登陆注册
15692800000020

第20章 CLARA MORRIS(6)

"Will you favour me, Miss Morris, with this actor's name?""Certainly. He is billed as Mr. Henry Irving."Mr. Daly looked up from his scribbling. "Irving? Irving? Is not he the actor that old man Bateman secured as support for his daughters?""Yes, that was the old gentleman's mistaken belief; but the public thought differently, and laboured with Papa Bateman till it convinced him that his daughters were by way of supporting Mr. Irving."A grim smile came upon the managerial lips as be asked. "What does he look like?""Well, as a general thing, I think he will look wonderfully like the character he is playing. Oh, don't frown so! He--well, he is not beautiful, neither can I imagine him a pantaloon actor, but his face will adapt itself splendidly to any strong character make-up, whether noble or villainous." Mr. Daly was looking pleased again. I went on:

"He aspires, I hear, to Shakespeare, but there is one thing of which Iam sure. He is the mightiest man in melodrama to-day!""How long did it take to convince you of that, Miss Morris? One act--two--the whole five acts?""His first five minutes on the stage, sir. His business wins applause without the aid of words, and you know what that means."Again that elongated "A-a-ah!" Then, "Tell me of that five minutes,"and he thrust a chair toward me.

"Oh," I cried, despairingly, "that will take so long, and will only bore you.

"Understand, please, nothing under heaven that is connected with the stage can ever bore me." Which statement was unalloyed truth.

"But, indeed," I feebly insisted, only to be brought up short with the words, "Kindly allow me to judge for myself."To which I beamingly made answer: "Did I not beg you to do that months ago?" But he was growing vexed, and curtly commanded:

"I want those first five minutes--what he did, and how he did it, and what the effect was, and then"--speaking dreamily--"I shall know--Ishall know."

Now at Mr. Daly's last long-drawn-out "A-a-ah," anent Mr. Irving's winning applause without words, I believed an idea, new and novel, had sprung into his mind, while his present rapt manner would tell anyone familiar with his ways that the idea was rapidly becoming a plan. Iwas wondering what it could be, when a sharp "Well?" startled me into swift and beautiful obedience, "You see, Mr. Daly, I knew absolutely nothing of the story of the play that night. 'The Bells' were, I supposed, church-bells. In the first act the people were rustic--the season winter--snow flying in every time the door opened. The absent husband and father was spoken of by mother and daughter, lover and neighbour. Then there were sleigh-bells heard, whose jingle stopped suddenly. The door opened--Mathias entered, and for the first time winter was made truly manifest to us, and one drew himself together instinctively, for the tall, gaunt man at the door was cold-chilled, just to the very marrow of his bones. Then, after general greetings had been exchanged, he seated himself in a chair directly in the centre of the stage, a mere trifle in advance of others in the scene, and proceeded to remove his long leggings. He drew a great coloured handkerchief and brushed away some clinging snow; then leaning forward, with slightly tremulous fingers, he began to unfasten a top buckle. Suddenly the trembling ceased, the fingers clenched hard upon the buckle, the whole body became still, then rigid--it seemed not to breathe! The one sign of life in the man was the agonisingly strained sense of hearing! His tortured eyes saw nothing. Utterly without speech, without feeling, he listened--breathlessly listened! A cold chill crept stealthily about the roots of my hair, I clenched my hands hard and whispered to myself: 'Will it come, good God, will it come, the thing he listens for?' When with a wild bound, as if every nerve and muscle had been rent by an electric shock, he was upon his feet; and I was answered even before that suffocating cry of terror--'The bells! the bells!'--and under cover of the applause that followed I said:

'Haunted! Innocent or guilty, this man is haunted!' And Mr. Daly, Ibowed my head to a great actor, for though fine things followed, you know the old saying, that 'no chain is stronger than its weakest link.' Well I always feel that no actor is greater than his carefulest bit of detail."Mr. Daly's pale face had acquired a faint flush of colour, "Thank you!" he said, with real cordiality, and I was delighted to have pleased him, and also to see the end of my troubles, and once more took up the sun-shade.

"I think an actor like that could win any public, don't you?""I don't know," I lightly answered. "He is generally regarded as an acquired taste.""What do you mean?" came the sharp return.

"Why, you must have heard that Mr. Irving's eccentricities are not to be counted upon the fingers of both hands?"Mr. Daly lifted his brows and smiled a contented smile: "Indeed? And pray, what are these peculiarities?""Oh, some are of the figure, some of movement, and some of delivery.

A lady told me over there that he could walk like each and every animal of a Noah's ark; and people lay wagers as to whether London will force him to abandon his elocutionary freaks, or he will force London to accept them. I am inclined to back Mr. Irving, myself.""What! What's that you say? That this fine actor you have described has a marked peculiarity of delivery--of speech?""Marked peculiarities? Why, they are murderous! His strange inflections, his many mannerisms are very trying at first, but be conquers before--"A cry stopped me--a cry of utter disappointment and anger! Mr. Daly stood staring at his notes a moment, then he exclaimed violently:

"D--n! d--n! oh, d--n!!!" and savagely tore his scribbled-on paper into bits and flung them on the floor.

Startled at his vexation, convulsed with suppressed laughter at the infantile quality of his profanity, I ventured, in a shaking voice, "Ithink I'd better go?"

"I think you had!" be agreed curtly; but as I reached the door he said in his most managerial tone: "Miss Morris, it would be better for you to begin with people's faults next time--"But with the door already open I made bold to reply: "Excuse me, Mr.

Daly, but there isn't going to be any next time for me!"And I turned and fled, wondering all the way home, as I have often wondered since, what was the plan that went so utterly agley that day?

Mr. Coghlan he engaged after failing in his first effort, but that other, greater plan; what was it?

同类推荐
  • 上清修身要事经

    上清修身要事经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 密藏开禅师遗稿

    密藏开禅师遗稿

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 点心单

    点心单

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 上清洞真九宫紫房图

    上清洞真九宫紫房图

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 苏悉地羯罗供养法

    苏悉地羯罗供养法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 剑武穹苍

    剑武穹苍

    一念可碎苍穹,一剑可破万法。尝天宗宗主独子义世迁,其灵根惊世,古来仅有,却因体内孕育的一把诡异神剑而导致无法修炼,直至有一天,宗主消失,宗门易主……
  • 萌徒出没:亲亲师父

    萌徒出没:亲亲师父

    人们说:教主大人欺师灭祖,杀人如麻,是个名副其实的祸害!某女说:你们四个字四个字的往外蹦,比文化啊?师糊欺师灭祖怎么了?应该的!不服你们来单挑啊!还有,师糊祸害我都来不及,轮得到你们吗?自作多情。人们白眼:……真是天要亡我,又多了一个祸害。某师糊说:作为女人要矜持,懂?某女无辜:不懂,我还是小孩……矜持什么意思?又不能吃。某师糊说:……
  • 花生两枝莲并一蒂

    花生两枝莲并一蒂

    前世,他是国际刑警,他是国际杀手,两个人是注定的对手,然而他们却以最亲密相拥的方式坠楼而亡。再醒时,他们是同母一胎的双生子。纠缠不清的从来不是感情,而是人心。前世今生,有你足矣。
  • 公主归来创世爱情

    公主归来创世爱情

    当千金才女和恶魔在一起之后会发生怎样的爱情呢?来看看吧!
  • TFBOYS涩涩爱

    TFBOYS涩涩爱

    爆笑生活为你开启!两情相悦的故事!女主失忆……男主搭救
  • 有所失必有所得

    有所失必有所得

    人生来有一种占有欲,喜欢“得”而讨厌“失”,其实“失中自有得”,而“得中也有失”。如果把人一生中的获得和失去相加,其结果等于零,也就是说,人自呱呱坠地至生命终结,失去了多少,必然也就得到了多少。
  • 碎骨

    碎骨

    一个人要成长,不仅要勇敢,还要勇敢面对过去
  • 珠峰部落

    珠峰部落

    珠峰擎天,是自然造化,还是文明冲突?珠峰圣母,是护佑人类,还是暗藏杀机?珠峰工程,是缔造神奇,还是葬送人类?珠峰邪魔,是借刀杀人,还是瞒天过海?珠峰部落,是文明使者,还是文明强盗?珠峰部落,珠峰唯一永远相伴的神奇部落,千万年不变,他们一直在等待,等待那个神圣的时刻到来――回家,回到快乐的大洋深处去!西刹邪魔,窥觎珠峰部落梦想,贪念骤生,妄想借刀杀人,毁灭人类,统治地球,缔造险恶的西刹邪国。地球将何去何从?地质狂人、飞行侠、神童,为你演绎惊天历险大戏……欢迎走进《珠峰部落》~~
  • 球可追风

    球可追风

    仅仅只是一次普通的际遇,却成就了一个少年的篮球传奇。这或许只是一个偶然,但这个偶然终将会演绎成为一个必然。
  • 清水忘歌:总裁别乱来

    清水忘歌:总裁别乱来

    当许清水被周承歌带到A市民政局门口时,许清水只是抬头看向那烫金的三个字,轻声道:“进去吧,什么话也不必讲,我理解。”说完便自己推开车门,走进民政局。……从民政局出来后,许清水冷冷地开口:“周承歌,现在结婚证也领了,你也可以如愿当上周氏总裁了,你开心吗?”顿了顿,又继续开口:“哦不,我怎么能这么问呢?当上总裁可是又有金钱又有权势,怎么会不开心呢?”许清水面带讥笑看着周承歌。周承歌为了自己爷爷那个承诺,想尽办法接近了许清水,从而和许清水如愿结婚。可是万万没有想到许清水在婚后和周承歌针锋相对,最后却把自己的心都交给了这个根本不爱她的人……