for bronze. For he could only think in bronze.

But all the bronze of the whole world had disappeared, nor
anywhere in the whole world was there any bronze to be found,
save only the bronze of the image of The Sorrow that endureth for
Ever.
Now this image he had himself, and with his own hands,
fashioned, and had set it on the tomb of the one thing he had loved
in life. On the tomb of the dead thing he had most loved had he set
this image of his own fashioning, that it might serve as a sign of the
love of man that dieth not, and a symbol of the sorrow of man that
endureth for ever. And in the whole world there was no other
bronze save the bronze of this image.
And he took the image he had fashioned, and set it in a great
furnace, and gave it to the fire.
And out of the bronze of the image of The Sorrow that endureth for
Ever he fashioned an image of The Pleasure that abideth for a Moment.
The Doer of Good

It was night-time and He was alone.

And He saw afar-off the walls of a round city and went towards
the city.
And when He came near He heard within the city the tread of the
feet of joy, and the laughter of the mouth of gladness and the loud
noise of many lutes. And He knocked at the gate and certain of the
gate-keepers opened to Him.
And He beheld a house that was of marble and had fair pillars of
marble before it. The pillars were hung with garlands, and within
and without there were torches of cedar. And He entered the house.
And when He had passed through the hall of chalcedony and the
hall of jasper, and reached the long hall of feasting, He saw lying on
a couch of sea-purple one whose hair was crowned with red roses
and whose lips were red with wine.
And He went behind him and touched him on the shoulder and
said to him, ‘Why do you live like this?’
And the young man turned round and recognised Him, and made
answer and said, ‘But I was a leper once, and you healed me. How
else should I live?’
And He passed out of the house and went again into the street.
And after a little while He saw one whose face and raiment were
painted and whose feet were shod with pearls. And behind her
came, slowly as a hunter, a young man who wore a cloak of two
colours. Now the face of the woman was as the fair face of an idol,
and the eyes of the young man were bright with lust.
And He followed swiftly and touched the hand of the young man
and said to him, ‘Why do you look at this woman and in such wise?’
And the young man turned round and recognised Him and said,
‘But I was blind once, and you gave me sight. At what else should I
look?’
And He ran forward and touched the painted raiment of the
woman and said to her, ‘Is there no other way in which to walk save
the way of sin?’
And the woman turned round and recognised Him, and laughed
and said, ‘But you forgave me my sins, and the way is a pleasant
way.’
And He passed out of the city.
And when He had passed out of the city He saw seated by the
roadside a young man who was weeping.
And He went towards him and touched the long locks of his hair
and said to him, ‘Why are you weeping?’
And the young man looked up and recognised Him and made
answer, ‘But I was dead once and you raised me from the dead.
What else should I do but weep?’
The Disciple

When Narcissus1 died the pool of his pleasure changed from a cup
of sweet waters into a cup of salt tears, and the Oreads2 came
weeping through the woodland that they might sing to the pool and
give it comfort.

And when they saw that the pool had changed from a cup of
sweet waters into a cup of salt tears, they loosened the green tresses
of their hair and cried to the pool and said, ‘We do not wonder that
you should mourn in this manner for Narcissus, so beautiful was he.’
‘But was Narcissus beautiful?’ said the pool.
‘Who should know that better than you?’ answered the Oreads.
‘Us did he ever pass by, but you he sought for, and would lie on
your banks and look down at you, and in the mirror of your waters
he would mirror his own beauty.’
And the pool answered, ‘But I loved Narcissus because, as he lay
on my banks and looked down at me, in the mirror of his eyes I saw
ever my own beauty mirrored.’
The Master

Now when the darkness came over the earth Joseph of Ari-mathea,3
having lighted a torch of pinewood, passed down from the hill into
the valley. For he had business in his own home.

And kneeling on the flint stones of the Valley of Desolation he


saw a young man who was naked and weeping. His hair was the
colour of honey, and his body was as a white flower, but he had
wounded his body with thorns and on his hair had he set ashes as a
crown.
And he who had great possessions said to the young man who was
naked and weeping, ‘I do not wonder that your sorrow is so great,
for surely He was a just man.’
And the young man answered, ‘It is not for Him that I am
weeping, but for myself. I too have changed water into wine, and I
have healed the leper and given sight to the blind. I have walked
upon the waters, and from the dwellers in the tombs I have cast out
devils. I have fed the hungry in the desert where there was no food,
and I have raised the dead from their narrow houses, and at my
bidding, and before a great multitude of people, a barren fig-tree
withered away. All things that this man has done I have done also.
And yet they have not crucified me.’
The House of Judgment

And there was silence in the House of Judgment, and the Man came
naked before God.

And God opened the Book of the Life of the Man.


And God said to the Man, ‘Thy life hath been evil, and thou hast
shown cruelty to those who were in need of succour, and to those
who lacked help thou hast been bitter and hard of heart. The poor
called to thee and thou didst not hearken, and thine ears were
closed to the cry of My afflicted. The inheritance of the fatherless
thou didst take unto thyself, and thou didst send the foxes into the
vineyard of thy neighbour’s field. Thou didst take the bread of the
children and give it to the dogs to eat, and My lepers who lived in
the marshes, and were at peace and praised Me, thou didst drive
forth on to the highways, and on Mine earth out of which I made
thee thou didst spill innocent blood.’
And the Man made answer and said, ‘Even so did I.’
And again God opened the Book of the Life of the Man.
And God said to the Man, ‘Thy life hath been evil, and the Beauty
I have shown thou hast sought for, and the Good I have hidden thou
didst pass by. The walls of thy chamber were painted with images,
and from the bed of thine abominations thou didst rise up to the
sound of flutes. Thou didst build seven altars to the sins I have
suffered, and didst eat of the thing that may not be eaten, and the
purple of thy raiment was broidered with the three signs of shame.
Thine idols were neither of gold nor of silver that endure, but of
flesh that dieth. Thou didst stain their hair with perfumes and put
pomegranates in their hands. Thou didst stain their feet with saffron
and spread carpets before them. With antimony thou didst stain
their eyelids and their bodies thou didst smear with myrrh. Thou
didst bow thyself to the ground before them, and the thrones of
thine idols were set in the sun. Thou didst show to the sun thy
shame and to the moon thy madness.’
And the Man made answer and said, ‘Even so did I.’
And a third time God opened the Book of the Life of the Man.
And God said to the Man, ‘Evil hath been thy life, and with evil
didst thou requite good, and with wrongdoing kindness. The hands
that fed thee thou didst wound, and the breasts that gave thee suck
thou didst despise. He who came to thee with water went away
thirsting, and the outlawed men who hid thee in their tents at night
thou didst betray before dawn. Thine enemy who spared thee thou
didst snare in an ambush, and the friend who walked with thee thou
didst sell for a price, and to those who brought thee Love thou didst
ever give Lust in thy turn.’
And the Man made answer and said, ‘Even so did I.’
And God closed the Book of the Life of the Man, and said, ‘Surely
I will send thee into Hell. Even into Hell will I send thee.’
And the Man cried out, ‘Thou canst not.’
And God said to the Man, ‘Wherefore can I not send thee to Hell,
and for what reason?’
‘Because in Hell have I always lived,’ answered the Man.
And there was silence in the House of Judgment.
And after a space God spake, and said to the Man, ‘Seeing that I
may not send thee into Hell, surely I will send thee unto Heaven.
Even unto Heaven will I send thee.’
And the Man cried out, ‘Thou canst not.’
And God said to the Man, ‘Wherefore can I not send thee unto
Heaven, and for what reason?’
‘Because never, and in no place, have I been able to imagine it,’
answered the Man.
And there was silence in the House of Judgment.
The Teacher of Wisdom

From his childhood he had been as one filled with the perfect
knowledge of God, and even while he was yet but a lad many of the
saints, as well as certain holy women who dwelt in the free city of
his birth, had been stirred to much wonder by the grave wisdom of
his answers.

And when his parents had given him the robe and the ring of
manhood he kissed them, and left them and went out into the
world, that he might speak to the world about God. For there were
at that time many in the world who either knew not God at all, or
had but an incomplete knowledge of Him, or worshipped the false
gods who dwell in groves and have no care of their worshippers.
And he set his face to the sun and journeyed, walking without
sandals, as he had seen the saints walk, and carrying at his girdle a
leathern wallet and a little water-bottle of burnt clay.
And as he walked along the highway he was full of the joy that
comes from the perfect knowledge of God, and he sang praises unto
God without ceasing; and after a time he reached a strange land in
which there were many cities.
And he passed through eleven cities. And some of these cities
were in valleys, and others were by the banks of great rivers, and
others were set on hills. And in each city he found a disciple who
loved him and followed him, and a great multitude also of people
followed him from each city, and the knowledge of God spread in
the whole land, and many of the rulers were converted, and the
priests of the temples in which there were idols found that half of
their gain was gone, and when they beat upon their drums at noon
none, or but a few, came with peacocks and with offerings of flesh
as had been the custom of the land before his coming.
Yet the more the people followed him, and the greater the
number of his disciples, the greater became his sorrow. And he
knew not why his sorrow was so great. For he spake ever about
God, and out of the fulness of that perfect knowledge of God which
God had Himself given to him.
And one evening he passed out of the eleventh city, which was a
city of Armenia, and his disciples and a great crowd of people
followed after him; and he went up on to a mountain and sat down
on a rock that was on the mountain, and his disciples stood round
him, and the multitude knelt in the valley.
And he bowed his head on his hands and wept, and said to his
Soul, ‘Why is it that I am full of sorrow and fear, and that each of
my disciples is as an enemy that walks in the noonday?’
And his Soul answered him and said, ‘God filled thee with the
perfect knowledge of Himself, and thou hast given this knowledge
away to others. The pearl of great price thou hast divided, and the
vesture without seam thou hast parted asunder. He who giveth away
wisdom robbeth himself. He is as one who giveth his treasure to a
robber. Is not God wiser than thou art? Who art thou to give away
the secret that God hath told thee? I was rich once, and thou hast
made me poor. Once I saw God, and now thou hast hidden Him
from me.’
And he wept again, for he knew that his Soul spake truth to him,
and that he had given to others the perfect knowledge of God, and
that he was as one clinging to the skirts of God, and that his faith
was leaving him by reason of the number of those who believed in
him.
And he said to himself, ‘I will talk no more about God. He who
giveth away wisdom robbeth himself.’
And after the space of some hours his disciples came near him and
bowed themselves to the ground and said, ‘Master, talk to us about
God, for thou hast the perfect knowledge of God, and no man save
thee hath this knowledge.’
And he answered them and said, ‘I will talk to you about all other
things that are in heaven and on earth, but about God I will not talk
to you. Neither now, nor at any time, will I talk to you about God.’
And they were wroth with him and said to him, ‘Thou hast led us
into the desert that we might hearken to thee. Wilt thou send us
away hungry, and the great multitude that thou hast made to follow
thee?’
And he answered them and said, ‘I will not talk to you about
God.’
And the multitude murmured against him and said to him, ‘Thou
hast led us into the desert, and hast given us no food to eat. Talk to
us about God and it will suffice us.’
But he answered them not a word. For he knew that if he spake to
them about God he would give away his treasure.
And his disciples went away sadly, and the multitude of people
returned to their own homes. And many died on the way.
And when he was alone he rose up and set his face to the moon,
and journeyed for seven moons, speaking to no man nor making any
answer. And when the seventh moon had waned he reached that
desert which is the desert of the Great River. And having found a
cavern in which a Centaur4 had once dwelt, he took it for his place
of dwelling, and made himself a mat of reeds on which to lie, and
became a hermit. And every hour the Hermit praised God that He
had suffered him to keep some knowledge of Him and of His
wonderful greatness.
Now, one evening, as the Hermit was seated before the cavern in
which he had made his place of dwelling, he beheld a young man of
evil and beautiful face who passed by in mean apparel and with
empty hands. Every evening with empty hands the young man
passed by, and every morning he returned with his hands full of
purple and pearls. For he was a Robber and robbed the caravans of
the merchants.
And the Hermit looked at him and pitied him. But he spake not a
word. For he knew that he who speaks a word loses his faith.
And one morning, as the young man returned with his hands full
of purple and pearls, he stopped and frowned and stamped his foot
upon the sand, and said to the Hermit: ‘Why do you look at me ever
in this manner as I pass by? What is it that I see in your eyes? For
no man has looked at me before in this manner. And the thing is a
thorn and a trouble to me.’
And the Hermit answered him and said, ‘What you see in my eyes
is pity. Pity is what looks out at you from my eyes.’
And the young man laughed with scorn, and cried to the Hermit
in a bitter voice, and said to him, ‘I have purple and pearls in my
hands, and you have but a mat of reeds on which to lie. What pity
should you have for me? And for what reason have you this pity?’
‘I have pity for you,’ said the Hermit, ‘because you have no
knowledge of God.’
‘Is this knowledge of God a precious thing?’ asked the young man,
and he came close to the mouth of the cavern.
‘It is more precious than all the purple and the pearls of the
world,’ answered the Hermit.
‘And have you got it?’ said the young Robber, and he came closer
still.
‘Once, indeed,’ answered the Hermit, ‘I possessed the perfect
knowledge of God. But in my foolishness I parted with it, and
divided it amongst others. Yet even now is such knowledge as
remains to me more precious than purple or pearls.’
And when the young Robber heard this he threw away the purple
and the pearls that he was bearing in his hands, and drawing a
sharp sword of curved steel he said to the Hermit, ‘Give me,
forthwith, this knowledge of God that you possess, or I will surely
slay you. Wherefore should I not slay him who has a treasure
greater than my treasure?’
And the Hermit spread out his arms and said, ‘Were it not better
for me to go unto the uttermost courts of God and praise Him, than
to live in the world and have no knowledge of Him? Slay me if that
be your desire. But I will not give away my knowledge of God.’
And the young Robber knelt down and besought him, but the
Hermit would not talk to him about God, nor give him his Treasure,
and the young Robber rose up and said to the Hermit, ‘Be it as you
will. As for myself, I will go to the City of the Seven Sins, that is but
three days’ journey from this place, and for my purple they will give
me pleasure, and for my pearls they will sell me joy.’ And he took
up the purple and the pearls and went swiftly away.
And the Hermit cried out and followed him and besought him.
For the space of three days he followed the young Robber on the
road and entreated him to return, nor to enter into the City of the
Seven Sins.
And ever and anon the young Robber looked back at the Hermit
and called to him, and said, ‘Will you give me this knowledge of
God which is more precious than purple and pearls? If you will give
me that, I will not enter the city.’
And ever did the Hermit answer, ‘All things that I have I will give
thee, save that one thing only. For that thing it is not lawful for me
to give away.’
And in the twilight of the third day they came nigh to the great
scarlet gates of the City of the Seven Sins. And from the city there
came the sound of much laughter.
And the young Robber laughed in answer, and sought to knock at
the gate. And as he did so the Hermit ran forward and caught him
by the skirts of his raiment, and said to him: ‘Stretch forth your
hands, and set your arms around my neck, and put your ear close to
my lips, and I will give you what remains to me of the knowledge of
God.’ And the young Robber stopped.
And when the Hermit had given away his knowledge of God, he
fell upon the ground and wept, and a great darkness hid from him
the city and the young Robber, so that he saw them no more.
And as he lay there weeping he was aware of One who was
standing beside him; and He who was standing beside him had feet
of brass and hair like fine wool. And He raised the Hermit up, and
said to him: ‘Before this time thou hadst the perfect knowledge of
God. Now thou shalt have the perfect love of God. Wherefore art
thou weeping?’ And He kissed him.
Appendix

As I indicated in ‘A Note on the Texts’, this appendix prints one


relatively unknown text, a manuscript fragment of a poem in prose.
‘Elder-tree’ (fragment)

Elder-tree, there stands a neglected grave. The grass grows thick and
rank around it, and the weeds have covered it all over. No bird ever
sings there, and even the sunbeams seem to avoid the spot. Yet in
that lonely grave the most beautiful woman in the world lies asleep.
Her throat is like a reed of ivory, and her mouth is like a ripe
pomegranate. Like threads of fine gold are the threads of her
flowing hair, and the turquoise is not so blue as her blue eyes.
Notes

Wilde extensively re-worked a group of themes throughout his


creative life, and his oeuvre draws heavily upon largely
unacknowledged self-quotation. In the following notes I have tried
to indicate the extent of this self-borrowing. Occasionally Wilde’s
spelling of names in his texts is not entirely accurate. I have not
made any corrections to the text, but in the explanatory notes the
correct (or modernized) forms have been used; so, for example, the
Venetian hotel in ‘Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime’ which in the text is
spelt ‘Danielli’ is silently corrected to ‘Danieli’ in the appropriate
explanatory note.

References to Wilde’s other works are abbreviated as follows:

The Picture of Dorian Gray, ed. Isobel Murray (Oxford, 1974): DG.

Lady Windermere’s Fan, ed. Ian Small (London, 1980): LWF.

A Woman of No Importance, ed. Ian Small (London, 1993): WNI.

An Ideal Husband, ed. Russell Jackson (London, 1980): IH.

The Importance of Being Earnest, ed. Russell Jackson (London, 1993):


I BE.

Other abbreviations:
Horst Schroeder, Annotations to Oscar Wilde, ‘The Portrait of Mr. W. H.’ (Braunschweig,
1986): Annotations.
Oxford English Dictionary: OED.

The Happy Prince and Other Tales

1 Dedication (p. 1) Carlos Blacker (1859–1928) was an expatriate Englishman who lived
mainly abroad, particularly in Paris, and who first met Wilde on his trips there.

THE HAPPY PRINCE

1 Charity Children (p. 3) The pupils of Charity Schools, institutions supported by


endowments and bequests for the education of children of the poor.

2 Sans-Souci (p. 5) I.e., without care. ‘sans-Souci’ was the name given to King Frederick
the Great’s Palace in Potsdam.

3 Second Cataract (p. 7) This and other details of the journey of the swallow’s friends (such
as the reference to the Temple of Baalbec, below) are taken from Émile Gautier’s poem
‘Ce que disent les hirondelles’ in Émauxs et Camées.

4 Memnon (p. 7) The reference is to the statue of Memnon at Thebes and the legend that it
emits musical notes when struck by the rays of the sun.

5 beryls (p. 7) Transparent precious pale-green stones.

6 King of the Mountains of the Moon (p. 9) The Mountains of the Moon are a range of
mountains in what is now Uganda.

7 As he is no longer beautiful, he is no longer useful (p. 11) A comment that pointedly refers
to a contemporary debate about art and utility. The immediate target is the socialist
critic William Morris, who held that the Victorian opposition between utility and beauty
was misplaced and that a notion of beauty should embrace utility. Wilde’s view of the
matter was more succinctly expressed in the ‘Preface’ to DG: ‘All art is quite useless.’

THE NIGHTINGALE AND THE ROSE


1 she is all style, without any sincerity (p. 15) A contrast which was to find frequent
expression in later works; cf. Gwendolen’s comment in I BE: ‘In matters of grave
importance, style, not sincerity, is the vital thing’(III, 28–9).

2 Echo (p. 16) In classical mythology a mountain nymph who possessed only the power to
repeat the last words uttered by someone else; see also note 20 to p. 113.

THE DEVOTED FRIEND

1 Gilly-flowers… the Flower-de-luce (p. 25) Wilde’s list of flowers has been chosen more for
its verbal picturesqueness than horticultural accuracy. Gilly-flower was a name already
out of date in the nineteenth century, and formerly applied to a variety of flowers,
including wallflowers. Shepherds’ Purse is a common cruciferous weed (Capsella bursa
pastoris) with small white flowers. Fair-maids of France are a double-flowered variety of
Crowfoot or ranunculus. Ladysmock is a common name for the Cuckoo-flower. Flower-
de-luce is an obselete form of fleur-de-lis, a lily.

2 Lots of people act well… thing of the two (p. 27) An idea that Wilde used again in ‘The
Critic as Artist’ in Intentions (1891): ‘it is more difficult to talk about a thing than to do
it, and… to do nothing is the most difficult thing in the world.’

3 story with a moral… dangerous thing to do (p. 34) The Victorian preoccupation with the
moral purpose of literature was a constant butt of Wilde’s humour. Cf. the ‘Preface’ to
DG: ‘There is no such thing as a moral or immoral book.’

THE REMARKABLE ROCKET

1 Pyrotechnist (p. 36) I.e., one skilled in the making of fireworks.

2 Aurora Borealis… more natural (p. 36) The Aurora Borealis are the northern lights. Wilde
enjoyed playing with concepts of naturalness and artificiality, most famously perhaps in
‘The Decay of Lying’, where a sunset is described as a ‘second-rate Turner… with all the
painter’s faults exaggerated.’

3 Pylotechnic (p. 38) A nonce-word.


4 Bengal light (p. 38) A firework producing a steady and vivid blue-coloured light, used for
signals (OED).

5 glee-club (p. 42) Singing or musical club.

6 I often have long conversations… I don’t understand a single word of what I am saying (p. 43)
A joke that underwent many repetitions; cf. Lord Goring’s exchange with his father in
IH: ‘Lord Caversham: Do you always really understand what you say, sir? Lord Goring:
Yes, father, if I listen attentively’ (III, 136–7).

7 hard work… whatever to do (p. 44) An idea which Wilde polished into an aphorism in
‘Phrases and Philosophies for the Use of the Young’: ‘The condition of perfection is
idleness’.

8 Gold Stick… Court dignitaries (p. 45) The reference is to the gilt rod carried on state
occasions by a colonel of the Life Guards.

The Portrait of Mr. W. H.

In the following notes I have drawn extensively upon Horst


Schroeder’s thorough and informed work of scholarship, Annotations
to Oscar Wilde, ‘The Portrait of Mr. W. H.’ (Braunschweig, 1986).
This volume and its companion, Oscar Wilde, ‘The Portrait of Mr.
W.H.’ – Its Composition, Publication and Reception (Braunschweig,
1984) deserve far greater recognition by Wilde scholars in Britain
and the United States than has hitherto been the case.
1 Birdcage Walk (p. 49) A street on the south of St James’s Park, and so one of the
fashionable milieux of London that so many of Wilde’s characters inhabit.

2 Macpherson, Ireland and Chatterton (p. 49) Three literary forgers. James Macpherson
(1736–96) published what he alleged were translations of Ossian; William Henry Ireland
(1777–1835) forged Shakespeare manuscripts; and Thomas Chatterton (1752–70) forged
medieval manuscripts. Wilde had lectured on Chatterton; the manuscript of his talk,
ironically and unashamedly plagiarized from the work of others, is in the William
Andrews Clark Memorial Library in the University of California, Los Angeles.

3 to realise one’s own personality on some imaginative plane (p. 49) This represents one of
Wilde’s earliest statements of what was to become a central concern in both his critical
and creative works – the proposition that the main function of art or criticism or (on
some occasions) certain modes of behaviour, such as that exemplified by the dandy, was
to express the individual.

4 Cyril Graham (p. 50) The name Graham recurs in LWF; Wilde’s elder son was called Cyril
and he used the name again in Intentions.

5 François Clouefs later work (p. 50) François Clouet (1520–72) was a distinguished French
court portraitist. The work of Clouet and his father Jean Clouet, also a portraitist, had
been popularized by Le Comte de Laborde in La Renaissance des arts à la cour de France
in 1855. It was Jean Clouet, rather than (as Wilde implies in his phrase the ‘great
Flemish master’) François, who was Flemish born.

6 Lord Pembroke (p. 51) William Herbert, third Earl of Pembroke (1580–1630), was the
patron of many poets; he was the dedicatee of the first folio of Shakespeare’s work and
thought by many to be the ‘Mr. W. H.’ of Shakespeare’s Sonnets.

7 the Penshurst portraits (p. 51) An error. Penshurst was the birthplace ofSir Philip Sidney.
The Wilton portraits of Lord Pembroke (of which Wilde was thinking) are by Daniel
Mytens and Van Dyck.

8 Mary Fitton (p. 51) A maid of honour to Elizabeth I and mistress of William Herbert;
identified in 1886 by Thomas Tyler as the original ‘Dark Lady’ of the Sonnets.

9 the playing fields at Eton (p. 51) In a saying attributed to the Duke of Wellington, ‘the
battle of Waterloo was won on the playing fields of Eton’; Wilde is mocking attributes of
character such as earnestness.

10 A.D.C. (p. 52) The Amateur Dramatic Company at the University of Cambridge from
which (as Wilde indicates later) women were excluded; they continued to be so until
well into the twentieth century.

11 better to be good-looking than to be good (p. 52) A sentiment which Wilde was to repeat
in DG: ‘it is better to be beautiful than to be good’ (p. 194).
12 Philistines (p. 52) A term used by Matthew Arnold (particularly in 1869 in Culture and
Anarchy) to identify middle-class values, and adopted by Wilde to denote materialist
(and anti-intellectual) British culture.

13 read for the diplomatic (p. 53) I.e., for the public examinations for foreign and colonial
services. In WNI Lord Illingworth refuses a career in diplomacy despite being ‘offered
Vienna’.

14 It is always a silly thing to give advice, but to give good advice is absolutely fatal (p. 53)
Once more a theme that underwent modification and variation and is best known in a
speech by Lord Goring to his father in IH: ‘I always pass on good advice. It is the only
thing to do with it. It is never of any use to oneself’ (I, 623–5).

15 overlooking the Green Park (p. 53) A location also used in ‘The Critic as Artist’ in
Intentions.

16 Lord Southampton (p. 54) Henry Wriothesley (1573–1624), the third Earl of
Southampton; like Pembroke, he was a patron of poets, including Shakespeare and, also
like Pembroke, he was thought by many to be the subject of Shakespeare’s sonnets.

17 Meres (p. 54) Francis Meres (1565–1647) who published in 1598 Palladis Tamia, Wit’s
Treasury, a history of English literature from Chaucer’s time to his own.

18 preface is from the publisher’s hand (p. 55) The initials ‘T. T.’ in the dedication of the
Sonnets stand for Thomas Thorpe, in whose name they were entered in the Stationers’
Registers in 1609.

19 Lord Buckhurst… Mr. Sackville (p. 55) Thomas Sackville (1536–1608) became the first
Earl of Dorset and Baron Buckhurst in 1567. Robert Allott’s anthology England’s
Parnassus, containing contributions by Sackville (under the initial ‘M.’) was published in
1600.

20 Elizabeth Vernon (p. 55) Cousin of the second Earl of Essex, Vernon was Southampton’s
mistress and later his wife.

21 Mr. W. Hall… Mr. W. H. the writer and not the subject of the dedication (p. 55) These
explanations of the Sonnets had, in fact, been suggested by Shakespearean scholars in
the 1850s and 1860s (and in particular by Andrew Brae and Samuel Neill). William
Hathaway was Shakespeare’s brother-in-law.
22 W. H.… “Mr. William Himself” (p. 56) An idea suggested by D. Bamstorff in Schlüssel zu
Shakespeares Sonnetten in 1860. For details of this idea and many others, Wilde was
indebted to Edmund Dowden’s The Sonnets of William Shakespeare (1881).

23 Drayton (p. 56) I.e., the poet Michael Drayton (1563–1631).

24 John Davies of Hereford (p. 56) Another identification made earlier in the century by
Henry Brown in The Sonnets of Shakespeare Solved (1870).

25 philosophical allegory… Catholic Church (p. 56) Once again, details of these particular
accounts of the Sonnets were available from Dowden’s The Sonnets of William
Shakespeare.

26 Viola and Imogen, Juliet and Rosalind, Portia and Desdemona, and Cleopatra (p. 57) I.e.,
the heroines of Twelfth Night, Cymbeline, Romeo and Juliet, As You Like It, The Merchant of
Venice, Othello and Antony and Cleopatra respectively.

27 Willie Hughes (p. 57) The identification of Mr. W. H. with Willie Hughes was neither
Wilde’s (nor Graham’s), but was suggested by the eighteenth-century critic Thomas
Tyrwhitt, and recorded by Edmund Malone in his Supplement to the Edition of
Shakespeare’s Plays… by Samuel Johnson and George Steevens (1780).

28 eighth line (p. 57) An error, for the line is in fact the seventh.

29 Chapman’s plays (p. 58) I.e., the dramatist George Chapman (?1559–1634), a detail to
be found in William Minto, Characteristics of English Poets from Chaucer to Shirley (1875)
and in Dowden’s The Sonnets of William Shakespeare.

30 Philistine (p. 59) See note 12 to p. 52.

31 Alleyn MSS at Dulwich… the papers of the Lord Chamberlain (p. 59) The papers of
Edward Alleyn, the famous Elizabethan actor, at Dulwich College, which he built and
endowed; the Public Record Office; and the Office of the Lord Chamberlain, whose
Examiner of Plays was, until 1968, the state censor of theatrical performances.

32 the gaunt Palace (p. 63) The description best fits Buckingham Palace, but it could refer
to St James’s.

33 petit-pain (p. 64) I.e., a bread-roll.

34 Rosalind to Juliet… Beatrice to Ophelia (p. 64) For Rosalind and Juliet, see note 26 to p.
57; Beatrice and Ophelia are the heroines of Much Ado About Nothing and Hamlet.
35 Thomas Thorpe (p. 66) See notes 18 to p. 55.

36 ‘slight Must,’ as he calls them (p. 67) In Sonnet 38.13.

37 Marlowe (p. 70) An idea proposed originally by Robert Cartwright in The Sonnets of
William Shakespeare (1859) and by Gerald Massey in Shakespeare’s Sonnets and his Private
Friends (1866).

38 Mephistopheles of his Doctor Faustus (p. 70) In Christopher Marlowe’s Dr Faustus


Mephistopheles seduces Faustus into eternal damnation; this identification was
discussed by Massey in Shakespeare’s Sonnets.

39 Blackfriars’ Theatre (p. 70) An error of detail, for Shakespeare’s company did not appear
at the Blackfriars until 1608.

40 Gaveston of his Edward II (p. 70) In Marlowe’s Edward II, the king’s (homosexual)
partiality for his favourite, Piers Gaveston, in part causes his downfall and the play’s
tragedy.

41 Red Bull Tavern (p. 70) The Red Bull, a playhouse in St John Street in Clerkenwell,
thought originally to have been an inn, where plays could have indeed been performed
in the ‘open yard’. Edward II was performed there.

42 King Edward’s delicate minion (p. 70) I.e., Gaveston in Edward II.

43 The Lover’s Complaint (p. 71) In fact, A Lover’s Complaint.

44 a wonderfully graphic account… Thomas Knell (p. 72) In his Annotations, Horst Schroeder
suggests that this passage is taken ‘almost verbatim’ from Gerald Massey’s Shakespeare’s
Sonnets and his Private Friends, and points out that it is not the work of Thomas Knell, as
Wilde and Massey suggest, but of Essex’s secretary, Edward Waterhouse. (See Schroeder,
Annotations, p. 29.)

45 Sidney’s Stella (p. 72) Penelope Devereux, the daughter of the first Earl of Essex, was
later married to Lord Rich. The suggestion that she was the subject of Philip Sidney’s
sonnet-sequence Astrophel and Stella was made by Massey in 1866, and rehearsed by
Edmund Dowden later in the century.

46 Hews was an Elizabethan name (p. 72) As the scholar Frederick Furnivall had noted as
early as 1876 in the academic periodical Notes and Queries.
47 Margaret Hews, whom Prince Rupert so madly loved (p. 72) I.e., Mrs Margaret Hughes.
She was Prince Rupert’s mistress, bearing him a daughter who was christened Ruperta
and to whom the Prince left all his estate in trust. Margaret Hughes appeared as
Desdemona in December 1660.

48 those English actors who in 1604… Court of that strange Elector of Brandenburg (p. 73)
The sources available to Wilde describe how a company of English actors travelled to
Germany in the early years of the seventeenth century and perhaps performed before
Duke Henry Julius of Brunswick-Lüneburg, and how in 1617 English comedians
appeared before the Elector of Brandenburg. The other details of the episodes appear to
be Wilde’s invention.

49 Aujklarung (p. 73) The most obvious immediate source of the term ‘Aujklarung’ was
Walter Pater’s story ‘Duke Carl of Rosenmold’ in Imaginary Portraits (1887), which Wilde
had reviewed in The Pall Mall Gazette in June 1887. There he drew attention to Pater’s
use of the term (which Pater translated as ‘the Enlightening’) and its use in relation to
the work of Leasing, Herder and Goethe.

50 Friedrich Schroeder (p. 73) I.e., Friedrich Ulrich Schroder (1744–1816), the first
manager to introduce Shakespeare to the German stage.

51 mimae quidem ex Britannia… slain at Nuremberg (p. 73) Horst Schroeder points out that
‘although the history of the early English actors at Nuremberg is well documented, an
incident like the one related is not recorded’ (Annotations, p. 60). He goes on to suggest
that Wilde’s anecdote is fictitious.

52 the sorrows of Dionysos that Tragedy sprang (p. 74) A theme that Wilde probably found
in ‘A Study of Dionysus’, an essay by Walter Pater, who had been a formative influence
at Oxford. Pater’s essay was published in 1876 in the Fortnightly Review and
posthumously in Greek Studies (1895). At one point Wilde seems to echo Pater directly:
‘It is out of the sorrows of Dionysus, then; – of Dionysus in winter – that all Greek
tragedy grows’ (Greek Studies (1895; 1901), p. 40).

53 Bithynian slave… yellow hills of Cerameicus… Antinous… Charmides in philosophy (p. 74)
The Bithynian slave was Antinöus, the beautiful page of the Roman emperor Hadrian
and a favourite subject of sculptors; Cerameicus is a quarter of Athens; Charmides was a
beautiful Athenian youth who appears in Plato’s dialogue of that name. Wilde’s theme is
the age-old one of the permanence of beauty in art; but it is significant that the
examples he gives are of classical male beauty.

54 Globe Theatre (p. 76) Erected in 1599 in Southwark for the Burbages. Shakespeare
acted there, but Wilde seems to have forgotten that the narrator has made the same
point about the Blackfriars and assumes his readers were aware of the relationship
between the two playhouses.

55 Cannes (p. 77) The popularity of Cannes as a resort dates from its virtual colonization
by British visitors from the midnineteenth century onwards.

56 night-mail from Charing Cross (p. 77) Charing Cross was the station serving, cross-
Channel traffic until the 1920s.

57 not a Clouet, but an Ouvry (p. 78) As Horst Schroeder suggests in Oscar Wilde, ‘The
Portrait of Mr. W. H.’ – Its Composition, Publication and Reception, the reference to Ouvry
is in all likelihood an error for Oudry, the French painter in the school of Jean Clouet;
an exhibition of Oudry’s work in 1888 in London had attracted considerable interest.

A House of Pomegranates

1 Dedication (p. 81) Constance Wilde (née Lloyd) was Wilde’s wife.

THE YOUNG KING

1 Dedication (p. 83) Margaret de Windt (1849–1936) married in 1869 Sir Charles Johnson
Brooke, the second Rajah of Sarawak. Wilde probably met her in Paris in 1891.

2 Faun (p. 83) In Greek mythology a rural demigod, represented as a man with horns and
the tail of a goat.

3 Joyeuse (p. 84) ‘Joyeuse’ was the epithet used to describe (and denigrate) members of
Henri Ill’s court. Wilde used it again in DG.

4 Adonis (p. 85) In Greek legend a beautiful youth favoured by Aphrodite, whose name
became a bye-word for male beauty.
5 Bithynian slave of Hadrian (p. 85) I.e., Antinous, the beautiful page of the Roman
emperor Hadrian; see note 53 to p. 74.

6 Endymion (p. 85) Once more male beauty is being alluded to, for in Greek legend
Endymion was a beautiful young shepherd whom Selene (the moon) visited each night
as he slept in an eternal sleep. Endymion was familiar to nineteenth-century readers
through the poem by John Keats.

7 Narcissus (p. 86) A favourite classical reference used by Wilde to denote vain male
beauty; see note 20 to p.113 and note 1 to p. 246.

8 lateen sail (p. 88) ‘A triangular sail suspended by a long yard at an angle of about 45º to
the mast’ (OED).

9 Ormuz (p. 89) A famously wealthy city in the Persian Gulf, mentioned by Milton in
Paradise Lost (11, 2).

10 Tartary (p. 90) In the Middle Ages, the land of the Mongols and Tartars of Central Asia,
who under Genghis Khan overran much of Europe; Wilde’s emphasis is upon the Tartars’
legendary violence.

11 Isis and Osiris (p. 91) Isis was the Egyptian goddess of the sky and wife of Osiris, the
god of fertility and the underworld.

12 Death leaped upon his red horse and galloped away (p. 91) Wilde’s treatment of Death,
Avarice and Plague draws heavily on the description of the Apocalypse in the
Revelation of St John the Divine.

13 pleasaunce (p. 92) A pleasure-ground, usually attached to a mansion.

14 dreamer of dreams (p. 95) A quotation from William Morris’s verse-romance The Earthly
Paradise, where the poet calls himself a ‘Dreamer of dreams’.

15 the dead staff blossomed (p. 95) An allusion to the Tannhäuser story, given its most
popular expression in the nineteenth century by Richard Wagner in his opera
Tannhäuser (1861). In it Tannhäuser confesses to the Pope his love for Venus, but is
refused absolution until the Pope’s staff blossoms. Tannhäuser goes back to Venusberg,
and the Pope’s ‘dead staff does indeed blossom. In De Prqfundis, his long prison-letter to
Lord Alfred Douglas, Wilde explicitly associated Tannhàuser with Christ.

16 monstrance (p. 96) Gold or jewelled vessel containing the consecrated Host.
THE BIRTHDAY OF THE INFANTA

1 Infanta (p. 97) Technically the eldest daughter of the king and queen of Spain who is not
heir to the throne.

2 Dedication (p. 97) Mrs William H. Grenville and her husband (Lord and Lady
Desborough), of Taplow Court in Buckinghamshire, were members of a group calling
themselves ‘The Souls’. Wilde was a frequent visitor to Taplow Court.

3 Mi reina! (p. 99) I.e., My queen!

4 Papal Nuncio (p. 99) A permanent official representative of the Roman see at a foreign
court.

5 Escurial (p. 99) The chief palace of the Spanish kings, about thirty miles from Madrid.

6 auto-da-fé (p. 99) The ceremonial delivery of heretics condemned by the Spanish
Inquisition to the secular arm to be burned at the stake.

7 urai sourire de France (p. 100) I.e., ‘the true smile of France’.

8 moue (p. 100) I.e., A pout.

9 hidalgo and grandee (p. 101) An inaccurate conjunction of terms: hidalgo refers to the
lower ranks of the nobility and grandee to the highest.

10 Camerera-Mayor (p. 101) The chief keeper of the Queen’s wardrobe.

11 Bravo toro! (p. 101) I.e., ‘bravo (or well done) bull!’

12 the semi-classical tragedy of Sophonisba (p. 102) Sophonisba was the daughter of the
Carthaginian general Hasdrubal; her fate formed the subject of numerous European
dramas.

13 Tritons (p. 106) Here statues of sea-monsters of semi-human form represented as a


bearded man with the hind-parts of a fish, holding a trident and a shell-trumpet.

14 Pan (p. 108) In classical mythology Pan was an Arcadian deity who invented and
played on the ‘pipes of Pan’; as Wilde’s allusion suggests, he came to be regarded as the
personification of Nature, and, perhaps ironically here, was associated with fertility.

15 tabouret (p. 111) A low seat or stool.


16 Holbein’s Dance of Death (p. 111) A series of woodcuts by Hans Holbein the Younger
executed in the 1520s, in which Death is depicted as an unwelcome democratic leveller
robbing every class and profession of their pride and status.

17 Lucca damask (p. 112) A figured cloth. Wilde reviewed Ernest Lefébure’s Embroidery
and Lace in Woman’s World in December 1888, calling it ‘a fascinating book’. The book
not only provided details of embroidery here, but also for Chapter 9 of DG.

18 Faun (p. 112) See note 2 to p. 83.

19 Venus (p. 113) In classical mythology the goddess of love.

20 Echo (p. 113) In classical mythology an oread whom Hera deprived of speech, except
for the power to repeat the last words uttered by someone else. She fell in love with
Narcissus (see note 7 to p. 86), but when her affection was not returned she pined away
until only her voice was left. In another version of the legend, Echo was a nymph loved
by Pan (thus taking up the identification of the dwarf with Pan on p. 108).

21 petit monstre (p. 114) I.e., little monster.

THE FISHERMAN AND HIS SOUL

1 Dedication (p. 115) Alice Heine (1858–1925), widow of the Duc de Richelieu, married
Prince Albert of Monaco in 1889. She was a patron of art and artists. Wilde seems to
have met her first in Paris in 1891. H.S.H. stands for ‘Her Serene Highness’.

2 Tritons (p. 116) See notes 13 to p. 106.

3 filigrane (p. 116) Delicate, thread-like forms.

4 Sirens (p. 116) In Homer’s Odyssey (12.39,184), sea-songstresses living on an island near
Scylla and Charybdis who charm sailors to their deaths – an ironic portent of the fate of
the fisherman.

5 nautilus (p. 117) A reference to a sea-creature (a cephalopod) that has a beautiful and
delicate chambered shell and webbed dorsal arms, which it was formerly believed to use
as a sail.

6 Kraken (p. 117) A mythical sea-monster of enormous size, the subject of a poem by
Tennyson.
7 baskets of plaited osier (p. 117) I.e., baskets made of stripped and woven willow
branches.

8 Fauns (p. 119) See note 2 to p. 83.

9 lemon (p. 119) An archaic word meaning lover or spouse.

10 samphire (p. 120) A maritime rock plant whose leaves are used in pickles.

11 vervain (p. 123) A plant reputedly possessing medicinal qualities.

12 targe (p. 123) A light shield.

13 Judas tree (p. 125) The leguminous tree (Cercis siliquastrum) from which Judas was
supposed to have hanged himself; it normally has purple flowers.

14 Tartars (p. 127) See note 10 to p. 90.

15 Gryphons (p. 128) Mythical animals which had the head and wings of an eagle and the
body and hindquarters of a lion. The following paragraphs contain a mixture of names
of real peoples and places (such as Tyre and Sidon) and the completely fictitious (such
as the Agazonbae, Laktroi and Krimnians).

16 selenites (p. 131) I.e., moonstones.

17 galbanum and nard (p. 133) Galbanum is a gum resin; nard is an aromatic balsam. Both
denote exoticism, an important element in decadent literature.

18 wine of Schiraz (p. 133) I.e., Shiraz, a city in Persia, famous for its wine.

19 palanquin (p. 134) ‘A covered litter for one person, carried by four or six men by means
of poles projecting before and behind’ (OED).

20 Circassian (p. 134) A gentile or non-Jew. Again the exotic is being invoked.

21 aloes (p. 135) Plants with fragrant resin and bitter juices.

22 ger-falcon (p. 135) A species of large falcon.

23 porphyry (p. 136) I.e., a beautiful red stone with a high polish. As with the earlier
reference to a ‘purfled’ (or decoratively braided) silk napkin, Wilde’s emphasis is once
more on conspicuous and exotic luxury, a common feature of decadent literature.

24 chalcedonies and sards (p. 137) Sard is a variety of chalcedony; both are semi-
transparent quartz stones. A knowledge of gems and precious stones is a feature of both
English and French decadent writing. Cf. DG and Joris-Karl Huysmans’s A Rebours
(1884). For his knowledge of the subject Wilde was greatly indebted to William Jones,
History and Mystery of Precious Stones (1880).

25 stibium (p. 143) A black antimony cosmetic, used for blackening the eyelids and
eyebrows.

26 Field of the Fullers (p. 146) In the Bible (2 Kings) the Fullers’ Field is a spot just outside
the walls of Jerusalem. The trade of fulling, or processing cloth, used alkalis and caused
offensive smells and was thus carried out at some distance from habitations. Hence the
spot in which the Fisherman and the Mermaid are buried is not only unhallowed, but
also contaminated (and thus sterile).

27 monstrance (p. 147) See note 16 to p. 96.

28 alb and the girdle, the maniple and the stole (p. 147) Details of ecclesiastical dress: an alb
is a tunic of white cloth worn by priests, the maniple is a Eucharistie vestment worn
over the arm and a stole is a narrow strip of silk worn over the shoulders.

THE STAR-CHILD

1 Dedication (p. 149) Margot Tennant was a friend from Dublin and was shortly to become
the wife of Herbert Henry Asquith, the Home Secretary and the future Prime Minister.

2 haggard (p. 154) An Irish term for a stack-yard.

3 carlots (p. 157) Peasants.

4 Giaours (p. 159) A term used by Turks for non-Christians, familiarized in the nineteenth
century by The Giaour, a poem by Byron.

Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime and Other Stories

LORD ARTHUR SAVILE’s CRIME

1 Lady Windermere (p. 167) Wilde’s use of names is never without significance. As the
later reference to Debrett’s Peerage hints, he had to be especially careful to avoid
specific reference to living members of the aristocracy. The titles Windermere, Fermor,
Jedburgh, and Plymdale are used again in later works.

2 Speaker’s Levée (p. 167) I.e., the speaker of the House of Commons whose levées are
traditionally held in court dress, hence the Cabinet Ministers’ ‘stars and ribands’. The
reference (and the later allusions to Princess Sophia and the Royal Academy) locates the
social milieu of the tale. An easy movement between the public arenas of political and
diplomatic life, semi-public artistic institutions such as the Royal Academy and the
private world of the aristocracy and upper middle classes (here represented by Bentinck
House) was a feature of late nineteenth-century London society.

3 political economist (p. 167) I.e., a specialist in political economy, a doctrine which
informed much nineteenth-century social and political thought, and a favourite target
for Wilde.

4 Or pur (p. 167) I.e., pure gold.

5 saint, with not a little of the fascination of a sinner (p. 168) An interest in psychological
types is a common feature of Wilde’s works, as is the reversal of Victorian moral
stereotypes (such as ‘saint’ and ‘sinner’). The sentiments here are repeated in the Society
Comedies and in particularly in DG.

6 cheiromantist (p. 168) I.e., palmist. Palmistry was fashionable in the 1880s and 1890s,
but as the reactions of Lady Windermere’s guests makes clear, the term cheiromancy
was not a particularly common nineteenth-century usage. Wilde’s interest in
cheiromancy was prompted in part by his friend Edward Heron-Allen’s essay ‘The
Cheiromancy of Today’ in Lippincotf’s Monthly Magazine in 1890.

7 Providence can resist temptation by this time (p. 169) A joke which, with variations, Wilde
was to re-use; cf. IH: ‘Lord Goring: Doesn’t that sound rather like tempting Providence?
Mrs Cheveley. Oh! surely Providence can resist temptation by this time’ (III, 378–9).

8 on a fait le monde ainsi (p. 170) Broadly translated, ‘that’s the way of the world’.

9 rascette (p. 170) Lines at the junction of the wrists and hand.

10 spatulate (p. 171) I.e., broadened and rounded.

11 lions better than collie dogs (p. 171) In late nineteenth-century literary culture, to
‘lionize’ meant both to fete and champion an individual writer.
12 Bayswater (p. 172) The significance of areas of London has changed since the late
nineteenth century. In Wilde’s work addresses denote social status and are thus very
important. Most of his work is set either in country estates or in the fashionable milieux
of London, principally Mayfair and what Henry Arthur Jones called ‘our little parish of
St James’. As a fairly recent suburban development, Bayswa-ter was outside this élite
world.

13 The proper basis for marriage is a mutual misunderstanding (p. 172) This line was taken
virtually verbatim from Henry James’s novel, The Portrait of a Lady (1881), but it
represents the basis for many jokes in Wilde’s later work; cf. IH: ‘In married life
affection comes when people thoroughly dislike each other’ (III, 211–12).

14 Morning Post (p. 172) A popular nineteenth-century newspaper, and the preferred
medium for news about London Society. In IH, Lord Caversham asks Lord Goring
whether he reads The Times, and Goring replies: ‘Certainly not. I only read The Morning
Post. All that one should know about modern life is where the Duchesses are; anything
else is quite demoralising’ (IV, 35–6).

15 moue (p. 172) See note 8 to p. 100.

16 General Boulanger (p. 174) A topical allusion: Boulanger was the French minister of
war.

17 Nemesis… shield of Pallas… Gorgon’s head (p. 174) In Greek mythology, Nemesis was
the Greek goddess who measured out happiness and misery to mortals. The armed
goddess Pallas Athene had on her shield a Gorgon head (which turned to stone those
who looked on it). Wilde’s meaning is that Lord Arthur’s fate is such as to turn his
countenance to stone.

18 Guildenstern… Hamlet… Prince Hal (p. 175) Guildenstern is a minor character in


Hamlet; Prince Hal is the reckless prince who later becomes king in Henry V.

19 guineas (p. 176) I.e., twenty-one shillings in pre-decimal coinage; one pound and five
pence in current coinage. The professions invariably charged fees in guineas; Podgers is
indicating that he should be treated as a member of a profession (such as a lawyer or
doctor).

20 portière (p. 176) A curtain hung over a door to give protection from draughts or to act
as a screen.
21 the Park (p. 177) I.e., Hyde Park. Lord Arthur goes north from an area around Belgrave
Square, and then south-east, a social as well as a physical journey.

22 eld (p. 177) I.e., age; the word was archaic well before the 1890s.

23 hansom (p. 178) A type of two-wheeled horse-drawn cab, a very common vehicle on
the streets of London in the nineteenth century. They were usually vehicles for hire, but
occasionally (as with this one) privately owned.

24 billy-cock hat (p. 178) A kind of bowler hat.

25 A London free from the sin… mom to eve (p. 179) Elsewhere Wilde admired the spectacle
of metropolitan life but regretted the social and economic inequality which made it
possible. Cf. Hester Worsley’s outburst in WNI: ‘You rich people in England, you don’t
know how you are living. How could you? You shut out from your society the gentle
and the good. You laugh at the simple and the poor. Living, as you do, on others and by
them, you sneer at self-sacrifice, and if you throw bread to the poor, it is merely to keep
them quiet for a season’ (II, 260–65).

26 Arcady (p. 179) Arcadia, in Greek legend the ideal region of pastoral simplicity and
contentment.

27 cigarette (p. 180) Cigarette smoking was more of a marker of fashion in the late
nineteenth century than it is now. It is used by Wilde to indicate a ‘modern’ or decadent
consciousness: most of his heroes and some of his ‘fast’ women are made to smoke.

28 crêpe-de-chine (p. 180) A white or coloured textured silk.

29 delicate little figures… near Tanagra (p. 180) Small statuettes of terracotta found in the
last decades of the nineteenth century in tombs dating from the late fourth and third
centuries BC at Tanagra in Greece. In the stage directions for Act I of IH, Wilde indicates
Mabel Chiltern’s delicacy and innocence by comparing her to a Tanagra statuette.

30 the Borgia (p. 180) Cesare Borgia, son of Rodrigo Borgia, Pope Alexander VI, became
notorious for his crimes, and is said to have inspired Machiavelli’s The Prince.

31 Sheraton (p. 182) A style of furniture developed in England in the late eighteenth
century, chiefly by Thomas Sheraton.

32 Buckingham (p. 182) I.e., a London club. Clubs were all-male preserves. Membership of
them was an index of social prestige: Podgers does not belong to a club.
33 Ruff’s Guide and Bailey’s Magazine… the Pharmacopoeia… Erskine’s Toxicology (p. 183)
I.e., Ruff’s Guide to the Turf and Bailey’s Magazine of Sports and Pastimes, both
contemporary sporting journals; the Pharmacopoeia was (and – as the British
Pharmacopoeia – is) an officially published book listing drugs and medicinal substances
with directions for use and identification. Sir Mathew Reid’s edition of Erskine’s
Toxicology is an invention.

34 aconitine (p. 183) A deadly poison whose manufacture began in 1847 and which in its
naturally occurring (and less toxic) form is monk’s-hood or wolf s-bane.

35 monsieur le mauvais sujet (p. 183) I.e., you scoundrel (or rascal).

36 On a fait des folies pour moi (p. 184) I.e., men lost their heads over me.

37 American novels (p. 184) A favourite butt for Wilde’s humour. Cf. the exchange in DG:
‘“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’ (p. 38).

38 Lido… Florian’s… Piazza (p. 186) The Lido is an island resort off Venice; Florian’s is a
cafe on the Piazza San Marco. Venice was extremely popular among the British leisured
class in the late nineteenth century.

39 Pinetum (p. 186) The pine forest of Ravenna.

40 Danielli’s (p. 186) Danieli’s is a fashionable hotel in Venice, near the Piazza San Marco
and overlooking the lagoon, well-known to nineteenth-century British travellers.

41 dynamite (p. 189) In fact, a fairly recent invention of 1867 by the Swede Alfred Nobel.

42 Scotland Yard (p. 189) A street off Whitehall which gave its name to the headquarters
of the Metropolitan Police until 1890 when it was moved to New Scotland Yard on the
Thames Embankment.

43 revolutionary tendencies (p. 189) The subject of Russian revolutionary politics was a
topical one and had preoccupied Wilde in his play, Vera; Or, the Nihilists (1880), and the
‘Soul of Man Under Socialism’. Nihilism (mentioned slightly later in the text) was a
Russian terrorist movement aimed at destroying the Tsarist state.

44 Tsar… ship’s carpenter (p. 189) An allusion to the embassy sent by Peter I to Western
countries for advice on modernizing the Russian navy. Peter himself went on the
embassy as a volunteer sailor – under the name of Peter Mikhailov – and learned about
shipbuilding at Deptford.
45 Marcobrünner (p. 191) Marcobrönn in the Erbach region is one of the great vineyards of
the Rheingau. Fine wines figured prominently in both Wilde’s work and his life. Rhine
wines (known generically in English as hock) were a particular favourite.

46 hydra (p. 192) In Greek mythology the fabulous many-headed snake whose heads grew
as fast as they were cut off.

47 I live entirely for my art (p. 192) The idea that art and criminality were linked in some
way was one that fascinated Wilde. It formed the subject of the essay ‘Pen, Pencil, and
Poison’ in Intentions (1891), and isa theme of DG.

48 meat-tea (p. 192) Wilde is generally very precise about matters of social etiquette. For
one of Lord Arthur’s rank, tea would be a light refreshment taken at four in the
afternoon. In IBE it includes cucumber sandwiches. A meat-tea would be a more
substantial meal, taken rather later; hence the references to different types of meal is
being used as an indicator of class behaviour.

49 tape (p. 193) I.e., ticker tape, a continuous paper tape which printed out telegraphic
messages, most usually from news agencies and the Stock Exchange. Ticker tape
machines were invented by Edison in the early 1870s in the United States and were
fairly common by the late 1880s.

50 Mudie (p. 193) Mudie’s circulating library was one of the most famous nineteenth-
century subscription libraries; it later merged with W. H. Smith’s circulating library.

51 Dorcas Society (p. 194) A ladies’ association (in a church) for making and providing
clothes for the poor. It is mentioned again in WNI, and is meant to indicate worthy (if
tedious) charitable service.

52 cap of Liberty (p. 194) The cap worn by the Jacobins in the French Revolution was
known as the ‘cap of liberty’. More recently and more locally it had also been worn by
some members of the Chartist movement in Britain in the 1830s and 1840s.

53 Liberty… French Revolution (p. 194) The centenary of the French Revolution in 1889
and the celebratory gift of the Statue of Liberty from France to the United States made
the Revolution a topical subject. Wilde’s specific reference is the ideal of liberty
embodied in the Revolution’s appeal to ‘Liberty, Equality and Fraternity’.

54 bull’s-eye lantern (p. 197) A lantern with a lens (the bull’s-eye) which focused its light
into a beam.
55 Gaiety (p. 197) A West-End theatre noted for musical comedies. See Ray Mander and
Joe Mitchenson, Lost Theatres of London (2nd edn, London, 1976).

THE SPHINX WITHOUT A SECRET

1 Title (p. 200) One of Wilde’s best-known poems is ‘The Sphinx’, which was in turn a
nickname he gave to his friend Ada Leverson. The story’s title is reminiscent of an
exchange in WNI: ‘Mrs Allonby: Define us as a sex. Lord Illingworth: Sphinxes without
secrets’ (I, 439–40). The subtitle – ‘an etching’ – recalls Wilde’s practice of subtitling his
poems in terms taken from other art-forms, particularly music and painting.

2 believed in the Pentateuch (p. 200) I.e., the first five books of the Old Testament. During
the course of the nineteenth century the authority of the Bible had been challenged by
scientific questioning of the historical accuracy of the book of Genesis: Murchison’s old-
fashioned virtues are being alluded to.

3 Madeleine… the Bois (p. 201) St Madeleine is a church in the 8th Arrondissement of
Paris, between the Opéra and the Champs Elysées. The woods of the Bois de Boulogne
are to the east of it.

4 Gioconda in sables (p. 201) Leonardo da Vinci’s portrait, now more popularly known as
the Mona Lisa, was assiduously discussed in the last decades of the nineteenth century,
particularly in a ‘purple passage’ by Walter Pater in The Renaissance (1873).

5 brougham (p. 201) A one-horse, closed carriage.

6 that wretched Row (p. 201) Rotten Row, a fashionable promenading place in Hyde Park.

7 ma belle inconnue (p. 201) I.e., my beautiful unknown (woman).

8 congestion of the lungs (p. 204) Congestion of the lungs is (as Wilde implies here) a
symptom of pneumonia.

THE CANTERVILLE GHOST

1 A Hylo-Idealistc Romance (p. 260) Hylo-Idealism was the doctrine of the Birmingham
poet, Constance Naden, whom Wilde admired. The doctrine identified the spiritual as
part of the material realm.
2 Dowager Duchess (p. 206) A dowager is a widow who enjoys the property or title that has
come to her via her husband. Dowagers – whether duchesses or not – form a significant
part of the comic world of Wilde’s plays.

3 You are certainly very natural in America (p. 207) The contrast between naturalness
(represented by America) and civilization (represented by Europe) is a theme common
in Wilde’s works, as indeed is an ironic tone towards things American. Cf. DG and WNI,
where Hester Worsley, an American heiress on holiday in Britain, is said by another
character to be ‘painfully natural’.

4 leading the German (p. 207) A dance, similar to the cotillon.

5 amazon (p. 207) In classical legend, Amazons were a race of female warriors.

6 Psychical Society (p. 210) A topical allusion: the Society for Psychical Research was
founded in 1882.

7 Fanny Davenport over Sara Bernhardt (p. 210) Fanny Davenport was a popular
contemporary American actress; Sara Bernhardt was a French actress who attained great
celebrity all over Europe and the United States, and was particularly famous for her
voice. Wilde was reported (by Vincent O’sullivan) to have said that he would have
married Sara Bernhardt; she was to play the tide-role in Salomé in 1892 before the play
was banned.

8 green corn, buckwheat cakes, and hominy (p. 210) Varieties of American cereals.

9 old man of terrible aspect (p. 211) An allusion to a line from Dante’s Vita Nuova, III. 3:
‘d’uno segnore di pauroso aspette’ – in Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s translation, ‘O Lord of
terrible aspect’ (Dante and his Circle, 1874).

10 Monsieur de Voltaire (p. 212) The French satirist, historian, moralist and free-thinker
who was exiled to England from 1726 to 1729 (when he presumably could have met the
family of the Ganterville ghost).

11 Crockford’s (p. 212) A famous gambling club established in 1827 in St James’s Street in
London by William Crockford. Charles James Fox, the great Whig statesman, died in
1806, and so was hardly likely to have gambled at Crockford’s.

12 Lady Stutfield (p. 212) Like Lady Windermere, a character-name that recurs in other
works.
13 Longfellow (p. 215) Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, the American poet, whom Wilde had
met on his American tour in 1882. The allusion is to Longfellow’s ‘The Skeleton in
Armour’.

14 the Virgin Queen herself ‘(p. 215) Elizabeth I.

15 Titan form (p. 217) Although Wilde frequently alludes to classical sources, the term
here simply means ‘colossal’ or ‘gigantic’ rather than signifying Greek deities.

16 falchion (p. 217) A broad curved sword.

17 dimity (p. 217) A stout cotton cloth which is used undyed for a bedding material.

18 Chanticleer (p. 218) The cock in Reynard the Fox and in Chaucer’s ‘The Nun’s Priest’s
Tale’ in The Canterbury Tales.

19 list slippers (p. 220) Traditionally worn by stage ‘ghosts’ to give them a silent tread.

20 arquebuse (p. 220) An early type of portable gun where the barrel is supported by a
tripod or forked rest.

21 large Saroni photographs (p. 221) Napoleon Sarony (1821–96) moved from his native
Canada to begin work on photography in Birmingham, England. He returned to North
America to open what became a highly successful New York studio in 1866 and was
reputed to have photographed over 30,000 actors and actresses. He took publicity
portraits of Wilde at the beginning and end of his American lecture tour.

22 clam-bake (p. 221) In the United States, a picnic party to eat baked clams.

23 euchre (p. 221) An American card game played with thirty-two cards.

24 guineas (p. 222) See note 19 to p. 176.

25 en secondes noces (p. 222) I.e., as a second wife.

26 free passage (p. 224) An ironic reference to the schemes for assisted emigration to the
British colonies or to the USA, often for ‘fallen’ women or reformed prostitutes, which
Wilde was to mock in WNI.

27 no ruins and no curiosities… navy and your manners (p. 225) A variation on a much used
joke; cf. the exchange in WNI on the British aristocracy and American life: ‘Lady
Caroline: There are a great many things you haven’t got in America, I am told, Miss
Worsley. They say you have no ruins, and no curiosities. Mrs Allonby:… What nonsense!
They have their mothers and their manners. Hester Worsley: The English aristocracy
supply us with our curiosities, Lady Caroline. They are sent over every summer,
regularly, in the steamers, and propose to us the day after they land’ (II, 245–53).

28 hemlock… nightingale (p. 225) The poisonous hemlock plant (Conium maculatura) has
white flowers (which are usually small, however), and is traditionally associated with
drowsiness and death. The nightingale was a Romantic symbol, used by Shelley and
particularly Keats, and connoting the oblivion achieved through art.

29 mortmain (p. 231) A legal term referring to land held in perpetuity by a family or
institution.

30 Virginia received the coronet… reward of all good little American girls (p. 233) Another
topic freely re-used; cf. WNI: ‘These American girls carry off all the good matches. Why
can’t they stay in their own country?’ (I, 206–7).

THE MODEL MILLIONAIRE

1 Ruff’s Guide and Baile’s Magazine (p. 235) See note 33 to p. 183.

2 butterfly to do among bulls and bears (p. 235) A dense set of allusions. The term butterfly
connotes irreverence – James McNeill Whistler, Wilde’s friend from the early 1880s
(and with whom he later quarrelled) signed his picture with a butterfly motif. A bull
market is Stock Exchange jargon for a market which is rising, whereas a bear market is
one which is falling.

3 pekoe and souchong (p. 235) Types of tea.

4 ineffectual young man with a perfect profile and no profession (p. 235) Cf. ‘Phrases and
Philosophies for the Use of the Young’: ‘There is something tragic about the enormous
number of young men there are in England at the present moment who start life with a
perfect profile, and end by adopting some useful profession.’ The lines were read out in
court during Wilde’s trials.

5 Men who are dandies and women who are darlings rule the world (p. 236) A familiar
sentiment. Cf. Lord Ulingworth in WMI: ‘The future belongs to the dandy. It is the
exquisites who are going to rule’ (III, 56–7); and ‘A Few Maxims for the Instruction of
the Over-Educated’: ‘Dandyism is the assertion of the absolute modernity of Beauty’.

6 trouvaille, mon cher (p. 236) I.e., a find, my dear fellow.


7 hock and seltzer (p. 237) See note 45 to Marcobriinner, p. 191.

8 A chacun son métier (p. 238) I.e., to each his trade, or, more colloquially, each to his
own.

9 Que voulez-vous? La fantaisie d’un millionaire! (p. 238) I.e., ‘What do you want? The
fantasy of a millionaire!’

10 Son affaire c’est l’argent des autres (p. 239) I.e., ‘his business is other people’s money’.

11 Row (p. 239) See note 6 to p. 201.

12 de la part de (p. 239) on behalf of.

Poems in Prose

1 Narcissus (p. 246) In the Greek legend, to which Wilde’s story gives an ironic twisf,
Narcissus was caused by Nemesis to become enamoured of his own image reflected in
the waters of a spring. He pined away and was changed into the flower which bears his
name.

2 Oreads (p. 246) Mountain nymphs of classical mythology.

3 Joseph of Arimathea (p. 246) Who in the Gospels took the body of Christ for burial.

4 Centaur (p. 252) A mythical beast with the head, trunk and arms of a man, and the body
and legs of a horse.
a Sonnet xx, 2.

b Sonnet xxvi, 1.

c Sonnet cxxvi, 9.

d Sonnet cix, 14.

e Sonnet i, 10.

f Sonnet ii, 3.

g Sonnet viii, 1.

h Sonnet xxii, 6.

i Sonnet xcv, 1.

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