THE CHAPLET
A strange stillness hung over the restaurant; it was one
of those rare moments when the orchestra was not discoursing
the strains of the Ice-cream Sailor waltz.
``Did I ever tell you,'' asked Clovis of his friend, ``the
tragedy of music at mealtimes?
``It was a gala evening at the Grand Sybaris Hotel, and a
special dinner was being served in the Amethyst dining-hall.
The Amethyst dining-hall had almost a European reputation,
especially with that section of Europe which is historically
identified with the Jordan Valley. Its cooking was beyond
reproach, and its orchestra was sufficiently highly salaried
to be above criticism. Thither came in shoals the intensely
musical and the almost intensely musical, who are very many,
and in still greater numbers the merely musical, who know
how Tschaikowsky's name is pronounced and can recognize
several of Chopin's nocturnes if you give them due warning;
these eat in the nervous, detached manner of roebuck feeding
in the open, and keep anxious ears cocked towards the
orchestra for the first hint of a recognizable melody.
`` `Ah, yes, Pagliacci,' they murmur, as the opening
strains follow hot upon the soup, and if no contradiction is
forthcoming from any better-informed quarter they break
forth into subdued humming by way of supplementing the
efforts of the musicians. Sometimes the melody starts on
level terms with the soup, in which case the banqueters
contrive somehow to hum between the spoonfuls; the facial
expression of enthusiasts who are punctuating potage St.
Germain with Pagliacci is not beautiful, but it should be
seen by those who are bent on observing all sides of life.
One cannot discount the unpleasant things of this world
merely by looking the other way.
``In addition to the aforementioned types the restaurant
was patronized by a fair sprinkling of the absolutely
non-musical; their presence in the dining-hall could only be
explained on the supposition that they had come there to
dine.
``The earlier stages of the dinner had worn off. The wine
lists had been consulted, by some with the blank
embarrassment of a school-boy suddenly called on to locate a
Minor Prophet in the tangled hinterland of the Old
Testament, by others with the severe scrutiny which suggests
that they have visited most of the higher-priced wines in
their own homes and probed their family weaknesses. The
diners who chose their wine in the latter fashion always
gave their orders in a penetrating voice, with a plentiful
garnishing of stage directions. By insisting on having your
bottle pointing to the north when the cork is being drawn,
and calling the waiter Max, you may induce an impression on
your guests which hours of laboured boasting might be
powerless to achieve. For this purpose, however, the guests
must be chosen as carefully as the wine.
``Standing aside from the revellers in the shadow of a
massive pillar was an interested spectator who was assuredly
of the feast, and yet not in it. Monsieur Aristide Saucourt
was the chef of the Grand Sybaris Hotel, and if he had an
equal in his profession he had never acknowledged the fact.
In his own domain he was a potentate, hedged around with the
cold brutality that Genius expects rather than excuses in
her children; he never forgave, and those who served him
were careful that there should be little to forgive. In the
outer world, the world which devoured his creations, he was
an influence; how profound or how shallow an influence he
never attempted to guess. It is the penalty and the
safeguard of genius that it computes itself by troy weight
in a world that measures by vulgar hundredweights.
Once in a way the great man would be seized with a desire
to watch the effect of his master-efforts, just as the
guiding brain of Krupp's might wish at a supreme moment to
intrude into the firing line of an artillery duel. And such
an occasion was the present. For the first time in the
history of the Grand Sybaris Hotel, he was presenting to its
guests the dish which he had brought to that pitch of
perfection which almost amounts to scandal. Canetons
la mode d'Ambl&`egrave;ve. In thin gilt lettering on the creamy
white of the menu how little those words conveyed to the
bulk of the imperfectly educated diners. And yet how much
specialized effort had been lavished, how much carefully
treasured lore had been ungarnered, before those six words
could be written. In the Department of Deux-Svres
ducklings had lived peculiar and beautiful lives and died in
the odour of satiety to furnish the main theme of the dish;
champignons, which even a purist for Saxon English would
have hesitated to address as mushrooms, had contributed
their languorous atrophied bodies to the garnishing, and a
sauce devised in the twilight reign of the Fifteenth Louis
had been summoned back from the imperishable past to take
its part in the wonderful confection. Thus far had human
effort laboured to achieve the desired result; the rest had
been left to human genius---the genius of Aristide Saucourt.
``And now the moment had arrived for the serving of the
great dish, the dish which world-weary Grand Dukes and
market-obsessed money magnates counted among their happiest
memories. And at the same moment something else happened.
The leader of the highly salaried orchestra placed his
violin caressingly against his chin, lowered his eyelids,
and floated into a sea of melody.
`` `Hark!' said most of the diners, `he is playing ``The
Chaplet.'' '
``They knew it was `The Chaplet' because they had heard it
played at luncheon and afternoon tea, and at supper the
night before, and had not had time to forget.
`` `Yes, he is playing ``The Chaplet,'' ' they reassured
one another. The general voice was unanimous on the
subject. The orchestra had already played it eleven times
that day, four times by desire and seven times from force of
habit, but the familiar strains were greeted with the
rapture due to a revelation. A murmur of much humming rose
from half the tables in the room, and some of the more
overwrought listeners laid down knife and fork in order to
be able to burst in with loud clappings at the earliest
permissible moment.
``And the Canetons &`agrave; la mode d'Amblve? In
stupefied, sickened wonder Aristide watched them grow cold
in total neglect, or suffer the almost worse indignity of
perfunctory pecking and listless munching while the
banqueters lavished their approval and applause on the
music-makers. Calves' liver and bacon, with parsley sauce,
could hardly have figured more ignominiously in the
evening's entertainment. And while the master of culinary
art leaned back against the sheltering pillar, choking with
a horrible brain-searing rage that could find no outlet for
its agony, the orchestra leader was bowing his
acknowledgments of the hand-clappings that rose in a storm
around him. Turning to his colleagues he nodded the signal
for an encore. But before the violin had been lifted anew
into position there came from the shadow of the pillar an
explosive negative.
`` `Noh! Noh! You do not play thot again!'
``The musician turned in furious astonishment. Had he
taken warning from the look in the other man's eyes he might
have acted differently. But the admiring plaudits were
ringing in his ears, and he snarled out sharply, `That is
for me to decide.'
`` `Noh! You play thot never again,' shouted the chef, and
the next moment he had flung himself violently upon the
loathed being who had supplanted him in the world's esteem.
A large metal tureen, filled to the brim with steaming soup,
had just been placed on a side table in readiness for a late
party of diners; before the waiting staff or the guests had
time to realize what was happening, Aristide had dragged his
struggling victim up to the table and plunged his head deep
down into the almost boiling contents of the tureen. At the
further end of the room the diners were still spasmodically
applauding in view of an encore.
``Whether the leader of the orchestra died from drowning
by soup, or from the shock to his professional vanity, or
was scalded to death, the doctors were never wholly able to
agree. Monsieur Aristide Saucourt, who now lives in
complete retirement, always inclined to the drowning
theory.''