The Country of the Blind, and Other Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 518 pages of information about The Country of the Blind, and Other Stories.

The Country of the Blind, and Other Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 518 pages of information about The Country of the Blind, and Other Stories.

But that appointment was the beginning of my downfall.  From that day I necessarily became a persistent theatre-goer, and almost insensibly I began to change.  The next thing I noticed after the gesture about the razor was to catch myself bowing ineffably when I met Delia, and stooping in an old-fashioned, courtly way over her hand.  Directly I caught myself, I straightened myself up and became very uncomfortable.  I remember she looked at me curiously.  Then, in the office, I found myself doing “nervous business,” fingers on teeth, when Barnaby asked me a question I could not very well answer.  Then, in some trifling difference with Delia, I clasped my hand to my brow.  And I pranced through my social transactions at times singularly like an actor!  I tried not to—­no one could be more keenly alive to the arrant absurdity of the histrionic bearing.  And I did!

It began to dawn on me what it all meant.  The acting, I saw, was too much for my delicately-strung nervous system.  I have always, I know, been too amenable to the suggestions of my circumstances.  Night after night of concentrated attention to the conventional attitudes and intonation of the English stage was gradually affecting my speech and carriage.  I was giving way to the infection of sympathetic imitation.  Night after night my plastic nervous system took the print of some new amazing gesture, some new emotional exaggeration—­and retained it.  A kind of theatrical veneer threatened to plate over and obliterate my private individuality altogether.  I saw myself in a kind of vision.  Sitting by myself one night, my new self seemed to me to glide, posing and gesticulating, across the room.  He clutched his throat, he opened his fingers, he opened his legs in walking like a high-class marionette.  He went from attitude to attitude.  He might have been clockwork.  Directly after this I made an ineffectual attempt to resign my theatrical work.  But Barnaby persisted in talking about the Polywhiddle Divorce all the time I was with him, and I could get no opportunity of saying what I wished.

And then Delia’s manner began to change towards me.  The ease of our intercourse vanished.  I felt she was learning to dislike me.  I grinned, and capered, and scowled, and posed at her in a thousand ways, and knew—­with what a voiceless agony!—­that I did it all the time.  I tried to resign again, and Barnaby talked about “X” and “Z” and “Y” in the New Review, and gave me a strong cigar to smoke, and so routed me.  And then I walked up the Assyrian Gallery in the manner of Irving to meet Delia, and so precipitated the crisis.

“Ah!—­Dear!” I said, with more sprightliness and emotion in my voice than had ever been in all my life before I became (to my own undoing) a Dramatic Critic.

She held out her hand rather coldly, scrutinising my face as she did so.  I prepared, with a new-won grace, to walk by her side.  “Egbert,” she said, standing still, and thought.  Then she looked at me.

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Project Gutenberg
The Country of the Blind, and Other Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.