But not for B'way in the summer of 1905!"
"It is my opinion," said I, "that great human emotions shake up our vocabulary and leave the words best suited to express them on top.
A sudden violent grief or loss or disappointment will bring expressions out of an ordinary man as strong and solemn and dramatic as those used in fiction or on the stage to portray those emotions."
"That's where you fellows are wrong," said Hollis.
"Plain, every-day talk is what goes.
Your captain would very likely have kicked the cat, lit a cigar, stirred up a highball, and telephoned for a lawyer, instead of getting off those Robert Mantell pyrotechnics."
"Possibly, a little later," I continued.
"But just at the time—just as the blow is delivered, if something Scriptural or theatrical and deep-tongued isn't wrung from a man in spite of his modern and practical way of speaking, then I'm wrong."
"Of course," said Hollis, kindly, "you've got to whoop her up some degrees for the stage.
The audience expects it.
When the villain kidnaps little Effie you have to make her mother claw some chunks out of the atmosphere, and scream:
"Me chee-ild, me chee-ild!"
What she would actually do would be to call up the police by 'phone, ring for some strong tea, and get the little darling's photo out, ready for the reporters.
When you get your villain in a corner—a stage corner—it's all right for him to clap his hand to his forehead and hiss:
"All is lost!"
Off the stage he would remark:
"This is a conspiracy against me—I refer you to my lawyers.'"
"I get no consolation," said I, gloomily, "from your concession of an accentuated stage treatment.
In my play I fondly hoped that I was following life.
If people in real life meet great crises in a commonplace way, they should do the same on the stage."
And then we drifted, like two trout, out of our cool pool in the great hotel and began to nibble languidly at the gay flies in the swift current of Broadway.
And our question of dramatic art was unsettled.
We nibbled at the flies, and avoided the hooks, as wise trout do; but soon the weariness of Manhattan in summer overcame us.
Nine stories up, facing the south, was Hollis's apartment, and we soon stepped into an elevator bound for that cooler haven.
I was familiar in those quarters, and quickly my play was forgotten, and I stood at a sideboard mixing things, with cracked ice and glasses all about me.
A breeze from the bay came in the windows not altogether blighted by the asphalt furnace over which it had passed.
Hollis, whistling softly, turned over a late-arrived letter or two on his table, and drew around the coolest wicker armchairs.
I was just measuring the Vermouth carefully when I heard a sound.
Some man's voice groaned hoarsely:
"False, oh, God!—false, and Love is a lie and friendship but the byword of devils!"
I looked around quickly.
Hollis lay across the table with his head down upon his outstretched arms.
And then he looked up at me and laughed in his ordinary manner.
I knew him—he was poking fun at me about my theory.
And it did seem so unnatural, those swelling words during our quiet gossip, that I half began to believe I had been mistaken—that my theory was wrong.
Hollis raised himself slowly from the table.
"You were right about that theatrical business, old man," he said, quietly, as he tossed a note to me.
I read it.
Loris had run away with Tom Tolliver.