| ‘The
Black Cap’ by Katherine Mansfield
One of Katherine Mansfield’s Experiments
in Dialogue, first published in New Age
May 17th 1917.
(A lady and her husband are seated at breakfast.
He is quite calm, reading the newspaper and eating;
but she is strangely excited, dressed for travelling
and only pretending to eat.)
She: Oh, if you should want
your flannel shirts, they are on the right-hand
bottom shelf of the linen press.
He: (at a board meeting of the Meat
Export Company). No.
She: You didn’t hear what I said.
I said if you should want your flannel shirts,
they are on the right-hand bottom shelf of the
linen press.
He: (positively). I quite agree!
She: It does seem rather extraordinary
that on the very morning that I am going away
you cannot leave the newspaper alone for five
minutes.
He: (mildly). My dear woman,
I don't want you to go. In fact, I have asked
you not to go. I can't for the life of me see…
She: You know perfectly well that I am
only going because I absolutely must. I’ve
been putting it off and putting it off, and the
dentist said last time…
He: Good! Good! Don’t let’s
go over the ground again. We’ve thrashed
it out pretty thoroughly, haven’t we?
Servant: Cab’s here, m’m.
She: Please put my luggage in.
Servant. Very good, m’m.
She gives a tremendous sigh.)
He: You haven't got too much time if
you want to catch that train.
She: I know. I’m going. (In
a changed tone.) Darling, don't let us part
like this. It makes me feel so wretched. Why is
it that you always seem to take a positive delight
in spoiling my enjoyment?
He: I don't think going to the dentist
is so positively enjoyable.
She: Oh, you know that's not what I mean.
You’re only saying that to hurt me. You
know you are begging the question.
He: (laughing). And you are
losing your train. You'll be back on Thursday
evening, won't you?
She: (in a low, desperate voice).
Yes, on Thursday evening. Good-bye, then. (Comes
over to him, and takes his head in her hands.)
Is there anything really the matter? Do at least
look at me. Don’t you – care –
at – all?
He: My darling girl! This is like an
exit on the cinema.
She: (letting her hands fall).
Very well. Goodbye. (Gives a quick tragic
glance round the dining-room and goes.)
(On the way to the station.)
She: How strange life is! I didn’t
think I should feel like this at all. All the
glamour seems to have gone, somehow. Oh, I’d
give anything for the cab to turn round and go
back. The most curious thing is that I feel if
he really had made me believe he loved me it would
have been much easier to have left him. But that’s
absurd. How strong the hay smells. It’s
going to be a very hot day. I shall never see
these fields again. Never! never! But in another
way I am glad that it happened like this; it puts
me so finally, absolutely in the right forever!
He doesn’t want a woman at all. A woman
has no meaning for him. He’s not the type
of man to care deeply for anybody except himself.
I’ve become the person who remembers to
take the links out of his shirts before they go
to the wash – that is all! And that's not
enough for me. I’m young – I'm too
proud. I’m not the type of woman to vegetate
in the country and rave over ‘our’
own lettuces...
What you have been trying to do, ever since you
married me is to make me submit, to turn me into
your shadow, to rely on me so utterly that you’d
only to glance up to find the right time printed
on me somehow, as if I were a clock. You have
never been curious about me; you never wanted
to explore my soul. No; you wanted me to settle
down to your peaceful existence. Oh! how your
blindness has outraged me – how I hate you
for it! I am glad – thankful – thankful
to have left you! I’m not a green girl;
I am not conceited, but I do know my powers. It’s
not for nothing that I’ve always longed
for riches and passion and freedom, and felt that
they were mine by right. (She leans against
the buttoned back of the cab and murmurs.)
“You are a Queen. Let mine be the joy of
giving you your kingdom.” (She smiles
at her little royal hands.) I wish my heart
didn’t beat so hard. It really hurts me.
It tires me so and excites me so. It’s like
someone in a dreadful hurry beating against a
door… This cab is only crawling along; we
shall never be at the station at this rate. Hurry!
Hurry! My love, I am coming as quickly as ever
I can. Yes, I am suffering just like you. It’s
dreadful, isn't it unbearable – this last
half-hour without each other… Oh, God! the
horse has begun to walk again. Why doesn’t
he beat the great strong brute of a thing…
Our wonderful life! We shall travel all over the
world together. The whole world shall be ours
because of our love. Oh, be patient! I am coming
as fast as I possibly can… Ah, now it’s
downhill; now we really are going faster. (An
old man attempts to cross the road.) Get
out of my way, you old fool! He deserves to be
run over… Dearest – dearest; I am
nearly there. Only be patient!
(At the station.)
Put it in a first-class smoker… There’s
plenty of time after all. A full ten minutes before
the train goes. No wonder he’s not here.
I mustn’t appear to be looking for him.
But I must say I’m disappointed. I never
dreamed of being the first to arrive. I thought
he would have been here and engaged a carriage
and bought papers and flowers… How curious!
I absolutely saw in my mind a paper of pink carnations…
He knows how fond I am of carnations. But pink
ones are not my favourites. I prefer dark red
or pale yellow. He really will be late if he doesn’t
come now. The guard has begun to shut the doors.
Whatever can have happened? Something dreadful.
Perhaps at the last moment he has shot himself…
I could not bear the thought of ruining your life…
But you are not ruining my life. Ah, where are
you? I shall have to get into the carriage…
Who is this? That's not him! It can’t be
– yes, it is. What on earth has he got on
his head? A black cap. But how awful! He’s
utterly changed. What can he be wearing a black
cap for? I wouldn't have known him. How absurd
he looks coming towards me, smiling, in that appalling
cap!
He: My darling, I shall never forgive
myself. But the most absurd, tragic-comic thing
happened. (They get into the carriage.)
I lost my hat. It simply disappeared. I had half
the hotel looking for it. Not a sign! So finally,
in despair, I had to borrow this from another
man who was staying there. (The train moves
off.) You’re not angry?
(Tries to take her in his arms.)
She: Don’t! We're not even out
of the station yet.
He: (ardently). Great God! What
do I care if the whole world were to see us I
(Tries to take her in his arms.) My wonder!
My joy!
She: Please don’t! I hate being
kissed in trains.
He: (profoundly hurt). Oh, very well.
You are angry. It’s serious. You can’t
get over the fact that I was late. But if you
only knew the agony I suffered…
She: How can you think I could be so
small-minded? I am not angry at all.
He: Then why won't you let me kiss you?
She (laughing hysterically). You look
so different somehow – almost a stranger.
He: (jumps up and looks at himself in the
glass anxiously, and fatuously, she decides).
But it's all right, isn't it?
She: Oh, quite all right; perfectly all
right. Oh, oh, oh! (She begins to laugh and
cry with rage.)
(They arrive).
She: (while he gets a cab). I must get
over this. It’s an obsession. It’s
incredible that anything should change a man so.
I must tell him. Surely it’s quite simple
to say: Don't you think now that you are in the
city you had better buy yourself a hat? But that
will make him realise how frightful the cap has
been. And the extraordinary thing is that he doesn’t
realise it himself. I mean if he has looked at
himself in the glass, and doesn’t think
that cap too ridiculous, how different our points
of view must be… How deeply different! I
mean, if I had seen him in the street I would
have said I could not possibly love a man who
wore a cap like that. I couldn't even have got
to know him. He isn’t my style at all. (She
looks round.) Everybody is smiling at it.
Well, I don't wonder! The way it makes his ears
stick out, and the way it makes him have no back
to his head at all.
He: The cab is ready, my darling.
(They get in.)
He: (tries to take her hand). The miracle
that we two should be driving together, so simply,
like this.
(She arranges her veil.)
He: (tries to take her hand, very ardent).
I’ll engage one room, my love.
She: Oh, no! Of course you must take two.
He: But don’t you think it would
be wiser not to create suspicion?
She: I must have my own room. (To
herself) You can hang your cap behind your
own door! (She begins to laugh hysterically.)
He: Ah! thank God! My queen is her happy
self again!
(At the hotel.)
Manager: Yes, Sir, I quite understand.
I think I’ve got the very thing for you,
Sir. Kindly step this way. (He takes them
into a small sitting-room, with a bedroom leading
out of it.) This would suit you nicely, wouldn’t
it? And if you liked, we could make you up a bed
on the sofa.
He: Oh, admirable! Admirable!
(The Manager goes).
She: (furious). But I told you I wanted
a room to myself. What a trick to play upon me!
I told you I did not want to share a room. How
dare you treat me like this? (She mimics)
Admirable! Admirable! I shall never forgive you
for that!
He: (overcome). Oh, God, what is happening!
I don't understand – I’m in the dark.
Why have you suddenly, on this day of days, ceased
to love me? What have I done? Tell me!
She: (sinks on the sofa). I'm very tired.
If you do love me, please leave me alone. I –
I only want to be alone for a little.
He: (tenderly). Very well. I shall try
to understand. I do begin to understand. I'll
go out for half-an-hour, and then, my love, you
may feel calmer. (He looks round, distracted.)
She: What is it?
He: My heart – you are sitting
on my cap. (She gives a positive scream and
moves into the bedroom. He goes. She waits a moment,
and then puts down her veil, and takes up her
suitcase.)
(In the taxi.)
She: Yes, Waterloo. (She leans back.)
Ah, I've escaped – I’ve escaped! I
shall just be in time to catch the afternoon train
home. Oh, it’s like a dream – I’ll
be home before supper. I’ll tell him that
the city was too hot or the dentist away. What
does it matter? I’ve a right to my own home…
It will be wonderful driving up from the station:
the fields will smell so delicious. There is cold
fowl for supper left over from yesterday, and
orange jelly… I have been mad, but now I
am sane again. Oh, my husband!
Ordering
books from Persephone
|
You
can see a complete list of Persephone
Books and order online here. Or you can email
us, telephone on 020 7242 9292, send a fax to 020
7242 9272 or write to the following address: Persephone Books
Ltd, 59 Lamb's Conduit Street, London WC1N 3NB
All Persephone Books cost £10 each plus £2 postage (see
more information on ordering).
We can now send a book a month for six or twelve months - more
> |
|