Behind the Beyond, and Other Contributions to Human Knowledge. Stephen Leacock

Behind the Beyond, and Other Contributions to Human Knowledge - Stephen Leacock


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Cicely has turned slightly pale. The weariness is out of her manner.

      "Trust the instinct of an old man, my dear. There's a woman in it. We old parliamentary hands are very shrewd, you know, even in these things. Some one is playing the devil with Jack—with Harding."

      Sir John is now putting on his gloves again and gathering up his parliamentary papers from the parliamentary paper stand on the left.

      He cannot see the change in Lady Cicely's face. He is not meant to see it. But even the little girls in the tenth row of the gallery are wise.

      He goes on. "Talk to Harding. Get it out of him. You women can do these things. Find out what the trouble is and let me know. I must help him." (A pause. Sir John is speaking almost to himself—and the gallery.) "I promised his mother when she sent him home, sent him to England, that I would."

      Lady Cicely speaks. "You knew Mr. Harding's mother very well?"

      Sir John: "Very well."

      "That was long ago, wasn't it?"

      "Long ago."

      "Was she married then?"

      "No, not then."

      "Here in London?"

      "Yes, in London. I was only a barrister then with my way to make and she a famous beauty." (Sir John is speaking with a forced levity that doesn't deceive even the ushers.) "She married Harding of the Guards. They went to India. And there he spent her fortune—and broke her heart." Sir John sighs.

      "You have seen her since?"

      "Never."

      "She has never written you?"

      "Only once. She sent her boy home and wrote to me for help. That was how I took him as my secretary."

      "And that was why he came to us in Italy two years ago, just after our marriage."

      "Yes, that was why."

      "Does Mr. Harding know?"

      "Know what?"

      "That you—knew his mother?"

      Sir John shakes his head. "I have never talked with him about his mother's early life."

      The stage clock on the mantelpiece begins to strike. Sir John lets it strike up to four or five, and then says, "There, eight o'clock. I must go. I shall be late at the House. Good-by."

      He moves over to Lady Cicely and kisses her. There is softness in his manner—such softness that he forgets the bundle of parliamentary papers that he had laid down. Everybody can see that he has forgotten them. They were right there under his very eye.

      Sir John goes out.

      Lady Cicely stands looking fixedly at the fire. She speaks out loud to herself. "How his voice changed—twenty-five years ago—so long as that—I wonder if Jack knows."

      There is heard the ring of a bell off the stage. The valet enters.

      "Mr. Harding is downstairs, my lady."

      "Show him up, Ransome."

      A moment later Mr. Harding enters. He is a narrow young man in a frock coat. His face is weak. It has to be. Mr. Harding is meant to typify weakness. Lady Cicely walks straight to him. She puts her two hands on his shoulders and looks right into his face.

      "MY DARLING," she says. Just like that. In capital letters. You can feel the thrill of it run through the orchestra chairs. All the audience look at Mr. Harding, some with opera glasses, others with eyeglasses on sticks. They can see that he is just the sort of ineffectual young man that a starved woman in a problem play goes mad over.

      Lady Cicely repeats "My darling" several times. Mr. Harding says "Hush," and tries to disengage himself. She won't let him. He offers to ring for tea. She won't have any. "Oh, Jack," she says. "I can't go on any longer. I can't. When first you loved me, I thought I could. But I can't. It throttles me here—this house, this life, everything–" She has drawn him to a sofa and has sunk down in a wave at his feet. "Do you remember, Jack, when first you came, in Italy, that night, at Amalfi, when we sat on the piazza of the palazzo?" She is looking rapturously into his face.

      Mr. Harding says that he does.

      "And that day at Fiesole among the orange trees, and Pisa and the Capello de Terisa and the Mona Lisa—Oh, Jack, take me away from all this, take me to the Riviera, among the contadini, where we can stand together with my head on your shoulder just as we did in the Duomo at Milano, or on the piaggia at Verona. Take me to Corfu, to the Campo Santo, to Civita Vecchia, to Para Noia—anywhere–"

      Mr. Harding, smothered with her kisses, says, "My dearest, I will, I will." Any man in the audience would do as much. They'd take her to Honolulu.

      While she is speaking, Sir John's voice had been heard off the stage. "No, thank you, Ransome, I'll get them myself, I know just where I left them." Sir John enters hurriedly, advances and picks up his papers on the table—turns—and stands–

      He sees his wife's attitude and hears her say "Riviera, Amalfi, Orangieri, Contadini and Capello Santo." It is enough. He drops his parliamentary papers. They fall against the fire irons with a crash. These in falling upset a small table with one leg. The ball of wool that is on it falls to the floor. The noise of this disturbs the lovers.

      They turn. All three look at one another. For a moment they make a motion as if to ring for tea. Then they stand petrified.

      "You!" gasps Lady Cicely. She does this awfully well. Everybody says afterward that it was just splendid when she said "You."

      Sir John stands gazing in horror. "Him! My God! He!" Mr. Harding says nothing. He looks very weak.

      Lady Cicely unpetrifies first.

      She breaks out, speaking through her nostrils. "Yes, I love him, I love him. I'm not ashamed of it. What right have you to deny it me? You gave me nothing. You made me a chattel, a thing–"

      You can feel the rustle of indignation through the house at this. To make a woman a thing is the crowning horror of a problem play.

      "You starved me here. You throttled me." Lady Cicely takes herself by the neck and throttles herself a little to show how.

      "You smothered me. I couldn't breathe—and now I'm going, do you hear, going away, to life, to love, behind the beyond!" She gathers up Mr. Harding (practically) and carries him passionately away. He looks back weakly as he goes.

      Sir John has sunk down upon a chair. His face is set.

      "Jack," he mutters, "my God, Jack!"

      As he sits there, the valet enters with a telegram on a tray.

      "A telegram, Sir John."

      Sir John (dazed and trying to collect himself), "What?"

      "A telegram, sir,—a cablegram."

      Sir John takes it, opens it and reads aloud:

      "He is dead. My duty is ended. I am coming home—Margaret Harding."

      "Margaret coming home. It only needed that—my God."

.       .       .       .       .       .       

      As he says it, the curtain falls.

      The lights flick up. There is a great burst of applause. The curtain rises and falls. Lady Cicely and Mr. Harding and Sir John all come out and bow charmingly. There is no trace of worry on their faces, and they hold one another's hands. Then the curtain falls and the orchestra breaks out into a Winter Garden waltz. The boxes buzz with discussion. Some of the people think that Lady Cicely is right in claiming the right to realize herself: others think that before realizing herself she should have developed herself. Others ask indignantly how she could know herself if her husband refused to let her be herself. But everybody feels that the subject is a delicious one.

      Those of the people who have seen the play before very kindly explain how it ends, so as to help the rest to enjoy it. But the more serious-minded of the men have risen, very gently, and are sneaking up the aisles. Their expression is


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