Charles Reade Reade

Hard Cash


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can persuade Miss Hardie to join you in a duet.”

      At this, Jane and Julia had an earnest conversation at the piano, and their words, uttered in a low voice, were covered by a contemporaneous discussion between Sampson and Mrs. Dodd.

      Jane. No, you must not ask me: I have forsworn these vanities. I have not opened my piano this two years.

      Julia. Oh, what a pity; music is so beautiful; and surely we can choose our songs, as easily as our words; ah, how much more easily.

      Jane. Oh, I don't go so far as to call music wicked: but music in society is such a snare. At least I found it so; my playing was highly praised, and that stirred up vanity: and so did my singing, with which I had even more reason to be satisfied. Snares! snares!

      Julia. Goodness me! I don't find them so. Now you mention it, gentlemen do praise one; but, dear me, they praise every lady, even when we have been singing every other note out of tune. The little unmeaning compliments of society, can they catch anything so great as a soul?

      Jane. I pray daily not to be led into temptation, and shall I go into it of my own accord?

      Julia. Not if you find it a temptation. At that rate I ought to decline.

      Jane. That doesn't follow. My conscience is not a law to yours. Besides, your mamma said “sing:” and a parent is not to be disobeyed upon a doubt. If papa were to insist on my going to a ball even, or reading a novel, I think I should obey; and lay the whole case before Him.

      Mrs. Dodd (from a distance). Come, my dears, Dr. Sampson is getting so impatient for your song.

      Sampson. Hum! for all that, young ladies' singing is a poor substitute for cards, and even for conversation.

      Mrs. Dodd. That depends upon the singer, I presume.

      Sampson. Mai—dear—madam, they all sing alike; just as they all write alike. I can hardly tell one fashionable tune from another; and nobody can tell one word from another, when they cut out all the consonants. N' listen me. This is what I heard sung by a lady last night.

      Eu un Da' ei u aa an oo. By oo eeeeyee aa Vaullee, Vaullee, Vaullee, Vaullee, Vaullee om is igh eeaa An ellin in is ud.

      Mrs. Dodd. That sounds like gibberish.

      Sampson. It is gibberish, but it's Drydenish in articulating mouths. It is—

      He sung Darius great and good, By too severe a fate Fallen, fallen, fallen, fallen, Fallen from his high estate, And wiltering in his blood.

      Mrs. Dodd. I think you exaggerate. I will answer for Julia that she shall speak as distinctly to music as you do in conversation.

      Sampson (all unconscious of the tap). Time will show, madam. At prisent they seem to be in no hurry to spatter us with their word-jelly. Does some spark of pity linger in their marble bos'ms? or do they prefer inaud'ble chit-chat t' inarticulate mewing?

      Julia, thus pressed, sang one of those songs that come and go every season. She spoke the words clearly, and with such variety and intelligence, that Sampson recanted, and broke in upon the—“very pretty”—“how sweet”—and “who is it by?” of the others, by shouting, “Very weak trash very cleanly sung. Now give us something worth the wear and tear of your orgins. Immortal vairse widded t' immortal sounds; that is what I understand b' a song.”

      Alfred whispered, “No, no, dearest; sing something suitable to you and me.”

      “Out of the question. Then go farther away, dear; I shall have more courage.”

      He obeyed, and she turned over two or three music-books, and finally sung from memory. She cultivated musical memory, having observed the contempt with which men of sense visit the sorry pretenders to music, who are tuneless and songless among the nightingales, and anywhere else away from their books. How will they manage to sing in heaven? Answer me that.

      The song Julia Dodd sang on this happy occasion, to meet the humble but heterogeneous views of Messrs. Sampson and Hardie, was a simple eloquent Irish song called Aileen Aroon. Whose history, by-the-bye, was a curious one. Early in this century it occurred to somebody to hymn a son of George the Third for his double merit in having been born, and going to a ball. People who thus apply the fine arts in modern days are seldom artists; accordingly, this parasite could not invent a melody; so he coolly stole Aileen Aroon, soiled it by inserting sordid and incongruous jerks into the refrain, and called the stolen and adulterated article Robin Adair. An artisan of the same kidney was soon found to write words down to the degraded ditty: and, so strong is Flunkeyism, and so weak is Criticism, in these islands, that the polluted tune actually superseded the clean melody; and this sort of thing—

      Who was in uniform at the ball?

       Silly Billy,

      smothered the immortal lines.

      But Mrs. Dodd's severe taste in music rejected those ignoble jerks, and her enthusiastic daughter having the option to hymn immortal Constancy or mortal Fat, decided thus:—

      When like the early rose,

       Aileen aroon,

       Beauty in childhood glows,

       Aileen aroon,

       When like a diadem,

       Buds blush around the stem,

       Which is the fairest gem?

       Aileen aroon.

       Is it the laughing eye?

       Aileen aroon.

       Is it the timid sigh?

       Aileen aroon.

       Is it the tender tone?

       Soft as the string'd harp's mean?

       No; it is Truth alone,

       Aileen aroon.

       I know a valley fair,

       Aileen aroon.

       I know a cottage there,

       Aileen aroon.

       Far in that valley's shade,

       I know a gentle maid,

       Flower of the hazel glade,

       Aileen aroon.

       Who in the song so sweet?

       Aileen aroon,

       Who in the dance so fleet?

       Aileen aroon.

       Dear are her charms to me,

       Dearer her laughter free,

       Dearest her constancy.

       Aileen aroon.

       Youth must with time decay,

       Aileen aroon,

       Beauty must fade away,

       Aileen aroon.

       Castles are sacked in war,

       Chieftains are scattered far,

       Truth is a fixed star,

       Aileen areon.

      The way the earnest singer sang these lines is beyond the conception of ordinary singers, public or private. Here one of nature's orators spoke poetry to music with an eloquence as fervid and delicate as ever rung in the Forum. She gave each verse with the same just variety as if she had been reciting, and, when she came to the last, where the thought rises abruptly, and is truly noble, she sang it with the sudden pathos, the weight, and the swelling majesty, of a truthful soul hymning truth with all its powers.

      All the hearers, even Sampson, were thrilled, astonished, spell-bound: so can one wave of immortal music and immortal verse (alas! how seldom they meet!) heave the inner man when genius interprets. Judge, then, what it was to Alfred, to whom, with these great words and thrilling tones of her rich, swelling, ringing voice, the darling of his own heart vowed constancy, while her inspired face beamed