She had grown up thinking it old-fashioned, out-moded, absurdly "plum-puddingy," and British. In the realm of orchestral music she was more at home. She honestly loved orchestral music divorced from words.
But the music of Claude"s which she knew was joined with words. And he must do something with words. For that, as it were, would lead the way toward opera. Orchestral music was more remote from opera. If Claude set some wonderful poem, and a man like Jacob Crayford heard the setting, he might see a talent for opera in it. But he could scarcely see that in a violin concerto, a quartet for strings, or a symphony. So she argued.
And she searched anxiously for words which might be set dramatically, descriptively. She dared not a.s.sail Claude yet with a libretto for opera. She felt sure he would say he had no talent for such work, that he was not drawn toward the theater. But if she could lead him gradually toward things essentially dramatic, she might wake up in him forces the tendency of which he had never suspected.
She re-read Rossetti, Keats, Sh.e.l.ley, dipped into William Morris,--Wordsworth no--into Fiona Macleod, William Watson, John Davidson, Alfred Noyes. Now and then she was strongly attracted by something, she thought, "Will it do?" And always at such moments a vision of Jacob Crayford seemed to rise up before her, with large brown eyes, ears like a faun, nervous hands, and the tiny beard. "Is it a business proposition?" The moving lips said that. And she gazed again at the poem which had arrested her attention, she thought, "Is it a business proposition?" Keats"s terribly famous _Belle Dame Sans Merci_ really attracted her more than anything else. She knew it had been set by Cyril Scott, and other ultra-modern composers, but she felt that Claude could do something wonderful with it. Yet perhaps it was too well known.
One lyric of William Watson"s laid a spell upon her:
"Pa.s.s, thou wild heart, Wild heart of youth that still Hast half a will To stay.
I grow too old a comrade, let us part.
Pa.s.s thou away."
She read that and the preceding verse again and again, in the grip of a strange and melancholy fascination, dreaming. She woke, and remembered that she was young, that Claude was young. But she had reached out and touched old age. She had realized, newly, the shortness of the time. And a sort of fever a.s.sailed her. Claude must begin, must waste no more precious hours; she would take him the poem of William Watson, would read it to him. He might make of it a song, and in the making he would learn something perhaps--to hasten on the path.
She started for the studio one day, taking the _Belle Dame_, William Watson"s poems, and two or three books of French poetry, Verlaine, Montesquiou, Moreas.
She arrived in Renwick Place just after four o"clock. She meant to make tea for Claude and herself, and had brought with her some little cakes and a bottle of milk. Quite a load she was carrying. The gouty hands of the caretaker went up when he saw her.
"My, ma"am, what a heavy lot for you to be carrying!"
"I"m strong. Mr. Heath"s in the studio?"
Before the man could reply she heard the sound of a piano.
"Oh, yes, he is. Is there water there? Yes. That"s right. I"m going to boil the kettle and make tea."
She went on quickly, opened the door softly, and slipped in.
Claude, who sat with his back to her playing, did not hear her. She crept behind the screen into what she called "the kitchen." What fun!
She could make the tea without his knowing that she was there, and bring it in to him when he stopped playing.
As she softly prepared things she listened attentively, with a sort of burning attention, to the music. She had not heard it before. She knew that when her husband was composing he did not go to the piano. This must be something which he had just composed and was trying over. It sounded to her mystic, remote, very strange, almost like a soul communing with itself; then more violent, more sonorous, but always very strange.
The kettle began to boil. She got ready the cups. In turning she knocked two spoons down from a shelf. They fell on the uncarpeted floor.
"What"s that? Who"s there?"
Claude had stopped playing abruptly. His voice was the voice of a man startled and angry.
"Who"s there?" he repeated loudly.
She heard him get up and come toward the screen.
"Claudie, do forgive me! I slipped in. I thought I would make tea for you. It"s all ready. But I didn"t mean to interrupt you. I was waiting till you had finished. I"m so sorry."
"You, Charmian!"
There was an odd remote expression in his eyes, and his whole face looked excited.
"Do--do forgive me, Claudie! Those dreadful spoons!"
She picked them up.
"Of course. What are all these books doing here?"
"I brought them. I thought after tea we might talk over words. You remember?"
"Oh, yes. Well--but I"ve begun on something."
"Were you playing it just now?"
"Some of it."
"What is it?"
"Francis Thompson"s _The Hound of Heaven_."
Jacob Crayford--what would he think of that sort of thing?
"You know it, don"t you?" Claude said, as she was silent.
"I"ve read it, but quite a while ago. I don"t remember it well. Of course I know it"s very wonderful. Madre loves it."
"She was speaking of it at the Shiffney"s the other night. That"s why it occurred to me to study it."
"Oh. Well, now you have stopped shall we have tea?"
"Yes. I"ve done enough for to-day."
After tea Charmian said:
"I"ll study _The Hound of Heaven_ again. But now do you mind if I read you two or three of the things I have here?"
"No," he said kindly, but not at all eagerly. "Do read anything you like."
It was six o"clock when Charmian read Watson"s poem "to finish up with."
Claude who, absorbed secretly by the thought of his new composition, had listened so far without any keen interest, at moments had not listened at all, though preserving a decent att.i.tude and manner of attention, suddenly woke up into genuine enthusiasm.
"Give me that, Charmian!" he exclaimed. "I scarcely ever write a song.
But I"ll set that."
She gave him the book eagerly.
That evening they were at home. After dinner Claude went to his little room to write some letters, and Charmian read _The Hound of Heaven_. She decided against it. Beautiful though it was, she considered it too mystic, too religious. She was sure many people could not understand it.
"I wish Madre hadn"t talked to Claude about it," she thought. "He thinks so much of her opinion. And she doesn"t care in the least whether Claude makes a hit with the public or not."
The mere thought of the word "hit" in connection with Mrs. Mansfield almost made Charmian smile.
"I suppose there"s something dreadfully vulgar about me," she said to herself. "But I belong to the young generation. I can"t help loving success."