HOWARDS END
Chapter 5
It will be generally admitted that Beethoven's Fifth Symphony is the most
sublime noise that has ever penetrated into the ear of man. All sorts and
conditions are satisfied by it. Whether you are like Mrs. Munt, and tap
surreptitiously when the tunes come--of course, not so as to disturb the
others--; or like Helen, who can see heroes and shipwrecks in the music's flood;
or like Margaret, who can only see the music; or like Tibby, who is profoundly
versed in counterpoint, and holds the full score open on his knee; or like their
cousin, Fräulein Mosebach, who remembers all the time that Beethoven is "echt
Deutsch"; or like Fräulein Mosebach's young man, who can remember nothing but
Fräulein Mosebach: in any case, the passion of your life becomes more vivid, and
you are bound to admit that such a noise is cheap at two shillings. It is
cheap, even if you hear it in the Queen's Hall, dreariest music-room in London,
though not as dreary as the Free Trade Hall, Manchester; and even if you sit on
the extreme left of that hall, so that the brass bumps at you before the rest of
the orchestra arrives, it is still cheap.
"Who is
Margaret talking to?" said Mrs. Munt, at the conclusion of the first
movement. She was again in London on a visit to Wickham
Place.
Helen looked down the long line of their
party, and said that she did not know.
"Would it be
some young man or other whom she takes an interest
in?"
"I expect so," Helen replied. Music
enwrapped her, and she could not enter into the distinction that divides young
men whom one takes an interest in from young men whom one
knows.
"You girls are so wonderful in always
having--Oh dear! one mustn't talk."
For the
Andante had begun--very beautiful, but bearing a family likeness to all the
other beautiful Andantes that Beethoven had written, and, to Helen's mind,
rather disconnecting the heroes and shipwrecks of the first movement from the
heroes and goblins of the third. She heard the tune through once, and then
her attention wandered, and she gazed at the audience, or the organ, or the
architecture. Much did she censure the attenuated Cupids who encircle the
ceiling of the Queen's Hall, inclining each to each with vapid gesture, and clad
in sallow pantaloons, on which the October sunlight struck. "How awful to
marry a man like those Cupids!" thought Helen. Here Beethoven started
decorating his tune, so she heard him through once more, and then she smiled at
her cousin Frieda. But Frieda, listening to Classical Music, could not
respond. Herr Liesecke, too, looked as if wild horses could not make him
inattentive; there were lines across his forehead, his lips were parted, his
pince-nez at right angles to his nose, and he had laid a thick, white hand on
either knee. And next to her was Aunt Juley, so British, and wanting to
tap. How interesting that row of people was! What diverse influences
had gone to the making! Here Beethoven, after humming and hawing with
great sweetness, said "Heigho," and the Andante came to an end. Applause,
and a round of "wunderschöning" and "prachtvolleying" from the German
contingent. Margaret started talking to her new young man; Helen said to
her aunt: "Now comes the wonderful movement: first of all the goblins, and then
a trio of elephants dancing;" and Tibby implored the company generally to look
out for the transitional passage on the drum.
"On the
what, dear?"
"On the drum, Aunt
Juley."
"No; look out for the part where you think
you have done with the goblins and they come back," breathed Helen, as the music
started with a goblin walking quietly over the universe, from end to end.
Others followed him. They were not aggressive creatures; it was that that
made them so terrible to Helen. They merely observed in passing that there
was no such thing as splendour or heroism in the world. After the
interlude of elephants dancing, they returned and made the observation for the
second time. Helen could not contradict them, for, once at all events, she
had felt the same, and had seen the reliable walls of youth collapse.
Panic and emptiness! Panic and emptiness! The goblins were
right.
Her brother raised his finger: it was the
transitional passage on the drum.
For, as if things
were going too far, Beethoven took hold of the goblins and made them do what he
wanted. He appeared in person. He gave them a little push, and they
began to walk in major key instead of in a minor, and then--he blew with his
mouth and they were scattered! Gusts of splendour, gods and demigods
contending with vast swords, colour and fragrance broadcast on the field of
battle, magnificent victory, magnificent death! Oh, it all burst before
the girl, and she even stretched out her gloved hands as if it was
tangible. Any fate was titanic; any contest desirable; conqueror and
conquered would alike be applauded by the angels of the utmost
stars.
And the goblins--they had not really been
there at all? They were only the phantoms of cowardice and unbelief?
One healthy human impulse would dispel them? Men like the Wilcoxes, or
President Roosevelt, would say yes. Beethoven knew better. The
goblins really had been there. They might return--and they did. It
was as if the splendour of life might boil over--and waste to steam and
froth. In its dissolution one heard the terrible, ominous note, and a
goblin, with increased malignity, walked quietly over the universe from end to
end. Panic and emptiness! Panic and emptiness! Even the
flaming ramparts of the world might fall.
Beethoven
chose to make all right in the end. He built the ramparts up. He blew with
his mouth for the second time, and again the goblins were scattered. He
brought back the gusts of splendour, the heroism, the youth, the magnificence of
life and of death, and, amid vast roarings of a superhuman joy, he led his Fifth
Symphony to its conclusion. But the goblins were there. They could
return. He had said so bravely, and that is why one can trust Beethoven
when he says other things.
Helen pushed her way out
during the applause. She desired to be alone. The music summed up to
her all that had happened or could happen in her career. She read it as a
tangible statement, which could never be superseded. The notes meant this
and that to her, and they could have no other meaning, and life could have no
other meaning. She pushed right out of the building, and walked slowly
down the outside staircase, breathing the autumnal air, and then she strolled
home.
"Margaret," called Mrs. Munt, "is Helen all
right?"
"Oh yes."
"She is
always going away in the middle of a programme," said
Tibby.
"The music has evidently moved her deeply,"
said Fräulein Mosebach.
"Excuse me," said Margaret's
young man, who had for some time been preparing a sentence, "but that lady has,
quite inadvertently, taken my umbrella."
"Oh, good
gracious me! --I am so sorry. Tibby, run after
Helen."
"I shall miss the Four Serious Songs if I
do."
"Tibby love, you must
go."
"It isn't of any consequence," said the young
man, in truth a little uneasy about his
umbrella.
"But of course it is. Tibby!
Tibby!"
Tibby rose to his feet, and wilfully caught
his person on the backs of the chairs. By the time he had tipped up the
seat and had found his hat, and had deposited his full score in safety, it was
"too late" to go after Helen. The Four Serious Songs had begun, and one
could not move during their performance.
"My sister
is so careless," whispered Margaret.
"Not at all,"
replied the young man; but his voice was dead and
cold.
"If you would give me your
address--"
"Oh, not at all, not at all;" and he
wrapped his greatcoat over his knees.
Then the Four
Serious Songs rang shallow in Margaret's ears. Brahms, for all his
grumbling and grizzling, had never guessed what it felt like to be suspected of
stealing an umbrella. For this fool of a young man thought that she and
Helen and Tibby had been playing the confidence trick on him, and that if he
gave his address they would break into his rooms some midnight or other and
steal his walkingstick too. Most ladies would have laughed, but Margaret
really minded, for it gave her a glimpse into squalor. To trust people is
a luxury in which only the wealthy can indulge; the poor cannot afford it.
As soon as Brahms had grunted himself out, she gave him her card and said, "That
is where we live; if you preferred, you could call for the umbrella after the
concert, but I didn't like to trouble you when it has all been our
fault."
His face brightened a little when he saw that
Wickham Place was W. It was sad to see him corroded with suspicion, and yet not
daring to be impolite, in case these well-dressed people were honest after
all. She took it as a good sign that he said to her, "It's a fine
programme this afternoon, is it not?" for this was the remark with which he had
originally opened, before the umbrella
intervened.
"The Beethoven's fine," said Margaret,
who was not a female of the encouraging type. "I don't like the Brahms,
though, nor the Mendelssohn that came first--and ugh! I don't like this
Elgar that's coming."
"What, what?" called Herr
Liesecke, overhearing. "The Pomp and Circumstance will not be
fine?"
"Oh, Margaret, you tiresome girl!" cried her
aunt. "Here have I been persuading Herr Liesecke to stop for Pomp and
Circumstance, and you are undoing all my work. I am so anxious for
him to hear what we are doing in music. Oh, you mustn't run down our
English composers, Margaret."
"For my part, I have
heard the composition at Stettin," said Fräulein Mosebach. "On two
occasions. It is dramatic, a little."
"Frieda,
you despise English music. You know you do. And English art.
And English Literature, except Shakespeare and he's a German. Very well,
Frieda, you may go."
The lovers laughed and glanced
at each other. Moved by a common impulse, they rose to their feet and fled
from Pomp and Circumstance.
"We have this
call to play in Finsbury Circus, it is true," said Herr Liesecke, as he edged
past her and reached the gangway just as the music
started.
"Margaret--" loudly whispered by Aunt
Juley. "Margaret, Margaret! Fräulein Mosebach has left her beautiful
little bag behind her on the seat."
Sure enough,
there was Frieda's reticule, containing her address book, her pocket dictionary,
her map of London, and her money.
"Oh, what a
bother--what a family we are!
Fr-Frieda!"
"Hush!" said all those who thought the
music fine.
"But it's the number they want in
Finsbury Circus--"
"Might I--couldn't I--" said the
suspicious young man, and got very red.
"Oh, I would
be so grateful."
He took the bag--money clinking
inside it--and slipped up the gangway with it. He was just in time to
catch them at the swing-door, and he received a pretty smile from the German
girl and a fine bow from her cavalier. He returned to his seat up-sides
with the world. The trust that they had reposed in him was trivial, but he
felt that it cancelled his mistrust for them, and that probably he would not be
"had" over his umbrella. This young man had been "had" in the past--badly,
perhaps overwhelmingly--and now most of his energies went in defending himself
against the unknown. But this afternoon--perhaps on account of music--he
perceived that one must slack off occasionally, or what is the good of being
alive? Wickham Place, W., though a risk, was as safe as most things, and
he would risk it.
So when the concert was over and
Margaret said, "We live quite near; I am going there now. Could you walk
around with me, and we'll find your umbrella?" he said, "Thank you," peaceably,
and followed her out of the Queen's Hall. She wished that he was not so
anxious to hand a lady downstairs, or to carry a lady's programme for her--his
class was near enough her own for its manners to vex her. But she found
him interesting on the whole--every one interested the Schlegels on the whole at
that time--and while her lips talked culture, her heart was planning to invite
him to tea.
"How tired one gets after music!" she
began.
"Do you find the atmosphere of Queen's Hall
oppressive?"
"Yes,
horribly."
"But surely the atmosphere of Covent
Garden is even more oppressive."
"Do you go there
much?"
"When my work permits, I attend the gallery
for, the Royal Opera."
Helen would have exclaimed,
"So do I. I love the gallery," and thus have endeared herself to the young
man. Helen could do these things. But Margaret had an almost morbid
horror of "drawing people out," of "making things go." She had been to the
gallery at Covent Garden, but she did not "attend" it, preferring the more
expensive seats; still less did she love it. So she made no
reply.
"This year I have been three times--to
Faust, Tosca, and--" Was it "Tannhouser" or
"Tannhoyser"? Better not risk the
word.
Margaret disliked Tosca and
Faust. And so, for one reason and another, they walked on in
silence, chaperoned by the voice of Mrs. Munt, who was getting into difficulties
with her nephew.
"I do in a way remember the
passage, Tibby, but when every instrument is so beautiful, it is difficult to
pick out one thing rather than another. I am sure that you and Helen take
me to the very nicest concerts. Not a dull note from beginning to
end. I only wish that our German friends would have stayed till it
finished."
"But surely you haven't forgotten the drum
steadily beating on the low C, Aunt Juley?" came Tibby's voice. "No one
could. It's unmistakable."
"A specially loud
part?" hazarded Mrs. Munt. "Of course I do not go in for being musical,"
she added, the shot failing. "I only care for music--a very different
thing. But still I will say this for myself--I do know when I like a thing
and when I don't. Some people are the same about pictures. They can
go into a picture gallery--Miss Conder can--and say straight off what they feel,
all round the wall. I never could do that. But music is so different
to pictures, to my mind. When it comes to music I am as safe as houses,
and I assure you, Tibby, I am by no means pleased by everything. There was
a thing--something about a faun in French--which Helen went into ecstasies over,
but I thought it most tinkling and superficial, and said so, and I held to my
opinion too."
"Do you agree?" asked Margaret.
"Do you think music is so different to
pictures?"
"I--I should have thought so, kind of," he
said.
"So should I. Now, my sister declares they're
just the same. We have great arguments over it. She says I'm dense;
I say she's sloppy." Getting under way, she cried: "Now, doesn't it seem absurd
to you? What is the good of the Arts if they are interchangeable?
What is the good of the ear if it tells you the same as the eye? Helen's
one aim is to translate tunes into the language of painting, and pictures into
the language of music. It's very ingenious, and she says several pretty
things in the process, but what's gained, I'd like to know? Oh, it's all
rubbish, radically false. If Monet's really Debussy, and Debussy's really
Monet, neither gentleman is worth his salt--that's my
opinion.
Evidently these sisters
quarrelled.
"Now, this very symphony that we've just
been having--she won't let it alone. She labels it with meanings from
start to finish; turns it into literature. I wonder if the day will ever
return when music will be treated as music. Yet I don't know.
There's my brother--behind us. He treats music as music, and oh, my
goodness! He makes me angrier than anyone, simply furious. With him
I daren't even argue."
An unhappy family, if
talented.
"But, of course, the real villain is
Wagner. He has done more than any man in the nineteenth century towards
the muddling of arts. I do feel that music is in a very serious state just
now, though extraordinarily interesting. Every now and then in history
there do come these terrible geniuses, like Wagner, who stir up all the wells of
thought at once. For a moment it's splendid. Such a splash as never
was. But afterwards--such a lot of mud; and the wells--as it were, they
communicate with each other too easily now, and not one of them will run quite
clear. That's what Wagner's done."
Her speeches
fluttered away from the young man like birds. If only he could talk like
this, he would have caught the world. Oh to acquire culture! Oh, to
pronounce foreign names correctly! Oh, to be well informed, discoursing at
ease on every subject that a lady started! But it would take one
years. With an hour at lunch and a few shattered hours in the evening, how
was it possible to catch up with leisured women, who had been reading steadily
from childhood? His brain might be full of names, he might have even heard
of Monet and Debussy; the trouble was that he could not string them together
into a sentence, he could not make them "tell," he could not quite forget about
his stolen umbrella. Yes, the umbrella was the real trouble. Behind
Monet and Debussy the umbrella persisted, with the steady beat of a drum.
"I suppose my umbrella will be all right," he was thinking. "I don't
really mind about it. I will think about music instead. I suppose my
umbrella will be all right." Earlier in the afternoon he had worried about
seats. Ought he to have paid as much as two shillings? Earlier still
he had wondered, "Shall I try to do without a programme?" There had always
been something to worry him ever since he could remember, always something that
distracted him in the pursuit of beauty. For he did pursue beauty, and
therefore, Margaret's speeches did flutter away from him like
birds.
Margaret talked ahead, occasionally saying,
"Don't you think so? don't you feel the same?" And once she stopped,
and said "Oh, do interrupt me!" which terrified him. She did not attract
him, though she filled him with awe. Her figure was meagre, her face
seemed all teeth and eyes, her references to her sister and brother were
uncharitable. For all her cleverness and culture, she was probably one of
those soulless, atheistical women who have been so shown up by Miss
Corelli. It was surprising (and alarming) that she should suddenly say, "I
do hope that you'll come in and have some tea."
"I do
hope that you'll come in and have some tea. We should be so glad. I
have dragged you so far out of your way."
They had
arrived at Wickham Place. The sun had set, and the backwater, in deep
shadow, was filling with a gentle haze. To the right of the fantastic
skyline of the flats towered black against the hues of evening; to the left the
older houses raised a square-cut, irregular parapet against the grey.
Margaret fumbled for her latchkey. Of course she had forgotten it.
So, grasping her umbrella by its ferrule, she leant over the area and tapped at
the dining-room window.
"Helen! Let us
in!"
"All right," said a
voice.
"You've been taking this gentleman's
umbrella."
"Taken a what?" said Helen, opening the
door. "Oh, what's that? Do come in! How do you
do?"
"Helen, you must not be so ramshackly. You
took this gentleman's umbrella away from Queen's Hall, and he has had the
trouble of coming for it."
"Oh, I am so sorry!" cried
Helen, all her hair flying. She had pulled off her hat as soon as she
returned, and had flung herself into the big dining-room chair. "I do
nothing but steal umbrellas. I am so very sorry! Do come in and
choose one. Is yours a hooky or a nobbly? Mine's a nobbly--at least,
I think it is."
The light was turned on, and
they began to search the hall, Helen, who had abruptly parted with the Fifth
Symphony, commenting with shrill little cries.
"Don't
you talk, Meg! You stole an old gentleman's silk top-hat. Yes, she
did, Aunt Juley. It is a positive fact. She thought it was a
muff. Oh, heavens! I've knocked the In and Out card down.
Where's Frieda? Tibby, why don't you ever--No, I can't remember what I was
going to say. That wasn't it, but do tell the maids to hurry tea up.
What about this umbrella?" She opened it. "No, it's all gone along
the seams. It's an appalling umbrella. It must be
mine."
But it was not.
He
took it from her, murmured a few words of thanks, and then fled, with the
lilting step of the clerk.
"But if you will stop--"
cried Margaret. "Now, Helen, how stupid you've
been!"
"Whatever have I
done?"
"Don't you see that you've frightened him
away? I meant him to stop to tea. You oughtn't to talk about
stealing or holes in an umbrella. I saw his nice eyes getting so
miserable. No, it's not a bit of good now." For Helen had darted out into
the street, shouting, "Oh, do stop!"
"I dare say it
is all for the best," opined Mrs. Munt. "We know nothing about the young
man, Margaret, and your drawing-room is full of very tempting little
things."
But Helen cried: "Aunt Juley, how can
you! You make me more and more ashamed. I'd rather he had
been a thief and taken all the apostle spoons than that I--Well, I must shut the
front-door, I suppose. One more failure for
Helen."
"Yes, I think the apostle spoons could have
gone as rent," said Margaret. Seeing that her aunt did not understand, she
added: "You remember 'rent.' It was one of father's words--Rent to the ideal, to
his own faith in human nature. You remember how he would trust strangers,
and if they fooled him he would say, 'It's better to be fooled than to be
suspicious'--that the confidence trick is the work of man, but the
want-of-confidence-trick is the work of the
devil."
"I remember something of the sort now," said
Mrs. Munt, rather tartly, for she longed to add, "It was lucky that your father
married a wife with money." But this was unkind, and she contented herself with,
"Why, he might have stolen the little Ricketts picture as
well."
"Better that he had," said Helen
stoutly.
"No, I agree with Aunt Juley," said
Margaret. "I'd rather mistrust people than lose my little Ricketts.
There are limits."
Their brother, finding the
incident commonplace, had stolen upstairs to see whether there were scones for
tea. He warmed the teapot--almost too deftly--rejected the Orange Pekoe
that the parlour-maid had provided, poured in five spoonfuls of a superior
blend, filled up with really boiling water, and now called to the ladies to be
quick or they would lose the aroma.
"All right,
Auntie Tibby," called Helen, while Margaret, thoughtful again, said: "In a way,
I wish we had a real boy in the house--the kind of boy who cares for men.
It would make entertaining so much easier."
"So do
I," said her sister. "Tibby only cares for cultured females singing
Brahms." And when they joined him she said rather sharply: "Why didn't you make
that young man welcome, Tibby? You must do the host a little, you
know. You ought to have taken his hat and coaxed him into stopping,
instead of letting him be swamped by screaming
women."
Tibby sighed, and drew a long strand of hair
over his forehead.
"Oh, it's no good looking
superior. I mean what I say."
"Leave Tibby
alone!" said Margaret, who could not bear her brother to be
scolded.
"Here's the house a regular hen-coop!"
grumbled Helen.
"Oh, my dear!" protested Mrs.
Munt. "How can you say such dreadful things! The number of men you
get here has always astonished me. If there is any danger it's the other way
round."
"Yes, but it's the wrong sort of men, Helen
means."
"No, I don't," corrected Helen. "We get
the right sort of man, but the wrong side of him, and I say that's Tibby's
fault. There ought to be a something about the house--an--I don't know
what."
"A touch of the W.'s,
perhaps?"
Helen put out her
tongue.
"Who are the W.'s?" asked
Tibby.
"The W.'s are things I and Meg and Aunt Juley
know about and you don't, so there!"
"I suppose that
ours is a female house," said Margaret, "and one must just accept it. No,
Aunt Juley, I don't mean that this house is full of women. I am trying to
say something much more clever. I mean that it was irrevocably feminine,
even in father's time. Now I'm sure you understand! Well, I'll give
you another example. It'll shock you, but I don't care. Suppose
Queen Victoria gave a dinner-party, and that the guests had been Leighton,
Millais, Swinburne, Rossetti, Meredith, Fitzgerald, etc. Do you suppose
that the atmosphere of that dinner would have been artistic? Heavens
no! The very chairs on which they sat would have seen to that. So
with our house--it must be feminine, and all we can do is to see that it isn't
effeminate. Just as another house that I can mention, but I won't, sounded
irrevocably masculine, and all its inmates can do is to see that it isn't
brutal."
"That house being the W.'s house, I
presume," said Tibby.
"You're not going to be told
about the W.'s, my child," Helen cried, "so don't you think it. And on the
other hand, I don't the least mind if you find out, so don't you think you've
done anything clever, in either case. Give me a
cigarette."
"You do what you can for the house," said
Margaret. "The drawing-room reeks of
smoke."
"If you smoked too, the house might suddenly
turn masculine. Atmosphere is probably a question of touch and go.
Even at Queen Victoria's dinner-party--if something had been just a little
different--perhaps if she'd worn a clinging Liberty tea-gown instead of a
magenta satin--"
"With an Indian shawl over her
shoulders--"
"Fastened at the bosom with a
Cairngorm-pin--"
Bursts of disloyal laughter--you
must remember that they are half German--greeted these suggestions, and Margaret
said pensively, "How inconceivable it would be if the Royal Family cared about
Art." And the conversation drifted away and away, and Helen's cigarette
turned to a spot in the darkness, and the great flats opposite were sown with
lighted windows, which vanished and were relit again, and vanished
incessantly. Beyond them the thoroughfare roared gently--a tide that could
never be quiet, while in the east, invisible behind the smokes of Wapping, the
moon was rising.
"That reminds me, Margaret. We
might have taken that young man into the dining-room, at all events. Only
the majolica plate--and that is so firmly set in the wall. I am really
distressed that he had no tea."
For that little
incident had impressed the three women more than might be supposed. It
remained as a goblin football, as a hint that all is not for the best in the
best of all possible worlds, and that beneath these superstructures of wealth
and art there wanders an ill-fed boy, who has recovered his umbrella indeed, but
who has left no address behind him, and no name.