There was a selection of names on bits of paper beneath the doorbells of the tenement. The name on the bell of 14c was Frankie Taylor. I rang it and waited. Papers and dust swirled in the corners. A window opened and the man himself leaned out.
‘Remember me?’ I shouted. The figure at the window nodded and waved me up. The stone stairway smelled badly of cooked food. The Great Profundo was on the landing, waiting barefoot, when I reached the fourth floor.
‘Yes, I remember,’ he said and shook hands. ‘The student. Those stairs knacker the best of us.’ He led me, breathing heavily, into the flat and offered me a chair which I declined. Would he be free – would he and the saw-player be free – on the evening of the thirteenth of next month? The sword-swallower shrugged and said that it was very likely. He sat down in his armchair and folded his knees up to his chest. Then he sprang up again and asked me if I would like a cup of coffee. I refused politely. I offered to write down the date and time of the meeting but Profundo assured me that they would be there. He sat down again and began to finger his toes.
‘Would you like a beer?’
‘What kind?’
He jumped off the chair and said, ‘I’ll see what I’ve left. I didn’t know you’d be coming.’ He opened a cupboard and closed it again, then left the room. I went over to the window to check that my car was still in one piece.
Profundo came back with three cans of lager held together by plastic loops.
‘Tennent’s. From Christmas,’ he said. He jerked one free and handed it over and took another himself. ‘Don’t be worrying about the car. It’s safe enough down there. The neighbours will keep an eye on it.’
I took the seat he had previously offered and said, ‘There’s another thing I’d wanted to ask you. I work for a student newspaper, Rostrum, and I was wondering how you would feel about giving an interview some time.’
‘Me?’ I applied pressure to the ring-pull and the can snapped open. From the triangular hole the lager was fizzy and tepid. ‘Why me? What could I tell you?’
‘Our readers are interested in a lot of things. I’m sure with the life you’ve led it couldn’t fail.’
‘Aww here now . . .’ He laughed and looked down at his feet. Without Jimmy, the saw-player, he seemed defenceless. He was a shy man, unable to look me in the eye. His voice was quiet, conversational – not strident like he had been by the river-bank.
‘If it’s of any help to you . . . in your studies, like . . . Oh would you like a glass?’
‘No thanks,’ I said. ‘Are you busy? Would you mind doing it now?’
‘Do I look busy?’ he said spreading his hands. I set up my machine, took a slug from the can and began my interview. (See Appendix.)
The bar in the students’ Union was hired for the night of the thirteenth and a low platform stage erected against one wall. In my role as treasurer I was obliged to be around so another of the members of the Eccentrics Genuine was sent in his car to pick up the pair of performers. There was a splendid turn-out – everyone in formal evening wear – and I was pleased at the thought of covering expenses from the door money alone. After that, what we made on new membership and the bar was profit. I myself was responsible for about forty new members that night: part of the rugby club, friends from the Young Conservatives, Engineers, Medics and, most extraordinary of all, some people from a recently formed Society of Trainspotters.
The entertainment was due to begin at nine o’clock and for about an hour and a half before that the bar was pandemonium. I have never seen students drink so much – even the Eccentrics Genuine. As early as eight o’clock they all began clapping and singing ‘Why are we waiting?’ But it was all very good-humoured.
At a quarter to nine I was informed of the arrival of the artists and went to welcome them. They were both standing in the corridor outside. The Great Profundo shook hands warmly. Jimmy nodded and said to me, ‘Is there anywhere we can change, get the gear sorted?’
‘Pardon?’
‘Like a dressing-room?’
‘No. No I’m sorry. I hadn’t thought you would need one – what with the street and all that.’
‘Street is street and indoors is indoors.’
‘It’s okay, this’ll do,’ said Profundo. He began stripping off his checked shirt and getting into his scarlet one. He had a surprisingly hairy chest. ‘You go ahead, Jimmy, warm them up.’ Jimmy continued grumbling and got out his bow and saw. Profundo edged past him and took a look through the glass doors.
‘A full house, by the look of it.’ Then he stopped. ‘Is there no women in there?’
‘Not in the Eccentrics Genuine,’ I said. ‘It’s one of the Club rules.’
‘We’re not that eccentric,’ said another member of the Committee. ‘We know how to enjoy ourselves.’
I slipped in at the back to listen to Jimmy’s performance. The melody he played was the same one I had heard that day on the bridge but within the confines of the hall it sounded different, more sentimental. The notes soared and trembled and swooped. One member of the audience, just to my left, took out a white handkerchief and pretended to mop his eyes. In playing the saw there is a great deal of vibrato required to give the notes texture. The player’s left hand quivers as the saw changes pitch.
‘He’s got Parkinson’s disease,’ shouted one of the new Medic members. But apart from that he was listened to attentively and applauded when he finished his selection.
Afterwards there was a great dash for the bar. Everyone considered it an interval and I had to hold back the Great Profundo until the crowd was settled again, which took some considerable time. While he waited patiently I pointed out to him that the floor was awash with beer, which might be awkward for him in his bare feet.
‘And now, gentlemen of the Eccentrics Genuine Club, it is my great pleasure to introduce to you the one and only, the great, the profound, the Great Profundo . . .’ I gave him such a buildup in the old music-hall manner that the audience were on their feet applauding as he made his entrance. He ran, carrying his black case on his shoulders, and took a jump up on to the stage. For a man of his age he was almost lithe. His movements as he opened his box of tricks were sweeping and athletic.
On my first encounter with him I had not noticed that his patter, which he began almost immediately he reached the stage, was so juvenile. He had not tailored his talk for such an audience as the Eccentrics Genuine. They laughed politely at some of his jokes. When he inserted the three épées and held his arms out wide for approval there was a kind of ironic cheer. His act lacked music and somebody began a drum-roll on one of the tables. This was taken up throughout the room until the bar throbbed with noise. Some others began to imitate a fanfare of trumpets. When he inserted the two aluminium film-extra swords someone said, not loudly, but loudly enough, ‘He’s naive. He’d swallow anything.’ There was a great deal of laughter at this, suppressed at first in snorts and shoulder-shaking, but which finally burst out and echoed round the bar. He silenced them by taking out the Claymore. There was a small three-legged stool beside him, on which Jimmy had sat to play his saw, and the Great Profundo, with gritted teeth, swung the broadsword and imbedded the blade a full inch into it. He had to put his foot on the stool and tug with all his might to free it and this occasioned yet more laughter. He stood the point of the sword on the small stage to let them see the length of it in relation to his height. A voice said, ‘If you stuck it up your arse we’d be impressed.’
And yet he went on. He did his hand over hand lowering of the blade into the depths of himself to the accompaniment of drumming on the tables. When it was fully inserted, he spread his arms, put his head back and paraded the stage. Some of the crowd were impressed because they cheered and clapped but others kept laughing, maybe because they were drunk, maybe at a previous joke. Then the tragedy happened.
The crowd could see it coming because they suddenly quietened. With his head back the Great Profundo took one or two paces forward and stepped off the edge of the
platform. He came down heavily on his right foot which slipped on the wet floor. He managed to remain upright but uttered a kind of deep groan or retch which everyone in the audience heard. He stood there, not moving, for several seconds, then he withdrew the sword and made his exit. Some of the crowd stood and applauded, others made straight for the bar. Jimmy tussled among them with a yellow plastic bucket to take up a collection.
Afterwards in the corridor I apologised for the behaviour and handed over the cheque to the Great Profundo.
‘It’s both on the one. I didn’t know Jimmy’s second name so I made it all out to Frankie Taylor.’
‘Thanks.’ In the corridor lights Profundo’s face looked grey.
‘I’ll take it,’ said Jimmy. ‘Your audience is a bunch of shit.’
‘I think we may have opened the bar too early. I’m sorry.’
‘You’re right there. All the fuckin money’s going over the counter. They gave three pounds. I haven’t seen pennies in a bucket for twenty years.’
Before putting the Claymore back in its case Frankie wiped its blade with a small damp cloth. Against the whiteness I saw specks of red.
‘Will you not have a drink?’ I said. ‘On the house.’
They refused. They were in a hurry to leave.
When I rang the bell of 14c it was Jimmy who put his head out of the window and called me up. The door was ajar when I reached the fourth floor. Jimmy was searching for something in a cupboard. He barely looked up at me.
‘Where’s the man himself?’ I said.
‘Did you not hear? He’s in hospital.’
‘What?’
‘He was pishing black for a week before he went to see about it. Must have been bleeding inside.’
‘Is it serious?’
‘They don’t know whether he’ll do or not. If you saw the colour of him you wouldn’t hold out much hope.’
Jimmy continued to rummage among the clothes and papers. He lifted a black brassière and looked at it.
‘Where the hell did he get all the women’s stuff?’ he muttered, more to himself than to me. ‘What did you want to see him about?’
‘Just to say hello. And to tell him the article will be in the next issue.’
‘A lot of good that’ll do him.’
He held a pullover up to his chest, saw the holes in the sleeves and threw it back into the cupboard.
‘I also wanted to return something I’d borrowed.’
‘What?’
‘To do with the article.’
‘I’ll give it to him.’
‘I’d prefer to hold on to it, if you don’t mind.’
‘Suit yourself,’ he said and closed the cupboard door. ‘But the man’ll be dead before the week’s out.’
APPENDIX
THE GREAT PROFUNDO – SWORD-SWALLOWER
(Rostrum vol. 37, no. 18)
The interviewer deliberated long and hard about whether or not to include certain parts of the following material but felt justified in doing so because it is the truth. Once a writer, be he novelist, critic or journalist, fails to report the world AS HE SEES IT then he has failed in his craft.
The interviewer visited the subject at his home in Lower Coyle Street. The apartments were small and sparsely furnished with little regard for order or taste. It was a sparseness which derived not from asceticism but poverty. During the interview the subject was, at first, nervous – particularly about speaking in the presence of a tape-recorder – then, when he forgot about it, animated. Throughout the subject was barefoot and fiddled continually with his toes.
INTERVIEWER: Could you tell us something about how you became involved in such an odd profession?
PROFUNDO: Is it on now? Okay. Right. Oh God, I don’t know. I was always interested in circuses and things. It was about the only entertainment we ever got where I was brought up.
INTERVIEWER: Where was that?
PROFUNDO: In the country – a village about thirty miles south of here. The circus would come through about twice a year. In the summer and maybe at Christmas. I just loved the whole thing. The smell of the animals – the laugh you had when they crapped in the ring. Some of those people! One minute you’d see them collecting money at the door, the next they’d be up on a trapeze. No safety-net, either. Anyway, I was about sixteen at the time and they’d organised a speed-drinking contest. I didn’t want to win in case my mother found out – she was very wary of the drink – but I could pour a pint down like that. (He mimics the action.) Like down a funnel. I have no thrapple, y’see. It was a fire-eater who told me this – I thought I was just normal. He took me under his wing and got me at the sword-swallowing.
INTERVIEWER: Did you join the circus?
PROFUNDO: Not that year, but I did the next. That was the year they had the six-legged calf. It’s a thing I don’t like – the way they use freaks. I don’t mean the wee midgets and all that – they earn good money and they can’t work at much else. But I remember paying to go into a tent to see this beast. It was just deformed, that’s all. Two half-bent extra legs sticking out its behind. I felt sorry for it – and a bit sick. But I said nothing. They took me on as a roustabout. I tried all kinds of things at the beginning. Acrobat – anything anybody would teach me.
(At this point the subject demonstrated a one-armed horizontal handstand on the edge of the table. The sight brought to mind the paintings of Chagall where peasants float above their world with no visible means of suspension. This physical activity seemed to banish his nervousness and he warmed to his theme.)
That’s not good for me at my age. It’s why I concentrate on swords now. Doesn’t take as much out of you.
INTERVIEWER: Do you still enjoy it?
PROFUNDO: It’s hard graft in all weathers and lately I’ve begun to have my doubts. But if I gave it up what could I do? How’d I pass the day? One of my main difficulties is that I’m not good with an audience. There’s guys can come out and have a crowd eating out of their hand right away with a few jokes. That’s hooring. All the time they’re saying, ‘Like me, like me for myself. It doesn’t matter what my act is, I want you to like me.’ If your act is no good, what’s the point. It’s the reason you are out there instead of one of them. People love to think they could do it – with a bit of practice. That’s what’s behind the oldest trick in the circus. Somebody asks for a volunteer and grabs a woman from the audience. He throws her around – on a horse or a trapeze or a trampoline – and we get flashes of her knickers, and all the time she’s holding on to her handbag. You’d be amazed at how many people fall for it. But it’s a plant. I loved playing that part – sitting up on the benches pretending you were the little old lady.
INTERVIEWER: And when did you begin to major in the sword-swallowing?
PROFUNDO: Oh that must have been thirty years ago. It was a good act – then. Not the way you saw it the other day. (Laughs) In those days I had STYLE. A rig-out like one of those bull-fighters, gold braid on scarlet, epaulettes, the long black hair and a voice that’d lift the tent. And the swords. D’you see those things I’ve got now? Rubbish – except for the Claymore.
INTERVIEWER: What happened to the good ones?
PROFUNDO: I’m sure they ended up in the pawn. But it wasn’t me put them there. D’you know the way I hand them round for the people to test? Well there’s some cities I’ve been in – I’ll not mention their names – when I handed them round they never came back. Somebody buggered off with them. But times were very hard just after the war. I don’t really blame people. You deserve all you get handing expensive items like that into a crowd. But some of them were real beauties. I collected them all over Europe.
INTERVIEWER: I didn’t realise you’d been that far afield.
PROFUNDO: After the war in France was the best. People had seen such desperate things. They wanted to be amused, entertained.
INTERVIEWER: But there couldn’t have been a lot of money about – just after the war.
PROFUNDO: Whose talking about m
oney? I’m talking about when it was best to be in front of an audience. They appreciated me. I had fans. Artists came to draw me.
INTERVIEWER: Artists?
PROFUNDO: Well, one artist – but he came time and time again. I didn’t know who he was at the time – a small man with a white beard and glasses. He didn’t talk much – just drew all the time.
(At this point the subject sprang from his seat and rummaged beneath his bed and produced a dog-eared folder from a suitcase. It contained newspaper clippings and photographs of himself and in a cellophane envelope a signed drawing by Matisse.) (See Illustration.)
What do you think of that, eh?
INTERVIEWER: This must be worth thousands.
PROFUNDO: I know it’s valuable but I wouldn’t sell it. Not at all. I didn’t much like it at the beginning – I mean it’s just . . . But I got to like it the more I looked at it. He did about thirty of me. Somebody tells me there’s one hanging in New York somewhere.
INTERVIEWER: Do you think I could borrow it to reproduce with the article?
PROFUNDO: Sure. But I’d like to have it back.
INTERVIEWER: Of course. Why don’t you frame it and put it on the wall.
PROFUNDO: You’d just get used to it then. This way I see it once every couple of years – when somebody calls. Then it’s fresh. Far better under the bed. The last time it was out was to show to Jimmy. He didn’t think much of it.
INTERVIEWER: I was going to ask you about him. Where does he fit in?
PROFUNDO: I met Jimmy a couple of years ago when I came back to work this place. The hardest thing about street work is gathering a crowd. He does that for me. The sound of that bloody saw attracts them from miles away and they all stand about listening. Once they’re all there I go straight into the routine. We split the proceeds. Jimmy has a good money head on him.
INTERVIEWER: I’d say so.
(The subject offered his last can of lager which was refused. He went to the kitchen to get two glasses in order to share it. In his absence the interviewer noticed that the subject had, in his rummagings in one of the cupboards, disturbed a box, which on closer inspection was seen to contain a variety of ladies’ underwear. The interviewer in all innocence asked the following question when the subject returned.)
Collected Stories Page 35