The wife. Who wants the natural?
Prof. [Grumbling] Umm! Wish I thought that! Modern taste! History may go hang; they’re all for tuppence-coloured sentiment nowadays.
The wife. [As if to herself] Is the Spring sentiment?
Prof. I beg your pardon, my dear; I didn’t catch.
Wife. [As if against her will—urged by some pent-up force] Beauty, beauty!
Prof. That’s what I’m, trying to say here. The Orpheus legend symbolizes to this day the call of Beauty! [He takes up his pen, while she continues to stare out at the moonlight. Yawning] Dash it! I get so sleepy; I wish you’d tell them to make the after-dinner coffee twice as strong.
Wife. I will.
Prof. How does this strike you? [Conning] “Many Renaissance pictures, especially those of Botticelli, Francesca and Piero di Cosimo were inspired by such legends as that of Orpheus, and we owe a tiny gem—like Raphael ‘Apollo and Marsyas’ to the same Pagan inspiration.”
Wife. We owe it more than that—rebellion against the dry-as-dust.
Prof. Quite. I might develop that: “We owe it our revolt against the academic; or our disgust at ‘big business,’ and all the grossness of commercial success. We owe——“. [His voice peters out.]
Wife. It—love.
Prof. [Abstracted] Eh!
Wife. I said: We owe it love.
Prof. [Rather startled] Possibly. But—er
[With a dry smile]
I mustn’t say that here—hardly!
Wife. [To herself and the moonlight] Orpheus with his lute!
Prof. Most people think a lute is a sort of flute. [Yawning heavily] My dear, if you’re not going to sing again, d’you mind sitting down? I want to concentrate.
Wife. I’m going out.
Prof. Mind the dew!
Wife. The Christian virtues and the dew.
Prof. [With a little dry laugh] Not bad! Not bad! The Christian virtues and the dew. [His hand takes up his pen, his face droops over his paper, while his wife looks at him with a very strange face] “How far we can trace the modern resurgence against the Christian virtues to the symbolic figures of Orpheus, Pan, Apollo, and Bacchus might be difficult to estimate, but——”
[During those words
his wife has passed through the window into
the moonlight, and her
voice rises, singing as she goes:
“Orpheus with
his lute, with his lute made trees . . .”]
Prof. [Suddenly aware of something] She’ll get her throat bad. [He is silent as the voice swells in the distance] Sounds queer at night-H’m! [He is silent—Yawning. The voice dies away. Suddenly his head nods; he fights his drowsiness; writes a word or two, nods again, and in twenty seconds is asleep.]