The Fascinating Foundling

3 0 00

The Fascinating Foundling

A Disgrace to the Author

Dramatis Personae

Horace Brabazon

Mercer, an elderly clerk

Cardonius Boshington, the Lord Chancellor

Anastasia Vulliamy

The Fascinating Foundling

Morning. Office of the Lord Chancellor. Door on the right leading to his private room, near the fireplace. Door on the left leading to the public staircase.

Mercer, an elderly clerk, seated at work. Enter, to him, through the public door, Horace Brabazon, a smart and beautiful young man of nineteen, dressed in the extremity of fashion, with a walking stick.

Brabazon

I want to see the Lord Chancellor.

Mercer

Have you an appointment?

Brabazon

No.

Mercer

Then you can’t see the Lord Chancellor.

Brabazon

I tell you I must see him.

Mercer

I tell you you cant. Look here: do you think the Lord Chancellor’s a palmist or a hair doctor that people can rush in out of the street and see him whenever they want to?

Brabazon

That speech was meant to insult and humiliate me. I make it a rule to fight people who attempt to insult and humiliate me. Throwing away his stick. Put up your hands. He puts up his own.

Mercer

Here: you let me alone. You leave this office, d’ye hear; or I’ll have the police in on you.

Brabazon

You are face to face with your destiny; and your destiny is to fight me. Be quick: I’m going to begin. Don’t look pale: I scorn to take you by surprise. I shall lead off with my left on your right eye. Put them up.

Mercer

I ain’t going to fight you. Let me alone, will you? I said nothing to you.

Brabazon

Liar and slave. Fight, I tell you: fight.

Mercer

Oh, was there ever the like of this? Don’t make such a noise.

Brabazon

I’m making it on purpose. I want you to fight because it’ll make more noise than anything else. The Lord Chancellor will come to see what the noise is about if only it’s loud enough. Time! He spars.

Mercer

Retreating to the fireplace and snatching up the poker. Ah, would you? You come near me, and I’ll split your head open, I will.

Brabazon

Snatching up the tongs, and engaging him in a stage fight of the noisiest. Lay on, Macduff; and damned be he that first cries Hold! Enough!

The Lord Chancellor enters indignantly.

The Lord Chancellor

What’s this? Who is this gentleman?

Brabazon

The Lord Chancellor. Good. To Mercer. Hence, horrible shadow: unreal mockery, hence. My lord, I have called on professional business. In the matter of Brabazon, an infant.

The Lord Chancellor

If you are a solicitor, sir, you must be aware that this is not the proper way to approach the Court.

Brabazon

I approach you as the father of all the orphans in Chancery.

The Lord Chancellor

Sir⁠—

Brabazon

Don’t fly out: I’ll explain everything. You remember the matter of Brabazon, an infant. Come, now! frankly as man to man you do remember the matter of Brabazon, an infant.

The Lord Chancellor

There is such a case, I believe.

Brabazon

Of course there is. Well, I’m the infant. I’m Brabazon. I’ll call thee Hamlet! King! father! Royal Dane: wilt thou not answer me? Prosaically. Now you see, don’t you?

The Lord Chancellor

You are young Horace Brabazon, are you?

Brabazon

I am, my lord. Such is life!

The Lord Chancellor

You are a ward of the Court; and you have systematically disobeyed every order made in your case.

Brabazon

The orders were unreasonable. Fatuous, in fact.

The Lord Chancellor

Sir⁠—

Brabazon

Let me explain. One of the orders was that I was to go into the Church.

The Lord Chancellor

At your own desire.

Brabazon

Exactly. But I should not have been indulged. I was too young. How did I know what was good for me? I put it to you as one man to another: do I look like an archbishop?

The Lord Chancellor

Stuff, sir.

Brabazon

As you say, nothing could have been more idiotic. You ought to have known better. No: the Church is not in my line. Nature intended me for the stage. The Unreal Mockery here was practising Macduff with me when you came in. Now what I want to know is, can you get me an engagement. As your ward, I have a right to expect that of you. You must know lots of people who could give me a start. And there’s another thing: very important. I⁠—Oh, by the way, won’t you sit down? Excuse me keeping you standing all this time. Macduff: a chair.

The Lord Chancellor

With ironic politeness. You are too good. He sits down.

Brabazon

Don’t mention it. Well, you know: I want some good home influence to steady me. You see you can’t steady me: you’re too much occupied here with your shop: besides, you may shake a loose leg yourself occasionally for all the public knows, eh? Even if you are virtuous, I should probably lead you astray. No: what I want is a wife. Not a young woman, you know. Someone old enough to be my mother: say thirty or so. I adore a mature woman. Not old enough to be your mother, you understand: old enough to be my mother. I attach some importance to that distinction; so be good enough to bear it in mind. One mustn’t overdo these notions.

The Lord Chancellor

Mr. Mercer, will you be good enough to make a careful note of this gentleman’s requirements: an engagement at a leading theatre to play Macbeth, and a wife of quiet habits and grave disposition. Anything else, Mr. Brabazon?

Brabazon

Nothing today, thank you. And now, I know better than to take up the time of a busy man. Happy to have made your acquaintance. So long! Ta, ta, Macduff.

He goes out.

The Lord Chancellor

What do you mean by letting this lunatic in, Mr. Mercer? I’m extremely annoyed.

Mercer

I didn’t let him in, my lord. He came in. I was keeping him from you at the risk of my life when you came in to ask what the noise was.

The Lord Chancellor

With emotion. My faithful Mercer.

Mercer

My honored master. They shake hands, weeping.

The Lord Chancellor

We were happy together until this man came between us.

Mercer

Let us try to forget him, my lord. Turns to his desk and sees Brabazon’s walking stick on the floor. My lord, he has left his walking stick behind. He will return for it. Let us fly. He picks it up and puts it on the desk.

The Lord Chancellor

Nonsense, Mercer: we have no aeroplane; and if we had we shouldn’t know how to use it. Hark! A visitor at the door. They both rush to it. The handle is turned. Tell him we have both gone out.

Mercer

Useless, my lord: he is a man of strong reasoning powers: he would conclude, on hearing our voices, that we were both within.

A Woman’s Voice

Is anybody there? Let me in. She rattles the door.

The Lord Chancellor

That is the voice of a young and probably beautiful woman.

Mercer

It is, my lord.

The Lord Chancellor

Then why the dickens don’t you open the door instead of striking melodramatic attitudes? How dare you keep the lady waiting? I’m very much annoyed.

Mercer

I’m sorry, my lord. He opens the door.

Anastasia Vulliamy enters.

Anastasia

To Mercer. Is this the Lord Chancellor’s?

Mercer

Yes.

Anastasia

Sir Cardonius Boshington’s?

Mercer

Yes, ma’am.

Anastasia

Are you the Lord Chancellor?

Mercer

No, ma’am. Leastways, not yet.

Anastasia

What are you?

Mercer

I’m the Lord Chancellor’s⁠—

Anastasia

Secretary?

Mercer

Well, hardly that, ma’am. If you ask me, I should say I was a sort of what you might call a clerk-valet to his lordship.

Anastasia

Are you a gentleman?

Mercer

Staggered. Well, that’s a poser, Miss, really. I’m in a manner of speaking a gentleman.

Anastasia

In what manner of speaking are you a gentleman?

Mercer

Well, Miss, I’m a gentleman to my tobacconist. Every man is a gentleman to his tobacconist. The parliamentary candidate for Hornsey always addresses me as a gentleman. But then he ain’t particular: leastways, not at election times. You see, Miss, there are three classes of gentry in this country.

Anastasia

Only three?

Mercer

Only three, ma’am.

Anastasia

How do you tell one from the other?

Mercer

You tell by the railway porters, Miss. The real upper class gives them a shilling; the upper middle class sixpence; and the lower middle, tuppence. I give tuppence myself.

Anastasia

And which particular class of gentleman is it, pray, that gives a lady a chair?

Mercer

Oh, I’m sure I beg your pardon, Miss. He places a chair for her.

Anastasia

Thanks. And now will you be good enough to tell Sir Cardonius Boshington that Miss Anastasia Vulliamy wishes to see him?

Mercer

To the Lord Chancellor. Miss Anaesthesia Vulliamy, my lord, to see you.

Anastasia

Springing up. Do you mean to tell me that this old man in livery is the great Chancellor?

The Lord Chancellor

At your service, Miss Vulliamy.

Anastasia

Producing a newspaper. Quite impossible. I have here an article on Sir Cardonius, headed Our Great Chancellor; and the description does not correspond in the least. Reading. “No man of our time has succeeded in tempering the awe inspired by a commanding stature and majestic presence with a love and confidence which even the youngest and most timid ward of the Court feels at the sound of his kindly voice and the encouraging beam, twinkling with humor, of his tender grey eyes.” Do you mean to tell me that that’s you?

The Lord Chancellor

It is not for me to say how far the description is an accurate or a happy one, madam; but I believe I am the person intended by the writer.

Mercer

Producing another paper. Perhaps you’d recognize this better, Miss. Sir Cardonius and me is on opposite sides in politics.

Anastasia

Taking the paper and reading at the place he indicates. “How much longer will the nation allow this despicable pantaloon to occupy the woolsack⁠—” What’s the woolsack?

Mercer

What the Lord Chancellor sits on in the House of Lords, Miss.

Anastasia

Continuing her reading. “whose contents only too strongly resemble those of his own head.” That’s a nasty one, you know: isn’t it? It means that your brains are woolly, doesn’t it?

The Lord Chancellor

Its meaning is entirely beneath my notice. I’m surprised, Mercer, to find you in possession of a scurrilous rag of this character. We may differ in our opinions; but if any paper taken in by me were to speak of you in such unbecoming terms, I should never open it again.

Mercer

Well, my lord; politics is politics; and after all, what is politics if it isn’t showing up the other side? When I pay a penny for a paper I’ve a right to get value for my money the same as any other man.

Anastasia

But I don’t understand. To the Chancellor. Are you a despicable pantaloon? The other paper says your name will be cherished by the warm hearts of the English people when Eldon and Sir Thomas More are forgotten. I thought that whatever is in the papers must be true. How do you explain being a great Chancellor and a despicable pantaloon at the same time?

The Lord Chancellor

I take it that the excellent journal from which you first quoted has put all considerations of party aside, and simply endeavored to place before you a dispassionate estimate of such modest services as I have been able to render to my country. The other paper gives you nothing but the vituperative ravings of an illiterate penny-a-liner blinded by party passion.

Mercer

You should never read more than one paper, Miss. It unsettles the mind, let alone the waste of a penny.

Anastasia

Well, it’s a great relief to me to hear that the Great Chancellor paper is the right one. To the Lord Chancellor. You think I may believe everything it says?

The Lord Chancellor

I trust I shall not disappoint any favorable opinion you may have founded on it.

Anastasia

It says here that though you are stern with the worthless and merciless to the impostor, yet your mature wisdom and unparalleled legal knowledge are freely at the service of all deserving persons, and that no distressed suitor has ever been turned empty away from your door.

The Lord Chancellor

That refers to my private house, madam. I don’t keep food here.

Mercer

I have a sandwich for my lunch, Miss. Sooner than send you empty away, I would give it to you, Miss, most joyfully.

Anastasia

I ask, not charity, but justice.

The Lord Chancellor

Madam: I must request you to speak like a lady and not like a procession of the unemployed. The House of Lords always gives charity and never gives justice.

Mercer

The House of Lords will find itself unemployed one of these days, if you ask me.

The Lord Chancellor

Silence, Mercer. Have the goodness to keep your Radicalism to yourself in the presence of this lady.

Anastasia

Why do you allow your clerk to be a Radical?

The Lord Chancellor

Well, madam, to make him a Conservative and an Imperialist I should have to raise his salary very considerably; and I prefer to save money and put up with a Radical.

Anastasia

You’ll excuse me asking you all these questions; but as I’ve decided, after what the paper says, that you are the man to advise me and be a father to me, it’s very important that you should be quite all right, isn’t it?

The Lord Chancellor

But it’s not my business to be a father to every young lady who walks into my office.

Anastasia

Not your business! Why, Whitaker’s Almanac says you get £5,000 a year. You don’t get that for nothing, I suppose. To Mercer. By the way, Whitaker doesn’t say how much you get.

Mercer

I get one-fifty.

Anastasia

One-fifty into £5,000 goes about thirty-three times. Why does he get thirty-three times as much as you? Is he thirty-three times as good?

Mercer

He thinks so.

The Lord Chancellor

I set up no such ridiculous pretension, Mercer.

Anastasia

To the Lord Chancellor. Perhaps you’re thirty-three times as sober. How much do you drink every day?

The Lord Chancellor

I am almost a teetotaller. A single bottle of burgundy is quite sufficient for me.

Anastasia

To Mercer. Then I suppose you drink thirty-three bottles of burgundy a day.

Mercer

Thirty-three bottles of burgundy a day on one-fifty a year! Not me. It hardly runs to beer on Sundays.

Anastasia

Well, there must be something awfully wrong about you, you know, if you get only the thirty-third of what he gets.

The Lord Chancellor

No, madam, Mercer is an excellent man in his proper place.

Anastasia

Then there must be something awfully right about you.

The Lord Chancellor

I hope so.

Anastasia

I don’t see the difference myself.

Mercer

He’s better fed.

Anastasia

Is he? I should have thought he was too red about the nose to be quite healthy. It’s the burgundy, I expect. However, I didn’t come here to talk about you two. Call it selfish if you will; but I came to talk about myself. The fact is, I’m an orphan. At least, I think I am.

The Lord Chancellor

Don’t you know?

Anastasia

No. I was brought up in what you might politely call a sort of public institution. They found me on the doorstep, you know. Might have happened to anybody, mightnt it?

Mercer

Scandalized. And you have the audacity to come here and talk up to us as if you was a lady. Be off with you; and be ashamed of yourself, you hussy.

The Lord Chancellor

Gently, Mercer, gently. It is not the poor girl’s fault.

Mercer

Not her fault! Why, she ain’t anybody’s daughter: she’s only an offspring.

Anastasia

Perhaps I’m his daughter, my lord.

Mercer

Oh, you wicked girl! Oh, you naughty story, you! Oh, that I should have lived to have this accusation brought against me: me! a respectable man!

Anastasia

I had a feeling the moment I saw you.

The Lord Chancellor

The voice of Nature! Oh, Mercer, Mercer!

Mercer

I’ll have the law of you for this, I will. Oh, say you don’t believe her, my lord. Don’t drive me mad. Say you don’t believe her.

The Lord Chancellor

I can’t disregard the voice of Nature, Mercer. The evidence against you is very black.

Mercer

Me the father of a common girl found on a workhouse doorstep!

Anastasia

Rising most indignantly. How dare you presume to say such a thing? A workhouse doorstep indeed! I was found on the doorstep of one of the very best houses in Park Lane.

The Lord Chancellor

Overwhelmed. My dear young lady, how can I apologize⁠—

Mercer

Crushed. I’m sure I beg your pardon most humbly, Miss.

The Lord Chancellor

Forget the rudeness of my clerk: he knows no better. Resume your seat, I beg.

Mercer

If I had only known, Miss! Park Lane! I could bite my tongue out for my bad manners, I do assure you.

Anastasia

Say no more. Of course you could not know my social position.

Mercer

Don’t say that, Miss. You have Park Lane in every feature.

The Lord Chancellor

Effusively. In your manners.

Mercer

In your accent.

The Lord Chancellor

In your tone⁠—

Mercer

Address⁠—

The Lord Chancellor

A je ne sais quoi⁠—

Mercer

A tout ensemble⁠—

Anastasia

You speak French?

Mercer

Not a word, Miss; but at the sight of that hat of yours the French fairly burst out of me.

Anastasia

You are very good⁠—

The Lord Chancellor

Oh, not at all.

Mercer

Don’t mention it.

Anastasia

Don’t begin again. I forgive you both. Now, attention! I’m a good-hearted but somewhat flighty girl; and I require some serious interest in life to steady me. As I had an ungovernable appetite, and was naturally rather inclined to be stout, I tried politics. For you, a man, politics meant the House of Lords. For me, a woman, politics meant Holloway Gaol and the hunger strike. I refused to take food until I was so frightfully hungry that when the Governor⁠—who was a plump, chubby, tempting sort of man, you know⁠—came into my cell and remonstrated with me, I attempted to devour him.

The Lord Chancellor

Pardon me. I thought you Suffragist lambs prided yourselves on acting always on principle. On what principle, may I ask, do you justify an attempt to devour an estimable public official?

Anastasia

On the Cat and Mouse principle, my lord. That is a part of the law of England.

Mercer

Never. Not when the woman is the cat.

The Lord Chancellor

May I ask, madam, what the unfortunate mouse did on this occasion?

Anastasia

He got quite angry, and said he wouldn’t have me in his prison another minute⁠—not if I went down on my knees and begged him to let me stay. Of course I refused to go; but I had to let the poor man have his way at last, though it took ten wardresses to persuade me to do it. I left them simply in ribbons, poor things. Prison made a great change in me. Before I went in I felt a great want of something to love; but when I came out I felt nothing but a great want of something to eat. There were two public houses near the prison. One had a placard up “Sausage and Mashed,” the other “Sandwich and Small Lloyd George.” I visited both in succession, and had two goes of each delicacy. I then drove to the Holborn Restaurant and had a five shilling lunch, stopping at three Pearce and Plentys on the way to sustain exhausted nature. At the Holborn they refused to serve me with a second lunch; so I went on to the Carlton. Of my subsequent experiences at the Savoy, Pagani’s, Frascati’s, Gatti’s, five baked potato men, and a coffee stall, I shall say nothing. Suffice it that when at last the craving for food was stilled, the craving for love returned in all its original force. I felt I must have something to cherish, to sacrifice myself for. You no doubt hold that self-sacrifice is a woman’s chief amusement.

The Lord Chancellor

Certainly I do.

Anastasia

Any man would. Well, what was I to love? My friends recommended marriage: a man, in fact. But I hesitated to rush at once to so expensive and troublesome an extreme. I tried a pet dog; but when it had been stolen for the sixth time by the man I bought it from, I refused to pay any more rewards, and we were parted forever. I tried a cat; but its conduct was so disreputable that I really could not live in the same house with it. I adopted the orphan child of a crossing sweeper who was run over; but when its aunt learnt that I had no parents she would not permit it to stay. Glad as I must confess I was to get rid of the little beast, my starved heart still ached, my empty arms still longed to gather some beloved object to my breast.

The Lord Chancellor

If I can be of any service to you, madam⁠—

Anastasia

You? You are married, are you not?

The Lord Chancellor

Well, er, yes I er⁠—am married.

Mercer

Catching her eye. I’m sorry, miss; but so am I. Still, a divorce would be a matter of only eighty pound or so if we made it a fairly straight case.

Anastasia

Never shall it be said that Anastasia Vulliamy built her happiness on the ruin of another woman’s home. There are younger and handsomer men than you, my lord: there are more genteel characters than Mercer. Neither of you, if I may be allowed the expression, is precisely what I should call a peach. And I want⁠—oh, I want a peach. He must be a young peach. Not that I am to be seduced by the fleeting charms of a smooth cheek and a slim figure. But it’s a necessity of my position as a woman that I should marry someone whom I can bully, because if a woman can’t bully her husband, her husband generally bullies her.

You, my lord, you will, you can,

Find me a young and foolish man.

Into my arms: under my thumb

Let him come, let him come.

I fear I am almost dropping into poetry; but the tumult of my emotions carries me away. I implore you not to keep me waiting. My soul, my soul is thrilling as it never thrilled before. My arms, my arms are longing as they never longed before. My heart, my heart is beating as it never bet before. Every nerve in my body, every fibre in my heart⁠—

Brabazon enters.

Brabazon

Excuse me: I left my stick, I think⁠—

Anastasia

Throwing herself into his arms. He has come: he has come: the very thing I want.

Brabazon

Quite out of the question, my dear lady. Sir Cardonius will tell you that you are too young, too irresponsible, too impulsive to be anything more to me than an extremely agreeable object of contemplation, and a charming hostess. With that object may I venture to propose a marriage to you?

Anastasia

Silly! that is exactly what I am proposing to you.

Brabazon

Not marriage to the same person, I think. You, as I understand it, propose to marry me. I propose that you should marry one of my friends. You can then invite me to your house, and put on your best company manners for my benefit. He will have the privilege of paying for your hats, and enjoying your no-company manners.

Mercer

My lord: this man has a giant intellect.

The Lord Chancellor

It will avail him as little as if he were the biggest fool in creation. Young man: you are lost. I argued as you do. I tried to get out of it.

Mercer

I moved all the way from Gospel Oak to Islington to escape; but it was no use.

The Lord Chancellor

Beware how you anger her by showing any reluctance. Remember: “Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned.”

Mercer

What’s the good of that nowadays? When that was written a woman would take no for an answer. She won’t now.

Anastasia

You will begin walking out with me at once. You are only on approval, of course; but if you suit, you may consider next Friday three weeks named as the day.

Brabazon

But where does the merit come in for me? Where is the moral discipline? Where is the self-sacrifice? You are an agreeable person: to marry you would be an act of pure selfishness.

Anastasia

So you think now, dearest. You won’t think that a year hence. I’ll take care of that for my own boy.

Brabazon

Yes, but look here, you know. Have you got any money?

Anastasia

Not a rap.

Brabazon

And you expect to get a slave for nothing. What cheek!

Anastasia

I’m richer than you think, darling. It’s true that I’m a poor penniless orphan. Doesn’t that touch you?

Brabazon

Not in the least.

Anastasia

Thoughtless boy. Have you forgotten that the women who have money always belong to some family or other?

Brabazon

Well?

Anastasia

Well, a family means relations. You can’t call your house your own. The brothers borrow money. The sisters come and stay for months. The mother quarrels with your mother.

Mercer

Gospel truth, every word of it.

The Lord Chancellor

Undeniable. He sighs deeply.

Anastasia

I, my love, am not perfect. I am a weak woman: I have nothing to cling to but your love, nor any place to rest except your very becoming fancy waistcoat. But at least I’m a foundling.

Brabazon

Excited and hopeful. A foundling?

Anastasia

I haven’t a relation in the world.

Brabazon

Clasping her. Mine! mine!! Mine!!!