A Hazard of New Fortunes

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A Hazard of New Fortunes Page 15

by William Dean Howells


  “I shall be glad to show you my rooms,” said Mrs. Leighton, with an irrelevant sigh. “You must excuse their being not just as I should wish them. We’re hardly settled yet.”

  “Don’t speak of it, madam,” said the gentleman, “if you can overlook the trouble we awe giving you at such an unseasonable houah.”

  “Ah’m a ho’sekeepah mahself,” Miss Woodburn joined in, “and Ah know ho’ to accyoant fo’ everything.”

  Mrs. Leighton led the way upstairs, and the young lady decided upon the large front room and small side room on the third story. She said she could take the small one, and the other was so large that her father could both sleep and work in it. She seemed not ashamed to ask if Mrs. Leighton’s price was inflexible, but gave way laughing when her father refused to have any bargaining, with a haughty self-respect which he softened to deference for Mrs. Leighton. His impulsiveness opened the way for some confidences from her, and before the affair was arranged she was enjoying in her quality of clerical widow the balm of the Virginians’ reverent sympathy. They said they were church people themselves.

  “Ah don’t know what yo’ mothah means by yo’ ho‘se not being in oddah,” the young lady said to Alma as they went downstairs together. “Ah’m a great ho’sekeepah mahself, and Ah mean what Ah say.”

  They had all turned mechanically into the room where the Leightons were sitting when the Woodburns rang. Mr. Woodburn consented to sit down, and he remained listening to Mrs. Leighton while his daughter bustled up to the sketches pinned round the room and questioned Alma about them.

  “Ah suppose you awe going to be a great awtust?” she said in friendly banter, when Alma owned to having done the things. “Ah’ve a great notion to take a few lessons mahself. Who’s yo’ teachah?”

  Alma said she was drawing in Mr. Wetmore’s class; and Miss Woodburn said: “Well, it’s just beautiful, Miss Leighton; it’s grand. Ah suppose it’s raght expensive, now? Mah goodness! We have to cyoant the coast so much nowadays it seems to me we do nothing but cyoant it. Ah’d like to bah something once without askin’ the price.”

  “Well, if you didn’t ask it,” said Alma, “I don’t believe Mr. Wetmore would ever know what the price of his lessons was. He has to think, when you ask him.”

  “Why, he most be chomming,” said Miss Woodburn. “Perhaps Ah maght get the lessons for nothing from him. Well, Ah believe in my soul Ah’ll trah. Now ho’ did you begin? And ho’ do you expect to get anything oat of it?” She turned on Alma, eyes brimming with a shrewd mixture of fun and earnest, and Alma made a note of the fact that she had an early-nineteenth-century face, round, arch, a little coquettish, but extremely sensible and unspoiled-looking, such as used to be painted a good deal in miniature at that period; a tendency of her brown hair to twine and twist at the temples helped the effect; a light comb would have completed it, Alma felt, if she had her bonnet off. It was almost a Yankee country-girl type; but perhaps it appeared so to Alma because it was, like that, pure Anglo-Saxon. Alma herself, with her dull dark skin, slender in figure, slow in speech, with aristocratic forms in her long hands, and the oval of her fine face pointed to a long chin, felt herself much more Southern in style than this blooming, bubbling, bustling Virginian.

  “I don’t know,” she answered slowly.

  “Going to take po’traits,” suggested Miss Woodburn, “or just paint the ahdeal?” A demure burlesque lurked in her tone.

  “I suppose I don’t expect to paint at all,” said Alma. “I’m going to illustrate books—if anybody will let me.”

  “Ah should think they’d just joamp at you,” said Miss Woodburn. “Ah’ll tell you what let’s do, Miss Leighton: you make some pictures, and Ah’ll wrahte a book fo’ them. Ah’ve got to do something. Ah maght as well wrahte a book. You know we Southerners have all had to go to woak. But Ah don’t mand it. I tell Papa I shouldn’t ca’ fo’ the disgrace of bein’ poo’ if it wasn’t fo’ the inconvenience.”

  “Yes, it’s inconvenient,” said Alma; “but you forget it when you’re at work, don’t you think?”

  “Mah, yes! Perhaps that’s one reason why poo’ people have to woak so hawd—to keep their mands off their poverty.”

  The girls both tittered, and turned from talking in a low tone with their backs toward their elders, and faced them.

  “Well, Madison,” said Mr. Woodburn, “it is time we should go. I bid you good night, madam,” he bowed to Mrs. Leighton. “Good night,” he bowed again to Alma.

  His daughter took leave of them in formal phrase, but with a jolly cordiality of manner that deformalized it. “We shall be roand raght soon in the mawning, then,” she threatened at the door.

  “We shall be all ready for you,” Alma called after her down the steps.

  “Well, Alma?” her mother asked when the door closed upon them.

  “She doesn’t know any more about art,” said Alma, “than—nothing at all. But she’s jolly and good-hearted. She praised everything that was bad in my sketches, and said she was going to take lessons herself. When a person talks about taking lessons as if they could learn it, you know where they belong, artistically.”

  Mrs. Leighton shook her head with a sigh. “I wish I knew where they belonged financially. We shall have to get in two girls at once. I shall have to go out the first thing in the morning, and then our troubles will begin.”

  “Well, didn’t you want them to begin? I will stay home and help you get ready. Our prosperity couldn’t begin without the troubles, if you mean boarders, and boarders mean servants. I shall be very glad to be afflicted with a cook for a while myself.”

  “Yes; but we don’t know anything about these people, or whether they will be able to pay us. Did she talk as if they were well off?”

  “She talked as if they were poor; poo’, she called it.”

  “Yes; how queerly she pronounced!” said Mrs. Leighton. “Well, I ought to have told them that I required the first week in advance.”

  “Mamma! If that’s the way you’re going to act—”

  “Oh, of course I couldn’t, after he wouldn’t let her bargain for the rooms. I didn’t like that.”

  “I did. And you can see that they were perfect ladies; or at least one of them.” Alma laughed at herself, but her mother did not notice.

  “Their being ladies won’t help if they’ve got no money. It’ll make it all the worse.”

  “Very well, then; we have no money either. We’re a match for them any day there. We can show them that two can play at that game.”

  Mrs. Leighton looked at her daughter as if she expected a judgment to descend upon her.

  III

  ANGUS BEATON’S STUDIO looked at first glance like many other painters’ studios. A gray wall quadrangularly vaulted to a large north light; casts of feet, hands, faces, hung to nails about; prints, sketches in oil and watercolor, stuck here and there lower down; a rickety table, with paint and palettes and bottles of varnish and siccative tossed comfortlessly on it; an easel, with a strip of some faded medieval silk trailing from it; a lay figure simpering in incomplete nakedness, with its head on one side, and a stocking on one leg, and a Japanese dress dropped before it; dusty rugs and skins kicking over the varnished floor; canvases faced to the mop-board; an open trunk overflowing with costumes—these features one might notice anywhere. But besides there was a bookcase with an unusual number of books in it, and there was an open colonial writing desk, claw-footed, brass-handled, and scutcheoned, with foreign periodicals—French and English—tittering its leaf and some pages of manuscript scattered among them. Above all there was a sculptor’s revolving stand, supporting a bust which Beaton was modeling, with an eye fixed as simultaneously as possible on the clay and on the head of the old man who sat on the platform beside it.

  Few men have been able to get through the world with several gifts to advantage in all; and most men seem handicapped for the race if they have more than one. But they are apparently immensely interested as well as distracted by them.
When Beaton was writing, he would have agreed, up to a certain point, with anyone who said literature was his proper expression; but then, when he was painting, up to a certain point he would have maintained against the world that he was a colorist and supremely a colorist. At this certain point in either art he was apt to break away in a frenzy of disgust and wreak himself upon some other. In these moods he sometimes designed elevations of buildings, very striking, very original, very chic, very everything but habitable. It was in this way that he had tried his hand on sculpture, which he had at first approached rather slightingly as a mere decorative accessory of architecture. But it had grown in his respect till he maintained that the accessory business ought to be all the other way; that temples should be raised to enshrine statues, not statues made to ornament temples; that was putting the cart before the horse with a vengeance. This was when he had carried a plastic study so far that the sculptors who saw it said that Beaton might have been an architect, but would certainly never be a sculptor. At the same time he did some hurried, nervous things that had a popular charm and that sold in plaster reproductions, to the profit of another. Beaton justly despised the popular charm in these, as well as in the paintings he sold from time to time; he said it was flat burglary to have taken money for them, and he would have been living wholly upon the bounty of the old tombstone-cutter in Syracuse if it had not been for the syndicate letters which he supplied to Fulkerson for ten dollars a week.

  They were very well done, but he hated doing them after the first two or three and had to be punched up for them by Fulkerson, who did not cease to prize them and who never failed to punch him up. Beaton being what he was, Fulkerson was his creditor as well as patron; and Fulkerson, being what he was, had an enthusiastic patience with the elusive, facile, adaptable, unpractical nature of Beaton. He was very proud of his art letters, as he called them; but then Fulkerson was proud of everything he secured for his syndicate. The fact that he had secured it gave it value; he felt as if he had written it himself.

  One art trod upon another’s heels with Beaton. The day before, he had rushed upon canvas the conception of a picture which he said to himself was glorious, and to others (at the table d’hôte of Maroni) was not bad. He had worked at it in a fury till the light failed him, and he execrated the dying day. But he lit his lamp and transferred the process of his thinking from the canvas to the opening of the syndicate letter which he knew Fulkerson would be coming for in the morning. He remained talking so long after dinner in the same strain as he had painted and written in that he could not finish his letter that night. While he was making his tea for breakfast the postman brought him a letter from his father enclosing a little check and begging him with tender, almost deferential, urgence to come as lightly upon him as possible, for just now his expenses were very heavy. It brought tears of shame into Beaton’s eyes—the fine smoldering, floating eyes that many ladies admired, under the thick bang—and he said to himself that if he were half a man he would go home and go to work cutting grave-stones in his father’s shop. But he would wait, at least, to finish his picture; and as a sop to his conscience, to stay its immediate ravening, he resolved to finish that syndicate letter first and borrow enough money from Fulkerson to be able to send his father’s check back; or if not that, then to return the sum of it partly in Fulkerson’s check. While he still teemed with both of these good intentions the old man from whom he was modeling his head of Judas came, and Beaton saw that he must get through with him before he finished either the picture or the letter; he would have to pay him for the time anyway. He utilized the remorse with which he was tingling to give his Judas an expression which he found novel in the treatment of that character—a look of such touching, appealing self-abhorrence that Beaton’s artistic joy in it amounted to rapture; between the breathless moments when he worked in dead silence for an effect that was trying to escape him, he sang and whistled fragments of comic opera.

  In one of the hushes there came a blow on the outside of the door that made Beaton jump and swear with a modified profanity that merged itself in apostrophic prayer. He knew it must be Fulkerson, and after roaring, “Come in!” he said to the model, “That’ll do this morning, Lindau.”

  Fulkerson squared his feet in front of the bust and compared it by fleeting glances with the old man as he got stiffly up and suffered Beaton to help him on with his thin, shabby overcoat.

  “Can you come tomorrow, Lindau?”

  “No, not tomorrow, Mr. Peaton. I haf to zit for the young ladies.”

  “Oh!” said Beaton. “Wetmore’s class? Is Miss Leighton doing you?”

  “I don’t know their namess”—Lindau began, when Fulkerson said: “Hope you haven’t forgotten mine, Mr. Lindau? I met you with Mr. March at Maroni’s one night.” Fulkerson offered him a universally shakable hand.

  “Oh yes! I am gladt to zee you again, Mr. Vulkerzon. And Mr. Marge—he don’t zeem to gome anymore?”

  “Up to his eyes in work. Been moving on from Boston and getting settled, and starting in on our enterprise. Beaton here hasn’t got a very flattering likeness of you, hey? Well, good morning,” he said, for Lindau appeared not to have heard him, and was escaping with a bow through the door.

  Beaton lit a cigarette, which he pinched nervously between his lips before he spoke. “You’ve come for that letter, I suppose, Fulkerson? It isn’t done.”

  Fulkerson turned from staring at the bust, to which he had mounted. “What are you fretting about that letter for? I don’t want your letter.”

  Beaton stopped biting his cigarette and looked at him. “Don’t want my letter? Oh, very good!” he bristled up. He took his cigarette from his lips, and blew the smoke through his nostrils, and then looked at Fulkerson.

  “No, I don’t want your letter; I want you.” Beaton disdained to ask an explanation, but he internally lowered his crest, while he continued to look at Fulkerson without changing his defiant countenance. This suited Fulkerson well enough, and he went on with relish: “I’m going out of the syndicate business, old man, and I’m on a new thing.” He put his leg over the back of a chair and rested his foot on its seat, and with one hand in his pocket he laid the scheme of Every Other Week before Beaton with the help of the other. The artist went about the room, meanwhile, with an effect of indifference which by no means offended Fulkerson. He took some water into his mouth from a tumbler, which he blew in a fine mist over the head of Judas before swathing it in a dirty cotton cloth; he washed his brushes and set his palette; he put up on his easel the picture he had blocked out the day before and stared at it with a gloomy face; then he gathered the sheets of his unfinished letter together and slid them into a drawer of his writing desk. By the time he had finished and turned again to Fulkerson, Fulkerson was saying: “I did think we could have the first number out by New Year’s; but it will take longer than that—a month longer; but I’m not sorry, for the holidays kill everything; and by February, or the middle of February, people will get their breath again and begin to look ‘round and ask what’s new. Then we’ll reply in the language of Shakespeare and Milton, ‘Every Other Week; and don’t you forget it.’ ” He took down his leg and asked, “Got a pipe of’baccy anywhere?”

  Beaton nodded at a clay stem sticking out of a Japanese vase of bronze on his mantel. “There’s yours,” he said. And Fulkerson said, “Thanks,” and filled the pipe, and sat down, and began to smoke tranquilly.

  Beaton saw that he would have to speak now. “And what do you want with me?”

  “You? Oh yes!” Fulkerson humorously dramatized a return to himself from a pensive absence. “Want you for the art department.”

  Beaton shook his head. “I’m not your man, Fulkerson,” he said compassionately. “You want a more practical hand; one that’s in touch with what’s going. I’m getting further and further away from this century and its claptrap. I don’t believe in your enterprise ; I don’t respect it; and I won’t have anything to do with it. It would—choke me, that kind of thing.”


  “That’s all right,” said Fulkerson. He esteemed a man who was not going to let himself go cheap. “Or if it isn’t, we can make it. You and March will pull together first-rate. I don’t care how much ideal you put into the thing; the more the better. I can look after the other end of the schooner myself.”

  “You don’t understand me,” said Beaton. “I’m not trying to get a rise out of you. I’m in earnest. What you want is some man who can have patience with mediocrity putting on the style of genius and with genius turning mediocrity on his hands. I haven’t any luck with men; I don’t get on with them; I’m not popular.” Beaton recognized the fact with the satisfaction which it somehow always brings to human pride.

  “So much the better!” Fulkerson was ready for him at this point. “I don’t want you to work the old established racket—the reputations. When I want them I’ll go to them with a pocketful of rocks—knockdown argument. But my idea is to deal with the volunteer material. Look at the way the periodicals are carried on now! Names! Names! Names! In a country that’s just boiling over with literary and artistic ability of every kind the new fellows have no chance. The editors all engage their material. I don’t believe there are fifty volunteer contributions printed in a year in all the New York magazines. It’s all wrong; it’s suicidal. Every Other Week is going back to the good old anonymous system, the only fair system. It’s worked well in literature, and it will work well in art.”

  “It won’t work well in art,” said Beaton. “There you have a totally different set of conditions. What you’ll get by inviting volunteer illustrations will be a lot of amateur trash. And how are you going to submit your literature for illustration? It can’t be done. At any rate, I won’t undertake to do it.”

  “We’ll get up a School of Illustration,” said Fulkerson, with cynical security. “You can read the things and explain ’em, and your pupils can make their sketches under your eye. They wouldn’t be much further out than most illustrations are if they never knew what they were illustrating. You might select from what comes in and make up a sort of pictorial variations to the literature without any particular reference to it. Well, I understand you to accept?”

 

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