登陆注册
37879600000025

第25章 POOR YORICK

THERE is extant in the city of New York an odd piece of bric-a-brac which I am sometimes tempted to wish was in my own possession. On a bracket in Edwin Booth's bedroom at The Players--the apartment re-mains as he left it that solemn June day ten years ago--stands a sadly dilapidated skull which the elder Booth, and afterward his son Edwin, used to soliloquize over in the grave-yard at Elsinore in the fifth act of "Hamlet."

A skull is an object that always invokes interest more or less poignant; it always has its pathetic story, whether told or untold;but this skull is especially a skull "with a past."

In the early forties, while playing an engage-ment somewhere in the wild West, Junius Brutus Booth did a series of kindnesses to a particularly undeserving fellow, the name of him unknown to us. The man, as it seemed, was a combination of gambler, horse-stealer, and highwayman--in brief, a miscellaneous desperado, and precisely the melodramatic sort of person likely to touch the sympathies of the half-mad player. In the course of nature or the law, presumably the law, the adventurer bodily disappeared one day, and soon ceased to exist even as a reminiscence in the florid mind of his sometime benefactor.

As the elder Booth was seated at breakfast one morning in a hotel in Louisville, Kentucky, a negro boy entered the room bearing a small osier basket neatly covered with a snowy nap-kin. It had the general appearance of a basket of fruit or flowers sent by some admirer, and as such it figured for a moment in Mr. Booth's conjecture. On lifting the cloth the actor started from the chair with a genuine expression on his features of that terror which he was used so marvelously to simulate as Richard III. in the midnight tent-scene or as Macbeth when the ghost of Banquo usurped his seat at table.

In the pretty willow-woven basket lay the head of Booth's old pensioner, which head the old pensioner had bequeathed in due legal form to the tragedian, begging him henceforth to adopt it as one of the necessary stage properties in the fifth act of Mr. Shakespeare's tragedy of "Hamlet.'' "Take it away, you black imp!" thundered the actor to the equally aghast negro boy, whose curiosity had happily not prompted him to investigate the dark nature of his burden.

Shortly afterward, however, the horse-stealer's residuary legatee, recovering from the first shock of his surprise, fell into the grim humor of the situation, and proceeded to carry out to the letter the testator's whimsical request. Thus it was that the skull came to secure an engage-ment to play the role of poor Yorick in J. B.

Booth's company of strolling players, and to continue a while longer to glimmer behind the footlights in the hands of his famous son.

Observing that the grave-digger in his too eager realism was damaging the thing--the marks of his pick and spade are visible on the cranium--Edwin Booth presently replaced it with a papier-mache counterfeit manufactured in the property-room of the theatre. During his subsequent wanderings in Australia and California, he carefully preserved the relic, which finally found repose on the bracket in question.

How often have I sat, of an afternoon, in that front room on the fourth floor of the club-house in Gramercy Park, watching the winter or summer twilight gradually softening and blurring the sharp outline of the skull until it vanished uncannily into the gloom! Edwin Booth had forgotten, if ever he knew, the name of the man; but I had no need of it in order to establish acquaintance with poor Yorick. In this association I was conscious of a deep tinge of sentiment on my own part, a circumstance not without its queerness, considering how very distant the acquaintance really was.

Possibly he was a fellow of infinite jest in his day; he was sober enough now, and in no way disposed to indulge in those flashes of merri-ment "that were wont to set the table on a roar." But I did not regret his evaporated hilarity; I liked his more befitting genial si-lence, and had learned to look upon his rather open countenance with the same friendliness as that with which I regarded the faces of less phantasmal members of the club. He had be-come to me a dramatic personality as distinct as that of any of the Thespians I met in the grill-room or the library.

Yorick's feeling in regard to me was a sub-ject upon which I frequently speculated. There was at intervals an alert gleam of intelligence in those cavernous eye-sockets, as if the sudden remembrance of some old experience had illu-mined them. He had been a great traveler, and had known strange vicissitudes in life; his stage career had brought him into contact with a varied assortment of men and women, and ex-tended his horizon. His more peaceful profes-sion of holding up mail-coaches on lonely roads had surely not been without incident. It was inconceivable that all this had left no impres-sions. He must have had at least a faint recol-lection of the tempestuous Junius Brutus Booth.

That Yorick had formed his estimate of me, and probably not a flattering one, is something of which I am strongly convinced.

At the death of Edwin Booth, poor Yorick passed out of my personal cognizance, and now lingers an incongruous shadow amid the mem-ories of the precious things I lost then.

The suite of apartments formerly occupied by Edwin Booth at The Players has been, as I have said, kept unchanged--a shrine to which from time to time some loving heart makes silent pilgrimage. On a table in the centre of his bedroom lies the book just where he laid it down, an ivory paper-cutter marking the page his eyes last rested upon; and in this chamber, with its familiar pictures, pipes, and ornaments, the skull finds its proper sanctuary. If at odd moments I wish that by chance poor Yorick had fallen to my care, the wish is only half-hearted, though had that happened, I would have given him welcome to the choicest corner in my study and tenderly cherished him for the sake of one who comes no more.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 燃烧旅馆

    燃烧旅馆

    我叫方竹也,很平庸的一个人,我从没想过有一天我会改变世界。本书节奏较慢,但保证更新,请大家相信小点,您的时间绝不会被浪费,《燃烧旅馆》将颠覆您的世界观。
  • 妈咪驾到,爹地请克制

    妈咪驾到,爹地请克制

    为了达到目的,她选择与如魔鬼的他合作,两个旗鼓相当的男女碰撞在一起,火花四射。他:臭小子,我可以把你打包,直接邮寄到兔子不拉屎的非洲某岛。臭小子:有妈妈陪着我,到处都是我的天堂。看着父子二人的争风吃醋,她嫣然一笑。臭小子:八千万,买一送一,如何?他:成交。他们这是把自己当成货物卖了吗?她一脸的愕然。她:你们两个……混蛋。
  • 五夫临门:女王,请负责

    五夫临门:女王,请负责

    她是云浮国第一美女,她亦是云浮国最年轻有为的女皇,然而,光环的背后却无法掩盖她那空空如也的后宫……北堂墨曾与魔共舞,毫无惧色……景卿曾为了修仙,而弃红尘于不顾,却在重回皇宫时,带回一谪仙男子,日夜与之共处……子辰曾醉卧美男怀抱,却在看到身怀有孕的他时,蓦然起身,恍然大悟……
  • 万界魔音

    万界魔音

    新书《都市魔王奶爸》,《魔法科技大洪流》已经连载,希望各位看官支持!更新一下短视频软件,发现短视频不一样了,那些发短视频的竟然变成了各个世界的主角,于是我跟着萧炎学斗气,跟着鸣人学忍术,跟着叶音竹学琴系魔法,跟着路飞学习霸气……然后傲笑都市……做个腹黑的救世主……
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 绝世神偷:废材五公主

    绝世神偷:废材五公主

    她是21世纪的神偷,却穿越到了一个废物的身上,没有灵脉,有爹没妈,不仅被其他姐妹欺负,连一个小宫女都敢欺负她。很好,她很快就让这群白痴知道,什么叫天才!什么最强属性风驭系,什么朱雀神兽,不好意思,小爷要了。不过,这个风度翩翩、玉树临风的小孩子——火驭,真的是天才少年吗?这个傲娇蠢萌的小鸟真的是朱雀神兽吗?还有啊,别人穿越都有一群美男陪,为毛我的不是呆萌小正太,就是花心萝卜,不是纯良少年,就是冷酷帝王。这种设定也太坑爹了吧!“我孤注一掷,还是输了吗”他缓缓抬起头问。“是。”她坚定的回答。“我赢了一生,死在自己女人手里。”他绝望的说着:“幽冥剑,以剑灵,封吾剑身,夏涵曦,记住我,爱你。”
  • 快穿之他们都被我骗了

    快穿之他们都被我骗了

    我不会贪心想要成为女主或者得到男主男配的爱,我只想要活下去而已,只想等到他来。可是,周围的人物越来越鲜活,我开始意识到他们不只是npc,也是需要用真情来对待的人......
  • 峥嵘仙梦

    峥嵘仙梦

    一个纤弱少年,凭着坚毅的性格,在残酷的修真界,峥嵘前行,直到修成大道,逆风飞扬!
  • 绝色狐后乱天下

    绝色狐后乱天下

    “凌寒......”她仰头一吻,不过蜻蜓点水,却已经足以够他温暖一生,雪然,这一世,有你无憾。上一代的恩怨情仇,书写出一段江湖、皇室和百年世家的恩怨情仇,凤鸾嫁衣的现世,更是解开了一段仙界与魔界的纠纷。“我,上官绝汐,是终究要回到仙界的。”而这一代......清冷质子、冷心帝王、霸气王爷、绝尘神医......“然儿,好像...你是孤的王后吧......”绝色狐后,当真是乱了天下!(简介无能,内容嘛,作者敢打包票保证精彩!)