The Old Maids' Club

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by Israel Zangwill


  CHAPTER IV.

  THE CLUB GETS ADVERTISED.

  "I see you have disregarded my ruling, Miss Dulcimer!" said LordSilverdale, pointing to the paragraph in the _Moon_. "What is the use ofmy trying the candidates if you're going to admit the plucked?"

  "I am surprised at you, Lord Silverdale. I thought you had more wisdomthan to base a reproach on a _Moon_ paragraph. You might have known itwas not true."

  "That is not my experience, Miss Dulcimer. I do not think a statement isnecessarily false because it appears in the newspapers. There is hardlya paper in which I have not, at some time or other, come across a truepiece of news. Even the _Moon_ is not all made of green cheese."

  "But you surely do not think I would accept Clorinda Bell after yourwarning. Not but that I am astonished. She assured me she was ice."

  "Precisely. And so I marked her 'Dangerous.' Are there any morecandidates to-day?"

  "Heaps and heaps! From all parts of the kingdom letters have come fromladies anxious to become Old Maids. There is even one application fromParis. Ought I to entertain that?"

  "Certainly. Candidates may hail from anywhere--excepting naturally theUnited States.

  "But what, I wonder, has caused this tide of applications?"

  "The _Moon_, of course. The fiction that Clorinda Bell intended to takethe secular veil has attracted all these imitators. She has given theClub a good advertisement in endeavoring merely to give herself one."

  "You suspect her, then, of being herself responsible for the statementthat she was going to join the Club?"

  "No. I am sure of it. Who but herself knew that she was not?"

  "I can hardly imagine that she would employ such base arts."

  "Higher arts are out of employment nowadays."

  "Is there any way of finding out?"

  "I am afraid not. She has no bosom friends. Stay--there is her mother!"

  "Mothers do not tell their daughters' secrets. They do not know them."

  "Well, there's her brother. I was introduced to him the other day atMrs. Leo Hunter's. But he seems such a reticent chap. Only opens hismouth twice an hour, and then merely to show his teeth. Oh, I know! I'llget at the _Moon_ man. My aunt, the philanthropist, who is quite ajournalist (sends so many paragraphs round about herself, you know),will tell me who invents that sort of news, and I'll interview thebeggar."

  "Yes, won't it be fun to run her to earth?" said Lillie gleefully.

  Silverdale took advantage of her good-humor.

  "I hope the discovery of the baseness of your sex will turn you again tomine." There was a pleading tenderness in his eyes.

  "What! to your baseness? I thought you were so good."

  "I am no good without you," he said boldly.

  "Oh, that is too rich! Suppose I had never been born?"

  "I should have wished I hadn't."

  "But you wouldn't have known _I_ hadn't."

  "You're getting too metaphysical for my limited understanding."

  "Nonsense, you understand metaphysics as well as I do."

  "Do not disparage yourself. You know I cannot endure metaphysics."

  "Why not?"

  "Because they are mostly made in Germany. And all Germans write as iftheir aim was to be misunderstood. Listen to my simple English lay."

  "Another love-song to Chloe?"

  "No, a really great poem, suggested by the number of papers and poems Ihave already seen this _Moon_ paragraph in."

  He took down the banjo, thrummed it, and sang:

  THE GRAND PARAGRAPHIC TOUR.

  I composed a little story About a cockatoo, With no desire of glory, To see what would ensue.

  It took the public liking From China to Peru. The point of it was striking, Though perfectly untrue.

  It began in a morning journal When gooseberries were due, The subject seemed eternal, So many scribes it drew.

  And in every evening column It made a great to-do, Sub-editors so solemn Just adding thereunto.

  In the London Correspondence 'Twas written up anew, And then a fog came on dense And hid me quite from view.

  And some said they had heard it From keepers in the Zoo, While others who averred it Had _seen_ that cockatoo.

  It lived, my little fable, I chuckled and I crew As at my very table Friends twisted it askew.

  It leapt across the Channel, A bounding kangaroo. It did not shrink like flannel But gained in size and hue.

  It appeared in French and Spanish With errors not a few, In Russian, Greek and Danish, Inaccurately, too.

  And waxing more romantic With every wind that blew, It crossed the broad Atlantic And grew and grew and grew.

  At last, like boomerang, it Sped back across the blue, And tall and touched with twang, it Appeared whence first it flew.

  An annual affliction, It tours the wide world through, And I who bred the fiction Have come to think it true.

  Life's burden it has doubled, For peace of mind it slew, My dreams by it are troubled, My days are filled with rue.

  Its horrors yearly thicken, It sticks to me like glue, And sad and conscience-stricken I curse that cockatoo.

  "That is what will happen with Clorinda Bell's membership of our club,"continued the poet. "She will remain a member long after it has ceasedto exist. Once a thing has appeared in print, you cannot destroy it. Apublished lie is immortal. Age cannot wither it, nor custom stale itsinfinite variety. It thrives by contradiction. Give me a cup of tea andI will go and interview the _Moon_-man at once."

  The millionaire, hearing tea was on the tray, came in to join them, andSilverdale soon went off to his aunt, Lady Goody-Goody Twoshoes, and gotthe address of the man in the _Moon_.

  "Lillie, what's this I see in the _Moon_ about Clorinda Bell joiningyour Club?" asked the millionaire.

  "An invention, father."

  The millionaire looked disappointed.

  "Will all your Old Maids be young?"

  "Yes, papa. It is best to catch them young."

  "I shall be dining at the Club sometimes," he announced irrelevantly.

  "Oh, no, papa. You are not admissible during the sittings."

  "Why? You let Lord Silverdale in."

  "Yes, but he is not married."

  "Oh!" and the millionaire went away with brighter brow.

  _The Millionaire._]

  The rest of the afternoon Lillie was busy conducting the PreliminaryExamination of a surpassingly beautiful girl who answered to the name of"Princess," and would give no other name for the present, not even toTurple the magnificent.

  "You got my letter, I suppose?" asked the Princess.

  "Oh, yes," said the President. "I should have written to you."

  "I thought it best to come and see you about it at once, as I havesuddenly determined to go to Brighton, and I don't know when I may beback. I had not heard of your Club till the other day, when I saw in the_Moon_ that Clorinda Bell was going to join it, and anything she joinsmust of course be strictly proper, so I haven't troubled to ask theHonorable Miss Primpole's advice--she lives with me, you know. An onlyorphan cannot be too careful!"

  "You need not fear," said Lillie. "Miss Bell is not to be a member. Wehave refused her."

  "Oh, indeed! Well, perhaps it is as well not to bring the scent of thefootlights over the Club. It is hard upon Miss Bell, but if you were toadmit her, I suppose other actresses would want to come in. There are somany of them that prefer to remain single."

  "Are you sure _you_ do?"

  "Positive. My experience of lovers has been so harassing and peculiarthat I shall never marry, and as my best friends cannot call me awall-flower, I venture to think you will find me a va
luable ally in yournoble campaign against the degrading superstition that Old Maids arewomen who have not found husbands, just as widows are women who havelost them."

  "I sincerely hope so," said Lillie enthusiastically. "You express myviews very neatly. May I ask what are the peculiar experiences you speakof?"

  "Certainly. Some months ago I amused myself by recording the strangeepisodes of my first loves, and in anticipation of your request I havebrought the manuscript."

  "Oh, please read it!" said Lillie excitedly.

  "Of course I have not given the real names."

  "No, I quite understand. Won't you have a chocolate cream before youcommence?"

  "Thank you. They look lovely. How awfully sweet!"

  "Too sweet for you?" inquired Lillie anxiously.

  "No, no. I mean they are just nice."

  The Princess untied the pretty pink ribbon that enfolded the dainty,scented manuscript, and pausing only to munch an occasional chocolatecream, she read on till the shades of evening fell over the Old Maids'Club and the soft glow of the candles illuminated its dainty complexion.

 

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