EZEKIEL IN THE QUARTIER MONTPARNESSE
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Templi Orientis
The other morning, as I lounged along the boulevard, who should I
meet but my old pal Jeremiah? The dear old boy, who is really as
straight and strong as the best, was pretending, as usual, to limp and
totter. "Jerry," I said, "I've been reading your
wail in Vanity Fair. What [a] fool you are!"
"Because Ninon is grown grave and beautiful and Greek, do you
think that youth is dead? good spirits follow the clinometer--the
barometer, I should say. Come along to the Dôme!"
And sure enough as we came to the famous little café, [th]at
delicate indicator went to "Set Fair." Even Jerry [w]ould
only just groan "Long foretold, long last; short notice, soon
past" before surrendering himself to rapture.
For who was there, between the Poet and the Moon-calf, but delicious
Doris?
Doris of the golden hair, Doris not yet twenty, Doris like what
Botticelli's Madone du Magnificat ought to have been, Doris the child,
with the faith of a child, and the laugh of a child, Doris with the moon
in her face and the stars in her hair, Doris of the lithe white limbs,
Doris of the Pomegranate mouth--nay! for what shall be said about her
mouth?--exquisite Doris, Irish Doris, innocent as Iphigenia, fiery as
Foustine--a phoenix in lamb's clothing! The blue eyes, and the
dawn-blush, and the dancing dream of gold!
Jeremiah pulled himself together with a jerk.
"A transient phenomenon!" he groaned.
"Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose!" I
retorted. "We are no poorer for Doris, and we are richer by
Ninon. You go and stand outside the Taverne Dumesnil and growl; I
go into the Taverne--the Taverne Omar--and drink. I see Art
everywhere winning the battle; it does not even see the Taverne Dumesnil.
You see that curly-headed young giraffe? He told me that:
you wouldn't think it, would you? But listen!"
The Poet's voice was audible above the clatter. His face at
once ascetic and sensual--the face of a god and of a beast!--was
earnest, eager, and his words came with the solemnity of an apostle--
"It is the eternal glory of Marcus Stone," he was saying,
and the Moon-calf hung on every word with rapt attention, while Doris
secretly delighted in the jester, not one quiver of whose eye-lashes
revealed his infinite irony--oh! never mind what he was saying.
"You must know the Poet, Jerry!" I broke in.
"He claims to be the great god Pan; he has the Ancient Comedy that
they played when the gods lived with men."
"I see the victim: growled Jeremiah.
"He and Doris have been playing it for a week," I
said. "Why, it's wonderful! There was a Dragon came to
Paris, Doris pretended to fall in love with him, silly lad!"
It was then that the Poet took the reins. By his subtlety he sent
the Dragon and the Moon-calf (who had meant to lunch with her) off to
browse; and came with much courtesy and apology to Doris, and explained
ever so nicely why they hadn't turned up, and took Doris to lunch, and
after lunch took Doris to look for the Moon-calf.
But they weren't the Moon-calf's rooms at all; and when he looked at
her, she understood. But it was all over--I give you my
word!--before she found out the subtlety of him. She thought it
was an accident!
And that is only the first act. I should like to tell you more,
but you write for English papers. and I don't want to give you unusable information!
Yes, Jeremiah, we've all been laughing our ribs sore except you and the
Moon-calf; and he'll laugh, too, when he understands, and is crowned as
the Bull of Diana." You'd better go to Chelsea; there's room
for a growler there, where Life is serious and Art its appanage.
As if Art was not self-conscious selected, quintessential Life! Go
to Chelsea, Jeremiah! John Tweed's the only artist there, and he's
too busy with his sculpture--and with the Comedy--to heed your croakings.
"Well," said Jeremiah, "there is much in what you say;
but I wish I had your clinom--barometer!"
"My dear ass," I replied, "do leave something for
Doris to do!"
More cheerfully: "Right, Ezekiel, but--what's the matter Ninon?"
We smiled, sun-bright, as he marched away whistling.
I lighted another pipe and settled down to look at Doris --at
Doris--at Doris.
I should like to learn the Ritual of the Comedy. But it was joy
enough, surely, only to look on at it. I swooned into an ecstasy
of contemplation, while the Poet still thundered, urgent, flaming,
insistent--
"It is not his supreme technical excellence that places Gustave
Doré so high above all souls of painters, living or dead; it is not
even his miraculous feeling for the spiritual, the mystic, the
Unknowable--for in these things he is rivalled by Bougereau on the one
hand and the Hon. John Collier on the other; but--"
Oh, Doris, Doris, not a muscle quivers!
ALEISTER CROWLEY. |