‘Nonsense, sir. Don’t tell me of foci. Pray, sir, will concave surfaces produce two voices when nobody speaks? I heard two voices, and one was feminine; feminine, sir: what say you to that?’
‘Oh, sir, I perceive your mistake: I am writing a tragedy, and was acting over a scene to myself. To convince you, I will give you a specimen; but you must first understand the plot. It is a tragedy on the German model. The Great Mogul is in exile, and has taken lodgings at Kensington, with his only daughter, the Princess Rantrorina, who takes in needlework, and keeps a day school. The princess is discovered hemming a set of shirts for the parson of the parish: they are to be marked with a large R. Enter to her the Great Mogul. A pause, during which they look at each other expressively. The princess changes colour several times. The Mogul takes snuff in great agitation. Several grains are heard to fall on the stage. His heart is seen to beat through his upper benjamin. THE MOGUL (with a mournful look at his left shoe). ‘My shoe-string is broken.’ — THE PRINCESS (after an interval of melancholy reflection). ‘I know it.’ THE MOGUL. ‘My second shoe-string! The first broke when I lost my empire: the second has broken to-day. When will my poor heart break?’ — THE PRINCESS. ‘Shoe-strings, hearts, and empires! Mysterious sympathy!’
‘Nonsense, sir,’ interrupted Mr Glowry. ‘That is not at all like the voice I heard.’
‘But, sir,’ said Scythrop, ‘a key-hole may be so constructed as to act like an acoustic tube, and an acoustic tube, sir, will modify sound in a very remarkable manner. Consider the construction of the ear, and the nature and causes of sound. The external part of the ear is a cartilaginous funnel.’
‘It wo’n’t do, Scythrop. There is a girl concealed in this tower, and find her I will. There are such things as sliding panels and secret closets.’ — He sounded round the room with his cane, but detected no hollowness. ‘I have heard, sir,’ he continued, ‘that during my absence, two years ago, you had a dumb carpenter closeted with you day after day. I did not dream that you were laying contrivances for carrying on secret intrigues. Young men will have their way: I had my way when I was a young man: but, sir, when your cousin Marionetta—’
Scythrop now saw that the affair was growing serious. To have clapped his hand upon his father’s mouth, to have entreated him to be silent, would, in the first place, not have made him so; and, in the second, would have shown a dread of being overheard by somebody. His only resource, therefore, was to try to drown Mr Glowry’s voice; and, having no other subject, he continued his description of the ear, raising his voice continually as Mr Glowry raised his.
‘When your cousin Marionetta,’ said Mr Glowry, ‘whom you profess to love — whom you profess to love, sir—’
‘The internal canal of the ear,’ said Scythrop, ’is partly bony and partly cartilaginous. This internal canal is—’
‘Is actually in the house, sir; and, when you are so shortly to be — as
I expect—’
‘Closed at the further end by the membrana tympani—’
‘Joined together in holy matrimony—’
‘Under which is carried a branch of the fifth pair of nerves—’
‘I say, sir, when you are so shortly to be married to your cousin
Marionetta—’
‘The cavitas tympani—’
A loud noise was heard behind the book-case, which, to the astonishment of Mr Glowry, opened in the middle, and the massy compartments, with all their weight of books, receding from each other in the manner of a theatrical scene, with a heavy rolling sound (which Mr Glowry immediately recognised to be the same which had excited his curiosity,) disclosed an interior apartment, in the entrance of which stood the beautiful Stella, who, stepping forward, exclaimed, ‘Married! Is he going to be married? The profligate!’
‘Really, madam,’ said Mr Glowry, ‘I do not know what he is going to do, or what I am going to do, or what any one is going to do; for all this is incomprehensible.’
‘I can explain it all,’ said Scythrop, ‘in a most satisfactory manner, if you will but have the goodness to leave us alone.’
‘Pray, sir, to which act of the tragedy of the Great Mogul does this incident belong?’
‘I entreat you, my dear sir, leave us alone.’
Stella threw herself into a chair, and burst into a tempest of tears. Scythrop sat down by her, and took her hand. She snatched her hand away, and turned her back upon him. He rose, sat down on the other side, and took her other hand. She snatched it away, and turned from him again. Scythrop continued entreating Mr Glowry to leave them alone; but the old gentleman was obstinate, and would not go.
‘I suppose, after all,’ said Mr Glowry maliciously, ‘it is only a phænomenon in acoustics, and this young lady is a reflection of sound from concave surfaces.’
Some one tapped at the door: Mr Glowry opened it, and Mr Hilary entered. He had been seeking Mr Glowry, and had traced him to Scythrop’s tower. He stood a few moments in silent surprise, and then addressed himself to Mr Glowry for an explanation.
‘The explanation,’ said Mr Glowry, ’is very satisfactory. The Great Mogul has taken lodgings at Kensington, and the external part of the ear is a cartilaginous funnel.’
‘Mr Glowry, that is no explanation.’
‘Mr Hilary, it is all I know about the matter.’
‘Sir, this pleasantry is very unseasonable. I perceive that my niece is sported with in a most unjustifiable manner, and I shall see if she will be more successful in obtaining an intelligible answer.’ And he departed in search of Marionetta.
Scythrop was now in a hopeless predicament. Mr Hilary made a hue and cry in the abbey, and summoned his wife and Marionetta to Scythrop’s apartment. The ladies, not knowing what was the matter, hastened in great consternation. Mr Toobad saw them sweeping along the corridor, and judging from their manner that the devil had manifested his wrath in some new shape, followed from pure curiosity.
Scythrop meanwhile vainly endeavoured to get rid of Mr Glowry and to pacify Stella. The latter attempted to escape from the tower, declaring she would leave the abbey immediately, and he should never see her or hear of her more. Scythrop held her hand and detained her by force, till Mr Hilary reappeared with Mrs Hilary and Marionetta. Marionetta, seeing Scythrop grasping the hand of a strange beauty, fainted away in the arms of her aunt. Scythrop flew to her assistance; and Stella with redoubled anger sprang towards the door, but was intercepted in her intended flight by being caught in the arms of Mr Toobad, who exclaimed— ‘Celinda!’
‘Papa!’ said the young lady disconsolately.
‘The devil is come among you,’ said Mr Toobad, ‘how came my daughter here?’
‘Your daughter!’ exclaimed Mr Glowry.
‘Your daughter!’ exclaimed Scythrop, and Mr and Mrs Hilary.
‘Yes,’ said Mr Toobad, ‘my daughter Celinda.’
Marionetta opened her eyes and fixed them on Celinda; Celinda in return fixed hers on Marionetta. They were at remote points of the apartment. Scythrop was equidistant from both of them, central and motionless, like Mahomet’s coffin.
‘Mr Glowry,’ said Mr Toobad, ‘can you tell by what means my daughter came here?’
‘I know no more,’ said Mr Glowry, ‘than the Great Mogul.’
‘Mr Scythrop,’ said Mr Toobad, ‘how came my daughter here?’
‘I did not know, sir, that the lady was your daughter.’
‘But how came she here?’
‘By spontaneous locomotion,’ said Scythrop, sullenly.
‘Celinda,’ said Mr Toobad, ‘what does all this mean?’
‘I really do not know, sir.’
‘This is most unaccountable. When I told you in London that I had chosen a husband for you, you thought proper to run away from him; and now, to all appearance, you have run away to him.’
‘How, sir! was that your choice?’
‘Precisely; and if he is yours too we shall be both of a mind, for the first time in our lives.’
�
��He is not my choice, sir. This lady has a prior claim: I renounce him.’
‘And I renounce him,’ said Marionetta.
Scythrop knew not what to do. He could not attempt to conciliate the one without irreparably offending the other; and he was so fond of both, that the idea of depriving himself for ever of the society of either was intolerable to him: he therefore retreated into his stronghold, mystery; maintained an impenetrable silence; and contented himself with stealing occasionally a deprecating glance at each of the objects of his idolatry. Mr Toobad and Mr Hilary, in the mean time, were each insisting on an explanation from Mr Glowry, who they thought had been playing a double game on this occasion. Mr Glowry was vainly endeavouring to persuade them of his innocence in the whole transaction. Mrs Hilary was endeavouring to mediate between her husband and brother. The Honourable Mr Listless, the Reverend Mr Larynx, Mr Flosky, Mr Asterias, and Aquarius, were attracted by the tumult to the scene of action, and were appealed to severally and conjointly by the respective disputants. Multitudinous questions, and answers en masse, composed a charivari, to which the genius of Rossini alone could have given a suitable accompaniment, and which was only terminated by Mrs Hilary and Mr Toobad retreating with the captive damsels. The whole party followed, with the exception of Scythrop, who threw himself into his arm-chair, crossed his left foot over his right knee, placed the hollow of his left hand on the interior ancle of his left leg, rested his right elbow on the elbow of the chair, placed the ball of his right thumb against his right temple, curved the forefinger along the upper part of his forehead, rested the point of the middle finger on the bridge of his nose, and the points of the two others on the lower part of the palm, fixed his eyes intently on the veins in the back of his left hand, and sat in this position like the immoveable Theseus, who, as is well known to many who have not been at college, and to some few who have, sedet, oeternumque sedebit. We hope the admirers of the minutiæ in poetry and romance will appreciate this accurate description of a pensive attitude.
* * * * *
CHAPTER XIV
SCYTHROP WAS STILL in this position when Raven entered to announce that dinner was on table.
‘I cannot come,’ said Scythrop.
Raven sighed. ‘Something is the matter,’ said Raven: ‘but man is born to trouble.’
‘Leave me,’ said Scythrop: ‘go, and croak elsewhere.’
‘Thus it is,’ said Raven. ‘Five-and-twenty years have I lived in Nightmare Abbey, and now all the reward of my affection is — Go, and croak elsewhere. I have danced you on my knee, and fed you with marrow.’
‘Good Raven,’ said Scythrop, ‘I entreat you to leave me.’
‘Shall I bring your dinner here?’ said Raven. ‘A boiled fowl and a glass of Madeira are prescribed by the faculty in cases of low spirits. But you had better join the party: it is very much reduced already.’
‘Reduced! how?’
‘The Honourable Mr Listless is gone. He declared that, what with family quarrels in the morning, and ghosts at night, he could get neither sleep nor peace; and that the agitation was too much for his nerves: though Mr Glowry assured him that the ghost was only poor Crow walking in his sleep, and that the shroud and bloody turban were a sheet and a red nightcap.’
‘Well, sir?’
‘The Reverend Mr Larynx has been called off on duty, to marry or bury (I don’t know which) some unfortunate person or persons, at Claydyke: but man is born to trouble!’
‘Is that all?’
‘No. Mr Toobad is gone too, and a strange lady with him.’
‘Gone!’
‘Gone. And Mr and Mrs Hilary, and Miss O’Carroll: they are all gone. There is nobody left but Mr Asterias and his son, and they are going to-night.’
‘Then I have lost them both.’
‘Won’t you come to dinner?’
‘No.’
‘Shall I bring your dinner here?’
‘Yes.’
‘What will you have?’
‘A pint of port and a pistol.’
‘A pistol!’
‘And a pint of port. I will make my exit like Werter. Go. Stay. Did
Miss O’Carroll say any thing?’
‘No.’
‘Did Miss Toobad say any thing?’
‘The strange lady? No.’
‘Did either of them cry?’
‘No.’
‘What did they do?’
‘Nothing.’
‘What did Mr Toobad say?’
‘He said, fifty times over, the devil was come among us.’
‘And they are gone?’
‘Yes; and the dinner is getting cold. There is a time for every thing under the sun. You may as well dine first, and be miserable afterwards.’
‘True, Raven. There is something in that. I will take your advice: therefore, bring me — —’
‘The port and the pistol?’
‘No; the boiled fowl and Madeira.’
Scythrop had dined, and was sipping his Madeira alone, immersed in melancholy musing, when Mr Glowry entered, followed by Raven, who, having placed an additional glass and set a chair for Mr Glowry, withdrew. Mr Glowry sat down opposite Scythrop. After a pause, during which each filled and drank in silence, Mr Glowry said, ‘So, sir, you have played your cards well. I proposed Miss Toobad to you: you refused her. Mr Toobad proposed you to her: she refused you. You fell in love with Marionetta, and were going to poison yourself, because, from pure fatherly regard to your temporal interests, I withheld my consent. When, at length, I offered you my consent, you told me I was too precipitate. And, after all, I find you and Miss Toobad living together in the same tower, and behaving in every respect like two plighted lovers. Now, sir, if there be any rational solution of all this absurdity, I shall be very much obliged to you for a small glimmering of information.’
‘The solution, sir, is of little moment; but I will leave it in writing for your satisfaction. The crisis of my fate is come: the world is a stage, and my direction is exit.’
‘Do not talk so, sir; — do not talk so, Scythrop. What would you have?’
‘I would have my love.’
‘And pray, sir, who is your love?’
‘Celinda — Marionetta — either — both.’
‘Both! That may do very well in a German tragedy; and the Great Mogul might have found it very feasible in his lodgings at Kensington; but it will not do in Lincolnshire. Will you have Miss Toobad?’
‘Yes.’
‘And renounce Marionetta?’
‘No.’
‘But you must renounce one.’
‘I cannot.’
‘And you cannot have both. What is to be done?’
‘I must shoot myself.’
‘Don’t talk so, Scythrop. Be rational, my dear Scythrop. Consider, and make a cool, calm choice, and I will exert myself in your behalf.’
‘Why should I choose, sir? Both have renounced me: I have no hope of either.’
‘Tell me which you will have, and I will plead your cause irresistibly.’
‘Well, sir, — I will have — no, sir, I cannot renounce either. I cannot choose either. I am doomed to be the victim of eternal disappointments; and I have no resource but a pistol.’
‘Scythrop — Scythrop; — if one of them should come to you — what then?’
‘That, sir, might alter the case: but that cannot be.’
‘It can be, Scythrop; it will be: I promise you it will be. Have but a little patience — but a week’s patience; and it shall be.’
‘A week, sir, is an age: but, to oblige you, as a last act of filial duty, I will live another week. It is now Thursday evening, twenty-five minutes past seven. At this hour and minute, on Thursday next, love and fate shall smile on me, or I will drink my last pint of port in this world.’
Mr Glowry ordered his travelling chariot, and departed from the abbey.
* * * * *
CHAPTER XV
THE DAY AFTER Mr Glowry’s departure was one of i
ncessant rain, and Scythrop repented of the promise he had given. The next day was one of bright sunshine: he sat on the terrace, read a tragedy of Sophocles, and was not sorry, when Raven announced dinner, to find himself alive. On the third evening, the wind blew, and the rain beat, and the owl flapped against his windows; and he put a new flint in his pistol. On the fourth day, the sun shone again; and he locked the pistol up in a drawer, where he left it undisturbed, till the morning of the eventful Thursday, when he ascended the turret with a telescope, and spied anxiously along the road that crossed the fens from Claydyke: but nothing appeared on it. He watched in this manner from ten A.M. till Raven summoned him to dinner at five; when he stationed Crow at the telescope, and descended to his own funeral-feast. He left open the communications between the tower and turret, and called aloud at intervals to Crow,— ‘Crow, Crow, is any thing coming?’ Crow answered, ‘The wind blows, and the windmills turn, but I see nothing coming;’ and, at every answer, Scythrop found the necessity of raising his spirits with a bumper. After dinner, he gave Raven his watch to set by the abbey clock. Raven brought it, Scythrop placed it on the table, and Raven departed. Scythrop called again to Crow; and Crow, who had fallen asleep, answered mechanically, ‘I see nothing coming.’ Scythrop laid his pistol between his watch and his bottle. The hour-hand passed the VII. the minute-hand moved on; — it was within three minutes of the appointed time. Scythrop called again to Crow: Crow answered as before. Scythrop rang the bell: Raven appeared.
‘Raven,’ said Scythrop, ‘the clock is too fast.’
‘No, indeed,’ said Raven, who knew nothing of Scythrop’s intentions; ‘if any thing, it is too slow.’
‘Villain!’ said Scythrop, pointing the pistol at him; ‘it is too fast.’
‘Yes — yes — too fast, I meant,’ said Raven, in manifest fear.
‘How much too fast?’ said Scythrop.
‘As much as you please,’ said Raven.
‘How much, I say?’ said Scythrop, pointing the pistol again.
Complete Works of Thomas Love Peacock Page 43