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The Rebel Angels tct-1

Page 36

by Robertson Davies


  “I never know what people want with such nasty toys,” said Lamotte. “It has been my observation, over a long life, that a man’s possessions are a surer clue to his character than anything he does or says. If you know how to interpret the language of possessions.” Lamotte looked as if he considered himself such a man.

  “All we’ll ever find in your cupboards are pieces of rare old china,” said Deloney; “and from what I hear, René, they don’t provide guarantees of a blameless taste.”

  “What? What? We must hear about this,” said Roberta. Lamotte was blushing.

  “René is reputed to have a fine collection of bourdaloues,” said Deloney.

  “Being—?”

  “Eighteenth-century china piss-pots for elegant ladies to slip under their skirts on long, cold coach journeys.”

  “No, no,” said Lamotte. “Named for the Abbe Bourdalue who preached inordinately long sermons—extreme tests of human endurance. But who says this—?”

  “Aha, wouldn’t you like to know? Are they really painted with naughty pictures?”

  “As long as I keep on drinking mineral water while you are sipping port, it will be quite a while before you find out.”

  “Minds that are too refined slip into grossness. Watch your step, René; we have our eyes on you.”

  Here it was Lamotte who smirked.

  “Do I hear you discussing the deep damnation of Urky McVarish’s taking-off?” It was Durdle, shouting down the table, which the etiquette of the occasion forbade him to do.

  “Ah, the Pink Ribbon Murder,” said Ludlow, the law don. “What did you make of that, Judge?”

  “I didn’t make much of it,” said Mr. Justice Northmore. “I read everything that appeared in all three papers, and the accounts were so muddled and contradictory that I couldn’t be sure of anything except that a professor had been murdered under somewhat imaginative circumstances. I wish it had come to trial, so we could have got to the bottom of it—”

  Roberta Burns snorted. The Warden raised his eyebrows.

  “So that we could have found out the truth about the ten feet of pink ribbon that were concealed in the rectum of the body. Now why would anybody want to do that?”

  “There was talk in one of the confessions of ‘ceremonies’.”

  “Yes, yes, Mr. Ludlow, but what ceremonies?”

  “The full explanation of that was given only in the letter that reached the police, which I had an opportunity of examining,” said Ludlow. “Something very complicated about Queen Anne.”

  “Can we not talk of anything else?” said the Warden.

  “Tell me later, Ludlow,” hissed the Judge.

  But the Warden’s mild plea could not stop the flow.

  Deloney was querying Ludlow: “Whatever became of the body?”

  “McVarish’s body, do you mean? I suppose the police released it to the family, when they had found out whatever they could.”

  “I never knew there was any family.”

  Here I was able to intervene with special knowledge. “There isn’t. So the University took over and there was a very private funeral. Just a couple of people from the President’s office at the crematorium.”

  “That can’t have been much of a ‘ceremony’. But a parson, one presumes? Who was it? Not you, Simon?”

  “No, not me. I read the service for the murderer, however, if you collect such information. I’d known him all my life.”

  “I think that fellow—the murderer—deserves public thanks,” said Elsa Czermak.

  “Elsa, we never knew you had it in for Urky!”

  “I mean for finishing himself off and not putting the public to heavy expense in the matter of a trial. He must have been a man of considerable quality.”

  “He was, I can assure you,” said Hollier.

  “Suicide, wasn’t it?” The curious Deloney again. “I heard he drank a whole can of Dog-Off.”

  Strange to hear Hollier defending Parlabane. “Nothing of the sort I assure you. He was an exceptional man, a man of formidable abilities, with a sense of style that would utterly reject death by Dog-Off.”

  “Of course, the book! The great book. Is it really magnificent?” said Durdle.

  “When will it be published?” said Aronson. “You are supposed to be attending to that, aren’t you, Hollier?”

  “Somebody else has been dealing with it while I have been ill,” said Hollier. “I understand the bidding among the publishers is not yet concluded. The film rights have been in demand from people who haven’t even seen the book.”

  “The really important point is that the original manuscript should be lodged in the University Library,” said Jubilei, who was an expert in archival work. “It sprang from this University, it led to an incident in University history that is inescapable, however reprehensible, and we must have it where it properly belongs.”

  “It’s been left to his old college library,” said Hollier. “St. John and the Holy Ghost. Spook, to you.”

  “I am not convinced such a small library will know how to deal with it,” said Jubilei. “Can you guarantee that it will be preserved, page by page, between sheets of acid-free paper?”

  I thought of Parlabane’s squalid mess of typescript, and smiled a private smile.

  “I don’t see how you can possibly speak of it as ‘an incident’,” said Durdle. “It’s our Crime, don’t you see, and a real beauty! How many other universities can boast a crime—an acknowledged, indisputable crime, that’s to say? It gives us a quality all our own, lifts us high above every other university on this continent. It was international news! Worth at least three Nobel Laureates! Raises us all immeasurably in our professional stature!”

  “Oh rubbish! How can you possibly say such a thing?” said Stromwell.

  “You can ask that? You, a medievalist! What were the great scholars of the past? Venal, cadging, saucy, spiteful, contumelious, and quarrelsome—Urky and his murderer are right in the pattern—and they were also great humanists. What is the modern scholar? A frowsy scarecrow of bourgeois conventionality.”

  “Speak for yourself,” said Stromwell.

  “I do! I do! I was saying precisely that to my wife this morning at breakfast.”

  “And what did she say?”

  “I think she said Yes dear, and went on making a list for her shopping. But that’s beside the point, which is that some grotesquerie, some wrenching originality, is a necessary part of real scholarship, and brings a special glory with it. We all share in the dark splendour of Urky’s murder; we are the greater for his passing, and his murderer’s book is in a special sense our book.”

  “You don’t even know whether or not it is a good book.”

  As they wrangled, some of the others were trying to change the subject, to please the Warden.

  “I have it on very good authority that we shall shortly have another Nobel Laureate in this University,” said Boys.

  “You mean he’s got it?” said Gyllenborg.

  “Can’t be absolutely certain until the announcement is made, but there are only three possible contenders this year, and I hear our man is top of the list.”

  “I thought it might be so when I read his Kober Lecture. Ozy spoke like a man who knew he had come to disturb the sleep of the world. We shall all have to revise our thinking. Excrement: daily barometer of whether the body—perhaps even the mind—is tending towards health or sickness. Of course he stands on Sheldon’s shoulders, but don’t we all stand on somebody’s past work?”

  “That is what lends splendour to a university,” said the Warden. “Not these dreadful interruptions of the natural order.”

  “You lean always towards the light, Warden; perhaps both are necessary, for completeness.”

  “Quite so,” said the Warden. “I confess I never really liked McVarish, but it is good modern theology to acknowledge every man’s right to go to hell in his own way.”

  As I listened, I felt a sadness creeping over me that was unquestionably tin
ged by the self-pity I had condemned in Hollier earlier in the day. Ah, well; a little self-pity is perhaps not amiss in circumstances where we cannot reasonably expect pity from anyone else. So I gave way to a measure of the harlot-emotion, and to my immense satisfaction it turned in a few minutes to a deep tenderness.

  Vogue la galère, Maria. Let your ship sail free.

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