1
I had taken Mrs Prest into my
confidence; without her in truth I should have made but little advance, for the
fruitful idea in the whole business dropped from her friendly lips. It was she who found the short cut and loosed
the Gordian knot. It is not supposed
easy for women to rise to the large free view of anything, anything to be done;
but they sometimes throw off a bold conception - such as a man wouldn't have
risen to - with singular serenity.
'Simply make them take you in on the footing of a lodger' - I don't
think that unaided I should have risen to that.
I was beating about the bush, trying to be ingenious, wondering by what
combination of arts I might become an acquaintance, when she offered this happy
suggestion that they way to become an acquaintance was first to become an
intimate. Her actual knowledge of the
Misses Bordereau was scarcely larger than mine, and indeed I had brought with
me from
Mrs Prest knew nothing about the papers, but was interested in
my curiosity, as always in the joys and sorrows of her friends. As we went, however, in her gondola, gliding
there under the sociable hood with the bright Venetian picture framed on either
side by the movable window, I saw how my eagerness amused her and that she
found my interest in my possible spoil a fine case of monomania. 'One would think you expected from it the
answer to the riddle of the universe,' she said; and I denied the impeachment
only by replying that if I had to choose between that precious solution and a
bundle of Jeffery Aspern's letters I knew indeed
which would appear to me the greater boon.
She pretended to make light of his genius and I took no pains to defend
him. One doesn't defend one's god: one's
god is in himself a defence. Besides,
today, after his long comparative obscuration, he hangs high in the heaven of
our literature for all the world to see; he's a part
of the light by which we walk. The most
I said was that he was no doubt not a woman's poet; to which she rejoined aptly
enough that he had been at least Miss Bordereau's. The strange thing had been for me to discover
in
The niece,
according to Mrs Prest, was of minor antiquity, and
the conjecture was risked that she was only a grandniece. This was possible: I had nothing but my share
in the very limited knowledge of my English fellow-worshipper John Cumnor, who had never seen the couple. The world, as I say, has recognised Jeffery Aspern, but Cumnor and I had
recognised him most. The multitude today
flocked to his temple, but of that temple he and I regarded ourselves
as the appointed ministers. We held,
justly as I think, that we had done more for his memory than anyone else, and
had done it simply by opening lights into his life. He had nothing to fear from us because he had
nothing to fear from the truth, which alone at such a distance of time we could
be interested in establishing. His early
death had been the only dark spot, as it were, on his fame, unless the papers
in Miss Bordereau's hands should perversely bring out others. There had been an impression about 1825 that
he had 'treated her badly', just as there had been an impression that he had
'served', as the London populace says, several other ladies in the same
masterful way. Each of these cases Cumnor and I had been able to investigate, and we never
failed to acquit him conscientiously of any grossness. I judged him perhaps more indulgently than my
friend; certainly, at any rate, it appeared to me that no man could have walked
straighter in the given circumstances.
These had been almost always difficult and dangerous. Half the women of his time, to speak
liberally, had flung themselves at his head, and while the fury raged - the
more that it was very catching - accidents, some of them grave, had not failed
to occur. He was not a woman's poet, as
I had said to Mrs Prest, in the modern phase of his
reputation; but the situation had been different when the man's own voice was
mingled with his song. That voice, by
every testimony, was one of the most charming ever heard. 'Orpheus and the Mænads!’
had been of course my foreseen judgement when first I turned over his
correspondence. Almost all the Mænads were unreasonable and many of them unbearable; it
struck me that he had been kinder and more considerate than in his place - if I
could imagine myself in any such box - I should have found the trick of.
It was
certainly strange beyond all strangeness, and I shall not take up space with
attempting to explain it, that whereas among all these other relations and in
these other directions of research we had to deal with phantoms and dust, the
mere echoes of echoes, the one living source of information that had lingered
on into our time had been unheeded by us.
Every one of Aspern's contemporaries had,
according to our belief, passed away; we had not been able to look into a
single pair of eyes into which he had looked or to feel a transmitted contact
in any aged hand that his had touched.
Most dead of all did poor Miss Bordereau appear, and yet she alone had
survived. We exhausted in the course of
months our wonder that we had not found her out sooner, and the substance of
our explanation was that she had kept so quiet.
The poor lady on the whole had had reason for doing so. But it was a revelation to us that
self-effacement on such a scale had been possible in the latter half of the
nineteenth century - the age of newspapers and telegrams and photographs and
interviewers. She had taken no great
trouble for it either - hadn't hidden herself away in an undiscoverable hole,
had boldly settled down in a city of exhibition. The one apparent secret of her safety had
been that
The gondola
stopped, the old palace was there; it was a house of the class which in
I forget
what answer I made to this - I was given up to two other reflections. The first of these was that if the old lady
lived in such a big and imposing house she couldn't be in any sort of misery
and therefore wouldn't be tempted by a chance to let a couple of rooms. I expressed this fear to Mrs Prest, who gave me a very straight answer. 'If she didn't live in a big house how could
it be a question of her having rooms to spare?
If she were not amply lodged you'd lack ground to approach her. Besides, a big house here, and especially in
this quartier perdu,
proves nothing at all: it's perfectly consistent with a state of penury. Dilapidated old palazzi,
if you'll go out of the way for them, are to be had for five shillings a
year. And as for the people who live in
them - no, until you've explored
I sat
looking out on all this with Mrs Prest (it was covered
with the golden glow of
'Dearest lady,'
I exclaimed, 'excuse the impatience of my tone when I suggest that you must
have forgotten the very fact - surely I communicated it to you - which threw me
on your ingenuity. The old woman won't
have her relics and tokens so much as spoken of; they're personal, delicate,
intimate, and she hasn't the feelings of the day, God bless her! If I should sound that note first I should
certainly spoil the game. I can arrive
at my spoils only by putting her off her guard, and I can put her off her guard
only by ingratiating diplomatic arts.
Hypocrisy, duplicity are my only chance.
I'm sorry for it, but there's no baseness I wouldn't commit for Jeffery Aspern's sake. First
I must take tea with her - then tackle the main job.' And I told over what had happened to John Cumnor on his respectfully writing to her. No notice whatever had been taken of his
first letter, and the second had been answered very sharply, in six lines, by
the niece. 'Miss Bordereau requested her
to say that she couldn't imagine what he meant by troubling them. They had none of Mr Aspern's
"literary remains", and if they had had wouldn't have dreamed
of showing them to anyone on any account whatever. She couldn't imagine what he was talking
about and begged he would let her alone.'
I certainly didn't want to be met that way.
'Well,'
said Mrs Prest after a moment and all provokingly,
'perhaps they really haven't anything.
If they deny it flat how are you sure?'
'John Cumnor's sure, and it would take me long to tell you how
his conviction, or his very strong presumption - strong enough to stand against
the old lady's not unnatural fib - has built itself up. Besides, he makes much of the internal
evidence of the niece's letter.'
'The internal evidence?'
'Her calling him "Mr Aspern".'
'I don't
see what that proves.'
'It proves
familiarity, and familiarity implies the possession of mementoes, of tangible
objects. I can't tell you how that
"Mr" affects me - how it bridges over the gulf of time and brings our
hero near to me - now what an edge it gives to my desire to see Juliana. You don't say "Mr" Shakespeare.'
'Would I,
any more, if I had a box full of his letters?'
'Yes, if he
had been your lover and someone wanted them.'
And I added that John Cumnor was so convinced,
and so all the more convinced by Miss Bordereau's tone, that he would have come
himself to Venice on the undertaking were it not for the obstacle of his
having, for any confidence, to disprove his identity with the person who had
written to them, which the old ladies would be sure to suspect in spite of
dissimulation and a change of name. If
they were to ask him point-blank if he were not their snubbed correspondent it
would be too awkward for him to lie; whereas I was fortunately not tied in that
way. I was a fresh hand - I could
protest without lying.'
'But you'll
have to take a false name,' said Mrs Prest. 'Juliana lives out of the world as much as it
is possible to live, but she has nonetheless probably heard of Mr Aspern's editors.
She perhaps possesses what you've published.'
'I've
thought of that,' I returned; and I drew out of my pocketbook a visiting-card
neatly engraved with a well-chosen non de guerre.
'You're
very extravagant - it adds to your immorality.
You might have done it in pencil or ink,' said my companion.
'This looks
more genuine.'
'Certainly
you've the courage of your curiosity.
But it will be awkward about your letters; they won't come to you in
that mask.'
'My banker
will take them in and I shall go every day to get them. It will give me a little walk.'
'Shall you
depend all on that?' asked Mrs Prest. 'Aren't you coming to see me?'
'Oh you'll
have left
'She'll
recognise his hand,' my companion suggested.
'On the
envelope he can disguise it.'
'Well,
you're a precious pair! Doesn't it occur
to you that even if you're able to say you're not Mr Cumnor
in person they may still suspect you of being his emissary?'
'Certainly,
and I see only one way to parry that.'
'And what
may that be?'
I hesitated
a moment. 'To make
love to the niece.'
'Ah,' cried
my friend, 'wait till you see her!'