Instant Lives
Instant Lives
Instant Lives
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HOWARD MOSS
Drawings by Edward Gorey
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PUBLIC
LIBRARY
INSTANT
LIVES
Books by Howard Moss
Poems
Selected Poems 1971
Second Nature 1968
Finding Them Lost 1965
Criticism
Satire
New York
SATURDAY REVIEW PRESS / E. P. BUTTON & CO., INC.
Portions of this book first appeared in Saturday Review I
The Arts (1972-1973), Antaeus (1974), and Vogue (1974).
10 987654321
No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form
or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording,
or any information storage and retrieval system now known or to be in-
vented, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a
reviewer who wishes to quote brief passages in connection with a review
written for inclusion in a magazine, newspaper or broadcast.
I. Title.
PZ4.M9134In [PS3525.08638] 813'.5'4 73-18495
JANE AUSTEN 4 /
THE BRONTES H
VITTORE CARPACCIO 14
FREDERIC CHOPIN 16
CLAUDE DEBUSSY 19
JOHN DONNE 24
SERGEI EISENSTEIN 26
PAUL GAUGUIN 31
EL GRECO 33
ALDOUS HUXLEY 36
HENRIK IBSEN 39
HENRY JAMES 41
JAMES JOYCE 43
ZOLTAN KODALY 45
T. E. LAWRENCE 47
FRANZ LISZT 49
GUSTAV MAHLER 51
SOMERSET MAUGHAM 53
ANNA PAVLOVA 58
MARCEL PROUST 61
CAMILLE SAINT-SAENS 64
SAPPHO 66
GERTRUDE STEIN 75
OSCAR WILDE 82
As the World is sifted into Time's Archives,
And the Bee reduceth Honey in his Hives,
1
with her cooking ability and school-o£-hard-knocks
brilliance. Only Louisa among them had been edu-
cated. In fact, none of the other girls could read or
write, though they were, in an amateur, outdated way,
tremendous talkers. Lupe, inexplicably, spoke nothing
but a Spanish demotic at best.
4
up," said Jane, tossing aside a galley of Sense and Sensi-
bility. Outside, it was 1811.
"Another clever novel. Miss?" asked Malaprop. She
eyed the dowdy pastries with a sickened eye. How
could they?
"Cleverer by far than cook," said Jane, with asperity.
She detested pastry, even when it was first rate, an en-
comium that could hardly be applied to the rnille
feuilles whose layers sagged one against the other, like
say, and then bit her lip. "Not that I'm complaining,"
she added. "I'm in no position to complain."
"You have gauged your position precisely," Jane re-
plied to her sister. "Though the accuracy of your as-
"A quartet?"
Silence again.
"A few German dances?"
Though it hurt Beethoven more than it did Karl,
the composer's lips remained sealed.
"A teensy bagatelle?"
The boy looked so crestfallen that Beethoven finally
gave in.
10
THE BRONTES
The moon-sulphured lightning zigzagged across the
moors. The weather spoke aloud— snare drum and
kettle. It was the worst storm in Yorkshire's history.
Charlotte sat in the schoolroom staring out the window,
as if to be stamped by the landscape like a brand.
Emily had just come down, afloat as from shipwreck.
Total immersion. She had been working on "some-
thing"— zi;/z a ^^ Charlotte refused to ask. Might one con-
sider Anne's lack of appearance an abeyance?
"He's imbibing again," Charlotte said. She bore the
equine traces of spinsterhood with equanimity.
11
'It's the weather," Emily countered. "He really
doesn't have enough to do."
"Do?" Charlotte was scornful. "What about the
wainscoting? And the roof? And the drains?"
Emily paled. Anne entered the room with the ele-
gance of a squatter.
"Hello," she said, lying down on the floor. "There's
a leak in the drawing room."
''Don't be eccentric," Charlotte admonished.
"Is being comfortable eccentric?" Anne asked. "Is
being happy?" She burst into tears and rushed from
the room.
"Her devotional verses are going to her head," Char-
lotte said.
12
A flash of lightning revealed a figure swaying in the
doorway. It was Branwell, intoxicated, menacing . . .
13
FITTORE CJRPACCIO
"There are so few places that know how to serve a
really delicious egg tempera," Mrs. Bronzino said, put-
14
asked nervously as soon as Mrs. Bronzino was out of
the room.
"Caravaggio? Here? On the same night as . .
."
15
FREDERIC CHOPIN
The Majorcan afternoon, streaked like a tomato tulip,
enveloped the island in a beneficent blaze. Each
stunted tree seemed to thrust itself up with a pert
starchness, and the sea, glinting irremediably in the
distance, added a touch of the mysterious to what was
already a mystery. Would the "Prelude" ever come
right? Chopin thought, his fingers idly straying across
16
standing there looking down at him, the whole force
of her figure concentrated in one galvanizing full-
length portrait.
"Why don't you cough more, Frederic," she said.
"Then I could stay up the whole night." Slowly she
descended the stairs. He stared at her.
''Again? You're going to be like this againV
"I don't know what you're talking about," she re-
plied. "Dolcilita has prepared breakfast?" Her Spanish,
he noted with envy, was improving. It was still light-
17
was drowned out by a louder sound. Someone was in-
18
CLAUDE DEBUSSY
The rowboat tilted again, and he slid past the gun-
wales, almost unconscious, the score still tightly
19
bilges working? Dimly, he could see, scrawled on top
of the manuscript score, a few words above the notes.
De Vauhe a midi sur mer (From dawn until midday
on the sea). Or was it movement, Jeux des
the second
vagues (Play of the waves)? The score danced before
his eyes. He closed them. The boat was lifted by a
wave. He was going to be sick again.
How he longed to be back working on Prelude a
Vapres-midi d'un faune! Then he had simply lived
among the goats in the backhills of Sicily for a month,
his flute never far from his mouth, his foot never far
from his flute. He had allowed the Italian summer heat
to penetrate to his very bones— the sensuality of those
sun-drenched months, dimly felt even now, caused a
feeble smile to cross his overly sensitive lips. His beard I
was embrume with salt. The whole project was a mis-
take. He was beginning to hate the sea. "I hate it," he
said, "l really hate it."
20
EMILY DICKINSON
As the twilight gathered around her, Emily sat at the
town, wrought up, here and there, into gables. Like its
21
She took a sip of dandelion wine from the fluted
Waterford goblet on the windowsill. Across the way,
the Reverend Hodgson was raising his hat. She bowed
slightly, her lace shawl shirred about her birdlike
shoulders— spinster but also ruthless businesswoman, as
the sailors sweating off the Rhode Island coast knew all
too well. At this very moment, they were pumping
barrel after barrel full of witch hazel distilled from
her secret formula. She had swallowed the ''recipe" at
22
The original was better: 'I taste a hazel never
brewed/ In barrels scooped in brine . .
." Or was it
I "stewed in brine"? She looked down at the paper. The
crucial verb was the one word she hadn't written down!
The signal! She was forgetting the signal!
23
JOHN DONNE
If you would do what John Donne did,
You merge the Clergy with the Id.
The jeu d' esprit of the lines— one need hardly men-
tion their metrical buoyancy— ttWs us much about what
the future Dean of St. Paul's was thinking as a cavalier
24
young man. They combine deeply felt religiosity,
humor, and outspoken sensuality. If we look more
closely at the couplet, we see still another strain: a
cabalistic exploration of syntax, daring yet magnificent
in its reverberations, for the verb "do," with its pri-
25
SERGEI EISENSTEIN
One more heavy lunch at the Winter Palace, and he
thought he'd go mad. But there was Klotz-Vronsky to
26
She lifted the samovar. Teapot or weapon? He was
never sure. Too old to be a soubrette, she was not too
old to do a little character acting for the OGPU.
"Enchante, Nadya," he heard himself saying. "You
look as good as ever." He was determined not to lie.
27
ciples had placed there, the night before, under the
cover of darkness.
She bent down. In an instant, the fihn was in his
28
uliLil \'A •' ..11 I-..
',
29
*Tou were saying?" he asked.
She looked athim with the aristocratic hauteur of
the innocent. Was she innocent? Or was she the servant
of a degeneracy so deep that its carrier was unaware of
the disease that formed her very substance?
"Nothing, really," she murmured. The brim of her
hat cast a pencil-line of shadow across the fine grillwork
of the railing. The smell of fresh water, of the spring
river struggling to give forth its scent, suddenly assailed
his nostrils. She was lovely. Of that there could be no
doubt.
"Nothing at all?" he pursued. His uniform seemed
to him stale and officious. It seemed to her pale and
unpropitious.
"Oh, I suppose it's a matter of viewpoint," she
countered, ambiguously.
"The war, you know. It's done something to all of
us." His face was serious.
She looked at him in surprise. "What war?" she
asked.
"You don't mean . . ."he began, astonished.
"You're trying to frighten me," she went on. "Just
because ..."
"Just because . . . what?"
"I don't know," she responded.
"But my uniform. Surely . .
."
their positions.
"Oh, Ford, really!'' And she stamped her well-shod
foot against the brick of the causeway. Back in the
30
PAUL GAUGUIN
In spite of his increasing insanity, he still made a good
husband, Sheila thought, as she raised the blind over-
looking the abattoir. And after all, how many times
did a girl like her marry a stockbroker like him? She
came from a small Danish farm whereas he came from
a big French city. He was highly sophisticated as well
31
really. Quick tears came to Sheila's eyes, tiny as they
were. "Oh, I'm being a sentimental fool," she mused.
"I'm always way before I have my Pernod."
this
32
EL GRECO
''Why not make a virtue out of a defect, El?" the kindly
33
the irises so that El Greco saw every object in the world
attenuated to the point of emaciation. It was as if some
abstract giant had pulled the taffy of reality out as far
34
In Spain, the Church and the State are one. The
authorities wanted El Greco's paintings— they were
their chief weapon in the long battle they were waging
against the secularization of art (el segulizionariola del
arte)— hut they insisted that Inez must go.
El Greco and the authorities clashed.
Six months later, Inez became the tiniest nun in
Spain.
35
ALDOUS HUXLEY
Penelope left a mark on St. Gaudin's that might more
accurately be described as a scar. Derision, coldness, the
absolute disdain of second-year goddesses, bespectacled
or Vampire, made not the slightest. Under her hands,
a mediocre hockey team became a dazzling instrument
of personal power; the Coffee Club, all Kensington
starch when she arrived, vibrated with Brazilian pro-
tein at the end— one could almost smell the beans. She
was energy incarnate. It was all the more amazing in
view of her appearance. Not a clue. She looked, actu-
ally, as if she were about to be ravished by an interior
decorator. The shoe was on the other foot. And what
36
freshgirlhad ever before fallen desperately in love
with the most famous taxidermist of his time? How
many mornings she had dawdled in front of his shop,
Delia, her best friend, in tow! There Tony was, clear
as a picture, ravishing as one, standing at work in his
window. Never a nod for them. Had she fallen merely
for window dressing? Or should one, in this case, say
"stuffing"? That he did his extraordinary work in Barn-
stable-on-Weir instead of London only added to his
inaccessibility.
out of her chair onto his. ''So sorry!" They stayed not
at Barnstable's little inn but raced out in his Lancia
to the shore.The Credenza Arms happily accommo-
dated them. The Credenza Arms was all accommoda-
tion. "Happy?" Tony asked, looking down at her peach
37
They had it out in his flat where she accused him of
running a "waxworks"— a fatal mistake. To call his
38
HENRIK IBSEN
A spasmodic of prefilthied snow plummeted past the
window. The frozen diamonded by
fishnet of Oslo,
39
Wherever she hoped she was suffering hor-
was, he
ribly, suffering the w^ay she had made half of Oslo
suffer. What a fool he had been to write A Dolls
House! It had only given her an excuse to walk out
on him!)
He thought of topics, but they slipped from his mind
almost as soon as they formulated themselves. Bear-
baiting? No, no, that was in another country, and be-
sides, the bear . . . Alcoholism? He reached for the
beer that, it seemed, had become his one solace. It was
5:00 A.M. and he'd already gone through eight cases!
The misuse of lumber? The smuggling in of wigs? If
40
HENRY JAMES
He took a dim view, if, indeed, a view, in all conscious-
ness, could be considered one, when the very act of its
41
worship, neither as communicant nor convert, to act,
42
JAMES JOYCE
Being a broth of a poi, cod-lei but Chile, to whom
Doubloom seized to half charm, eggs isle seemed puf-
ferable. He Christ the Iris zei, he crossed the Ingres
flannel and maid his weigh a broad. Zoo rich! Elps!
EEEEEEEEEEk! Them Swiss miss misses me. Watch
out, Montaignes, and them Edel (Weiss) Leon? Ted?
Price? Ah, my Tyne is come, said the looney.
—Been around. Fin a Goon? the sty shun Master
asked.
—Oops und din, neary and farry, dune and ma-
rooned, the sly fix respun did.
Thar she wuz, his foot your beride! Dumb in a
comb, she cum in a dream, Yanna! Plura see, plura
bull, pal a Sade, plura Belle! His Rhine stone, his dime
monde, his night mer!
He halteringly two-tempt to smote in smell talk.
—How river, Larry? Diego Rivera? Miss Issippi?
—Hud, son, she swimmingly stood. Ah, sea side.
Smelt auk?
—Small talc, he ably Ripe Post Ed.
We drawers the curt Teen ova the seen. Suffers to
say, soon they wuz sloping to bedden, slopping to bide
in, inseys and outseys, Adams and Eves. And sometimes
a mat in the nay. He Shake-speared. She marsh-Mar-
lowed. They Ben to the Jon, son. He stang in his path:
Can't Elbe Liffey dat Mann of mien.
—Z larffed, Bayou bist mir Seine. Bra bra! Throw
another wreck-word on the Vico.
Minus the slightest idea of a didie, they doe mess
tick, night Afton nit apres nought, lunch on, dindin,
43
cafe, lay. Heaven a Bull? A food dime was Hades by
hell.
44
ZOL TAN KODAL Y
Zoltan Kodaly manifested his musical ability at an early
age by singing and humming. Often his fingers would
run back and forth across an imaginary keyboard.
"What is Zoltan doing with his hands?" the peasants
would ask. The mystery was soon cleared up when a
piano was brought from a neighboring town and
Zoltan whisked through a few early Haydn sonatas he
had been secretly studying in the barn. He was shunted
from one conservatory to another and finally sent to
45
Russia, where he studied ''Chords" in St. Petersburg
and **Tunes" in Moscow. A short course in "Oriental
Chimes" at a remote outpost in Siberia completed his
musical education.
His middle period is characterized by exquisite folk
songs popular both with the layman and the musical
connoisseur— songs such as Peas in Your Bonnet,Why
Does the May Qiieen Beat Her Ward? and Home
Lights, perhaps the most famous of all. (After its first
46
T. E. LAWRENCE
Because his mother had been humiliated at a Council
Meeting, Lawrence suffered a life of emotional de-
privation. Its symptoms were many and frequent:
inane fitfulness, a disquieting habit of kneeling at pig
fairs, and a tendency to disrobe in the face of authority.
Thought of as "daft" by his peer group, he was forced
to change schools. Yet even at Oxford, an outsider im-
pelled toward farther and farther perimeters, he found
it difficult to make more reason to
friends. All the
wonder at the towering achievement of Omar, that
miraculous distillation of the East, not yet available to
the general reader, which I have had the privilege of
fingering in the cafeteria of the British Museum. I
47
found it a work deeply intolerable and without the
sweep of his epic study of Bedouin life, Land, Sand,
Soil, and Oil. The intervening years spent overlooking
a coke pit have never been sufficiently chronicled, but
now, due to the deaths of Pastor Fielding and his wife,
48
FRANZ LISZT
''Please, Marie!" Franz shook his locks in anger. Didn't
she realize that, sitting on the keyboard, she made ar-
peggios impossible? This was not the first time she had
interfered with his work. "Off, off," Liszt cried.
"You sound like a dog," Marie countered. "All work
and no play ."
. .
around.
That afternoon, over a double consomme soggy with
disunion, Liszt asked, "Where's Cosima?"
Marie's brow darkened. "Where indeed! One min-
49
ute she's with von Biilow, the next with Wagner ..."
"I told you not to mention that man's ..."
"All right, all right. You asked." Marie got up from
the table. She was heavy with child again. Where will
it end? Liszt asked himself, preparing for another
whirlwind tour of the musical centers of Europe: Lan-
nion, Vaasa, and Bruges. Getting the piano up on the
horses was not the least of his difficulties. At Liszt's
approach, the horses would pretend to be musical and
stamped out tunes with their hooves. And then, he was
fussy about clothes. Should he take the black? The
blue? Marie was very little help despite her liberal
views.
Later, as kapellmeister at Weimar, he began his
liaison with Princess Carolyne von Sayn-Wittgenstein.
"Sayn," he said one day. "What do you think of
this?"
And hers were the first ears ever to hear the jellylike
strains of the Liehestraum.
Another frantic tour of the minor spas of Hungary,
marked everywhere by screaming teenage Hungarian
girls attempting to overturn his barouche, made Liszt
think of retirement.
"Shall I?" he asked a talented pianist he was tutor-
ing. ''Que penses-tu, Dierdre?"
"Dunno," Dierdre mumbled, going back to her
Czerny without a pause. It was difficult since she was
sitting on the keyboard and could hardly sight-read at
best.
50
GUSTAV MAHLER
(For Luchino Visconti)
51
unborn whose score made demands on the chorus
never dreamed of before in the history of music. Why
not a symphony, finally, with all the Italian boys in the
world drafted to sing its intricate canons?
He met Flaglio's insistent eyes in the train window
again. They were deepset, olive, almond-shaped, and
filmed— perhaps because of the long hours Flaglio spent
on his manuscript of Polish prayers and petitions. The
translation was to be published, he dreamed, under the
title of Prayers and Petitions from the Polish. And set
52
SOMERSET MAUGHAM
In Benares, one can distinguish the Mandarin from
the maverick by a simple test. After the rain stops and
the heat hangs heavy, the children come by with a
drink called jahda, which they sell for a tuppence or
two. Made of papaya and mint, it seems irresistibly
53
hghtning
love was streaked with
and. consequently, her
of loathing. At the
next table, MiUKent no-
flashes
gentleman was writing furiously.
"Who s that?
ticed a
Fitzroy glanced over casually.
she queried Fitzroy.
the scrxbbler. Caii
-Oh him. It's Willie Maugham,
writing stones?" He snorted
you 'imagine a grown man
in disgust. "Did you
bid?"
for the first time.
Millicent repeated herself-not
coldly. He was
"Two of hearts," Fitzroy responded
Cairo and
known as the best bridge player between
not,
Khartoum, an area which did ""f^^^^^^'fy'/".
Mary, a fey petite blonde, had
clude India. His wife,
spring before after
consuming a forwarded
died the
Club. Fitzroy
selectionfrom the Fruit-of-the-Month
his concubine,
Teneeta
had been inconsolable, though
in the little cabin
he had
Wine Slob, still lived
the
edge of his property.
Some said
erected for her at the
placed a curse on Mary
Fitzroy;
that Teneeta had
poisoning.
died from monsoon
others that Mary had
of the Col-
Madeline Cumberland, the social arbiter
asides, "Sex is to Mary
ony had said in one of her witty
If Fitzroy had
FitLy thermos bottle is to ice."
as the
killed her with one
blow of
heard her, he would have up^
which little red hairs sprang
his huge hands, from
drinking herself to de^th
MadelLe Cumberland was KCB
Reginald Cumberland^
because her favorite son,
hike^
Shintoism on an overnight
had been converted to
said lamely, as tea
was announced
'1 pass," Millicent
that served as a cardroom.
Who
in the fan-cooled loggia
months later, she would
would have guessed that, six center
jahda detoxification
stumble across Fitzroy at a
just outside New Delhi?
54
I
55
made the musicologist's task any the less formidable!)
The boy was exhausted. It had been one schloss after
another.
Leopold, his father, said, "Wolfgang, what is the
matter with you?"
'1 can't reach the keys when I sit down," Wolfgang
replied.
"Is that all!" Leopold sighed with relief. "Terma-
gant!"— he addressed their manager— "either lower the
stool or cut off the legs of the instrument."
Termagant protested. "It's a glass piano."
"I can't,"
Many Sacher tortes had been consumed the evening
before in honor of the Emperor's name day. It was 9:00
A.M. and half of Vienna was still asleep. What peltings
with cake there had been! What drag races through the
Vienna woods! In their attempt to wake each other up,
the Viennese had committed the ultimate atrocity:
they had allowed commerce to grind to a halt. A drizzle
had settled over the city, ruining who knows what
quantities of pastry! Mozart gazed silently into space
for amoment, and then, standing up, launched into the
haunting melody that begins the andante movement
of the Seventh Piano Concerto (K. 395). It was to have
its premiere that night. At the end of the rehearsal,
the entire orchestra got up and applauded Mozart to
the man, except for the harpist, a transsexual.
At the evening performance. Emperor Albert him-
self occupied the State Box. With him was the infa-
56
you've done it again!" In tears, he handed Wolfgang a
check for 3,000 groschen.
3,000 groschen for the Seventh Piano Concerto when
Mozart had expected 5,000 florins! He was desperately
short of cash. He had secretly entered Vienna's Annual
Baking Contest (Toddler's Division) and had spent a
fortune on imported mocha. He was about to protest,
but the press of his admirers separated him from the
Emperor.
Leopold came to the rescue. ''Could you double it.
57
ANNA PAVLOVA
Seeing her inimitable Swan, few would imagine the
grisly sight of her backstage, after the performance,
tearing huge hunks of steak from the bone as she de-
voured the hand-picked sirloins with a cry. Washed
down by assistants, she nimbly danced out again for
yet another curtain call. St. Petersburg could never get
enough of her. All diamond-hard delicacy, all feathery
tension on stage, she was like a wild cannibal off. Such
are the paradoxes of metabolism. To Vladimir, the
stage manager, her inconsistency, her changeability
58
only made his passion for her the more intense. "Eat,
eat/' he would say, in Russian, while he fed her the
almost-raw steak. And she would look at him coldly
with a cross, icy detachment, as if he did not exist. She
had made the mistake of letting him "take" her after
an overexcited performance of Giselle, and they had
begun one of those do-or-die physical attachments-
recoil and temptation on her part, slavishness fraught
with violence on his— that do not bode well. A provin-
cial too swiftly plunged into the decadence of St.
jewelbox.
There was a knock on the door. "Another telegram
59
from Diaghilev, Great One." It was Masha, who knew
Pavlova too well to take offense at her insults.
60
MARCEL PROUST
Paris threatened to become as parched as overburned
toast, promised with its aromas of charcoal, the broiling
pit, and the quotidian oven, the worst heatwave in its
61
he resembled somewhat a mummy prepared for a
sarcophagus, a mummy, however, sitting straight up,
the leather gloves tightly fitting over the cashmere
gloves beneath and those over the custom-made cotton
ones below, Egyptian cotton being the only fabric he
could tolerate, now, next to his hands for reasons that
still proved mysterious to his doctors, while remaining
imperviously non-allergenic to wool, the most common
epidermal allergic substance of all, he found himself
shivering and albeit he had had the surrounding coun-
tryside cleared for a quarter of a mile in every direc-
tion, not a flower, bush, vine, tree, or weed remained
standing, each single representative of greenery or
blossom having been meticulously uprooted before
he'd even considered stepping out of the apartment at
44 rue Hamelin, he sniffed, ominously, the faintest
trace of scent on the air— pollen? it was unmistakably
pollen— after he'd gone to all that trouble, his servants
poking about in parks and alleyways, the rough, good-
natured waiters of the cafe, the finest peasant types
France had to offer, rushing hither and yon in their
colorful, striped waistcoats to rip up yet another re-
calcitrant petunia, another reluctant privet, a pine
tree, coy with refusal and heavy with dirt, having
added more than its share to the dusty scene, so he had
been told, for, of course, the uprooting had taken
place three days ago, time enough indeed, in the ordi-
nary run of things, to have given the dust time to settle,
62
and the flushed, nevertheless a certain ambiguity
clouded the issue not only because Celeste had perhaps
wound the scarves just a bit too tight this time, but
because Alfredteen's cruel, yet delicate, androgynous
eyes, so reminiscent of the deepest ponds of Normandy,
glimpsed as they now were across the black sea of the
cafe table, the firm peninsula of the jaw undercutting
the suggestion of velvet faintly lining the upper lip,
the skin of a beauty rivaled only by the camelia, dam-
ask not being line enough, nor even the hothouse
peach, might have had something to do with it.
63
CAMILLE SJINT-SJENS
It wasn't easy, putting all the bones together, but
Camille, obsessed by his masterpiece, Danse Macabre,
knew that unless he could find a fibula by the weekend,
the score would not be finished in time for the concert
at the Palais Royale. And here was another femur!
That's all there seemed to be— femurs!
"What's happening to the French cadaver, Loti?" he
asked his friend. Loti, who had a degree in skeletonol-
ogy, had done most of the digging.
"Like everything," Loti replied, "the quality goes
down." And he quoted a popular poem of the day,
"Tout que vaj Va Id-has."
"I mean it, all right," Loti said. "All these years, tag-
ging along after you, listening to what a great man you
are. 'Camille is a genius,' " he mocked. "Well, that's
64
long enough, Camille. I want to be minor in my own
right."
And they would have come to blows if the Franco-
Prussian War hadn't started at precisely that moment.
A portable radio on a passing horse conveyed the ter-
65
SAPPHO
She had the day off, the whole day, and, with a sigh,
she rose from the bed, consented, in a way, though
what, she asked herself, was contentment, really, when
so much of what she had once taken for granted
seemed, now, fragmentary, illusive, disjunctive? The
blue Aegean made a slight purring noise against the
white rocks. The blue of the sky was a sharper blue, as
67
AUGUSTIN EUGENE SCRIBE
(A recently discovered notebook makes it clear that, at
the time of his death, Scribe was working on a com-
pletely new form of drama— the one- or two-line play.
Several examples are offered below. They have been
translated by the compiler. WARNING: These plays
are fully protected by copyright law and permission
and fees must be granted and assigned for their per-
formance.) ^
68
COUNTDOWN FOR RENEE
A furnished apartment in the
Bastille.
Renee Auberjon
Robespierre has been treating me shamefully.
Gloria
How awful for you, Renee.
(Curtain)
# # # #
RODRIGO
Here, you are happy, Alice?
Alice
Happy? In Spain? With you?
(Curtain)
# # # #
69
ARISTOCRATIC HEIRS
A salon outside Nice. On ball-
Talleyrand
(Leaning forward) And then?
(Curtain)
# # # #
DESERT APPRENTICES
Outside a pancake house in
Syria.
First Traveler
How would you like a Syrian pancake?
Second Traveler
You can't be serious?
(Curtain)
^ 'tF 'fF w
70
METHYLATED SPIRITS
A hospital corridor in Costa
Rica.
Nurse
You are no longer sterile, Dr. Conchito.
Dr. Conchito
It is a great day for Costa Rica, my friend.
(Curtain)
* # # #
71
Y
MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT
SHELLE
"Still asleep, Percy Bysshe?" she asked softly. The bed-
room held the light from the hills; dawn was rising
rapidly. Her candle dripped a bit of wax onto his mag-
nificent hair, but the slow suspiration of his breath-
musical and cadenced, as if, even asleep, he were com-
posing a poem— made her heart stir. But she had work
to do, work she could not let even him know of. For
72
had forbidden anyone to come near it, pretending that
she was repairing her "dolls," and in a funny way— she
laughed— she was.
Outside, it was cold. Stone-castle cold, she said to
herself, taking the broad steps quickly, until she
reached the top of the north tower. There he was,
standing in the doorway, an extension cord wrapped
around his left ankle. Behind him, the tubes bubbled
and the electrodes spit their bluish sparks.
luff . . . ooo . .
."
78
she had stretched above the few bits of whalebone she
had been able to purloin.
*Te . ess wor
. . . . . . . . war . . . auk."
Where could they go? she wondered. There was a
pounding at the door. My God! Could it be Percy
Bysshe? If he found out she'd been "experimenting"
again, would kill him.
it
74
GER TR UDE STEIN
Humming Satie's latest while she dressed, she became
a little misty-eyed when she thought over the guest list.
76
tween them. And though the rest of the evening was a
typical, brilliant salon-type affair for which the house
had become notorious (marred only by the Cone girls'
77
PETER ILICH TCHAIKOVSKY
Another note from Madame von Meek: 'Tetroosha: I
was watching you through the binoculars and your
green tie has a stain on it. Also, you were leaning very
close to Marina Pavlovna Schoulbetsky in the carriage.
Why were you out at all? You wrote me you were work-
ing on your symphony. Is that the way you work on
your symphony? This month I send 1,000 roubles in-
78
Black Sea bonelessness and Crimea mincings. Later,
sitting at the piano, he banged out the theme from the
Second Piano Concerto. He was upset. Life was sad,
sad, sad. But was it not an old axiom that the artist
must suffer?
79
JAN VAN EYCK
"Where's the lamb? And the adorers?" Van Eyck
angrily asked.
The burgher, a clairvoyant, was flustered.
"Well, you see, it's this way . . . Van Dyck . .
."
"Eyck."
"I mean Jan . .
."
the parquetry.
"There are no lambs to be had for love nor money,"
the burgher muttered.
''Or money," Van Eyck corrected him. He detested
the incorrect usage of "nor."
"And the adorers?" he went on.
"They say a demon is at work. And they well, . . .
80
"Well, could you get me something in its place? The
lamb, I mean," the painter continued.
"Such as, sir?"
81
OSCAR WILDE
**Bon mots, among intimates, are the cablegrams of the
desert," Oscar said, his finger still firmly on the pulse
of the epigram. Bosie was being retrograde and piggish.
He hadn't the faintest notion of the hideous conflict
that seethed in his friend's breast. Oscar had secretly
finished the first act of The Importance of Being Ear-
nest that very afternoon and was torn with doubt. Cu-
cumber sandwiches? Watercress sandwiches? The whole
scenewould stand or fall on his ultimate decision. The
82
two of them were holed up at the Cadogan, their secret
summer retreat. Who would think of looking for them
in London? In August?
Alfred Lord Douglas's handsome profile was sil-
houetted against the window. Behind him, a judicious
square of lime, Sloane Park, gave off its summerlike
perfume, a mixture of coal dust and acacia.
"This bag," Bosie said. He so much preferred the
Connaught.
"Hotels are the greenhouses of the dead," Oscar said,
sipping a Scotch and soda. "Another, Bosie?" There
must be no crise tonight.
83
"Andre," Oscar returned. "The most interesting
new noveliston the Continent. If you'd only read, in-
84
1
f
HOWARD MOSS is poctry editor of The New Yorker. He
is the author of several volumes of poetry and of criti-
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