The head
waiter there is an old Viennese friend of mine and looks
after me
beautifully. I've never been there with a lady before,
and he's sure to ask me afterwards, in his fatherly way, if we're
engaged."
The lunch was a success in every way. There was just enough
orchestral effort to immerse the conversation without drowning it,
and Youghal was an
attentive and inspired host. Through an open
doorway Elaine could see the cafe reading-room, with its imposing
array of NEUE FREIE PRESSE, BERLINER TAGEBLATT, and other exotic
newspapers
hanging on the wall. She looked across at the young man
seated opposite her, who gave one the
impression of having centred
the most serious efforts of his brain on his
toilet and his food,
and recalled some of the
flattering remarks that the press had
bestowed on his recent speeches.
"Doesn't it make you
conceited, Courtenay," she asked, "to look at
all those foreign newspapers
hanging there and know that most of
them have got paragraphs and articles about your Persian speech?"
Youghal laughed.
"There's always a chastening corrective in the thought that some of
them may have printed your
portrait. When once you've seen your
features
hurriedly reproduced in the MATIN, for
instance, you feel
you would like to be a veiled Turkish woman for the rest of your
life."
And Youghal gazed long and lovingly at his
reflection in the
nearest mirror, as an antidote against possible incitements to
humility in the
portraitgallery of fame.
Elaine felt a certain soothed
satisfaction in the fact that this
young man, whose knowledge of the Middle East was an embarrassment
to Ministers at question time and in
debate, was showing himself
equally well-informed on the subject of her culinary likes and
dislikes. If Suzette could have been forced to attend as a witness
at a neighbouring table she would have felt even happier.
"Did the head
waiter ask if we were engaged?" asked Elaine, when
Courtenay had settled the bill, and she had finished collecting her
sunshade and gloves and other impedimenta from the hands of
obsequious attendants.
"Yes," said Youghal, "and he seemed quite crestfallen when I had to
say 'no.'"
"It would be
horrid to
disappoint him when he's looked after us so
charmingly," said Elaine; "tell him that we are."
CHAPTER X
THE Rutland Galleries were
crowded, especially in the neighbourhood
of the tea-buffet, by a
fashionablethrong of art-patrons which had
gathered to
inspect Mervyn Quentock's
collection of Society
portraits. Quentock was a young artist whose abilities were just
receiving due
recognition from the critics; that the
recognitionwas not overdue he owed largely to his
perception of the fact that
if one hides one's
talent under a bushel one must be careful to
point out to
everyone the exact bushel under which it is hidden.
There are two manners of receiving
recognition: one is to be
discovered so long after one's death that one's grandchildren have
to write to the papers to establish their
relationship; the other
is to be discovered, like the
infant Moses, at the very outset of
one's
career. Mervyn Quentock had chosen the latter and happier
manner. In an age when many aspiring young men
strive to
advertisetheir wares by imparting to them a freakish imbecility, Quentock
turned out work that was characterised by a
pleasing delicate
restraint, but he contrived to
herald his
output with a certain
fanfare of personal eccentricity,
thereby compelling an attention
which might
otherwise have strayed past his
studio. In appearance
he was the ordinary
cleanly young Englishman, except, perhaps, that
his eyes rather suggested a library
edition of the Arabian Nights;
his clothes matched his appearance and showed no taint of the
sartorial
disorder by which the bourgeois of the garden-city and
the Latin Quarter
anxiously seeks to
proclaim his kinship with art
and thought. His eccentricity took the form of flying in the face
of some of the
prevailing social currents of the day, but as a
reactionary, never as a
reformer. He produced a gasp of admiring
astonishment in
fashionable circles by refusing to paint actresses
- except, of course, those who had left the
legitimate drama to
appear between the boards of Debrett. He
absolutely declined to
execute
portraits of Americans unless they hailed from certain
favoured States. His "water-colour-line," as a New York paper
phrased it, earned for him a crop of angry
criticisms and a shoal
of Transatlantic commissions, and
criticism and commissions were
the things that Quentock most wanted.
"Of course he is
perfectly right," said Lady Caroline Benaresq,
calmly rescuing a piled-up plate of caviare sandwiches from the
neighbourhood of a trio of young ladies who had established
themselves
hopefully within easy reach of it. "Art," she
continued, addressing herself to the Rev. Poltimore Vardon, "has
always been geographically
exclusive. London may be more important
from most points of view than Venice, but the art of
portraitpainting, which would never concern itself with a Lord Mayor,
simply grovels at the feet of the Doges. As a Socialist I'm bound
to recognise the right of Ealing to compare itself with Avignon,
but one cannot expect the Muses to put the two on a level."
"Exclusiveness," said the Reverend Poltimore, "has been the
salvation of Art, just as the lack of it is proving the
downfall of
religion. My colleagues of the cloth go about zealously
proclaiming the fact that Christianity, in some form or other, is
attracting shoals of converts among all sorts of races and tribes,
that one had scarcely ever heard of, except in reviews of books of
travel that one never read. That sort of thing was all very well
when the world was more sparsely populated, but nowadays, when it
simply teems with human beings, no one is particularly impressed by
the fact that a few million, more or less, of converts, of a low
stage of
mental development, have accepted the teachings of some
particular religion. It not only chills one's
enthusiasm, it
positively shakes one's convictions when one hears that the things
one has been brought up to believe as true are being very
favourably
spoken of by Buriats and Samoyeds and Kanakas."
The Rev. Poltimore Vardon had once seen a
resemblance in himself to
Voltaire, and had lived
alongside the
comparison ever since.
"No modern cult or fashion," he continued, "would be favourably
influenced by considerations based on
statistics; fancy adopting a
certain style of hat or cut of coat, because it was being largely
worn in Lancashire and the Midlands; fancy favouring a certain
brand of
champagne because it was being
extensively patronised in
German summer resorts. No wonder that religion is falling into
disuse in this country under such ill-directed methods."
"You can't prevent the
heathen being converted if they choose to
be," said Lady Caroline; "this is an age of toleration."
"You could always deny it," said the Rev. Poltimore, "like the
Belgians do with regrettable occurrences in the Congo. But I would
go further than that. I would
stimulate the waning
enthusiasm for
Christianity in this country by labelling it as the
exclusivepossession of a
privileged few. If one could induce the Duchess of
Pelm, for
instance, to
assert that the Kingdom of Heaven, as far as
the British Isles are
concerned, is
strictlylimited to herself,
two of the under-gardeners at Pelmby, and, possibly, but not
certainly, the Dean of Dunster, there would be an
instant reshaping
of the popular attitude towards religious convictions and
observances. Once let the idea get about that the Christian Church
is rather more
exclusive than the Lawn at Ascot, and you would have
a quickening of religious life such as this
generation has never
witnessed. But as long as the
clergy and the religious
organisations
advertise their creed on the lines of 'Everybody
ought to believe in us: millions do,' one can expect nothing but
indifference and waning faith."
"Time is just as
exclusive in its way as Art," said Lady Caroline.
"In what way?" said the Reverend Poltimore.
"Your pleasantries about religion would have sounded quite clever
and
advanced in the early 'nineties. To-day they have a dreadfully
warmed-up flavour. That is the great
delusion of you would-be
advanced satirists; you imagine you can sit down
comfortably for a
couple of decades
sayingdaring and
startling things about the age
you live in, which,
whatever other defects it may have, is
certainly not
standing still. The whole of the Sherard Blaw school
of discursive drama suggests, to my mind, Early Victorian furniture