LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF CALlFORfilA RIVERSIDE , Lord Dundreary Memoir of E. A. Sothern E. A. SOTHERN AS LORD DUNDREARY ILLUSTRATED EDITION MR. E. A. SOTHERN. LORD DUNDREARY A Memoir of Edward Askew Sothern T. Edgar Pemberton "WitH a Srief SKetcK of tKe Career of £. H. Sothern Xlbe Tknicfterbocher press "new Korh 1>y id or Sbe Vtnicitecbocisetr press, "new JOocl; CONTENTS The Career of E. H, Sothern . sothern on the stage Sothern off the Stage Sothern in the Hunting-Field . Sothern in High Spirits . Conclusion Postscript to the Third Edition PAGE T 153 173 262 THE CAREER OF E. H. 80THERN By Jackson D. Haaq Edward Hugh Sothern was born in New Orleans December 6, 1859, educated in Eng- land, and studied to be an artist until his eighteenth year, when he made his first stage appearance. His father, Edward A. Sothern, remembered through his embodiments of Lord Dundreary, David Garrick, and The Crushed Tragedian, was an amateur artist of great tal- ent, and was desirous of his son becoming a painter. With this end in view, the younger Sothern passed through an elaborate art course in England, after gaining his regular schooling in Warwickshire and the Marylebone grammar school, London, and finally the Heatherly preparatory school. Elaborate plans were formed for Mr. Sothern to be an artist. He commenced the study of drawing and painting under one of the most famous masters in Lon- don, and made a tour through the art centres of Europe, where he spent some time in study- ing the natural colour of the scenery and en- vironment of Spain. Mr. Sothern now has vi The Career of E. H. Sothern many brilliant paintings as the result of these early years of study of the limner's art. Mr. Sothern entered a competition at the Royal Academy of London for a scholarship, a yearly custom with that institution with young artists who win their recognition through the drawings or paintings they may submit. Mr. Sothern's subject was a drawing of the powerful principal figure of the Laocoon group. His work was ignored, and the young man for the first and only time of his life was discouraged. He decided to abandon the art of painting and enter that of the drama, greatly against his father's desires. It was in his father's own company, how- ever, that the young man made his first ap- pearance on any stage, in Abbey's Park Theatre, New York, in September, 1879. He assumed the name of E. Dee, an abbreviation of his own name, Edward, and the play was a farce called " Brother Sam," he playing a cabman. After a few years of apprenticeship Sothern entered other dramatic organisations, one of these being John McCullough's, at the time he was at the height of his glory. Later he went to London and appeared first in the Royalty Theatre in October, 1881, as Mr. Sharpe in " False Colours." He appeared in the Criterion Theatre the next spring, suc- ceeding his brother, the late Lytton Sothern, The Career of E. H. Sothern vii in " Fourteen Days." He also played engage- ments in the Strand, Surrey, and Standard Theatres and toured the provinces. He re- turned to America in 1883, again joining Mc- Cullough. In 1884 he appeared in " Called Back " and other plays, and in 1884 was with Helen Barry and others at various theatres. In 1885-6 he supported Helen Dauvray in the Union Square Theatre and then joined Daniel Frohman's Lyceum Company as leading man, remaining there until 1898. During the early years Mr. Sothern wrote a play called " Crushed, or Whose Are They? " which he produced himself in the Star Theatre, New York, acting as author, manager, and leading actor with Joseph Haworth and other players in the cast. The play was afterward produced by Harrison and Gourlay, and also praised by Stuart Robson, under the name of "Domestic Earthquakes." In 1883 Sothern wrote another play called " A Lock of Hair," which was produced in the English provinces with his brother, Lytton. One of his latest efforts as dramatist, '* The Light That Lies in Woman's Eyes," was produced by Virginia Harned in 1903. In the year 1885, Daniel Frohman, then a young manager who had severed his connec- tion with the Mallory Brothers of the Madison Square Theatre, became manager of the Ly- viii The Career of E. H. Sothern ceum Theatre. The venture was not proving successful until one day Mr. Sothern, then appearing with Helen Dauvray in " One of Our Girls," brought to Frohman a play that had been left him by his father, and suggested it as a good vehicle for the stock company. It was found that the play contained an admir- able part suited to Sothern himself, and simply to supply an entertainment and to keep the theatre open for a fortnight until summer the play was produced, Mr. Sothern featured as star, although still under contract to Helen Dauvray. The play was " The Highest Bid- der," originally called " Trade." It was pro- duced in May, 1887. An interesting story is told of this period. The play went so well that the manager tried to secure for the actor a release from his road tour from Miss Dauvray for the next season, but she demanded $1000. This Mr. Frohman would not pay, but Mr. Sothern paid it him- self. Thus he began the next season in the Lyceum Theatre, New York, under the manage- ment of Mr. Frohman, supported by Rowland Buckstone, who has been with him ever since. A trunk of plays was turned over to Messrs. Belasco and De Mille, and '' Lord Ohuraley " was the first result. In this play Mr. Sothern began to show his skill as a stage manager and a shaper of stage pictures. He The Career of E. H. Sothern ix took the stage management into his own hands and made a success of the leading part as well. In this play Margaret Anglin and Maude Adams made their first New York appearances. A short tabulary of the original plays pro- duced from that date to this is of interest: Season 1886-87, "The Highest Bidder," "The Great Pink Pearl," "Edith's Burglar." Season 1888-89, "Lord Chumley." Season 1890-91, " Maister of Woodbarrow," " I Love," a monologue, by himself. Season 1891-92, "The Dancing Girl." Season 1892-93, "Captain Lettarblair." Season 1893-94, " Sheridan," " The Uisreput able Mr. Reagan," " The Victoria Cross." Season 1894-95, "The Way to Win a Woman." Season 1895-96, "The Prisoner of Zenda." Season 1896-97, " An Enemy to the King." Season 1897-98, "'Change Alley," "The Adventure of Lady Ursula," and " The Lady of Lyons." Season 1898-99, "A Colonial Girl," and " The King's Musketeer." Season 1899-1900, " The Song of the Sword," "The Sunken Bell," "Drifting Apart." Season 1900-'01, " Hamlet." Season 1901-'02, "Richard Lovelace" and " If I Were King." Season 1903, " If I Were King," " The Proud X The Career of E. H. Sothern Prince," " Markheim," a one-act play by himself. Season 1904-'05, with Julia Marlowe, " Romeo and Juliet," " Much Ado About No- thing," "Hamlet." Season 1905-'06, "Taming of the Shrew," " The Merchant of Venice," " Twelfth Night." Season 1906-'07, "Jeanne D'Arc," "John the Baptist." Season 1907-'08, "The Fool Hath Said," " Lord Dundreary," " Don Quixote," etc During all this time he has, as he is doing this year, made revivals of his tried suooesses. INTRODUCTION More than eight years have elapsed since Edward Askew Sothern, one of the most ori- ginal and popular of modern comedians, passed away, yet, beyond some appreciative mention of him in recent volumes of interest- ing literary and theatrical reminiscences, no life of him has appeared. Long have I felt that there should exist some record of his re- markable stage career, and of the place that he held in the hearts of those who knew, un- derstood, and loved him. Finding that two short articles from my pen concerning him that appeared in the pages of The Theatre magazine attracted some attention, and sub- sequently having been fortunate enough to obtain the help of the surviving members of his family and near friends (who gave me considerable material, for which I here desire to thank them), I resolved to attempt a bio- graphy and tell the story of his experiences as an actor. I knew him intimately — well enough to ap- preciate his merits, and to understand his faults — and I found in him, as many others xii Introduction did, the most tender, considerate, vigilant, and warm-hearted of friends. If this work does a tardy justice to one who was the bril- liant star (in his case I might say, comet) of many seasons, my labour will be amply repaid. T. EDGAR PEMBERTON. June nth, 1889. Note. — The First Edition of this memoir was pub- lished in England in 1890. A Memoir of Edward Askew Sothern CHAPTER I sothern on the stage " Sir, " The press of business previous to the clos- ing of our season has prevented my answering your note earlier, and I now write to assure you that I witnessed your performance at Weymouth with much pleasure, " Our company for next season is complete, and from my connection with Mr. Keeley, I am not quite my own master ; but as I shall be alone in management next September I shall be happy to hear from you about Easter-time, when I will enter into communication with you respecting an engagement at my theatre. In the meantime I hope you will keep yourself in constant practice without which natural talent is of little avail. I thought your act- 2 Edward Askew Sothern ing in ' Used Up ' very good indeed, but in Claude Mclnotte it suggested itself to me that you occasionally ' preached ' too much, instead of giving vent to the impulse of the character. In the third act, when you brought Pauline to your mother's cottage, you were scarcely subdued enough in your action. The head erect, with eye to eye, bespoke too much on your part the injured man, rather than one who had deeply wronged another. Your en- trance in the first act should have been, I think, more excited and rapid. The character of the young Frenchman should at once be de- velof)ed to his audience by an exhibition of that enthusiasm consequent on his village victory, which afterwards wins for him the soldier's laurels on the field of battle, " You will, I am sure, excuse my pointing out to you what struck me as wrong in your conception, I would not do so, but that I think you are in possession of talents that may one day work their way in London, pro- vided they are properly cultivated. Your faults generally were those of a novice, which practice will conquer, " Pray accept my best wishes for your suc- cess, and, hoping to hear from you at the time I have stated, believe me, " Yours truly, " Charles Kban." Sothern on the Stage 3 In October, 1851, in this kindly yet critical fashion, wTote the foremost actor of his day to a young stage beginner destined to secure a fame and popularity of which the old-day players had little dreamt. It was Edward Askew Sothern who, nervously enough, no doubt, had played on the boards of the old- fashioned Weymouth Theatre Sir Charles Coldstream and Claude Melnotte, under the very eye of the great Charles Kean; and it was Edward Askew Sothern who, ten years later on, revolutionised the theatrical world of London. Prior to the Weymouth performance the young actor had had some experience both as an amateur and a professional. He was born in Liverpool, on April 1, 1826 {^^ Dundreary and his Brother Sam are naturally April fools," he was wont in after life to say), and had been intended by his father for the Church or for the Bar; but though for either calling every facility was offered him, he would take to neither, and, the theatrical instinct being strong within him, he, from a very early age, made up his mind that he would be an actor. The elder Sothern, a wealthy merchant, colliery proprietor, and ship-owner, had the strong objection characteristic of his day to all things connected with the stage, allowing his children to " go to the play " but 4 Edward Askew Sothern once in the course of the year, and disliked the idea of his son taking part in private theatricals. In spite, however, of parental ad- vice and admonition (you might as well have advised a duckling not to take to water) the boy contrived to gratify his inclinations. While still at school he managed to pay sur- reptitious Saturday night visits to a penny theatre hard by his home. His soul was fired by the blood-curdling melodramas that he saw there, and the glorious and never-to-be-forgot- ten experience of having been permitted to cross the stage of a real theatre during a " rally " in the clown's scenes that succeed pantomime (they were in those days the great feature in pantomime). He gave on one of his half-holidays, assisted by his schoolfellows, a matinee, at which, in the two or three farces that were produced, he played all the comic parts, and, between each interval, sang a song. A little later on, having declined to enter upon a clerical, legal, or even medical career — which had also been offered to him, — and while he was making futile efforts to ac- custom himself to the routine of work in his father's office, he joined the " Sheridan Ama- teur Dramatic Society," where real actresses were engaged, and the pieces were performed with some degree of completeness. Very speedily he became the " leading man " of this Sothern on the Stage 5 local histrionic club, and, having delighted himself and his young friends in such light pieces as " Othello " and " The Gamester," he became quite certain as to his destiny and calling. For an amateur to obtain a hearing on the bona fide stage was in those days a far more difficult matter than it is now ; but chance favoured Sothern, for in the spring of 1849 he was staying with wealthy friends at St. Helier's, Jersey, and the Theatre Royal at that little town was under the temporary manage- ment of a Mons. Gilmer, and being asked, as at that time was the custom, for their patron- age, Sothern's friends suggested to the mana- ger that he should give the ambitious amateur a chance on the regular boards. Mons. Gil- mer, whose one aim was to get sufficiently good houses to enable him to leave the island, consented, and, being a man of much theatrical experience, put Sothern through his facings in the character of Claude Melnotte, in which it was decided that his first appearance should be made. Even to-day Mons. Gilmer does not speak in very enthusiastic terms of his pupil or his first performance; but that it was emi- nently satisfactory to 'the stage-struck Sothern is proved by the fact that he at once deter- mined to burn his boats, and become an actor in right-down earnest. Warned by his tutor- manager that he was not likely to endure the 6 Edward Askew Sothern drudgery of his proposed professional career so long as he had money to spend and to live upon, his first step was to squander every farthing in his possession (a task that his ever pleasure-loving nature made an exceed- ingly easy one), and being thus by his own act reduced to the necessity of working, he adopted the pseudonym of " Douglas Stuart," and became a regular member of the St. Hell- er's stock company. Here, with much courage and very characteristic perseverance, he played a great number of parts, his adopted name continually figuring in the play-bills in com- edy, melodrama, and farce. The name of Stuart he retained until, following the advice of Mr. Lester Wallack, he abandoned it for his own. This was not, however, until he had secured something like a recognised position on the American stage, and he has left it on record that one of his reasons (the initial one was, of course, the objection taken by his fam- ily to his sudden plunge into the theatrical world) for continuing to act under an assumed name was that he hoped his friends would never know anything of the struggles and privations through which, during the early days of his self-chosen career, he had to pass. In Jersey he no doubt did a great deal of rough, useful work. Speaking years after- wards at the Theatre Royal, Birmingham, at a Sothern on the Stage 7 performance given for the benefit of his friend, Mr. J. C. Smith, who, in 1849, was also a member of the company playing at the St. Helier's Theatre, he told the audience how he had played Hamlet to the heneficiaii^e's Ghost; but, prior to this great opportunity, there were many less ambitious appearances, and at least one in Shakespeare's immortal play, in which he was cast for Laertes, the Ghost, and the Second Actor. In connection with this undertaking (in those days at the smaller provincial theatres by no means an uncommon one) an amusing anecdote has been handed down. To assist poor young '' Stuart," a memorandum was attached to the wings telling him when to make his changes. Some practical joker took this down, and the consequence was that the Sec- ond Actor, Laertes, and the Ghost were, since the nervous performer was now merely rely- ing upon his memory, continually appearing on the stage in the wrong character. " Oh, the agony of those moments and of that night ! " groaned Sothern, as he recalled the incident in after years. " Fancy the Ghost going on to act as Laertes ! " From Jersey to Weymouth is not a very far cry, and this brings me back to the com- mencement of my chapter, and the perform- ance of '' The Lady of Lyons " and " Used 8 Edward Askew Sothern Up," at which Charles Kean was present, and concerning which he wrote so encouragingly. Pending the time when he was to write to the great actor and manager respecting a London appearance, Sothern, accepting such engage- ments as came in his way, drifted to Wolver- hampton, and while there an event occurred which mapped out his career. The Mons. Gilmer of the Jersey days, who was closely connected with the fortunes of the Theatre Royal, Birmingham, was about to take a benefit in the great midland town, and, hear- ing that his struggling and ambitious young friend was in the neighbourhood, good-nat- uredly offered him the opportunity of appearing before a larger and more critical audience than had hitherto come in his way. Sothern jumped at the chance, and accordingly appeared on the boards of the old Birmingham Theatre as Frank Friskley, in the well-known farce en- titled " Boots at the Swan." The excellence of his acting at once caught the critical eye of Mr. Simpson, the then manager of the theatre ; he was offered an engagement, and became a member of the company. That Sothern at- tached great importance to this step in his professional career is amply proved by the fact that when, some eleven years later, he made his first appearance as Lord Dundreary at the Haymarket, he caused himself to be Sothern on the Staee t> announced as " formerly of the Theatre Royal, Birmingham." '* What a difference," I often heard him say, when in the days of his fame he revisited the town, " between the time when I came over from Wolverhampton to play Frank FrisMey on these boards, and right thankfully accepted an engagement at thirty shillings a week, and now, when I turn money away from the doors! But the difference is more in the public than in me. I was probably as good an actor then as I am now. Like many other men, I wanted finding out, and I must confess that I have been very lucky." In those days Mr. Simpson was the manager of more than one theatre, and, after a short but satisfactory engagement in Birmingham, Sothern was told off to play in Liverpool ; but, disliking this enforced return in his 'prentice days to his native town, he gave up the idea of waiting for his opportunity with Kean, and accepted an offer that was made to him to try his fortune in America. At the National Theatre, Boston, at a sal- ary of twenty-five dollars a week, he made his first American appearance, playing Dr. Pang- loss in " The Heir-at-Law," and a part in the farce called " John Dobbs." The selection of the comedy proved to be a most unfortunate one. Sothern's failure as Dr. Pangloss was complete, and so mercilessly and unanimously lo Edward Askew Sothern was his acting cut up in the papers that, to use his own words, he was forthwith " dis- missed for incapacity." Somewhat discour- aged, but happily not disheartened, by this luckless venture, he then accepted an engage- ment, at a reduced salary, to play juvenile parts at the Howard Athenaeum in the same city. Of these early American days Mrs. J. R. Vin- cent, a veteran actress on the Boston stage, and Sothern's lifelong friend, has written* as follows : " ' Douglas Stuart ' was tall, wil- lowy, and lithe, with a clear, red-and-white, English complexion; bright blue eyes; wavy, brown hair; graceful in his carriage, and well calculated physically to conciliate the heart of any susceptible woman. He lived at the same house with me, and I soon found that he had all the simplicity and buoyancy of a child. He was not rich — anything but that — but in- variably charitable and generous to the extent of prodigality. " The opening night was not a success. You can fancy the appearance of a boy on the stage I should say he was three or four and twenty, * In a pleasant little book concerning Sothern, entitled Birds of a Feather, that appeared eleven years ago in America. His own carefully marked and corrected copy of this brief record has been en- trusted to me. Sothern on the Staee ii but behind the footlights he did not look as if he were more than sixteen. He had a singu- larly sweet voice. " ' Douglas Stuart's ' next move was to the Howard Athenaeum. I remember an incident that occurred at this period which illustrates a phase of his character to which I have just referred. One of the actors (his name was Sneider), a quiet, well-behaved, inoffensive man, who was very poor, was suddenly taken ill. Stuart, learning this fact, went to the headquarters of Sneider, where he found the friendless, penniless fellow more dead than alive, in a miserable back attic, and became his constant nurse. Apparently he was in the last stage of consumption, and but for the care, comfort, and attention rendered by his new-found friend he probably would have died. I have seen him two or three times within a few years, and he never fails to speak in the most enthusiastic terms of the kindness and affection shown him during that sickness. " The first impression produced by ' Douglas Stuart ' as an actor was not a favourable one. The truth is he had been over-praised. The manager of the National Theatre had an- nounced it in advance that he was going to bring to America ' the greatest actor that had ever appeared on its stage,' and thus had aroused the expectations of the people to such 12 Edward Askew Sothern a degree that they were naturally disap- pointed; hence his failure. Besides, he was not old enough to make a sensation. He could not even ' make-up ' properly, although his education was correct, and he was perfect in whatever part he undertook. I do not remem- ber the different pieces that he played, yet I recall the fact that they were remarkably well done for so young a man. But, oh, how sen- sitive he was! — especially when the papers cut him up, which they did without stint." At the Howard Athenaeum Sothern did bet- ter than at the National Theatre, but, feeling that his chances of experience were small, he very soon went to New York, and succeeded in obtaining an engagement with Mr. Barnum to play twice daily at his famous Museum. Here he got the practice that he so much needed, at last acquired the art of self-posses- sion, and was thus able to study his audiences. His next step was an engagement at Wash- ington, at a salary of forty dollars a week, and this was followed by successful appearances at Baltimore and other cities. Although by no means regarded as a star, his acting must in those days have impressed all true critics, as the following, written by one who closely watched his progress, will show. The play was Buckstone's " Flowers of the Forest " : " These ' Flowers ' were a sort of gipsy gang Sothern on the Stage 13 of astouishiug appropriating powers, and among them the ' character ' is the ' Kinchin.' The ' Kinchin,' as I remember him, is a swarthy, lank individual, out at elbows and knees, ungainly and gaunt. When the rest of the thieves come into the shanty, and bring out the various fine valuables they have cap- tured, the ' Kinchin ' takes a bandana handker- chief from one pocket, something equally trivial from every pocket, ending, if I remember, with a wretched chicken, which is drawn out of his breast and rushes about the stage. The gang roar with laughter, and chaff him tre- mendously; but can I ever forget the look of pathetic grief at their ingratitude assumed by the ' Kinchin ' ? Shall I ever lose one tone of the injured ' Kinchin's ' voice when after- wards, a more serious mood having overtaken him, he said, 'Hevery one 's against me. A swell General, he goes hinto a henemmy's country, and kills hevery one he meets — and burns their willages — and they cover him with stars, and blows a trumpet for him. Hi just collar a hen or a handkerchief — they blows no trumpet for me, — they whips me, and gives me 'ancuffs to carry. It 's shameful, it is. It quite 'urts my feelings.' " I don't think I should have hesitated to prophesy in that moment — it must have been fifteen years ago — that the Mr. St»iart who 14 Edward Askew Sothern played the part of ' Kinchin ' would some day be a much more famous man than I expected. And, indeed, he has become famous, for I see him to-day as the great impersonator of Dundreary." At length the feet of the wandering, hard- working young actor touched firm ground, and he became a recognised member of Mr. Wal- lack's company; but the parts allotted him were so small, and his chances of real distinc- tion seemed so remote, that just before the long-expected opportunity came he had almost made up his mind to abandon the stage, return to England, and seek some other employment. Sothern was the hardest of workers, and al- though there seemed very little likelihood of his being called upon to play them he con- stantly studied (sitting up until four o'clock in the morning, and applying himself all day when there was no rehearsal) the parts un- dertaken by Lester Wallack. Miss Matilda Heron had been engaged to play Camille in a version of " La Dame aux Camelias," and three days before the production, which was regarded with considerable apprehension, he was asked if he could study the long and im- portant part of Armand Duval. To the sur- prise of the management, it was found that he was already " up " in it. It was at once given to him, and at the performance, which was in Sothern on the Stage 15 every way a pronounced success, he received, for the first time in his life, several enthusias- tic " calls," This settled matters in more ways than one, and, having played under the direc- tion of Mr. Wallack for about four years, he left him, and joined the company of Miss Laura Keene, then acting in New York in a theatre which bore the name of his manageress. How hard he worked in these days, and how home-sick he often felt, will be gathered from some extracts from letters that he wrote at the time to one of his oldest companions and most intimate friends in England: " The remembrances brought up by your few lines on the old place took me many, many years back. I saw myself, as you so well de- scribed, standing gazing on the river, and a long, struggling tear forced its way down a cheek that fate has done naught but cuff for years. But, God be praised, there are brighter days in store, and I am as much the old Ned Sothern in heart and feeling as ever, though grey hairs have been forced through the hotbed of my weary skull. If I have no gen- ius, I at least have indisputable perseverance." A month later he wrote: " I 've made a big mark in New York this season. My time is as sure to come, if I live, as there is a sun in the heavens." The desire to return to and act in his own i6 Edward Askew Sothern country was so strong within him that, hop- ing quickly to raise the wherewithal for the venture, he speculated during an " ofif season " as a manager, and wrote almost definitely about an appearance in Liverpool, saying: " I send you my list of crack parts. What is your opinion of them? * School for Scandal ' : . . Charles Surface. ' Heir at Law ' Dr. Pangloss. * Old Heads and Young Hearts ' Lyttleton Coke. ' She Stoops to Conquer ' Young Marlow. 'The Rivals' Bob Acres. ' London Assurance ' Charles Courtley. ' Much Ado About Nothing ' Benedick. ' Bachelor of Arts ' Harry Jaspar. 'Laugh When You Can' Gossamer. 'The Marble Heart' Raphael. ' Camille ' Armand. ' The Wife ' St. Pierre. 'The Lady of Lyons' Claude Melnotte. 'Used Up,' 'Poor Pillicoddy,' 'Twenty Minutes with a Tiger,' 'The Morning Call,' ' Two Can Play at That Game,' ' Trying it On,' ' My Aunt,' and ' Delicate Ground.' " Have ' The Marble Heart ' and ' Camille ' been much played in Liverpool? My idea would be to have the Royal at so much a week, and work matters in my own way." Fate willed that this scheme should only exist on paper. The management venture was Sothern on the Stage 17 a failure, and poor Sothern was compelled to write — " I 've had an awful season, . . . and this time I 've had a sickener." Of his experiences in these early days Soth- ern, with his keen sense of humour, had, of course, in after life, many amusing stories to tell, of which the following is an example: An actor was playing the part of a prisoner in a dungeon, and, in order to make his escape, had concealed in his dress a file about eighteen inches long. He had filed off his handcuffs and shackles, and through his prison bars, and had leapt on to the stage, when the king's carbineers made their appearance, and pointed their muskets at him, the business of the piece being that he was to be shot dead in full view of the audience. The word " Fire ! " was given, and followed by half a dozen feeble and harmless " clicks," the property man having forgotten to " load " the guns. Here was a dilemma! Without the death of the escaped prisoner the piece could not come to an end, and how was the unfortunate actor to commit the happy despatch? Quick as lightning an idea, which surely proved that he had real dramatic genius, came into his mind. With a quick movement he thrust the ponderous file in the direction of his throat, at the same instant performing a kind of conjuring trick, 1 8 Edward Askew Sothern which caused it to disappear, and then melo- dramatically exclaimed, " My God ! I have swallowed the file ! " He then came down to the footlights, and, to the entire satisfaction of the audience, expired in great agony. Another anecdote, in which the notorious blunders of stage firearms had once more a part, he told of himself. He was playing with one of the famous tragedians of his day in that lugubrious but then popular drama, en- titled, " Pauline ; or, A Night of Terror," in which, it may be remembered, two men, re- solved to fight to the death, confront each other in the last act over a table on which lie two pistols, the one loaded, the other empty and harmless. With their backs to the table the men select their weapons, then face each other, and shoot. Sothern was to take up the deadly instrument, and as he fired, the trage dian, with a splendid " back-fall," was to drop down, a corpse. Alas! alas! the pistols were equally innocent of anything that would cause a report, and Sothern in dismay saw the al- most noiseless fall of the two triggers, followed by the tragedian still standing and staring at him in mute and hopeless dismay. In a moment Sothern became inspired, again pre- sented the pistol, clicked the offending trigger, and, with all the force of a good pair of lungs, roared " BANG ! " The effect was in- Sothern on the Stage 19 stantaneous. The tragedian fell as if he had been shot through every vital part of his body, and the curtain came down to deafening applause. On another occasion, a young lady was play- ing, who, although a novice in acting, had a lovely voice of which she was proud, and al- ways used on the stage, even though the occa- sion was inopportune. She had been engaged t(» play a part in a melodrama, and had made it a sine qua non that she should introduce a song, and accompany herself on the piano. The director of the theatre, being obliged to go away on business, gave instructions to the stage-manager that she was to do this wher- ever she thought best. She was playing the part of a persecuted maiden, pursued by bri- gands, when, in the midst of a highly-wrought dramatic scene, to the horror of every one on the stage and behind the scenes, she insisted upon a piano being discovered in the wilds of the forest. She dashed on with her hair streaming down her back, and after a strong declamatory speech expressive of the idea that she wished she were back amongst her early friends, she exclaimed, " Ah, I see that the brigands have left their piano in the woods, which reminds me of the song my brother taught me long ago." Whereupon, with mar- vellous comjjlaisance, she revolved upon the 20 Edward Askew Sothern music-stool, and proceeded to sing " Home, Sweet Home." But I must, for the time being, abandon anecdote, and return to Sothern at Laura Keene's theatre. Here, on October 18, 1858, was produced for the first time the piece known as " Our American Cousin," by Tom Taylor. Much to his disgust, Sothern was cast for the subordinate character of Lord Dundreary, who was intended to be an old man, and who had only forty-seven lines to speak. At first he declined to play the part, but subsequently, on the condition that he should be permitted to re-write it on lines of his own, undertook it. Then he commenced putting into it everything he had seen that had struck him as wildly absurd. There was not, he used afterwards to declare, a single look, word, or act in Lord Dundreary that had not been suggested to him by people whom he had known since early boyhood. On the first night the part was by no means a success, — indeed, it was some two or three weeks before the public began to un- derstand what an actor whose name had hitherto been identified with characters of a serious and even pathetic type meant by this piece of mad eccentricity. But, once compre- hended, Lord Dundreary's popularity was a thing assured, and very soon he made a not very interesting or brilliant play one of the Sothern on the Staee 2 [ & greatest attractions that the American stage had ever known. Everything about the part — the famous make-up, the wig, the whiskers, and the eye-glass, the eccentric yet faultless costumes, the lisp and the stutter, the ingen- ious distortion of old aphorisms — was the out- come of Sothern's own original thought. Only one thing connected with the impersonation — the quaint little hop (that odd " impediment in the gait," which became as much part and parcel of his lordship as the impediment in his speech) — was the result of accident. At re- hearsal one cold day, Sothern, who was ever of a restless disposition, was endeavouring to keep himself warm by hopping about at the back of the stage, when Miss Keene sarcasti- cally inquired if " he was going to introduce that in Dundreary?" Among the bystanding actors and actresses this created a laugh, and Sothern, who at the time was out of temper with his part, replied in his gravest manner, "Yes, Miss Keene; that's my view of the character." Having so far committed himself, he felt bound to go on with it, and finding as the rehearsal progressed that the whole company, including the scene-shifters, were convulsed with laughter, he at night made capital out of a modified hop. Months grew into years while Lord Dundreary reigned su- preme upon the American stage, and English 2 2 Edward Askew Sothern playgoers were almost wearying of waiting for this most original of stage creations, when it" was modestly enough announced that on November 11, 1861, Mr. Sothern, " formerly of the Theatre Royal, Birmingham, and from the principal American theatres," would make his first appearance at the Haymarket, in a char- aster which he had already played for up- wards of eight hundred times. In theatrical circles the experiment was, oddly enough, con- sidered to be a most dangerous one, and it was only because the Haymarket was sadly in need of an attraction that Sothern got a chance of appearing on its historic boards. Lord Dun- dreary, it was said, had become popular in New York because the American theatregoers of those days revelled in a gross and insulting caricature of an English nobleman; in London the performance would, no doubt, be con- demned as entirely wanting in humour, taste, and judgment. That Sothern himself was un- certain about it the following incident will prove: During the rehearsal of the play one of the oldest members of the Haymarket com- pany came upon the stage while he was run- ning over his famous letter scene. He turned, and said, " My dear madam, don't come on here till you get your cue. In fact, on the night of the performance, you will have twenty minutes to wait during this scene." Sothern on the Stage 23 " Why," said the lady, satirically, " do you expect so much applause?" " Yes," replied Sothern ; " I know how long this scene always plays." " Ah ! " answered the actress, " but suppose the audience should not take your view of the matter?" '' In that case," said Sothern, " you won't have to bother yourself, for I and the piece will have been condemned a good hour before your services will be required." Sothern's misgivings with regard to a ven- ture upon which so much depended had been more openly expressed in a letter which, be- fore leaving America, he wrote to a friend in England : " I have received a point-blank offer," he said, " from the Theatre Royal, Haymarket, London, and, conditionally, have accepted, to open in October next. I commence as Lord Dundreary. Every one foretells a hit; hut I am douMfiil. The whole past seems like a dream to me. Who (when I first played Bev- erley as an amateur) ever imagined that I should take to the stage as a profession — come over to America, remain nine years, and re- turn to ' star ' in London ! " What a terrible " first-night " to the anx- ious actor that initial performance of " Our American Cousin " on the London stage must 24 Edward Askew Sothern have been! All the actors and actresses of the Haymarket company, including Buckstone, who played Asa Trenchard (a part that never suited him), Chippendale, Eogers, Clark, Braid, Mrs. Charles Young, Miss M. Oliver, Miss H. Lindley, and Miss Henrade, predicted the cer- tain failure of the piece and its principal per- former; but Sothern attacked his work boldly, and although the piece did not make an im- mediate success, the humour and originality of his acting were universally acknowledged. It was, indeed, some time before " Our American Cousin " (which is, in truth, but a poor play) drew remunerative audiences and, in despair of its ever doing so, Buckstone had actually put up notices announcing that it would be immediately replaced by " She Stoops to Conquer," when Charles Mathews, who had seen and well knew how to appreciate Soth- ern's admirable acting, strongly advised him to keep it in the bill, declaring that Lord Dundreary had only to become known to be phenomenally popular. How right in his judgment Mathews was the sequel proved. The fame of his lordship spread far and near; the success of the performance became as great as it was then unprecedented, and for four hundred consecutive nights the Haymarket was crowded with eager, delighted, and up- roariously mirthful audiences. Well might Sothern on the Stage 25 Sothern in those days look back with pride to the perseverance and faith in himself that had upheld him through so many struggles and dis- appointments, and which had at length given him the realisation of his most sanguine hopes. It may here be worth while to glance at the other London playhouses, and take note of the programmes with which " Our American Cousin " had to compete. At Drury Lane Miss Avonia Jones was playing in " Medea " ; at the Adelphi the Boucicaults were to be seen in " The Colleen Bawn " ; at the Princess's Fechter had just produced " Othello " ; at the Lyceum Falconer's " Peep o' Day " was the attraction; at the Olympic the unrivalled Robson was acting to enthusiastic and en- thralled audiences; at the St. James's Miss Herbert, Miss Kate Terry, and Mr. Alfred Wigan were appearing in " The Isle of St. Tropez " ; at Sadler's Wells Mr. Phelps's artis- tic revival of " The Winter's Tale " was being given ; and at the Strand " Johnnie " Clarke, *' Jimmy " Rogers, and Marie Wilton, bright- est and best trio of all burlesque performers, were making the little house ring with merri- ment in the travesty called " Esmeralda." A small number of theatres these, in comparison with the long list with which we are to-day familiar; but, surely, a goodly selection of 26 Edward Askew Sothern plays, and a notable group of performers, whose names the history of the stage will not allow to die. Above them all, however, Soth- ern rose pre-eminently, and for many months the Haymarket was the head centre of theatri- cal attraction. It must have been very gratifying to the actor to find that Lord Dundreary was at once understood by English folk. There was no suggestion of bad taste; the impersonation, ex- travagant though it undoubtedly was, was not considered foolish; it excited laughter, it gained applause, it interested as much as it amused, and it became the rage not only of London but of England. Dundreary was upon the lips of every one. Men cultivated Dun- dreary whiskers and aifected Dundreary coats* ; indeed, at that time, Sothern was such a good friend to the tailors that, if he would have accepted them, he might have been fur- nished, without any mention of payment, with clothes sufficient for a dozen lifetimes. His dressing-room at the Haymarket was crowded 1 Mr. E. H. Sothern still possesses, and it need hardly be said, prizes, the long frock-coat which, on the occasion of the first performance of " Our American Cousin " in America, his father borrowed from Mr. Boucicault for the use of Lord Dundreary. The name of " Boucicault " is affixed to this, the original of a since world-famous garment. Sothern on the Stage 27 with parcels sent by energetic haberdashers, who knew that if by wearing it upon the stage he would set the fashion for a certain make of necktie, or a particular pattern of shirt-cuff, or collar, their fortunes would be half made; and hatters and bootmakers followed in the haberdashers' wake. Dundreary photographs were seen everywhere ; " Dundrearyisms," as they came to be called, were the fashionable mots of the day; and little books (generally very badly done) dealing with the imaginary doings of Dundreary under every possible con- dition, and in every quarter of the globe, were in their thousands sold at the street corners. Concerning Dundreary quite three parts of England went more than half mad, and not to know all about him and his deliciously quaint sayings and doings was to argue your- self unknown. The actor who not only caused but sustained all this excitement must have achieved some- thing far greater than the mere creation of a new type of " stage swell." Dundreary was a study for the philosopher, as well as a laugh- ing-stock for the idler, and he thus became popular with all classes of the community. Summing him up in his tersely odd way, the American dramatic critic who signs himself " Nym Crinkle " said, " Mr. Sothern's concep- tion of the part of Dundreary, if not an in- 28 Edward Askew Sothern spiration, shows inherent originality. The type itself is new. It is the elaboration of a negation. Dundreary is an intellectual non- entity. It is as if the actor had set about to show us the rich fulness of a vacuum. But even a negation becomes eloquent when all the faculties of the artist are directed upon it. And histrionism here shares the victory of philosophy, which spends centuries of learning to prove that nothing IS. Heretofore the stage has not been destitute of amusing asses. Asininity, in fact, always played a prominent part in comedy. But when did we ever see a player devote himself to the elucidation of its mysteries with this exhaustive skill and patience? At best the fool was portrayed by empty fooling, no one seeming to think it a serious matter to be brainless; and how ac- ceptable the mere physical exposition of stu- pidity was to the public the serene idiot in ' Humpty Dumpty ' fully demonstrated, by grinning vacuously at them for two years. But Mr. Sothern conceived the idea of an ele gant ass, perfect in all his imperfections, rich in the absence of brains, coherent in his inco- herency, and polished in the proof of his stupidity. More than this, he undertook to show us the internal character of it; the very workings of the addled intellect; and it was possible to put our finger with accuracy on Sothern on the Stage 29 the weak spots in his head whenever we got through laughing. Dundreary lacks the logi- cal faculty, and in the showing humour steps in gracefully. When he reads his brother Sam's letter, which informs him that Sam has discovered that his old nurse is his mother. Dundreary brings all his faculties to bear upon his own interest in the matter, and tries to discover who his mother will be if this is true. But he cannot make a deduction. Any effort of his mind to be sequential involves him in inextricable confusion. He uses his fingers as aids. His thumb represents Sam's mother; his forefinger is his own mother; and then he catches sight of the remaining fingers, and away go his faculties. Whose mothers are they? This is foolishness, but rational fool- ishness, after all, because we see the spring of it. There is also this significance in Dun- dreary — that he represents the possibility of a state of society in which nothing is preserved to the individual but personal vanity of ap- pearance. The satire is doubtless overdrawn, but it anticipates the fashionable man whose artificial tastes have eaten up his natural fac- ulties. Mr. Sothern's success is not flattering to the few comedians who have endeavoured to show by direct means how estimable frank ness and common-sense are — for he has better shown it by its antithesis, and his delicious 30 Edward Askew Sothern dolt has seasoned for long keeping a very trashy play. Above all, he shows the true comedy talent — the power of getting inside a character, and making it talk and act accord- ing to its nature." After this I may appropriately quote an English critic's judgment on the first appear- ance of Lord Dundreary at the Haymarket. " Whether," said the Athenceum of November 16, 1861, " the character by itself would sustain any degree of interest, we much doubt; but in the hands of Mr. Sothern, the gentleman who has been acting in it for so many hundred nights over the water, it is certainly the fun- niest thing in the world. The part is abstractly a vile caricature of an inane nobleman, intensely ignorant and extremely indolent. i The notion once accepted by the audience that * such an absurd animal could be the type of any class whatever, the actor was free to ex- aggerate to any extent the representation of ] the ridiculous, Mr. Sothern, in the quietest way, takes full advantage of his position, and effectually subdues the audience to his mood. ' Laughter, at all times irrepressible, finally cul- minates in a general convulsion, which to our ears seemed quite a peculiarity — it was so strange, and yet so natural. The occasion was simply the reading of a letter from a brother in America, containing literally no- 1 Sothern on the Stage 31 thing more than he feared a former letter had miscarried from his having forgotten to direct it. This, with certain inane comments on its contents, sufficed to enable Mr. Sothern to produce the prodigious effect we have in- dicated. We are therefore disposed to believe that Mr. Sothern, as an eccentric actor, is a man of no ordinary genius, and reasonably de- sire his further acquaintance." Nothing pleased Sothern better than to meet with people who did not look upon Dundreary as an absolute fool. His lordship was, it will be remembered, remarkably shrewd in all matters that were likely to affect his pocket; he had no idea of being in any way or by any one taken in; and even his twisting about of familiar proverbs, ridiculous as it was, had in it a certain amount of naive common-sense. On that point Sothern said: " Now, see how easily this thought, which has been frequently cavilled at as too non- sensical for an educated man, was suggested. A number of us were, years ago, taking supper in Halifax after a performance, when a man entered the room, and, looking at us, said, ' Oh, I see ! Birds of a feather ! ' I instantly saw the weak side of this fragment of a well- known maxim, and winking at my brother actors, and assuming utter ignorance, I said, 'What do you mean by birds of a feather?' 32 Edward Askew Sothern He looked rather staggered, and replied, " What, have you never heard of the old Eng- lish proverb — " Birds of a feather flock together " ? ' Every one shook his head. He then said, ' I never met such a lot of ignora- muses in my life.' That was my cue, and I began to turn the proverb inside out. I said to him, ' There never could have been such a proverb — birds of a feather! The idea of a whole flock of birds having only one feather! The thing is utterly ridiculous. Besides, the poor bird that had that feather must have flown on one side; consequently, as the other birds could n't fly at all, they could n't flock together. But even accepting the absurdity, if they flocked at all they must flock together, as no bird could possibly be such a d — d fool as to go into a corner and try and flock by himself.' Our visitor began to see the force of the logic, and was greeted with roars of laughter. I made a memorandum of the inci- dent, and years afterwards elaborated the idea in writing Dundreary. I have quires upon quires of memoranda of a similar character; but whenever I play the part the public seem so disappointed at not hearing the old lines that I fear I shall never have the opportunity of getting them to accept what would really be a much better version," Even as it was, " Our American Cousin " Sothern on the Stage ^t^ bristled with deliciously quaint " Dnndreary- isms," as, take, for example, his lordship's re- mark when Asa Trenchard asked him if he had "got any brains?" "He wants to find out if I've got any brains, and then he'll scalp me ; that 's the idea ! " Or again, when Dun- drcary, after copious potations of brandy-and- soda, is alone in his bedroom and says, " Every- thing seems wobbling about, I know as well as possible there are only two candles there, and yet I can't help seeing four. I wonder, if I was to put those two fellows out, what rcould hecome of the other two?" And then, when Asa comes in and suggests they shall " have the liquors up and make a night of it," Dundreary replies, "Make a night of it? Why, it is night! It's just twelve o'clock." In the scene which he has with his valet Bud- dieom'be, after the latter's dismissal. Dun- dreary shows a keen sense of humour. Buddicomte has asked for a character, when the following conversation takes place: Dun. I '11 tell you the best plan. You write your own character, and I '11 put my name to it. It will save us both a good deal of anxiety. Bud. Thank you, my lord. That will suit me exactly. Oh, my lord, I have to thank you for the two waistcoats you were kind enough to give me, but unfortunately they are too small for me. Dun. Well, give them to your mother. 3 34 Edward Askew Sothern Bud. Oh, I took the liberty of putting them back into your lordship's wardrobe. Dun. I don't want to carry on a conversation all day. Go away. You 're a nice person, but I 've had enough of you. Bud. Yes, my lord. I put the waistcoats back, and I took instead two coats. Dun. This is getting funny ! Oh ! You 've taken a couple of coats, have you? Bud. Yes, my lord. I thought you wouldn't mind the exchange. Dun. Oh no, I rather like it! New ones, I hope. Bud. I can't say they 're quite new, my lord, be- cause I 've worn one and my brother has worn the other. Dun. Had n't you better let your uncle have one? Bud. That 's very curious, my lord. He 's had one! Dun. Oh ! I 'm glad you 've made the old man happy! Have you taken many trousers? Bud. Not yet, my lord. Dun. Oh, not yet! Will you be kind enough to look them over, and if they don't fit we '11 have them altered for you. Bud. Really, my lord, this is more than I expected. Dun. It 's a great deal more than I expected. Will you have the goodness to fetch me a policeman? Bud. Yes, my lord. Will one be sufficient? Dun. What a splendid fool this fellow is! Oh, you can bring me one and a quarter if you like! From the scenes between Dundreary and Georgina one may almost quote at random: Sothern on the Stage 35 Dun. It 's a pretty flower, — if it were another colour. One fellow likes one colour, and another fel- low likes another colour. Come, you know what I mean? (Georgina shakes her head.) Yes, you do. I don't — but you do. I mean it 's one of those things that grows out of a flower-pot, — roots, — mud, — and all that sort of thing. Oh, talking of mud reminds me I want to say something. It 's rather awkward for one fellow to say to another fellow, — the fact is, I 've made up my mind to propose to some fel- low or other, and it struck me I might as well pro- pose to you as anybody else. (Georgina turns slightly away from him.) I mean sooner, of course. I only said that because I was nervous, — any fellow naturally does feel nervous when he knows he 's going to make an ass of himself. Talking about asses, I Ve been a bachelor ever since I 've been so high, and I Ve got rather tired of that sort of thing, and it struck me if you '11 be kind enough to marry me I shall be very much obliged to you. Of course, if you don't see the matter in the same light, and fancy you 'd rather not, — why, I don't care a rap about it! {She turns aside, looking amazed.) I've got it all mixed up somehow or other. You see, the fact is, — hem — hem! {Pause.) It makes a fellow feel awkward when he 's talking to the back of a person's head. {She faces him.) Thank you, that 's better : you '11 find me a very nice fellow, — at least, I think so, — that is, what I mean is, that most fellows think me a nice fellow, — two fellows out of three would think me a nice fellow, — and the other fellow — the third fellow, — well, that fellow would be an ass. I'm very good-tempered, too; that 's a great point, is n't it? You look as if you 'd got a good temper; but then, of course, we know that many a girl looks as if she 'd got a good temper 36 Edward Askew Sothern before she 's married, — but after she 's married sometimes a fellow finds out her temper 's not ex- actly what he fancied. {He laughs suddenly.) I 'm making a devil of a mess of it! I really think we should be very happy. I 'm a very domesticated fellow, — fond of tea, — smoking in bed, — and all that sort of thing. I merely name that because it gives you an insight into a fellow's character. You '11 find me a very easy fellow to get along with, and after we 've been married two or three weeks, if you don't like me you can go back again to your mother. Those who remember the play will readily recall the delightful exactitude with which each point in this extraordinary " proposal " speech was made. Those who do not will, perhaps, hardly appreciate it, for one cannot on paper convey the comical stutter, the quaint laugh, and the wonderful facial expression of the actor ; but they will probably see in it signs of the curious subtlety of the character that Sothern invented. Later on, in the scene in which Lieutenant Ver?ion asks Dundreary to use his influence to get him appointed to a captaincy, there occurs a delicious " Dundrearyism " : Dun. I suppose you are right in your lee scuppers? Lieut. Lee scuppers? Dun. Your mainbrace, larboard stove pipes, hatchway, helm-rudder, and all that sort of thing? Sothern on the Stage 37 Lieut. Oh, — you mean, — can I pass my ex- amination? Dun. I don't mean anything of the sort. Of course you can pass it. The point is, can you get through it? The joke of the dog wagging his tail because of his superior strength, and in order to pre- vent the tail wagging the dog, has become such a byword that it need not be detailed here — though it is sometimes, I fancy, forgotten that its originator was Dundreary. The letter from Sam (the immortal Sam who never had a " uel "), which used to be the great success of the evening, and which, de- livered as it was, used to make people abso- lutely sore with laughing, must be given, with the stage directions, in ewtenso: (Before opening letter read " N.B." outside it.) " N.B. — If you don't get this letter, write and let me know." That fella 's an ass, whoever he is ! (Opens letter, taking care he holds it upside down.) I don't know any fella in America except Sam; of course I know Sam, because Sam's my brother. Every fella knows his own brother. Sam and I used to be boys when we were lads, both of us. We were always together. People used to say, " Birds of a feather " — what is it birds of a feather do? — oh, "Birds of a feather gather no moss!" That 's ridiculous, that is. The idea of a lot of birds picking up moss ! Oh no ; it 's the early bird that knows its own father. That's worse than the 38' Edward Askew Sothern other. No bird can know its own father. If he told the truth, he 'd say he was even in a fog about his own mother. I 've got it — it 's the wise child that gets the worms ! Oh, that 's worse than any of them! No parent would allow his child to get a lot of worms like that! Besides, the whole pro- verb 's nonsense from beginning to end. Birds of a feather flock together : yes, that 's it ! As if a whole flock of birds would have only one feather! They 'd all catch cold. Besides, there 's only one of those birds could have that feather, and that fella would fly all on one side ! That 's one of those things no fella can find out. Besides, fancy any bird being such a d — d fool as to go into a corner and flock all by himself ! Ah, that 's one of those things no fella can find out. {Looks at letter.) Whoever it 's from he 's written it upside down. Oh no, I 've got it upside down ! I knew some fella was upside down. (Laughs.) Yes, this is from Sam; I always know Sam's handwriting when I see his name on the other side. " America." Well, I 'm glad he 's sent me his address ! " My dear brother." Sam always calls me brother, because neither of us have got any sisters. " I am afraid that my last letter miscarried, as I was in such a hurry for the post that I forgot to put any direction on the envelope." Then I sup- pose that 's the reason I never got it; but who could have got it? The only fella that could have got that letter is some fella without a name. And how on earth could he get it? The postman couldn't go about asking every fella he met if he 'd got no name! Sam's an ass! "I find out now" (I wonder what he 's found out now?) " that I was changed Sothern on the Stage 39 at my birth." Now, what d — d nonsense that is! Why did n't he find it out before? " My old nurse turns out to be my mother." What rubbish! Then, if that 's true, all I can say is, Sam 's not my brother, and if he 's not my brother, who the devil am I? Let's see now. Stop a minute {pointing to forefinger of left hand) . That 's Sam's mother, and that's {the thumb) Sam's nurse. Sam's nurse is only half the size of his mother. Well, that 's my mother {points to second finger on left hand. He finds he can't get that finger to stand up like the rest — the thumb and forefinger — as he closes the third and little finger). I can't get my mother to stand up. Well, that 's my mother {holds up fore- finger of right hand; in the meantime he has opened all the fingers of the left hand) . Hullo, here 's a lot of other fellas' mothers! Well, as near as I can make out, Sam has left me no mother at all! Then the point is, who 's my father? Oh, that 's a thing no fella can find out! Oh, here 's a P.S. " By the bye, what do you think of the following riddle? If fourteen dogs with three legs each catch forty-eight rabbits with seven- ty-six legs in twenty-five minutes, how many legs must twenty-four rabbits have to get away from ninety-three dogs with two legs each in half an hour? " Here 's another P.S. " You will be glad to know that I have purchased a large estate, somewhere or other on the banks of the Mississippi. Send me the purchase money. The enclosed pill-box con- tains a sample of the soil! " Though in all the public announcements of 40 Edward Askew Sothern " Our American Cousin " the play was stated to be the sole work of Tom Taylor, in a manu- script copy of it which is now before me, it is clearly set down that " the character of Lo7d Dundreary " was " written and created by Mr. Sothern." In the handwriting of the actor this book is full of instructions which show that, easily as he always acted, he was ever anxious concerning the proper " making of his points," and the improvement of the play. In the scene between Dundreary and his valet from which I have quoted, he says, " Warn Buddicomhe to play well down the stage, to speak very clearly, and wait till every laugh is followed by a dead silence." Of one of the Georgina scenes he notes, " Every line of this scene is a roar, but it is not long enough " ; and of an encounter with Asa, albeit it was his own work, he remarks, " This scene is as bad as it can be." Before the famous reading of the letter, he enjoins, " Extreme silence dur- ing Mr. Sothern's scene," and after it he ad- mits, " Once my letter is read, the rest of the piece sinks down." Sothern was incessantly at work altering, cutting, adding to, and elaborating his parts. His son, Mr. E. H. Sothern, has entrusted me with another and later copy of " Our Ameri- can Cousin," which is full of notes, and which is, in his opinion, the most interesting of the MR. E. H. SOTHERN AS DUNDREARY. Sothern on the Stage 41 copies that exist. Here we find a note to the effect that the actors who are performing in the piece are to be warned that " no eye- glass or side whiskers are to be worn " (the reason for this is obvious), and that "the peo- ple are to play quick until the entrance of Dundreary J' " Every one in evening dress ; gentlemen do not wear gloves," is the heading in Sothern's handwriting to the first act. This was the prompt copy used on English and American provincial tours, and no doubt the faultlessly-dressed Dundreary had on more than one occasion been shocked at the solecisms of the country actors cast for Sir Edward Trenchard, and Captain de Boots. Such an instruction as this would not be taken amiss. ^^ Not to wear gloves " would not be expensive. It is when an exacting star expects the poorly paid actor who supports him to dress up to his standard that anxiety comes in. Sothern, in his own handwriting, gives the following wild letter from young Edward Trenchard (it was he, it will be remembered, who introduces Cousin Asa to his English relatives) to his father : " I am delighted with America — and the Americans. It is a grand country. I 've travelled everywhere; I've shot alligators in the south; killed buffalo in the west; been hunting in Minnesota with a party of Crows six feet high ; and am now resting in this lovely 42 Edward Askew Sothern place, enjoying the pure air, and whipping the trout streams of Vermont." Then follows a scene by Sothern, in which, in a far shorter time than Tom Taylor took about it, the story of the Mary Meredith relationship with the Trenchards is told, and the expected arrival of Asa is discussed. In this connection the cautious Sothern, evidently with an eye on provincial American audiences, makes Flor- ence Trenchard say, '' Stop ! I won't hear another word against him! The Americans are a brave and earnest people, and it is ab- surd to suppose that they all speak through their noses, perpetually drink chain-lightning, or slap everybody on the back and call you ' Old Hoss ! ' " To which Sir Edward replies, " Why, what American novels have you been reading, Florry ? You 're quite enthusias- tic ! " and the daughter discreetly answers, " Nay, papa dear ; I 'm merely just." A little later on, Dundreary, pointing to the outrage- ously dressed Asa, says to Mrs. Mountchess- ington, "Is that the American?" and when she answers " Yes," he asks, " What made him come in disguise? Sam says they've got no- thing but blankets and rings through their noses." So Sothern's consummate tact showed him how to round off corners that might, un- der certain conditions, prove troublesome. In the second act of this copy there is an- Sothern on the Stage 43 other scene between Dundreary and his valet. Buddicom'be is brushing his master's hair while the latter lazily looks through the ad- vertisements in a newspaper, and the following ridiculous conversation takes place: Dun. (reading). "WANTED.— A baby to bring up in a bottle " Bud. Oh! by the bottle, my lord Dun. Buy it? What, with the baby in it? Nonsense! I don't want any bottled babies. Dun. (reading). " TEETH.— Teeth taken out with pleasure and comfort, by the aid of laughing gas." Buddicombe, you must have some laughing gas. Bud. But I don't require any, my lord. Dun. Well, but you must have it, for me to see the operation. Bud. My teeth are all sound, my lord ; and I 've got thirty-two. Dun. Then you've got too many; no fellow wants thirty-two teeth — they 're only in the way. Three or four are quite enough for a fellow like you. (Reading) " WANTED.— Wanted at school— two thrashing machines." Bud. At school? No, no, my lord. Wanted at Scole. Scole is a small town in Norfolk. Dun. I'm not an ass. I know that! Have you ever been to Scole — I mean school? Bud. Yes, my lord, certainly. Dun. Any thrashing going on while you were there? Bud. I received nothing but good marks, my lord. Dun. Have you got any of them now? 44 Edward Askew Sothern Bud. I have prizes, my lord. I was top boy in my school. Dun. It must have been a jolly old school, then. Oh! {reading) listen to these fellows! They ought to be in a lunatic asylum! "WANTED: SHOOT- ING! — Two gentlemen require shooting every day for a month." What d'ye think of those fellows? Buddicombe, I '11 lend you a gun, and you can have a pop at those fellows all next week. Bud. I 'm afraid that sort of sport would n't suit the gentlemen. Dun. Never mind, it might please you! Bud. If I did such a thing, my lord, I should be hanged. Dun. Do you think you would? Well, then — do it. And so on ad lib. In the third act, Buddicombe is warned that in his scenes with Dundreary he should " speak slowly, very clearly, and wait until every tit- ter is over before he begins his speeches. His dress is frock-coat, white vest, dark trousers, high white collar, and dark necktie. Hat, and no gloves." This glove question was evidently in some places a troublesome one. The long, rambling, incoherent story that Dundreary tells to Geortjina, and which was always being altered, is here written in as follows : " When Sam was a lad he was merely a baby — born, and everything like that, of course. He had a bald head too, and was Sothern on the Stage 45 greatly annoyed about it, — I don't mean an- uo3'ed about being bald, but about being born at all. What I mean is, — he put it this way, — there he was, and of course it was too late to alter the position. There was another fel- low, — an old chum of Sam's, — and he was born too, — and he had a bald head too. There was a good deal of jealpusy about that. This fellow was a baby about Sam's age. There was a good deal of bother about that. His mother asked my opinion about it, but I told her I did n't want to get mixed up in family matters. Well, that fellow died, and made himself very comfortable in that sort of way, — and his cousin by another fellow's godmother married a girl that I was going to marry, — only I did n't get up, or something like that, — my man did n't call me, —or something of that sort, — so she married this other fellow, — a very nice fellow he was, and I wanted to do him a good turn, and there it was. They were very happy and all that, — splendid mother- in-law and a large family, — about fourteen children, — made things very pleasant like that, — nearly all of them twins, — and they made me godfather to about a dozen of them. The wife was a very nice woman, with her nose a little on one side, — a lovely girl though. His nose was a little on one side, too, so it made everything pleasant like that. All the child- 46 Edward Askew^Sothern ren's noses were on one side too. They were what you might call south-south-west noses. Fourteen noses looked very pleasant like that. Whenever I met them in the park it always struck me that if my fool of a man had only called me that morning, and I had married their mother, — I mean, if I 'd been their father, — it was quite on the cards that their noses might have been a little But that 's no- thing to do with the anecdote. Well, one day he went on a stroll with his mother-in-law, — a woman he hated like poison, — and they got shipwrecked, — had a very jolly time of it, — lived on a raft for about a fortnight, — lived on anything they could pick up, — oysters^ sardines, — I don't exactly know what, — until at last they had to eat each other. They used to toss up who they should eat first, — and he was a very lucky fellow; and when he was left alone with his mother-in-law, he tied her to the raft — legs dangling in the water, and everything pleasant like that. Then he stuck a penknife in his mother-in-law, and cut her up in slices, and ate her. He told me that he enjoyed the old woman very much. He was a splendid fellow, — full of humour — and full of mother-in-law, too." Of course, without the inimitable manner in which Sothern used to give utterance to it, this whimsical balderdash loses almost all its Sothern on the Stage 47 point; but I hope that with me most of my readers will be able to recall this marvellously subtle and perfect impersonation. Not many, I think, will agree with the intelligent play- goer who, having sat through a performance of " Our American Cousin," left the theatre saying that '' Lord Dundreary was the worst played part in the piece, because the actor had such an unfortunate impediment in his speech." In the first copy of Tom Taylor's play of which I have made mention, there is a note by Sothern to the effect that a scene between Dundreary and Asa, at the end of the third act, is " as bad as bad can be." In the one of which I am now writing it is replaced by the following, in Sothern's own handwriting — Asa. How do you do, my lord? Dun. Can't you see, I 'm not doing anything. Asa. Nice place this. I suppose you own lots of farms like this — eh? Dun. Well, I suppose I do. Asa. Do they raise much on this one? Dun. Yes — sometimes. Asa. What? Dun. Money. Asa. Yes, — but do you raise wheat, and oats, and potatoes? Dun. No, I don't; but my tenants do. Asa. Of course you raise pigs? Dun. Raise pigs? No. When I want exercise I 48 Edward Askew Sothern raise dumb-bells. (Aside). This fellow's an idiot! Asa. Look here, now. I want information. What do you feed your pigs on? Dun. On the ground, of course! Do you sup- pose I feed them up in a balloon? Asa. No, no; I mean, what do you give them to eat? Dun. Grass, and corn, and sardines, — anything they fancy. I don't care what they eat. Asa. When you give them corn, do you use it in the ear? Dun. Do I do what? Asa. Give it them in the ear? Dun. In their ears? The fellow's mad! What have the animals got mouths for if they 're going to have their food rammed down their ears? Asa. Blessed if I know if this fellow 's a fool, or whether he 's selling me. And much more to the same purpose, until such as in those days remained of the serious interest of the piece was resumed. In the fourth act there is little of interest, save an appeal to the company to " pay all their attention to the tag at the end of the piece," and a note near the conclusion of the reading of the famous Sam's letter to the effect that ^' Sir Edward and Florence must be ready to come on, in case Dundreary does n't read P.SS." Which shows that encores may be missed, even in the best regulated of pieces. And so, through infinite painstaking. Dun- Sothern on the Stage 49 dreary became the established theatrical hero of the day. Every saying and every action of the apparently semi-idiotic creature was the result of careful observation and study; even the preposterous counting of the fingers was a transcript from what had been seen. " You remember," said Sothern, " that in one act T have a by-pla}' on my fingers, in which I count from one to ten, and then, reversing, begin with the right thumb and count, ten, nine, eight, seven, six, and five are eleven. This has frequently been denounced by critics as ut- terly out of place in the character, but I took the incident from actual life, having seen a notoriously clever man on the English turf, as quick as lightning in calculating odds, com- pletely puzzled by this ridiculous problem." How " Our American Cousin " was revived, and re-revived on the Haymarket boards, and how, even when he was attracting large audi- ences with other plays, Sothern found it ex- pedient to appear in little after-pieces in which Dundreary figured, is a matter of stage his- tory. One of these farces (it was the joint work of Sothern and H. J. Byron, and in it all Tom Taylor's characters were absurdly bur- lesqued) was entitled, " Dundreary Married and Settled," and in connection with it an extraordinary but true story of a young man who had mistaken his vocation is on record. 50 Edward Askew Sothern " I was playing," said Sothern, " at the Theatre Royal, Edinburgh, in ' Dundreary Married and Settled.' Among the company was a young fellow who, although undeniably well-educated and a thorough gentleman, had been obviously and expressly made not to be an actor. He had ruined two or three scenes with me in pieces which we had previously performed, and I was forced to tell the stage manager particularly not to let him play Lieutenant Vernon. The manager, however, begged me to give the young fellow another chance, and I consented, at the same time re- marking, ' You '11 find there will be another contretemps, and the mischief to pay.' The lines he had to utter, when I gave him a cer- tain cue, were as follows : ' That 's a nice horse to lend a friend; I never could ride. I have broken both his knees. Where is Georgina? Upstairs ? Heave ahead ! ' You can imagine the consternation of us all when, the time hav- ing arrived for him to ' go on,' he paid not the slightest attention to the cue, but listened in- tently at the keyhole, apparently absorbed in his own meditations, and softly whistling to himself, 'Still so Gently O'er Me Stealing.' What to do I did not know. I shrugged my shoulders and looked despairingly at the prompter, for there was a dead pause in the play, which was, to say the least of it, em- Sothern on the Stage 51 barrassing. The prompter, a quick-tempered man, rushed round to the door, and you can imagine my feelings as the young fellow in an instant afterwards came half leaping, half falling on the stage, as frightened and amazed as if he had been shot out of a catapult. The prompter could not resist the temptation of an inviting attitude, and as Lieutenant Vernon stood bending over the keyhole, he received the full force of a heavy boot that greatly acceler- ated his motion. With a howl of agony, the young amateor exclaimed, ' My God ! What 's that?' Not knowing the cause of this dem- onstration, I whispered to him. ' Come on, sir ; come on ! Quick ! ' Poor fellow, he had ' come on ' with a vengeance ; and this is what, in the confusion of the moment, he said: " That 's a nice girl to lend a friend : I never could ride. I have broken both her knees! Where is the horse? Upstairs? Heave ahead ! ' That is one of the few times in my experience when I felt as if I had been shaken up by an earthquake." Another of these '' wild whimsicalities," as Sothern called them, was entitled " Dundreary a Father." The one was as ephemeral as the other, and, amusing as both were, neither added much to the fame of Sothern or the popularity of Dundreary. In due course Dundreary tried his fortune 52 Edward Askew Sothern in Paris, but there he did not make a success. French audiences failed to see the humour of the creation, and his lordship was slightingly alluded to by critics as " un sort de snob." It is interesting, however, to note that Henry Irving, Edward Saker, and John T. Raymond were members of the company. Irving played the drunken lawyer's clerk, Adel Murcott, and, in connection with the luckless engagement, Raymond, who was the Asa Trenchard, has re- corded a couple of good stories that prove that the failure of his venture by no means damped Sothern's elastic spirits. These stories should, perhaps, have their place in another chapter, but as they deal with Dundreary in Paris, they shall be told here. " You are, perhaps, aware," wrote the popu- lar American comedian, " that at the subsidy theatres in France, no fire, not even a lighted match, is permitted on the stage. You will also recall the fact that in one part of the play Asa Trenchard has to burn a will. In order to comply with the law, and at the same time get rid of this document, I was compelled to tear the will instead of applying the match in the usual way. The result was that the part was not at all a success, much of its point being lost by the tameness of this in- cident. At last I said to Sothern, ' I have a great mind to burn the thing, anyhow, and Sothern on the Stage 53 take the chances.' My misfortune was in con- fiding my intention to Sothern, for he instantly gave instructions to one of the gendarmes who was hovering about the wings to arrest me in the act. When the scene came on, anticipat- ing no trouble, but expecting, on the contrary, to receive a recall, as I always did at this juncture, I struck the match and lighted the paper. Before I knew anything else I was seized from behind by a big gendarme and carried bodily otf the stage. Of course the audience did not know what was the matter, and I was equally in the dark. Not speaking French, I could not make any explanation, or ask any questions, and the more I struggled the tighter the gendarme held me in his grip. It was only when Mr. Sefton, the agent of Sothern, made his appearance and explained matters that I was released. You should have seen then how that French official, mad as a hornet at being imposed upon, went for Soth- ern, and the manner in which he disappeared down the back-stairs into a convenient hiding- place. Fortunately, Mr. Sefton was able to appease the indignation of the irate French- man, and in a few minutes Dundreary was per- mitted to come out of his retirement, and the play went on happily. " During this engagement," continued Ray- mond, " we had a frightful fight one night, and 54 Edward Askew Sothern produced a perfect scare among the members of the company. , the celebrated bill-poster of Paris and London, was in the green-room, and made some remark as coming from Soth- ern concerning me which I purposely construed into a most grievous insult. Dashing im- petuously into Sothern's dressing-room, which was just off the green-room, I demanded in a loud tone, that could be heard by everybody, instant satisfaction or his life, whispering to Sothern to keep up the joke. Always as quick as lightning to take a hint, he presently emerged, kicking me out of his apartment into the midst of the now thoroughly aroused peo- ple in the green-room. I rushed off to get a knife, swearing vengeance. Everybody ap- pealed to me to be quiet, and tried to hold me back, while I contended that nothing but his life's blood would wipe out the insult. Of course the play had to continue, but the actors were almost afraid to go on the stage, looking on me as a wild American, who, with bowie- knife in hand, was about to commit a horrible murder. Meanwhile Sothern had quietly sent me a note telling me to slip into his dressing- room again, get some ' stage blood ' there, lock the door, and that as soon as he came off we would have a 'time.' I followed the instruc- tions, and after the act he came down and joined me. The people in the green-room were Sothern on the Stage 55 on the alert, and between Sothern and myself we gave their listening ears the benefit of a full chorus of moans, groans, imprecations, struggles, and other sounds of distress, among which every now and then my knife could be heard sticking into some conveniently soft substance that sounded very like a human body. , whose remarks had been the cause of all this commotion, frightened almost to death, rushed after the gendarmes. When the latter came they demanded entrance in French. A low groan was the only response. Believing that one or both of us must be nearly dead, they burst open the door. was the first man to rush in, and was followed by the officials and such of the company as were not on the stage. You can imagine their feelings when they saw Sothern and myself, covered with blood, lying upon the floor, with the gory knife near by, the entire apartment in con- fusion and bearing evidence of a desperate struggle. " ' Poor fellow ! ' said onCj ' does his pulse beat?' 'He must be dying!' was the remark of another. ' Go for a stretcher.' ' What awful fighters these Americans are ! ' and other similar expressions were also to be heard. " , with a horror-stricken face, stooped over and touched Sothern, who partially raised his head, and feebly whispered, ' A glass of 56 Edward Askew Sothern champagne — quick ! ' This was immediately given him, and then I lifted my head, and in a faint kind of way ejaculated, ' Some wine, too ! ' Then we both rose up on our elbows and asked for more wine, and from that posi- tion to our feet, until finally, with a hearty laugh at the success of our joke, we invited the whole party to join us in a potation. The practical gendarmes did not see any fun in being ' sold ' in this manner, although they took their share of the champagne, and I think that some of the English actors themselves never, to this day, have learned to appreciate the pranks of the two ' Americans.' " In England — both in London and in the country — the popularity of Lord Dundreary seemed to be inexhaustible, and, notwithstand- ing the great successes that Sothern made in other pieces, " Our American Cousin " was constantly reproduced at the Haymarket, and in America, I believe, never lost its charm. Concerning one of the London revivals, the Times said: " There are some persons who enjoy, if not a perpetual, at least a remarkable youth. Such persons reappear among their friends after a few years' absence, and everybody is astonished to find how young they are look- ing, in impudent defiance of the parish regis- trv of births. To the category of people thus Sothern on the Stage 57 privileged, that distinguished noble, Lord Dundreary, having attained in London the enormous age of nearly nine theatrical years " (it will be seen that this was one of the early revivals), "and thus aged himself into a tra- dition, unquestionably belongs. On the 11th of November, 1861, he made his first bow to the British public; he floated gaily through the ' exhibition year ' as one of the lions of that populous period, and here he is, in 1870, look- ing as fresh as ever, drawing crowds to the Haymarket with as much attractive force as the newest novelty could command. " The fact must be taken into consideration that everything is new to those who have not seen it, and that to the travelling cockney who surveys the world from a subjective stand- point, the pyramids of Egypt are infinitely more modern than the Monument on Fish- street Hill. As there came a Pharaoh who knew not Joseph, so there has sprung up a race to whom Lord Dundreary is a figure of the past. The descendants of Joseph cer- tainly derived no immediately perceptible benefit from the ignorance of the new Pharaoh, but it might have been otherwise if Joseph himself had lived on, and Mr. Sothern enjoys the advantage of being the Joseph alike of the past and the present. " Be it remarked, however, that Lord Dun- 58 Edward Askew Sothern dreary, although a pronounced aristocrat, is by no means an obstinate Conservative. He moves with the times, and, while he aims to please those who never saw him before, he laudably and successfully endeavours to retain his popularity with those to whom he has been long familiar. He drops many of his old jokes, and he introduces fresh pleasantries, verbal and practical, at pleasure, so that his oldest acquaintance behold and hear him do- ing and saying new things. Those who patronised him in 1861 did not then hear him sing the lyrical panegyric of his Brother Sam who now brings his first act to a mirthful con- clusion, nor were they then made acquainted with the somewhat pantomimic humour of the bedroom scene. The letter from the absent brother, of course, keeps its place as a piece de resistance, and is nightly encored some four or five times. For this freedom of interpola- tion and omission Mr. Sothern derives full scope from the utter badness of the piece which he illumines, ' bright as a star when only one is shining in the sky.' The character of Lord Dundreary, though its details judiciously vary, holds its own as a unique creation." With Sothern this quaintly conceived and marvellously elaborated conception died. It is true that his clever and handsome son — poor Lytton Sothern — whose early death still leaves Sothern on the Stage 59 an unhealed sore in the memories of those who knew and cared for him, played the part with some degree of success; but though the imita- tion was almost exact, an indescribable " something " was wanting, and one could not but feel that a " claimant " had arisen for a title that was extinct. Those early Haymarket days must have been a wonderful change to the still young actor, who, in English provincial towns and in America, had fought so hard a fight. From the overworked member of the stock company, with any number of parts to study, and in- numerable slights to submit to, to suddenly become the leading light of successive London seasons, with only one character to delineate, would have turned the head of many an actor; but Sothern had the true stuff in him, and long before the phenomenal popularity of Dundrem-y showed the least sign of waning he was busy with other parts. The second char- acter in which he appeared on the London stage was in a little piece which he had him- self adapted from the French, and which he called '' My Aunt's Advice " ; and this was fol- lowed by his clever impersonation of Captain Walter May dentin sh in " The Little Treasure " (an event made memorable in the annals of the English stage, inasmuch as it is associated with one of the earliest successes of Miss Ellen 6o Edward Askew Sothern Terry, who was the fascinating little Gertrude of those days), and a species of monologue entertainment entitled " Bunkum Muller." In all of these he was good, and the production of the little pieces enabled critics to see that he was not merely a one-part player; but they were only passing efforts which served to keep his hand in while the drawing powers of " Our American Cousin " were at their height. The question of a successor to that play was a subject for the most anxious deliberation. Sothern, himself, was most anxious to appear in a piece of a serious type (to the end of his days he never forgot his success — I believe that it was the one of which he was most proud — in "La Dame aux Camillas"), but his Eng- lish friends advised him that for the present he could only be accepted as a " character " actor, and it was not until Tom Robertson ap- peared with his delightful version of " Sulli- van," entitled " David Garrick," that a sort of compromise was effected. Sothern ex- pected to make an enormous success out of the opportunities for earnest acting that the first and third acts afforded, and his well- wishers felt certain that he would do wonders with the subsequently world-famous scene of simulated intoxication. The history of this pleasant comedy, which still holds the stage, and out of which so much Sothern on the Stage 6i money has been made, is a curious one. Rob- ertson's original adaptation was, according to Sothern's own account of it, a very rough one, and it was sold to a dramatic publisher for the modest sum of £10. No one feeling dis- posed to produce it, it was for a period of eight years " pigeon-holed," and it was through a chance conversation with the adapter, — and subsequently most brilliant of modern-day English dramatists, — that Sothern heard of the plot, took a fancy to it, and decided that Garrick should be the successor of Dundreary. Prior to its London production, the play was tentatively performed at the Prince of Wales Theatre, Birmingham; and after it was over, Sothern, who was most keenly anxious about his new part, and never satisfied with his own acting, emphatically declared that the whole thing was a failure, and, as far as he was con- cerned, would never be heard of again. Luck- ily, his own judgment was overruled by that of his friends and advisers, and, as every play- goer knows, Garrick became one of the most successful of his impersonations. No doubt the wonderful drunken scene, clever in its con- ception and perfect in its detail, was the great feature of the piece; but though some critics took exception to his acting, in the love-scenes with Ada Ingot, he gained in them a multitude of devoted admirers. Generally willing to ac- 62 Edward Askew Sothern cept the verdict of the press, Sothern was al- ways rather sore with regard to this alleged defect in his performance, and I very well re- member how, on one occasion, when, on his benefit night in a provincial town, he made one of those little before-the-curtain speeches for which he was famous, he said : " The local critics have unanimously declared that, un- fortunately for my career as an actor, my voice is wholly unsuited to ' love-making.' With some compunction, and with my hand appropriately placed on my heart, I should like to inform those gentlemen that, following in private life that most agreeable of pursuits, I find that I get on as well as most people! " When " David Garrick " was first produced in London, Sothern (still thinking that he had made a failure) generously declared that the piece was saved by the exquisite acting of Miss Nellie Moore in the character of Ada Ingot; but long after that charming young actress was dead it drew enthusiastic audiences, and Mr. Charles Wyndham has recently shown that it still has abundant vitality. Other actors, and notably Mr. Edward Compton, have also successfully played this difficult but effective part. Sothern, however, was its creator, and, surely, his finished and most artistic perform- ance will live in the history of the stage. The next Haymarket production in which he Sothern on the Stage 63 appeared was a clever but not very long-lived play by Mr. Watts Phillips, entitled "The Woman in Mauve " ; and then came a " happy thought." Although the popularity of Dun- dreary was by no means exhausted, it was, from a managerial point of view, very im- portant that he should " rest " for awhile ; and who, with playgoers, could fill his place so suitably as that Brother Sam whose famous letter had been read so often, and whose name was already as familiar in their mouths as household words? For this character Sothern had already found his type in a man who, while only possessed of some £400 a year, managed, without the remotest blemish on his name, to live at the rate of £5000 or £6000 a year. The task of writing the piece was en- trusted to the late John Oxenford, and under the brightest of auspices Sam made his appear- ance on the Haymarket boards. Once more the ease and excellence of Sothern's acting, his faultless dress, and his effective " make- up," were the talk of the town, and the inter- est in the new character was ingeniously kept alive by reason of the cleverly conceived con- trast between the appearance and personal traits of the stage brothers. The elegant and deliberate Dundreary was as dark as hair-dye could make him, and the impediment in his speech had been more than 64 Edward Askew Sothern half his fortune: the Eon. Sam Slingsdy was as light in apparel, complexion, and bearing as a feather from a dove's wing, while in speech he was as rapid as ever was the voluble Charles Mathews in farces of the type of " Patter versus Clatter." Sam's ready impudence and polished manner secured a host of friends and admirers, and once more genuine success was secured. But the younger brother could hardly expect to have as many devoted followers as the bearer of the family title, and, amusing com- pany though he was, his popularity in due course waned, and in about twelve months' time he made way for Frank Annerly in Dr. Westland Marston's brilliant comedy, " The Favourite of Fortune." How good Sothern was in this part many will remember. The character was a happy medium between the handsome, sentimental heroes that he always wanted to represent, and the finished comedy studies in which he excelled. No doubt the audience liked Frank Annerly best when, in cynical mood, he dealt with the apparent faith- lessness of poor Hester Lorrington and the worldliness of her friends, and, with irresisti- ble precision, made point after point in the clever dialogue of the piece; but I am quite sure that Sothern enjoyed himself most when, at the end of the first act, he was the recipient Sothern on the Stage 65 of the cheers of the supernumeraries whom he was supposed, in the most dashing manner, to have rescued from a watery grave. Those were (as such cheers always are) re-echoed by the audience, and, elated by them, Sothern, the greatest character delineator of his day, and then, on account of his great success, his own master, once more imagined himself the ideal stage-lover. And so it came about that, after an interval of nearly fifteen years, he again essayed the character of Claude Melnotte. In the peasant's dress, the handsome cos- tumes of the supposed Prince of Como, and the uniform of the French Colonel, he looked the part to perfection; but, although on the oc- casion of the first performance (it was at the Theatre Royal, Birmingham, for the benefit of his old friend, Mr. J. C. Smith, and Mrs. Ken- dal, then Miss Madge Robertson, was the most effective and fascinating of Paulines) the piece went admirably, and the applause at the end of each act was deafening, Sothern's acting fell far short of his conception of the char- acter. It was a curious result, for he attacked the part with enthusiasm; he longed for un- qualified success, and he had (a rare thing in him) unlimited confidence in himself; but somehow the performance lacked the true ring. I cannot, perhaps, better show what was 66 Edward Askew Sothern the one thing wanting than by saying that when, in the last act, with Pauline in his arms, he spoke the lines — " Look up ! Look up, Pauline ! for I can bear Thine eyes! The stain is blotted from my name. I have redeem'd mine honour. I can call On France to sanction thy divine forgiveness! Oh, joy! Oh, rapture! By the midnight watch- fires Thus have I seen thee! thus foretold this hour! And 'midst the roar of battle, thus have heard The beating of thy heart against my own ! " he delivered them (although I am convinced that he felt every word of them) in precisely the same fashion as when, in mock earnest- ness, he had, with slight alterations, to give utterance to them as Sir Hugh de Brass (one of his best parts) in the farce called " A Regu- lar Fix." How wonderfully true, even after the lapse of these years, was the already quoted criticism of Charles Kean: " I thought your acting in ' Used Up ' very good indeed, but in Claude Melnotte it suggested itself to me that you occasionally ' preached ' too much instead of giving vent to the impulse of the character." Strive though he did, Sothern was never able to make a real success in " The Lady of Lyons " ; but in the " Charles Mathews " char- acters to be found in such pieces as " Used Sothern on the Stage 67 Up " and " A Regular Fix," he was ever ad- mirable. I remember on that first appearance as Claude Melnotte he did a thing that for some moments put in jeopardy the whole per- formance. In the second act, where Colonel Dames tests the masquerading Prince of Como by addressing him in the Italian language, and Claude ought only to reply with a puzzled " Hem — hem," and " What does he mean, I wonder ? " Sothern permitted himself to drop into his lightest manner, and even to indulge in some " Dundrearyisms," saying, " Yes, that is d — d funny," and so on. The audience, rec- ognising the method of an old friend and favourite, roared with laughter, and it was some time before the rash actor could again secure hushed attention. Still believing himself to be a perfect Claude, Sothern persevered with the part, un- til a country critic, who meant to be both friendly and complimentary, said that until he had undertaken it no one had quite appre- ciated its humour! This, as he himself said, was a " crusher," and, with a groan, the peas- ant's, the prince's, and the colonel's costumes were permanently consigned to the wardrobe. In December, 1866, Sothern appeared at the Haymarket as Harry Vivian, in a three-act comedy by Tom Taylor, entitled '' A Lesson for Life." It was a pleasant part, which made no 68 Edward Askew Sothern very great demand upon his powers, but in which he was able, even more conclusively than before, to prove that he, before all the actors of his day, was able to portray the easy man- ners of the perfect English gentleman. In speaking of this performance, an eminent critic said : " As an earnest student in his pro- fession, Mr. Sothern has worked with a zeal which has rarely been excelled. The promi- nent characteristic of his style is the air of modern refinement with which he surrounds the personage represented. There is nothing conventional about his movements, nothing which belongs to the stilted mannerisms of the past school of histrionic art. We have the pol- ished ease of good society faithfully illustrated, the reality of nature in place of the artificiality of the stage, and a life-like portrait painted in vivid colours as an acceptable substitute for the faded caricature which has too often passed current with hasty observers for the semblance of a gentleman." " A Lesson for Life " was followed by ap- pearances as Robert Devlin in " A Wild Goose," and Albert Bressange in " A Wife Well Won " ; but though, concerning the latter piece, Sothern (who strongly fancied his part in it) wrote, " The Prince of Wales told me he was charmed with it," neither play ran long, and in neither did he materially add to his reputa- Sothern on the Stage 69 tion. " A Wife Well Won " will, however, be vividly remembered by all who saw it, for in it Miss Madge Robertson, then on the thresh- old of her brilliant career, played its girlish heroine in a manner so captivating as to be absolutely irresistible. Sothern always used to speak of it as the most charming impersona- tion he had seen. At about this time a play that would really hold the stage in " Our American Cousin," " David Garrick," or even " Brother Sam " fashion, was eagerly sought at the Haymarket, and after much deliberation a strong, and, as it proved, successful bid for popularity was made in the production of Dr. Westland Mars- ton's adaptation of Mons. Octave Feuillet's " Roman d'un Jeune Homme Pauvre," entitled (Sothern, surely, had something to do with the selection of the English name?) "A Hero of Romance." In this, as Yictor, Marquis de Tourville, the energetic actor gained great popularity in the direction in which he had always aimed. Never was a more interesting personage than this ruined young Marquis, I)erformiug the duties of steward in the par- venu family of the haughty young lady of his love, seen upon the stage. What a thrill went through the audience when the gallant youth quitted the stage and ("off") conquered in a few moments the unheard-of vices of that sing- 70 Edward Askew Sothern ularly unmanageable horse " Black Harry " ; what sympathy was accorded him when he sub- missively bore the taunts of proud and un- yielding beauty ; what a sensation there was in the house when, in order to save his own hon- our and her reputation, he rushed " three steps at a time " up the ruined tower, and, by the light of a pale moon, recklessly flung himself from its dizzy height on to the yawning feather- bed in the unseen depths below ; and how copi- ously the tears fell when, exquisitely dressed in a perfectly fitting seal-skin trimmed coat, the like of which had never been seen before (and which no one but the Sothern of those days dare have worn), he burnt the will in the candle, dedicating the sacrifice to his past love, and subsequently receiving in the hand of the arrogant young lady the just reward of his manly virtue ! " A Hero of Komance " became the hero of his day, and when the piece was brought into the provinces young women lost their hearts to him, and young men, at penny readings, burnt foolscap wills in inex- pensive candles, but, since they had not facili- ties for the leap from the tower, and could not treat themselves to collars and cuffs of seal- skin, achieved only half success. I do not think that Victor, Marquis de Tourville, was the best thing that Sothern did in this way, but it was theatrically the most effective, and Sothern on the Stage 71 is, consequently, ranked amongst his list of triumphs. The next Haymarket production was " Home," the clever adaptation by his friend, Tom Robertson, of Emile Augier's " L'Aven- turi6re," and in it solid success was once more gained. As his part was not a " romantic " one, Sothern was very doubtful concerning it, but after its production he wrote, " 'Home ' is a great hit — every one giving me far more praise than I deserve. I played so nervously the first night that I fully expected a cutting-up in the papers. However, the public is satis- fied, and I always acknowledge the verdict it gives, pro or con." " Home " had a highly satisfactory run in London, and by his imper- sonation of Colonel John White, Sothern un- doubtedly added to his laurels both in England and America. One of the great attractions of the piece was a " love-scene," of which Sothern subsequently claimed to be the author. Cer tainly — for it was to a certain degree written upon Dundreary lines — he played it to perfection. While this pretty play was at the height of its popularity there seemed to come the prom- ise of great things. " I 've a great part," he wrote. " I expect another Dundreary success in my next piece, which I shall try in Bir- mingham." This part was Sir Simon Simple, 72 Edward Askew Sothern in H. J. Byron's " Not Such a Fool as He Looks." He did try it in Birmingham, and, wonderfully made up in a wig so flaxen that it was almost white, and presenting a clean- shaven and boyish face, with an entirely novel break in the voice that was as natural as it was effective, he scored a splendid first night success. According to his wont, however, he was dissatisfied, and declared that both piece and part must be altered. This the author, having faith in his work, declined to do. " By- ron demands ' Sir Simon Simple'" (it was, by the way, under this title that he produced the piece) " back again," he wrote a few weeks later on. " I 'm not sorry, though it 's a lot of work thrown away." How Byron himself made the part popular in London every one knows, and subsequently Sothern recognised the fact that he had thrown away a chance. Again, though later on, he wrote, " I am about to produce another comedy, ' Birth,' by Tom Robertson. I've much faith in it, — a pretty plot, and my part peculiar and original." This he played in several provincial towns, and the audiences heartily endorsed his privately ex- pressed opinion; but although after the first performance he telegraphed, " ' Birth ' a genu- ine HIT," he again suffered from want of confi- dence, and abandoned a piece in which he would have probably achieved a lasting success. Sothern on the Stage 73 The next Haymarket production in which Sothern appeared was the two-act comedy by H. T. Craven (according to his custom this, too, had been previously tried in the provinces), entitled " Barwise's Book," and in it, for the first time since his great successes, he as- sumed what may fairly be called (although from first to last the piece, in tone and treat- ment, was comic) the character of " stage vil- lain." The experiment is noteworthy, and deserves description. " In Charles Mulcraft," said a critic, " Mr. Sothern has a character somewhat different from any that he has hitherto attempted: his personations have been usually of amiable if not excellent fellows — for even for Dundreary, selfish as he is, one cannot but entertain a certain sneaking kindness. Mulcraft, how- ever, is a piece of cool and superficial selfish- ness, without a single spark of principle or generosity; yet in manners and style a gentle- man, and quite unlike the common theatrical villain and plotter. He commits forgery as if there were no offence in it ; and as he sins with- out compunction, discovery brings to him re- gret at being discovered, without a shade of remorse for having sinned. The conception of such a character is decidedly original ; it loses nothing in being worked out by Mr. Sothern. To live a gay, easy, showy, idle life, of the 74 Edward Askew Sothern pleasures of which he has a keen appreciation, is Mulcraft's best philosophy; to obtain the means of so doing he is ready to sacrifice all the moralities, and without feeling or person- ally making any sacrifice in so doing. The end, if only it be attained, is to him complete justification of the means. He is a type — which might be worked up even more highly than the author has done in the present case — of the perfectly presentable nineteenth-cen- tury Bohemian; the whited sepulchre of mod- ern society — gorgeous without, but empty and contemptible within. He is not even a pro- fessor of virtue; the substantiality of means, and an outer coating of respectability suffices him; his soul, if he have a soul, is therewith content. Mr. Sothern presents the shallow rogue — who never, to give him his due, pre- tends or attempts depth — with the fidelity of a photograph; giving bare fact, without appeal to sympathy, either approbative or reproba- tory. He is dressed in the extravagance of modern fashion — extravagance without vul- garity, except in so far as high fashion is al- ways vulgar; and one confesses, on seeing and hearing him for the two hours which the piece lasts, that — except that few even of such char- acters would go the length of forgery — the portrait is a fair reflection of many men of the time. His doings and character scarcely ex- Sothern on the Stage 75 cite any emotion beyond a sort of amazed con- tempt; he is a fellow to whom one would pre- fer giving a wide berth, but on whom moral indignation would be utterly thrown away. Mr. Sothern confines himself within the limits of the character with admirable self-command; he is neither tempted on the one hand to lead us to despise Mulcraft by making him a clev- erer villain than he is, nor on the other to excuse his villainy by making him more than superficially attractive. It is a part in which there is much more talent than meets the eye; only an actor who has latent power of a very high order could afford to sink so much of it in the elaboration of a character so little stagey, yet so cruelly true to nature of an arti- ficial order as this. Of course, every point is wrought up to perfection; and the closeness with which the audience follows, shows how thoroughly they enjoy Mr. Sothern's admira- bly-finished acting." Clever as this new study was, " Barwise's Book " was too slight a piece for a prolonged run, and another play, tried in the country, was a three-act comedy, by Messrs. Maddison Mor- ton and A. W. Young, entitled " A Threepenny Bit," in which Sothern was well suited as a terribly nervous gentleman named Augustus Thrillington; but this was only seen in Lon- don in condensed one-act form, under the new 76 Edward Askew Sothern title of "Not if I Know It!" At about this time, too, he reappeared (the part was always a favourite one with him, and right splendidly, in his handsome dress, he bore himself) as the amusing hero of "■ The Captain of the Watch ;" but the next important Haymarket production in which he figured was H. J. Byron's three- act comedy " An English Gentleman." Soth- ern's part in this (I believe that Byron had previously played it himself, then calling the piece " The Last Shilling ") was that of Charles Chuckles, a warm-hearted, cool-headed, but not too quick-witted young English squire, who, being duped by impostors, deems it a matter of honour to give up his estates, and who having, to the amazement of the audience, done many eccentric and quixotic things while in a state of penury, comes to his own again, and marries the heroine, just in the nick of time for the fall of the curtain. In describing the character as a " cool-headed " one, I for- got, for the moment, that Sothern caused Squire Chuckles to appear in neatly cropped flaming red hair. The make up was both new and effective, but " An English Gentleman " was not a very interesting or attractive play, and its life was not longer than its deserts. The eagerly sought " Second Dundreary success " was apparently as far off as ever, when, during one of his American engage- Sothern on the Stage T] ments, it seemed to be suddenly found. I can- not help thinking that it was because the nervous and over-sensitive Sothern had allowed Byron to make the success as Bir Simon Simple that, but for his want of confidence, might have been his, he was ever ready to try a part in which Byron had gained popularity. Nothing could have seemed more out of Sothern's some- what limited range than the character of the disappointed provincial tragedian, Fitzalta mont, which Byron had created at the Adel- phi, in March, 1870, and which he had again portrayed at the Strand, in October, 1872, call- ing the piece in which it was the central figure, in the first place, " The Prompter's Box," and in the second, " Two Stars ; or, The Footlights and the Fireside." Sothern never saw the piece performed, but of course he knew of it, and when, while in Philadelphia, a friend suggested that the part would suit him, he at once telegraphed to Byron for a copy of it. Having received and read it, the idea took his fancy, and, to use bis own words, " It appeared to me that if I could good-naturedly satirise the old school of acting, contrasting it through the several characters with the present school, I should arrive at the same effects in another manner which were produced in Dundreary ; that is to say, that though stigmatised by everybody as 78 Edward Askew Sothern a very bad tragedian, I should gain the sym- pathy of the audience in the satire, however much they might laugh at my peculiarities. The character is not an imitation of any one actor I have ever seen. I have simply boiled down all the old-school tragedians as I boiled down all the fops I had met before I played Dundreary. I tested the piece in Philadel- phia, and its success was immediate. In my judgment, ' The Crushed Tragedian,' if not the best part in my repertory, is likely to com- mand popular favour at once wherever it is performed, and to retain its hold upon the stage for many years." In view of the reception of Sothern's appear- ance in this character in London, it may be instructive to glance at what leading Ameri- can critics had to say concerning it. It is as follows : " Mr. Sothern's impersonation of Fitzalta- mont, ' The Crushed Tragedian,' is the more impressive the oftener it is seen, and the more attentively it is studied. To fully appreciate its surpassing merits as a dramatic realisa- tion, it is necessary to do something more than look and laugh. It is only when we have seen Mr. Sothern's performance so often that we can forego the enjoyment of the playgoer, to watch with the eyes of a student, that the ar- tistic power of the creation is revealed. Then, Sothern on the Stage 79 and not till then, do we begin to understand what a creation his Fitzaltamont really is. " Much has been said of the wonderful ver- satility of the actor who could, from Dtin- dreary, transform himself with such magical completeness into that utter antithesis of the English fop, the sombre, misanthropic, theat- rical Fitzaltamont; but this versatility, note- worthy as it is, is one of the least remarkable characteristics of the impersonation. The greatest merit of his Fitzaltamont lies in this — that out of a mere thing of threads and patches, out of a stage tradition, a conven- tional laughing-stock, a popular butt, he has created a living, sentient human being. Into the dry bones of a common caricature he has breathed vitality, for it is just as impossible not to recognise in the ' Crushed ' a fellow- being, having the same feelings and affections as ourselves, as it is not to laugh at the strange eccentricities which distinguish him. Fitz is human to begin with, and so commands our sympathies. He is also in dead earnest. He believes in his own powers with all his might and main. His vanity is equal to that which consumed the heart of Malvolio, and his vanity impels him, as it impelled the cross-gartered steward, to believe anything of himself and his capacities. From some reason or other, Fitz- altamont has taken up the idea that he is a 8o Edward Askew Sothern tragic genius, and he believes that with all his heart and soul. When he announces him- self as being ' crushed/ it is with the utmost sincerity. The spectator knows better. He knows that his vanity is Fitzaltamonfs stock- in-trade, and thus the character becomes laughter-provoking. " And how laughable it is, only those who have seen Mr. Sothern play it can form an idea. With what elaboration of detail does the actor embody his conception! There is not a gesture, not an intonation, not a move- ment, but it seems to illustrate the character portrayed. He strides across the stage, and it is as though he were wading through a sea of gore ; he mutters to himself, ' Ha ! ha ! ' and you know that he is cursing fate with a bit- terness loud and deep; he scowls, and it is plain that he thinks his frown is as majestic as Olympian Jove himself; he flings himself in a chair as though wearied with such a con- tinual battling with destiny; he leans, in con- templation, against the mantelpiece, and it is manifest that he is philosophically pondering, a la ' Hamlet,' upon the vanity of the world, and its lack of appreciation for genius, and always and in all things poor Fitzaltamont is exquisitely, indescribably ludicrous. " But, whatever he says or does, no faintest suspicion that he is making himself ridiculous Sothern on the Stage 8i ever crosses his mind. He is without the least scintilla of humour, and, acting as he is all the time, he is all the time in deadly earnest. It is the world that is out of joint — not he. Mr. Sothern's impersonation of ' The Crushed Tragedian ' is no less an acquisition to the dramatic world, than a triumph of the actor's talent." Another well-known American writer said: " When a new, distinct, and enjoyable char- acter is created by author and actor for the dramatic stage, it has good title to take rank among other works of art. It is in many re- spects just such a creation as an accepted masterpiece of sculpture, or a finished paint- ing, or a grand piece of music, to which the cultivated mind pays homage of admiration for the skill, the study, the talent, or the genius displayed in the achievement. Something like this is done by Mr. Sothern in the study and representation of Fitzaliamont, the * Crushed Tragedian.' This new character stands out like a statue, or the central figure of a lifelike picture. It is not only distinct from all others of the characters with which our dramas are peopled, but it is as opposite as possible to Dundreary, that other creation of Mr. Sothern with which his fame as a dramatic artist is so largely identified, and there is not the faintest flavour of Mr. Sothern's own individuality in it. 82 Edward Askew Sothern " It is not our purpose to describe the ' Crushed Tragedian.' It would require a good deal of study to do even that in a satis- factory way. The play must be seen and heard to be understood, and it will be the bet- ter enjoyed by those who go to see it if they have no detailed description. It may be said, however, that, notwithstanding the * dejected 'haviour of the visage ' of Fitzaltamont, and his inky habiliments, very seedy and baggy, and the many set-backs he suffers in pursuing the pet ambition of his life, his expression of his professional woes is so grotesque and ludi- crous that the audience is in one continuous strain of laughter so long as he is on the stage." Concerning this new success, Sothern wrote to England : " ' The Crushed Tragedian ' is literally a tremendous HIT. Not even stand- ing-room ; and next Saturday will be our fiftieth night. Five calls nightly after the fourth act, and all purely done by BUSINESS, as I am not on the stage for four pages until the end of the act. It has neatly ' walked over ' Dun- dreary's head, and will go a good year in Lon- don. I have greatly altered the piece and rewritten my part to a very great extent. I have gently satirised the old school of acting without burlesquing it. In short, without egotism, I may truly tell you that I have once more ' struck oil,' as they say in America." Sothern on the Stasre & That, notwithstanding Sothern's high hopes concerning it, " The Crushed Tragedian " failed in London, is now a matter of stage history. It was first, in the May of 1878, "tried" in Birmingham, and the keenness of his disap- pointment at the Haymarket must have been terribly aggravated by the enthusiasm with which his performance had been on the previ- ous night received by his old friends the provincial playgoers. Before he stepped on to the Birmingham boards he, in his usual nervous way, expressed some doubt. " The part was a great hit in America," he said; " but the question is, how will it be received in England?" The Midlanders, at least, were not slow to answer the question. The house was packed, the reception of Fitzalta- mont, in his wonderful dress and make-up, was immense, and the piece and the impersona- tion were received with boisterous acclama- tion. The judicious, however, shook their heads, and it was a significant fact that, in the leading local paper of the next day, there was no notice of " The Crushed Tragedian." When the performance was over, I went round to see Sothern and to take him home. " He has just gone," said the stage-door keeper, " and he told me to tell you that you would find him " — giving me a card — " at this ad dress." Knowing that he had not had time to 84 Edward Askew Sothern change his dress, I thought at first that he was playing me one of his notorious and never- ending practical jokes; but, finding that he was not in his dressing-room, I went to the place named, and there I found him, close on midnight, in all the " bravery " of " The Crushed Tragedian," as " The Mammoth Co- mique," being photographed under the blinding glare of the electric light! It was a curious sight, and one that I am unlikely to forget — the wonderfully painted and disguised face, the gaudy and exaggerated costume, the care- fully studied pose, and the eager and excited interest of the sitter! With this quaint com- panion I returned to the theatre, that he might change his dress, and over his after-supper cigar that night he became enthusiastic. " I have got my second Dundreary success," he declared. " I did n't know how ' Fitz ' would go in England, and, mark me, this means five hundred nights at the Haymarket!" Full of assurance, he left me the next day for London ; in the evening " The Crushed Tragedian " was I>roduced on the boards that had witnessed Dundreary's London triumph, and — well, the fate of that version of Byron's play is well known. The next day he wrote, " An organised sys- tem to d — n the piece. Bows of hissers! We '11 see who '11 win." Sothern on the Stage 85 We know now who won, and I fear that the loss of the game told heavily on poor Soth- ern's heart. It is not for me to defend, in the face of abler critics, " The Crushed Trage- dian,'' but I think that all who saw the imper- sonation will allow that it contained many touches by no means unworthy of the creator of Dundreary. It was, however, " caviare to the general," and, as a matter of consequence, failed to attract. Of it a well-known writer said : " Mr. Soth- ern's make-up is very droll, his control of his voice is remarkable, and his facial play is in- describable. Had he played the role he as- sumes in a piece of half the length, he would have obtained a conspicuous triumph." In America Fitzaltamont was always tri- umphant, and an extraordinary lawsuit, in which he was the defendant, added to his no- toriety and popularity. Count Joannes, once an actor of the old school of which Sothern made fun, and subsequently an eccentric law- yer, actually brought a suit to stop the per- formance of the piece on the ground that Sothern's make-up maligned him, and gener- ally burlesqued his identity. A reporter of an American paper, who called on Sothern with the view of obtaining informa- tion concerning these preposterous and abor- tive proceedings, wrote as follows: 86 Edward Askew Sothern " Mr. Sothern had just driven up, and was alighting from his coupe when a reporter reached the stage-door of the Park Theatre. As the ' Crushed Tragedian ' was to come on very shortly, he invited the caller to go into his dressing-room and talk with him while he was making-up. He had not heard of the Count's proceedings, and was inclined to dis- credit the story. ' It 's some joke,' said he, unbuttoning his shirt collar and reading a slip of newspaper which had been handed to him, containing an application of the Count to the court. ' Why, I never saw the man but once in my life, and that was four months after I began the " Crushed Tragedian." Does he really look like the Crushed? Well, God help him ! Been thirty years making a repu- tation? — that's not an unusual time; I have known it to take longer — and I am taking it from him! Come, now, that's too much! Seriously, is this thing true? Well, if it is, and if I have to go down to that court to show cause, by George, I pity the man that brings me! I won't let him rest while his worried life clings to him ! He shall get telegrams and post-cards from this time on for ever. Do about it? Why, I shall appear, of course! But I don't know anything about it, except what you have just told me. Now, my hair' to his servant, who handed him his wig — Sothern on the Stage 87 'has the Count Joannes really hair like this? I cannot believe it — it is some monstrous sell.' " Mr. Sothern had put on the long, solemn hair of the ' Crushed Tragedian/ and his eyes were circled about with rings of tearful red, when there was a knock at the door, and an- other reporter was announced — from the Trihune. Mr. Sothern threw a look of dark suspicion into his eyes and sadly shook hands with him. " ' I suppose you have heard, Mr. Sothern,' said the new-comer, ' that the Count Joannes has obtained an order from the court for you to show cause why you should not be restrained from playing the " Crushed Tragedian ? " ' " ' Is this a joke, sir? ' asked the actor, very stiffly. " ' Oh no, indeed ! It is a fact. He really has. Haven't you heard of it?' '' ' I think there is a conspiracy, and now it strikes me that you are in it. I never played a practical joke in my life. But, go on, sir.' " ' Really, Mr. Sothern, this is a serious matter. The Count has actually obtained " ' Do you mean to tell me, on your honour, that you are not attempting to joke with me?' ♦ "'No, indeed; I ' " ' Remember, I am not to be trifled with.' 88 Edward Askew Sothern " ' Do you anticipate any personal trouble between the Count and yourself ? ' " ' If what you tell me is true, I do/ " ' In case of a duel, from whom would the challenge naturally come?' " ' Oh, from him ! He is my senior, and I would not think of cutting in in such a matter.' " ' But he is titled, and, as far as I know, a similar honour has never been conferred upon you by any German potentate.' " ' Only because I have been too busy to think of it. It 's waiting for me, and I can have it any time I please.' " ' How would you fight the Count if he should challenge you?' " ' I should prefer the date to be the first of April, and, although I haven't yet fully con- sidered the question, I think the weapons should be cannon. Yes, on reflection, I am sure I shall insist upon those new cannon that discharge one hundred and seventy shots a minute. He shall sit upon one of those en- gines and I upon another, and we will continue them until there shall be no remnant of either the Count or Sothern.' " But, although the actor treated the whole thing as a joke. Count Joannes was terribly in earnest. Of course nothing came of his " suit " except a capital advertisement for MR. E. A. SOTHERN AS LORD DUNDREARY. Sothern on the Stage 89 Fitzaltamont, of which full advantage was taken. When " The Crushed Tragedian " so signally failed at the Haymarket, Sothern appeared for a short time as Sydney Spoonbill, in a three- act farcical play by H. J. Byron, entitled " A Hornet's Kest " ; but, as he himself said, it was " simply a case of dressing himself well, and larking about the stage for an hour or so," and, though it caused abundant laugh- ter, the impersonation did not add to his reputation. For benefits, and on other similar occasions, he now and then took other parts, but this practically exhausts the list of important characters in which he was seen on the Eng- lish stage. For the benefit of Edwin Adams, in New York, one act of " Othello " was given, with Sothern as the Moor, Florence as I ago, Lotta as Dcsdemona, and Mrs. John Drew as Emilia. Of this performance one who was present said : " Mrs. Drew acted Emilia superbly, and of course in all seriousness; but little Lotta, the American Chaumont, burlesqued Desdemona by kicking her train and rattling off the speeches, much to the disgust of poor Sothern, who, magnificently costumed, played Othello in dead earnest, much to the disappointment of the audience, who had expected all sorts of 90 Edward Askew Sothern antics from Florence and himself. In this case, as frequently off the stage, Sothern suf- fered from his reputation as an incorrigible farceur; frequently, when he was quite seri- ous in conversation, he would find people laughing at his remarks." I have sometimes thought that it was the recollection (if not the mortification) of these moments that first made Sothern think he would like to play " The Crushed Tragedian." Concerning this benefit performance, in which he failed to impress an American audience with his Othello, he wrote to England, " Ned Adams's (dying) benefit comes to over £2000, but the excitement and worry have made me really ill." Poor Sothern! He little thought then how near he was to his own end! Of new pieces, and ideas for new pieces, his busy brain was always full. Dundreary shown under new conditions was always with him a favourite notion, and I once heard him say, with a half laugh, after nervously thrashing out a number of droll notions in this connec- tion, " ' Dundreary's Funeral ' would n't be a bad title, would it? " There was to be a piece called " The Founder of the Family," in which the father of Dundreary and his brother Sam was to be introduced to the public. The manu- script of this play is in existence, and the idea of it is excellent. The " Founder " is de- Sothern on the Stage 91 picted as a kind-hearted, aristocratic English- man, absolutely without a memory — an elab- orate and altogether whimsical, but always gentlemanly, Mr. Gatherwool. I believe that Mr. E. H. Sothern intends to try this piece in America; he possesses much of his father's peculiar talent and method, and I hope and believe that he will succeed in it. In a piece that was written for, but never acted by, his father by Messrs. Robert Reece and Maddison Morton, and the title of which has been al- tered from " Trade " to " The Highest Bid- der," he has already won fame and fortune. Sothern always very much regretted that he had not had the chance of creating the char- acter of Cheviot Hill in Mr. W. S. Gilbert's excruciatingly funny comedy " Engaged." " It is what I have been waiting for for years," he declared ; " it would have fitted me like a glove." Few playgoers who remember the actor's quaint method, and bear in mind Mr. Gilbert's ingeniously conceived character, will in this instance doubt his judgment. In Cheviot Hill he would very likely have found his " second Dundi'eary success." But for ill- health he would have played the part in New York, and, knowing that Americans have no associations with the " Cheviot Hills," he pro- posed to alter the name of the character to The Marquis of Piccadilly. There were other 92 Edward Askew Sothern pieces by Dr. Westland Marston concern- ing which he was justifiably sanguine, but in which he never appeared. The last work upon which I saw him engaged was the study of the play specially written for him by Mr. Gilbert, entitled " Foggerty's Fairy." When this piece was produced by Mr. Charles Wyndham at the Criterion it did not prove a great attrac- tion, but I, who heard Sothern read it, and was thus able to understand his grasp of a very peculiar character, believe that in his hands it would have been a striking success. His carefully marked copy of the play is be- fore me now. Another idea of his was a play in which he might assume madness, just as in " David Garrick " he simulated drunkenness. He only gave this up when a friend of his — a physician — told him that when he was a medical adviser at a madhouse, and was com- pelled to listen to the wild vagaries of his patients, he found himself drifting uncon- sciously into the same channels, his sleep be- ing disturbed by strange dreams, and his whole nature absorbed in the contemplation of the mad world. Insanity seemed to follow him like a nightmare, until at last, finding that his mind was likely to become more or less sympathetically affected, he determined to sac- rifice his salary, retire from the institution, and commence the ordinary practice of medi- Sothern on the Stage 93 cine. Sothern, who had almost a morbid hor- ror of madness, dreaded a similar experience, and immediately abandoned the project. A piece that was written for him while he had it in view, and of which he had approved, has been produced by Mr. Edward Compton under the title of " The Actor." Few who witnessed the delightful ease with which he went through his parts would imagine that Sothern was the most nervous of actors. But it was so, and he once said: " I think that most of our best actors are painfully nervous, especially on the first two or three nights of a performance in which they may be specially interested; and my experi- ence tells me that people with this tem- perament are never fully satisfied with their labours. They are perpetually polishing, im- proving, and revising. The very instant that an actor is satisfied with his own work, and believes himself to have reached the acme of cleverness, from that moment he begins to deteriorate. I am more nervous in going be- fore an audience now than I was twenty years ago. During the first night of ' The Crushed Tragedian ' a lady with whom I was play- ing told me she thought I was going to drop on the stage in a faint, and I thought so too, for my hands and feet were as cold as marble. This, however, is by no means strange. I have 94 Edward Askew Sothern seen one of the oldest and most distinguished actors on the English stage with his tongue so completely paralysed for several seconds, that he was obliged to wet his lips before he could deliver a line." It is worthy of note here that, although Sothern always wished to excel and be re- ceived in serious parts, he believed that com- edy required even more intensity, and, as he would put it, " magnetism," than melodrama or tragedy, because, he declared, " in the one case the actor may find his efifect created simply by the representation of a touching story, while in the other, unless the performer by action fully illustrates the humour of an idea, the comedy fails to be appreciated, and the mag- netic power of his art is absent." Never should it be forgotten that, ever mind- ful of his early struggles and disappointments, Sothern, in the day of his triumph, did all that in him lay for the charitable institutions of the theatrical profession. In October, 1871, making a " farewell " appearance at the Hay- market prior to his departure to America, he generously handed over his share of the profits of a memorable evening to the Royal General Theatrical Fund. The house was, in a pecun- iary sense, a very large one, the receipts amounting to nearly £500. After deducting Mr. Buckstone's share of the proceeds, and the Sothern on the Stage 95 usual expenses, Sothern contributed to the charity the handsome sum of £204. The ordinary receipts were increased by admirers of the actor, who secured private boxes at ab- normal prices, by others who willingly paid double prices for their stalls, and by twenty- five enthusiasts who paid a guinea each to go behind the scenes and bid the most popular actor of his day good-bye. Speaking of this performance and its re- sults, the Times said : " Mr. Sothern has thus signalised his departure by a munificent act of charity, augmenting a popularity which scarcely seemed susceptible of increase, and there is no doubt that his reappearance at the Haymarket next summer will be eagerly an- ticipated by the play going world of England. Since he first made our public acquainted with Lord Dundreary he has been a noted figure, constantly present on the London or provin- cial stage, and his visit to the United States will cause a serious gap in the theatrical amusements of the three kingdoms." Nine months later he did a still more nota- ble thing, and in speaking of it I may once more quote the Times: " Probably in the history of the theatrical profession there is no fact more extraordinary or more honourable than the appearance of Mr. Sothern on Wednesday night. In the 96 Edward Askew Sothern middle of an American engagement he crosses the Atlantic for the express purpose of rep- resenting his great character, Lord Dundreary, for the benefit of the Royal General Theatri- cal Fund. Of course, everybody was delighted with an exhibition of character which bears witness to an original genius worthy of Rabelais; but the cheers which welcomed his graceful words of farewell were given, not merely to the great actor, but to the generous benefactor. The deed of charity done, Mr Sothern recrosses the Atlantic, and pursues the course of his American engagement." In concluding my chapter on " Sothern on the Stage," I cannot do better than quote Dr. Westland Marston, who, besides being an acute critic and an undoubted authority, had, as we have seen, exceptional opportunities of forming an opinion of his acting capacities. He says : " In broad or eccentric characters, Mr. Sothern's humour was peculiar to itself. In refined comedy, his manner, albeit less airy than that of the younger Mathews, was not dissimilar. Moreover, in his power in the direction of sentiment, though special and very limited, he differed from his brother- comedian, in whom it scarcely existed. Soth- ern, though somewhat heavy in serious delivery, could be earnest and telling in sarcasm, and I have known him, on one or two occasions. Sothern on the Stage 97 surprise the house by a touch of pathos, all the more telling from contrast with his reck- less levity. But in his peculiarity as an ec- centric humorist he had no rival in his own (lay — no successful competitor. " Whether by design or by instinct, he was complete master of all that is irresistible in the unexpected. If, as in Lord Dundreary, the character he assumed was half-idiotic, he would deliver its absurdities with an air of profound sagacity, and now and then relieve them by a sharp thrust of shrewd common sense. If his mistakes were ridiculous and farcical, as when he stumbled into the lap of an old dowager, the confusion that the mistake occasioned him, and his air of well-bred con- trition, half redeemed him in one's opinion. " In his early performances in ' David Gar- rick ' — especially the scenes in which he at- tempts to disenchant the citizen's daughter by assuming the excesses of a drunkard — Mr. Sothern was droll and effective, without being overstrained, and there was real feeling in his sense of the humiliation he inflicts upon himself to save the girl who loves him from a misplaced passion. His declamation of some tragic lines, though a little heightened for the special occasion, was so fervent, that it might have been effective if his acting had been in earnest. More than once, when he expressed 98 Edward Askew Sothern his besetting desire to play tragedy, and his fear that after Lord Dundreary the public would not accept him, ' Deliver tragedy,' I said, ' as you do in *' David Garrick," only omit the touch of burlesque, and you may suc- ceed.' ' Ah ! but it is just because in " David Garrick " it is burlesque,' he replied ' that I dare let myself go.' This reply seemed to me to light up the entire position." It lighted up the position very perfectly indeed. CHAPTER II SOTHERN OFF THE STAGE " It is not a matter of wonder that Sothern is spoken of as ' a prince of good fellows.' He is magnetic in manner, humorous in speech, rich in reminiscence, responsive, and sympa- thetic, a good listener, an equally good talker, and always sparkling like a newly-opened bot- tle of champagne. With such a battery of social forces, added to ability of a high order in the representation of the peculiar charac- ters with which his name is now identified on both sides the Atlantic, professional success has been a legitimate result. In person Mr. Sothern is probably five feet ten inches in height, and put together as if intended for hard work. He is wiry, elastic, as restless as a bundle of nerves under galvanic influence, and would be marked in any crowd as a man possessed of strong individuality and unusual personal characteristics. In age the actor has been so well preserved that, like Tim Linkin- water, he might have been born one hundred and fifty years old, and gradually come down to five-and-twenty, for he seems younger every 99 100 Edward Askew Sothern birthday than he was the year before. His face, undisturbed by a wrinkle or a line of trouble, and habitually quiet, is still lighted up under a mass of beautiful white hair by a pair of bright bluish-grey eyes, which look as if they were undergoing continual drill to keep them in proper subjection. It is a counte- nance full of expression — now as imperturba- ble as if it were carved out of lignum vitce, a perfect dead wall, and again filled with a crowd of welcomes shining out of every smile. A long grey moustache hides the mouth, but fails to conceal the many little lights that hover round the corners, especially when the mental fireworks are let off, and one begins to feel as if he were an aurora borealis. Tidy in dress, with little or no display of Jewellery, ingenu- ous, open and frank in the acknowledgment of a foible or an error, such is an offhand pen- portrait of Edward Askew Sothern." Thus wrote one who knew Sothern in the later years of his life intimately. Will his description, I wonder, convey to those who did not know the actor in private life any idea of what he really was? Oddly worded though some of it is, it is all true enough; and as I am no great believer in " pen-portraits," and certainly could not hope to conjure up with ink and paper the varying expressions on the refined, handsome, and ever-kindly face that j^ Sothern off the Stage]' loi 1 knew so well, I quote it here. Of course the " beautiful white hair " and the " long grey moustache " belonged to the latter period of his career. I knew him when moustache and hair were brown, and when he was the best looking, the best dressed, and the most fas- cinating man in England. No wonder that people went half crazy about him, or that he became the very idol of London society, and the courted guest of all — from royalty down- wards. If ever a deliberate plot was made to spoil a man, the victim of that plot was Soth- ern; and the real wonder is that he came out of the ordeal so well. Feted, petted, and run after by the highest in the land, he never for- got his friends, and though, as a matter of expediency, he availed himself of the invita- tions that were literally showered upon him, his happiest moments, I know, were passed with those who really cared for him, and had his best interests at heart. Sothern, as I have already said, was the comet, not of one, but of many London seasons; and there is no doubt that the whirl of excitement in which he per- force lived, coupled with its inevitable conse- quences, prematurely produced the white hair, the grey moustache, and the all too early death. But he had his happy days, as those who knew him when he lived in the charming old-fashioned house called " The Cedars," in I02 Edward Askew Sothern Wright's Lane, Kensington, will well remem- ber. Revelling in the presence of fulfilled ambition and apparently endless popularity and prosperity, Sothern became an ideal Eng- lish host, and took keen delight in all the pleasures that his position enabled him to com- mand. Not once, however, did he allow the exacting demands that were now made on every moment of his time to interfere with his du- ties on the stage. Attributing his hard-earned success to earnestness — to doing everything as well as he knew how, to never acting on the impulse of the moment, and to thoroughly un- derstanding what he had to do, — he was ever on the look-out for fresh characters and pieces ; and when rehearsals became necessary, he worked as hard and as anxiously as when his very bread depended upon his exertions. The care that he took with his acting was almost rivalled by the extraordinary and minute at- tention that he paid to the details of his cos- tume when dressing for his parts. Nothing would induce him to have anything of a make- shift character, and on no occasion was he known to appear in public in garments in which he had once been seen on the stage. An infinite capacity for taking pains was cer- tainly comprised in, if it did not wholly con- stitute, Sothern's genius. It is certainly wonderful how he could be — Sothern off the Stage 103 as he undoubtedly was — in this over-busy, feverish period of his life, the promptest and most regular of correspondents. Every let- ter — whether from friend or stranger — that he received was quickly answered; every applica- tion that was made to him received some re- sponse. Like every actor of note, he was plagued, almost beyond endurance, by the manuscripts of would-be dramatists. " Great heavens ! " he used to say, " every fresh man that I meet has either written a play, or wants to sell wine." And yet, whenever he saw the least hope in the work submitted to him, he was ever full of courtesy, kindliness, and en- couragement. " If ever," he wrote to a young author, who had timidly submitted a play to him, " if ever you write a piece that I can squarely and fairly say ' go ahead ' with, I '11 do my very d — dest to make it a ' hit.' Get to work on it, and I '11 nurse it in America and bring it back full grown. Nothing would give me greater pleasure than assisting in a grand success for you — only don't let us make a mis- take. Frame out a pretty, simple love story; let me tell you where the ' ends of acts ' come in (experience alone can smell that) ; and, above all, be human in every word you write. But, ' Oh ! it 's so easy to advise, and so diffi- cult to do,' say you, and naturally too. It is. Don't write for a star — don't write for me; I04 Edward Askew Sothern write for a very first-class company, every part A 1 in its class and proportions. All I can add is that I '11 put my whole soul and heart into it, and no one, save you, shall ever know I even suggested. Pull your head to- gether with a plot — simple, natural, true to nature. Love is love all the world over. There is no new way of handling it ; but a real, genuine, honest, self-sacrificing love scene would be a ' dead certainty ' in its effect on young and old. Real hearts beat much alike. We all know that. Thousands of years ago they did — they do now — and ever will. Imagine yourself the hero, and write as you fancy you would feel." " Get your pieces printed," was a piece of advice that Sothern gave to unacted drama- tists of more or less promise. " Tom Robert- son," he wrote, " used to get all his plays kept in type, scene by scene. He said he could not judge the effect till he read them in type." An admirable lesson was conveyed in this way : " Write your pieces in telegrams. I mean by that, that all you inexperienced authors write so much too much, and I would have you go through your speeches and sen- tences from a telegraphic point of view. Here, for example, is a speech that would cost quite half-a-crown to send along the wires. Just look through it again, and see if, with the same Sothern off the Stage 105 sense conveyed in it, you could not cut it down and send it for a shilling. Overhaul your pieces in this way, and, depend upon it, you will improve them. The public of to-day have got used to telegrams, and prefer them to the polite correspondence of the Richardson- ian days." Sothern carried this theory of his into practice, and was a very strong believer in the efficiency of the use of the theatrical pruning- knife. The last time I saw him act (it was almost the last time that he played on English boards), a singular and almost painful thing occurred, which made him declare most em- phatically that audiences cared little or no- thing about dialogue, and that the more a piece was " cut " the better would be its chances of success. The play of the evening was " David Garrick." Sothern was so nerv- ous, ill, worried, and unhappy, that (to those who knew it) it seemed almost impossible that he would get through the evening. He did very well, however, carrying the house (and a crowded house it was) with him as usual, until the final act, when, kneeling by the side of the yielding Ada Ingot, Garriclc had to tell the touching story of his early life, of his parents' objection to his choice of a profes- sion, of his disobedience to their wishes, of his triumph as an actor, and of his never- io6 Edward Askew Sothern"^ ending remorse for his mother's broken heart. " Ada," began poor Sothern, " I had a mother once — I had a mother once " ; he then looked vaguely round the house, and, to those who knew him and his then state of health, it was clear that the words had left him. The voice of the prompter was heard; Ada, with her averted face half-hidden in her handkerchief, endeavoured to give him the missing lines ; but it was of no avail, the words were hopelessly, irretrievably gone. " I had a mother once," he repeated, in the sonorous tones with which playgoers were once so familiar, and then, with a sigh, cutting the Gordian knot, he concluded by giving the final words of the speech, " My mother was dead. Her tears weigh upon me yet." The audience applauded, and, all else going well, " David Garrick " came to its usual brilliant termination. Smoking his after-sup- per cigar that night, Sothern asked me if I had noticed the contretemps. I could not say no, but, anxious that he should not dis- tress himself about it, I told him that I did not think that it could have been observed by those who were not very familiar with the play. " Observed ! " he said ; " but I should think it was observed! Why, the scene never went so well. It was a chance cut, but it was a good one. ' I had a mother once ; my Sothern off the Stage 107 mother is dead.' That is all the public want. They don't care to be troubled about such merely domestic details as Garrick's becoming a famous actor, and drawing a big salary; or with the old lady's inconsistent and uninter- esting broken-heartedness. ' I had a mother once; my mother is dead.' That sums up everything; it's all the public require, and it's all, in future, they will ever get from me in the last act of ' Garrick.' " Another young dramatist of acquaint ance sent a three-act comedy to Sothern, which he pronounced by letter to be " extraordinary — absolutely extraordinary," adding, " Come and talk it over with me." The young dra- matist did go and talk it over with him, and what took place at that interview may, per- haps, best be told in dialogue: Y. D. I am so glad that you have read my play. Sothern. So am I. I have thoroughly enjoyed it. Y. D. {delighted). That is almost more than I dared to hope. Sothern. It was a great deal more than / dared to hope. Y. D. You found it original? Sothern. Absolutely. I never read anything like it Y. D. (thinking his fortune is made). Really Sothern (interrupting him) . Shall I give you my candid opinion of it act by act? io8 Edward Askew Sothern Y. D. If it would not be too much trouble. Sothern. None at all. Well, I suppose you mean to commence with the first act? Y. D. Naturally. Sothern. Pardon me, I was not quite sure. Of course, I 'm not infallible — and . Well, you 're an author, and I 'm only an actor, you know. Do you altogether like that first act? Y. D. Well, I can't say that I 'm altogether satis- fied with it. Sothern. Of course not. No one would be. I know the experience that you have had in these matters, and directly I read the first act I shook my head and said: "No, no; confound it all! , who knows more about plays than I do, can't be satisfied with the first act." Y. D. {pleased at the way in which he is being treated). What a critic you are! Sothern. Not at all. You dramatists are the real critics. Very well, then; you tell me — in con- fidence, of course — that you don't like the first act. Good ! Then we '11 come to the second. Y. D. (hopefully). Yes; what of the second? Sothern. Not good, is it? Y. D. (ruefully). Isn't it? Sothern. Well, honestly, is it? Y. D. I suppose not, if you have it so. Sothern. Pardon me, you have it so; it's your play, not mine. Then, as you frankly tell me that you don't like the first act, and consider the second one not good — which means bad — hear my opinion of the third act. Y. D. (who feels that the third act is his strong- est card). Yes, — well, — the third act? Sothern. The third act, my boy, is simply beastly! Sothern off the Stage 109 In the kindness of his heart, Sothern sub- sequently produced a little play by that young author, giving it, as few others would do, the very finest of chances. " I shall begin," he wrote, when the production was decided upon, '' with ' Garrick,' your piece afterwards, so that it will have the best place in the Bill. Then I shall wind up with ' A Regular Fix.' " How many overworked men, I wonder, would go to such trouble as this in order to let a novice have a hearing? But Sothern always kept in mind the days of his early struggles, and was ever ready to lend a helping hand to those who were still toiling laboriously, and in many cases hopelessly, on the road to the success that he had won. Another trait in his character was his hearty admiration of the good work done by his con- temporaries on the stage. Of J. B. Buck- stone, under whose management at the Hay- market he made his first London appearance, and for so many years acted, he said : " Buck- stone must now be about seventy-five years of age; but, old as he is, he gets hold of his audi- ence more rapidly than any one I know. A simple ' good morning ' from him seems to set the house in a roar. His personal magnetism is simply wonderful. He acts as if he had strings on all his fingers attached to the audi- ence in front^ and plays with them and pulls no Edward Askew Sothern them about just as he wants." He considered Mrs. Kendal the first and finest actress of the day, and he had a special admiration for the acting of Mrs. Bancroft, speaking of her as being in her own way " the best actress on the English stage — in fact, I might say on any stage." He was also enthusiastic concerning the work done by Irving, Toole, Chippendale, Compton, Hare, Lionel Brough, Edward Saker, Edward Terry, Hare, W. Farren, and Kendal. Among the actors of his time, however, he gave the highest place to David James, whose wonderful transitions from broad low comedy to domestic pathos he could never sufficiently praise. Miss Larkin, too, came in for a full share of his appreciation. In his early American days he had wilfully kept himself out of an engagement in order that he might see Rachel play her celebrated characters, and he never forgot the lesson that her acting taught him. " There was a fas- cination about it," he said, " that was almost painful. She had less action than any artist I have ever seen, but she was so intensely in earnest, and her passion was so overwhelming, though subdued, that you lost yourself in wonderment. I learned from her, therefore, that one of the chief elements of whatever suc- cess I expected was earnestness, intensity, and thorough identification with every part in Sothern off the Staee iii fe which I might be engaged. There is not an audience in the world which will not be quick to detect the sympathy between the actor and his play." Of Charles Mathews's wonderful talent, which ran in somewhat the same groove as his own, he naturally held a high opinion. " He was undoubtedly," he said, " the founder of the present school of light comedy, and when he dies I know of no man who will take his place. His force consists in his excessive — well, I may call it his champagny airiness. Even at the present time, when he must be nearly seventy years old, he dashes on the stage with all the lightness and brilliancy of a lad of twenty. I never saw Charles Mathews attempt a serious part, and, in fact, there does n't seem to be one pathetic tone in his voice. Still, I am sure that he would play a pathetic scene in a perfectly natural manner." Among the dramatists who wrote for him he had an especial liking for Henry J. Byron — " and so would any one," he said, " who un- derstands the character of the man, and appreciates his extraordinary facility for pun- ning, twisting words inside out, and producing the wittiest of effects. One, however, fre- quently must read his burlesques before see- ing them, in order to understand the nice shading which he employs in his word-paint- 112 Edward Askew Sothern ing. As regards his plays when put upon the stage, not one company in a hundred can give the necessary point to Byron's witticisms with- out seeming to force them. I know him well, and never met a man in all my travels who more completely ' corruscated ' with brilliant thoughts and repartee. A stenographer could almost write an admirable burlesque by tak- ing down what Byron says at his own dinner- table, because his humour is thrown off so easily and naturally. Wit with him is spon- taneous, and when in the mood every sentence is an epigram. It is a prevailing impression that Byron writes too rapidly, but, to my cer- tain knowledge, he frequently does not take a pen in hand for weeks at a time. I have often seen him after a chatty dinner-party go to his desk and make a half-dozen memoranda. Dur- ing that time he probably evolved the skele- ton of a play. He never commences a drama wondering how he is going to finish it; the framework is all clear before he puts pen to paper. The beginning and the end of every act are definitely settled; as to the dialogue, that comes to him more naturally than he can scribble. I once asked him why he did not use a shorthand reporter. He replied that the scratching of his quill on the paper was like music to him! Another thing: he scarcely ever is guilty of an erasure, and when he has Sothern off the Stage 113 once written a piece he has the strongest pos- sible objection to alterations. He rarely goes to see a first night's performance of his own work, and a play once produced seems to lose all interest in his mind, doubtless because it is so quickly succeeded by the plot of the next, which you may be sure he will speedily write. I should say that he has not more than two or three friends in the world whom he regards as intimate associates. In fact, his life is all work, but such pleasant work to him that it never becomes tiresome or monotonous." Concerning W. S. Gilbert, whom he re- garded as " not only one of the shining lights of modern dramatic literature, but an excel- lent, generous, and high-toned gentleman," he has left the following graceful anecdote : " A short time ago," he said, " I made a proposi- tion to him to write a comedy for me, which he agreed to do for an agreed sum, to be paid on the delivery of the manuscript. I particu- larly^ requested him not to make an individual part for me, inasmuch as I wished to select it myself. The play, when finished, was a beau- tiful composition; but, after many weeks of thought and reading, I came to the conclusion that the character which Gilbert had evidently created for my own personation was not suited to my style and methods, and I wrote him to that eflfect. He replied in the most unselfish 1 14 Edward Askew Sothern spirit, expressing his regret that I had not been suited, and at once offering to take back the play. I like to speak of this circumstance, because it is an exceptional instance of large- heartedness on the part of one who might legally and reasonably have enforced his contract." To those who did not know Sothern inti- mately it may bQ somewhat of a surprise to be told that he was intensely fond of the study of theology. Every book upon the subject that he could get he would read with avidity, and he delighted in nothing more than a pro- longed discussion on theological matters. He thoroughly disliked creeds, and had a profound contempt for bigotry; but from his readings and discussions he formed religious convic- tions of his own, which were short, simple, and to the point. " They only," he would say, with an irresistible twinkle in his blue-grey eyes, " require living up to ! " And, in never forgetting the claims of friendship, he lived up to them right manfully. Although he never, unaided, was the author of a London-produced play, we have seen how he amplified the work of others, and in a few odd moments of his active life he was very fond of using his facile pen. As an example of what he would do in this direction, I may, perhaps, be permitted to quote the following Sothern off the Stage 1 1 5 " Rambling Reflections " that appeared in the Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News of December, 1874: " In knocking about the world, here, there, and everywhere, I have sometimes whiled away the tedium of solitary evenings, while ' taking mine ease in mine inn,' by jotting down the rambling reflections that occurred to my mind during my long and lonesome railway jour- neys. Some of them owe their birth to stray paragraphs of newspapers picked up en voy- age, others to incidents in my own chequered career, and yet others, I am afraid, to the mere rumble and jumble of the train, originat- ing a similar rumble and jumble in the drain. However, be they as they may, good, bad, or indifferent, ' be they spirits of health or gob- lins damned,' I will adventure them forth on the tide of public opinion, and launch my ' unconsidered trifles ' on the stream, as the truant schoolboy sends his paper boat floating whither chance may direct, without compass, helm, or log, and so, ' vogue la galere.' " A strong prejudice exists among certain classes of presumably intelligent people against novels, novel-writers, and novel-read- ers. It is considered a waste of time to read works of fiction — that valuable time that might be so much better employed in minding your business, i.e., cheating your neighbours; ra- ii6 Edward Askew Sothern ^ tional conversation, i.e., scandal and gossip; scientific inquiry, i.e., having your head felt by Professor Bumptious; and religion, i.e., damning everybody's soul who does not be- long to your particular church. In former days this prejudice extended to a sort of social ostracism of all who dared to confess the heinous crime of novel-reading; and truly, in these times, there was some shadow of excuse for such severity, for it must be allowed that the novels of the period, albeit full of wit and invention, were somewhat prurient, to use the mildest term, or what Judge of Eoundwood would have called ' bordering on the indel.' Fielding and Smollett have left us lifelike pictures of their times, indeed; but we can scarcely blame the parents of that day for striving to guard the minds of their children from the cochonnerie so plentifully scattered over the pages of ' Peregrine Pickle,' ' Tom Jones,' and others of like kidney. The novels that were not naughty were insufferably dull. Witness Richardson's ' Sir Charles Grandi- son,' a work which we defy any one, however much imbued with respect for the ' classic au- thors,' to wade through at present; and the ' Evelina ' of Miss Burney, which bears about the same relation to a good novel of the pres- ent day, in completeness of plot and sparkle of dialogue, as the Marchioness's orange-peel _^Sothern ojff the Stage 117 and water does to Perrier and Jouet's dry champagne. " With the Avatar of Scott all this was changed. A higher tone was infused into the literature of fiction. A choice of comic char- acter, inclining more to the ludicrous than the coarse, to the eccentric than to the vul- gar, took the place of the obscenities that passed for wit and humour with our great- grandfathers. Historical accuracy supplanted loose description, and true local colouring re- placed that inclination to dress everybody and everything in Roman costume or else in the ordinary apparel of the time. The statue of Canning as a Roman senator and Garrick playing Macheth in the uniform of the Guards are examples in point. Scott was a scholar and antiquarian. His historical characters are costumed with scrupulous accuracy, and armed according to the fashion of their age; their conversation is modelled on the works of the old writers, unstarched to a colloquial consistency. In reading the romances of the * Wizard of the North,' we seem to live in the very midst of the people and manners de- scribed. Who has not shared the Scottish breakfasts at Tullyveolan, and drank ' pottle deep' from the Bear of Bradwardine? How often have we quailed under the objurgations of Meg Dods, and accompanied the ' daun- ii8 Edward Askew Sothern dering ' by brae and burn of Edie Ochiltree? It is not too much to say that he who has lovingly studied the ' Waverley Novels ' is an educated man. *' From the era of Scott to the present day, novelists have sought, by every means in their power, of care and research, to make their works faithful pen-pictures of the times and places they profess to describe, so that the reader is transported from scene to scene with the magic celerity of Chaucer's ' Hors of tree.' The whole world is opened to the view; our ideas become gradually cosmopolitan — * No pent-up Utica contracts our powers, The whole, the boundless continent is ours.' German, French, Spanish, Italian, nay, even Kussian and Asiatic life become as familiar to us as if we were ' native, and to the man- ner born.' National prejudices disappear; we come to appreciate the fact that ' the whole world is akin,' and, by consequence, to recog- nise the universal brotherhood of man. As a natural result, war becomes abhorrent to our feelings; familiarity with the manners and customs of other nations deprives us of that lofty contempt and insolent conceit which are such powerful incentives to aggression, and we arrive at the conclusion that the eleventh Sothern off the Stage 1 19 commandment is by far the best, ' Love one another.' " In good novels of the present day, the reader is brought into close contact, mentally, with all sorts of people, and with all the dis- eases of the body politic, which he would naturally avoid and shrink from personally. His sympathies are awakened and his charity aroused by the vivid pictures of misery and vice, and his best feelings are called into ac- tion responsive to the scenes of refinement and virtue depicted by the graphic pens of close observers. The manners of the higher classes, and the refinement of their language, are rendered available to all, and men may become, aye! have become, finished gentlemen from the careful perusal of good novels, who, otherwise, from lack of opportunity and ex- ample, must have remained clowns. The novel-reader, also, lives a multiplied life; he exists not only in his own person, but also in the history of each one of those friends of fancy whose companionship is as real to him as that of the men and women whom he daily meets. Is not Tom Pinch the bosom friend of every one? Who has not taken Colonel New- come into his heart of hearts? Verily, I be- lieve that more than railways, steamships, or telegrams — more than gas, or, greatest of modern inventions, lucifer matches! — have I20 Edward Askew Sothern novels and novelists aided to advance the higher civilisation and to extend the homo- geneity of humanity. " The drama is but an acted novel, and, be- ing acted, that is, presented in bodily form and audible speech, appeals even more vividly than mere written description to the masses who have not the' faculty of impersonating in their own minds the ideas of others, and to whom representation is essential. We won- der what the world would be without the drama to ' hold, as 't were, the mirror up to nature; to show virtue her own feature, scorn her own image, and the very age and body of the time its form and presence'; had we no Othello to warn us against jealousy, no ' School for Scandal ' to ridicule that most fashionable vice, no ' Tartuffe ' to gibbet hy- pocrisy, no lago to put us on our guard against our ' honest ' friends ? In this ma- terial age, and most matter-of-fact country, the drama, either in its spoken or written form, is almost the sole intellectual element of our civilisation : all else is ' Fact, sir ! hard fact ! ' For ' to the general ' the influence of poetry, painting, and music is far removed, while the drama is ever present in some form or other. The pulpit is so entirely given over to the exaltation of sect, and dreams of the future life, to the utter neglect of things pertaining Sothern off the Stage 121 to the present existence; deals so exclusively in post-obits, in fact, is so thoroughly polemi- cal and retrogressive, that its power as a puri- fier and guide is almost naught. The press, although, thank Heaven ! we can proudly point to the leading papers of England and America as the bulwarks of liberty and the fearless ex- posers of imposture and incompetence, is still so occupied with the material occurrences of the day and the more weighty affairs of State and commerce that, with the exception of those journals specially devoted to literature and art, it literally has not the space to devote to aesthetic culture as a main object, but is, by the necessity of the case, forced to neglect the lighter subjects; and so the drama is left almost alone as a refining, elevating, and warning medium to that large majority of the world's inhabitants, whose lack of time, op- portunity, or taste for study prohibits any very profound views to originate with them- selves, and who are therefore fain to accept the opinion of some * guide, philosopher, and friend,' to mould their crude views of things into shape and consistence. Let us, then, watch that it be not lowered by the prurient taste of the vulgar, or the caprice and vanity of its professors, but lend one and all our best endeavours to raise and purify it as the prop And mainstay of civilisation." 122 Edward Askew Sothern It will be surmised from this that Sothern was not only a firm believer in the real good that might be done by the conscientious follow- ing of his own profession, but an enthusiastic reader of high-class novels. Nothing, indeed, in the way of romance came amiss to him, and I well remember the eager and boyish delight with which he devoured the wildly improbable but cleverly conceived stories of Jules Verne. His " Rambling Reflections " were continued as follows: " They say ' a straw thrown up shows how the wind blows,' and the difficulty both in England and America of convicting any one accused of capital crime is but an indication of the gale of popular feeling blowing adverse to judicial murder. People are beginning to see that t^^o wrongs do not* make a right, and that to kill one man because he has killed an- other is but to put yourself in his place and to lower yourself to his level. A great many relics and exuvice of barbarism have descended to us from the old Jewish, Roman, and feudal times, when, as in all savage and semi-civilised tribes and peoples of the present day, ven- geance was thought a virtue, and ' an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth,' was the iron rule which the advance of human thought seeks to displace by the golden one, ' Do unto others as ye would that others should do unto Sothern off the Stage 123 you ' ; with but indifferent success, however, as yet, for up to the present time people will go to church and listen reverently to the enun- ciation of the merciful precept of Him whom they acknowledge as the God of mercy, and afterwards condemn a fellow-creature to the stake, axe, or gallows, with the greatest com- placency and satisfaction, licking their lips the while, and patting themselves on the head as expecting that God of mercy and loving- kindness to welcome each one to the heavenly city, when they pay Him a visit, with ' Well done, good and faithful servant! enter thou into the joy of thy Lord.' " Happily, at last there appears ' a cloud no bigger than a man's hand ' rising above the horizon, which may prove to be the harbinger of a plenteous rain. Things are turning round, and people are beginning to see that ' the worst use you can put a man to is to hang him,' while the feeling that it is wrong for a fallible creature to commit an irrevoca- ble act is daily gaining ground. If we kill a man because we, in our weak and easily mis- led judgment, think that he has committed a murder, we cannot give back the life that we have rashly taken away, even should his in- nocence afterwards become as clear as the sun at noonday. The irrevocable deed is done past recall, and we, the people who have killed 124 Edward Askew Sothern an innocent man, are as much murderers as he who, smarting under real or fancied wrongs, slays his injurer; whereas, should we upon strong, and to us convincing, evidence sentence a man to imprisonment for life, and circum- stances should in time prove his innocence, we can, at least, restore the remainder of his existence and make what poor atonement may be in our power for the time we have robbed him of. This feeling is the cause of the lenity exhibited by juries in cases of capital crime; it may remain in abeyance in the instance of some professional slaughterer who basely murders for gain; but in any case where the least excuse of passion is available, it starts up like a knight-errant of yore, and throws its protecting shield between the gallows and its victim. " Do away with the cruel, disgusting halter, and you will do away with forsworn juries and tergiversating judges. In order to make this a safe proceeding to the community, ex- ecutive clemency should be abolished. Neither king, president, nor governor should have the power to turn a murderer loose upon society at his caprice; the incontrovertible proof of entire innocence should alone justify the open- ing of the prison doors, and the united voice of the legislative body be the only means of grace. ' To this complexion we must come at Sothern off the Stage 125 last.' Let us consider for a moment the ma- terial, so to speak, of our juries. Are they not for the most part composed of stolid, half-educated, or wholly ignorant men of the lower middle-class, whose knowledge of the world is limited to the mere mechanical func- tions of their trade or calling, and who, even in that, are so unidea'd, that if you order anything in the least different from what they have been used to, the least bit out of their groove, you are sure to have your orders to- tally misunderstood, and the article, whatever it may be, utterly spoiled? Men to whom prejudice stands in the place of reason, who do so and so because their fathers did so before them, and to whom an original thought or a logical deduction is simply an impossi- bility! And yet to such hands as these we trust a man's life! that mysterious gift which, once taken, we cannot restore — that flame which, once extinguished, we cannot relume — that ' Anima ' or breath which, once exhaled, is irrevocably diffused through the eternal void. And the judges! what better are they? Why, not much more than a hundred years ago the great lights of the law, the legal patriarchs, who are still looked up to as the exponents of British justice, burned old ladies at the stake as witches! (Query, did they believe they were, or were their worships only yielding to I 26 Edward Askew Sothern public opinion, and roasting ancient dames 'pour encourager les autres'?) Truly, as Stephen Plim says, ' it 's aw a muddle,' or, as I sa}^ myself, " it 's one of those things that no fella can find out.' " I should like to come to life again in about five hundred years, and see how they manage things then. But I suppose even then there would be something to growl about, and that, with Don Quixote, that incarnation of reform, we should have ^ duelos y quebrantes,' i.e., gripes and grumblings, at least once a week." There was, I think, nothing that Sothern hated so much, or concerning which he would wax so wrathfully eloquent, as capital punishment. That in the early days of his stage career Sothern had some ambition to become his own dramatist, will be seen by an extract from a letter, bearing date January 10, 1861, that he wrote from New York : " As for myself, I have (in acting) much im- proved since we parted, and I have been edu- cating myself for London. When I do make my appearance there it will be in one of my own pieces. I have now written four pieces — two six acts, and two five acts. First, an adaptation of Octave Feuillet's French novel, ' The Romance of a Poor Young Man ' ; second, ' Buffalo ' ; third, ' Suspense ' ; fourth, '■ Redemp- Sothern off the Stage 127 tion,' founded on a piece now making a sensa- tion in Paris. I have also two more in hand. I often write all night when I am in the hu- mour. I feel sure of my success in ' Suspense ' in London. In every city I open in that part, and invar iaMy carry all before me. I write to an old friend, else I would not pen so ego- tistical a letter; but I know all news of my progress pleases and interests you. I have not printed anything yet, nor shall I till I have played out their novelty." It was not until long after he came to Lon- don that Sothern required a new play, and then, as we have seen, he put these pieces of his own upon the shelf, and wisely entrusted himself to the experienced and popular pens of such dramatists as Tom Robertson, Tom Taylor, John Oxenford, Watts Phillips, and Westland Marston. It is interesting, how- ever, to note that Sothern had himself written a play on the subject of " The Hero of Ro- mance," with which the last-named author had supplied him. In his pleasant memoirs, Mr. Bancroft records how, when he was a member of the stock company at Dublin, in the heyday of Dundreary's success, Sothern, " afflicted with the mania that his true vocation was that of a serious actor," unsuccessfully revived a powerful but gloomy play called " Retribu- tion," which was originally acted at the 128 Edward Askew Sothern Olympic by Alfred Wigan, George Vining, and Miss Herbert. Sothern played Count PriuU, Mr. Bancroft was Oscar de Beaupre, — and there is reason to believe that this was an- other of the dramas that the young actor had previously adapted for his own use in Amer- ica. The connection between Sothern and Robertson dated as far back as the days when, as " Douglas Stuart," the actor was a mem- ber of the Wolverhampton stock company, and when a piece (there is some evidence to show that it was a crude and early version of "David Garrick") was rehearsed under the superintendence of the young dramatist. Mr. William Rignold, the well-known actor, was then the conductor of the orchestra of five ( !), and well remembers the occasion, though (con- ductors have to sit through so many pieces!) he cannot be quite certain as to the play. That Sothern wrote these plays of his in stormy times, will be gathered by a further extract from the letter from which I have quoted: "Times are fearful here," he wrote; "civil war sure, and next time you hear from me I may be writing with a pen in one hand and a blunderbuss in the other! But, joking apart, affairs here are in a terrible state, and revolu- tion is inevitable. Next Monday I open for two nights at Philadelphia — the ' Walnut ' ; thence to Washington, and afterwards to Bal- Sothern off the Stage 129 timore; but before my Philadelphia engage- ment is through it 's more than possible that Washington may be a mass of burning ruins. In May I 'm sure to come to England, if not before. Don't make any engagement for me. I prefer landing clear, then I can see how the land lies. The theatres are closing up here right and left. Washington and Baltimore are keeping open now solely for my engage- ment, in the hope that I may pull up business." In an old scrap-book that, during the strug- gling American days, Sothern, with charac- teristic method, kept, there is an advertised outline of the play called " Suspense," which, in good old-fashioned style, runs as follows: "BENEFIT AND LAST APPEARANCE BUT ONE OF MR. SOTHERN. THIS EVENING, SEPT. 28, 1860, WILL BE PRESENTED MR. SOTHERN'S NEW FIVE-ACT DRAMA, ENTITLED SUSPENSE. Jules D'Alber Mr. Sothern. " Synopsis of Scenery and Incidents. " ACT I. — The story of Jules' courtship — 130 Edward Askew Sothern Marie's dislike to a country life — ' This sea always the same ! ' — Entrance of Jules D'Alber — Her husband — Jules' dream — ' A fairy ves- sel, with sails of white satin and silver cords ' — A speculation — A rapid fortune — ' You shall have your castle, believe me ! ' — The whistle — The gallant Henri — The arrival of the bonnet — The wager — Ten bonnets against one kiss — Entry of the crew and their tribes — Away to the christening — Michael's description of his lady love — ' She can lift a barrel of cider ' — His resolve to accompany Jules on the voyage — Return of the party after the christening of the schooner — Song and chorus — Drink to the crew — They weigh anchor in twenty minutes — The voyage begins — ' The sailor knows not if he may ever return ' — The parting — The let- ter explaining all — ' Farewell ! God bless you all ! Farewell ! ' — Now to sea — Marie's distress — Henri's treachery — ' I can give it her to- morrow ' — His sudden jealousy of Antoine — Alone! alone! — Lapse of twelve months. " ACT II. New Scene. — Antoine's house and garden — Packing up — The arrival of a Paris- ian friend — Treatise on love — The omnibus — Marie! — Check and counter-check — The watch- dog — ' I must muzzle him ' — Octave tired of the horse-pond — ' She loves me ' — La Dumond — The old nurse — ' Ha ! another watch-dog.' "ACT III. New Scene.— Room in D'Al- Sothern off the Stage 131 ber's house — Night — Octave's first effort as confidant — His first love — ' At a baker's ' — The silk window — Henri's jealousy and disin- terested advice — The storm at sea — Mala- propos visit of Antoine — The temptation — Trials of love — The rivals — ^The quarrel — ' Hark ! it is my husband ! ' — Jules' sudden return in the midnight storm, after a twelve- month's absence — The painful reception — Joy and sorrow — The invitation — ' Remember to- morrow ' — La Dumond's determination to re- veal all to her master — The love-letter — A silk window — ' Let me not think, or I shall go mad ' — ' My poor master, I have much to tell you ' — ' Speak ! I am prepared for all.' " ACT IV. Scene — Jules' house — Morning — My wife — My friend — Let me not forget 't is with them I love to deal' — The crew's pres ent — The breakfast — The story of Henri's life saved in a shipwreck of Jules' — Taunts and insults — ' Let us smoke in the garden ' — The duel arranged — The seconds — Jules' instruc- tions to Henri with the sabre — ' May your suc- cess in this encounter be equal to your loyalty and trust ' — Now engaged ! — ' Are you afraid ? — I cannot afford to love you yet.' " ACT V. Scene — Jules' house — Night — The letter — Confession and flight — Abrupt ar- rival of Jules D'AIber — The treasures of jewels and gold — Remembrance — The fairy has re- 132 Edward Askew Sothern turned to her home — ' What are you looking at so earnesti}-, Marie?' — Ten o'clock — The hour is past — ' Too late 1 too late ! ' — ' Did I not know your love, your loyalty, and trust, I should imagine that you contemplated treach- ery, Marie ! ' — ' Kay, I swear ' — ' You lie, per- jured woman, you lie! ' — The cries of those dy- ing in agony of soul, as well as body, borne on the wind — Death! ruin! misery! the reward of treachery — Sailors' chorus and departure — Mighty Octave! receive once more in thy bosom thy deceived and heart-broken son; henceforth thou art my only country, my only home — France, farewell, for ever! — Alone! alone ! " Surely, when Sothern talked of commencing his much-coveted career in a play of this type, his expectation was that he would star at the Adelphi rather than at the Haymarket; and yet throughout this preposterous melodrama- tic synopsis of a piece in which, no doubt, the actor-author thoroughly enjoyed himself, one can trace the humour of the destined Lord Dundreary. The " old nurse " of the second act was very possibly an ancestress of the ancient domestic who was responsible for the infant training of Brother Sam; and it is easy to believe that " another watch-dog " was the progenitor of the famous animal that was "Strong enough to wag his own tail. Be this as Sothern off the Stage 133 it may, it is certain that while Sothern loved playing the hero of pieces of the " Suspense " description, he was always most keenly alive to the absurdities of the situations in which he on these occasions found himself. There are other things in this old scrap- book that, although they deal with Sothern as an actor, may (inasmuch as they show the records of his early days that he cared to keep) be appropriately quoted in my " Ofif the Stage " chapter. There are criticisms, good, bad, and indifferent, on his acting as Count Priuli, in " Retribution " ; Pu^; Felix Featherly, in Stirling Coyne's comedy, " Everybody's Friend " ; and the hero of " The Marble Heart." Concerning the last-named performance, a critic wrote : " The opening scene, indicating ' a dream,' typical of an artist sculptor's studio at Athens, gives to view the statues of Alcibi- ades, Gorgos, Diogenes, the three Graces, with the loving slave Thea, and Phidias (who fore- shadow Marie and Raphael in the reality or sequel). This scene was altogether wrongly represented, and always has been so in this country, but we never witnessed the absurdity before of putting the fond Phidias in Roman costume. Mr. Sothern made him up in a Roman shirt, Roman sandals, and Roman arm- our sleeves. Ye Grecian gods! well may you have looked so sorrowful at the absence of the 134 Edward Askew Sothern Athenian tunic and cothurni! In fact, Mr. Sothern reminded us more of his Jason in the tragedy of ' Medea,' or an insane gladiator who has been mesmerised, than a Grecian." There are many interesting allusions to his performance as The Kinchin in " The Flowers of the Forest," which was evidently a very popular one (remarkable in its disguise, and admirable in its minutiw) in America, and which he played after as well as before his Dundreary success; and there is a little be- fore-the-curtain speech in connection with the last-named impersonation that is well worth recording. It was at Albany that, having re- sponded to an enthusiastic call, Sothern said: " Ladies and gentlemen, I hardly think it cus- tomary to make a speech on the first evening of a performance, such things being generally kept in reserve until the evening of a benefit. But since you have insisted upon it, I must heartily thank you for your attention and laughter at one of the most absurd perform- ances ever seen on the stage. I have endeav- oured to make Lord Dundreary a caricature — a burlesque of the broadest type — upon the silly and contemptible fops we everywhere meet. If I have done so to your satisfaction I am satisfied. I have to ask, however, that you will not judge of my merits by the per- formance — it is absolutely too silly. I trust, Sothern off the Stage 135 however, before the close of my engagement, to appear before jou in parts of some merit, when I hope to give you an opportunity to judge of my abilities." Poor Sothern! How great must his mor- tification have been when he found that the inane Dundreary absolutely ruined the budding prospects of the gallant hero of •• Suspense." And yet, as I have hinted, there is no doubt that all the time that he was with the most energetic earnestness playing these ideal parts, he had an eye on the ludicrous and bur- lesque side of them. In proof of this, this very scrap-book shows that while he was rev- elling in his own version of " The Romance of a Poor Young Man " (" The Hero of Ro- mance" of subsequent Hay market days), he would from time to time appear in what he called the " farcical tragedy " of " The Romance of a Very Poor Young Oyster- man." This venerable collection of newspaper cut- tings contains, from a New Orleans journal, the following somewhat odd account of the origin of Tom Taylor's play, " Our American Cousin " : " During the years 1850-51, when the ' World's Fair ' in the ' Crystal Palace,' on the banks of the ' Serpentine,' in Hyde Park, Lon- 136 Edward Askew Sothern don, was the great attraction to the wonder- loving, the United States were better and more numerously represented by people than any other country. In the current twelve months it is estimated fifty thousand Americans visited the great metropolis of England, and we all remember the furore some of our Yankees created. Hobbs' locks were placed on the doors of the Lord Chamberlain's offices; Colt's revolvers were in the holsters of every British cavalry officer; Connecticut baby-jumpers were in the royal nursery; and Massachusetts pat- ent back-acting, self-adjusting, rotary motion, open-and-shut mouse-traps were the terror of even aristocratic rats. Lord John Russell ' guessed ' and ' calculated ' on the ' Papal Ag- gression Bill ' ; Palmerston and Disraeli ' whittled,' one on, the other around the Wool- sack ; and through the columns of the elegantly worded Court Circular, we learned that at a par- ticular fraction of an hour, on a particular day of the week, her most gracious Majesty, Queen Victoria, aided by the Royal Consort, His Highness Prince Albert, together with the whole royal family, indulged in three half- pints of ' pea-nuts ' and four and the two-six- teenths of our genuine ' pumpkin-pies ' ; while Cardinal Wiseman and the Bishop of London were seen playing ' poker ' over two stiff 'Bourbon whisky-slings'; in a word, every- WHAT AN ATH THIS FELLOW IS." Sothern off the Stage 137 thing was Yankee with the cockneys, who pro- nounced their cousin the only individual elevated to an equal capacity with the titillat- ing, pulverised particles of the tobacco-plant — in other words, ' up to snufif.' This state of things naturally caught the attention of the dramatic world, and a comedian of the Yankee school, named Josiah Silsby, visited London, where and when Tom Taylor, the facetiously called ' author,' immediately brought his ' adaptation ' pen to work and pro- duced ' Our American Cousin,' in which Mr. Silsby was to play at the Adelphi Theatre the then leading character of Asa Trenchard. To Mr. Ben Webster, the lessee of the Adelphi, this play was sold by Tom Taylor for the sum of £80. Mr. Webster held it in his study, and on reconsideration, as the year 1851 was com- ing to a close, and the Yankee mania was dying away, declined putting the piece on the stage, and by way of a compensation and considera- tion to Silsby for breaking up the unexpired engagement between them, and a desire to have Madame Celeste as a ' star ' at the Adel- phi, he (Mr. Webster) made Silsby a present of the manuscript of the play of ' Our Ameri- can Cousin.' On reading it, Silsby came to the conclusion that it was an ineffective piece, and placed it * on the shelf ' until his return to America, when he rehearsed it in California. 138 Edward Askew Sothern Again it was doomed to the shelf without the public getting a view of it. " Years passed, and in the meantime Tom Taylor, thinking because Silsby died that ' Our American Cousin ' was a manuscript in the basket of oblivion and ' rejected addresses,' and having a copy of it, placed the same in his New York agent's hands, who in due course sold it to Laura Keene for a thousand dollars. On the production of the piece for the first time, Mrs. Silsby, the widow of the comedian, remembering the name and the various char- acters, having been present at the rehearsal in California, searched over the old papers of her late husband, and then found the original manuscript, with the following superscription in Josiah Silsby's own handwriting, ' Our American Cousin, by Tom Taylor. From B. Webster to J. Silsby.' The subject coming to the ears of Messrs. Wheatley and Clarke, the managers of the Arch Street Theatre, Phila- delphia, they bought the original manuscript from Mrs. Silsby, and commenced rendering the play, when a lawsuit was instituted be- tween themselves and Miss Laura Keene, in which some interesting evidence was elicited, but none that sustained the Philadelphia mana- gers in their case against the shrewd and wily Laura. The piece, from its first night at Laura Keene's to the time of its withdrawal. Sothern off the Stage 139 was wonderfully attractive, and, though played in every city of the Union since, has not been successful as a ' run,' save in such cities as a short distance made it convenient for the imitators to visit, watch, and study the origi- nal performers. For instance, from Boston F. L. Davenport and Chanfrau, J. A. Smith and Warren, and from Philadelphia, Wheat- ley and Clarke, visited Laura Keene's in New York, and repeatedly studiously witnessed every movement, every ' gag ' or stage tact, and the entire affair was secretly taken down in shorthand by hired stenographers for these gentlemen. Hence, in only those cities has the piece been well rendered, and though the pub- lic have seen it already here, many have yet to see it more complete with its three original characters, and its chief one, Lord Dundreary. So much for the history of ' Our American Cousin.' " If the history be a true one, it would then appear that when, in 1851, Charles Kean prophesied that Sothern would one day work his way in London, the piece in which his first great success was to be achieved was already written, and in the possession of Benjamin Webster. The book also gives a record of a benefit performance in which " Messrs. Jefferson and Sothern were immensely funny ' in Box and 140 Edward Askew Sothern iJox,' paraphrasing the points of the piece in the most unblushing manner to suit the cir- cumstances of their own professional associa- tions. For instance, instead of Box asking Cox if he had ' a strawberry mark on his left arm,' and, after receiving a negative answer, exclaiming, ' Then you are my long-lost brother ! ' Mr. Sothern said, ' You have the mark of a thneeze on your left arm ? ' ' No,' replied Mr. Jefferson. ' Then,' cried Mr. Sothern, ' you are my long-lost American cousin ! ' " As a further proof of his desire in these days to get away from America and Dundreary, and to come to England with a piece after his own heart, I may quote from two letters writ- ten in 1859: " New York, January 7, 1859. " My Howard Athenaeum spec, begins on Monday, the 17th inst. Stars, Mrs. Forrest {i.e., Sinclair), Mr. and Mrs. Boucicault, Miss Matilda Heron, Miss Vandenhoff. I am leav- ing no stone unturned to ensure success, but God only knows whether it will turn out well. It will either be a big lump of money, or a dead failure. I '11 keep you posted up in the whole affair. This everlasting ' American Cousin ' is now in its twelfth week, and doubt- less will run all the season. I left Wallack's Sothern off the Stage 141 because Lester and I clashed too much, and I felt a change of locality does good sometimes. I only get sixty dollars here now, but I get two benefits, which brings it to seventy-five dollars. The panic lowered all salaries. If my Boston spec, be a success, you '11 see me in Liverpool to a certainty. What the devil do you mean by my getting £5 a week in England?" . . . "January 21, 1859. " On the 7th I wrote you a long letter. Since then I have opened the Howard Athe- naeum, and Mrs. Sinclair's engagement has turned out an utter failure. I shall drop about 1200 dollars on her twelve nights! The whole Boston public are against her. Every one fancied she would be a great card. This is a terrible blow to my English trip, but the Bou- cicaults, Miss Heron, and Miss Vandenhoflf may pull it up, — but I doubt if I can clear my- self, unless these stars make a big strike! 'T is very disheartening, and 't is so bad to open the season with a failure. A few weeks more will settle the point. God grant I may be on the right side. ' Our American Cousin ' is running yet (15th week!) and bids fair to go till the 4th of July. 'T is considered the biggest hit ever made in America!" And again, in another undated but evidently 142 Edward Askew Sothern earlier letter (for Dundreary was at last do- ing for him what his speculation as a mana- ger did not), he says: " If I can possibly raise money enough, you will see me in England about the first week in September. All depends on the success of my Halifax season. So much do I desire to come, that I am making no engagements for the Fall here. Should Halifax fail, it will stun me ; but I 've full hopes it will succeed." The following extracts from his letters to a lifelong friend, and one of his fellow-actors of the Jersey days, are not without interest. They convey some idea of his style as a cor- responent, and, almost to the last, the irre- pressible buoyancy of his spirits: " I send you MS. and parts of a new farce, to be announced as follows: A NEW AND ORIGINAL FARCE BY THE CELEBRATED AUTHOR OF 'BOX AND COX,' ENTITLED 'DUNDREARY A FATHER.' Lord Dundreary Mr. Sothern. Jem Baker Mr. Blakeley. Parker (a Page) ....Call Boy, dressed in buttons. Nabhevi (a Policeman) 2nd Low Com. Sothern off the Stage 143 Mrs. Mountches sing ton Mrs. Lacy. Lady Dundreary . . . Miss Pateman or Mrs. Smith. Nurse 2nd Old Woman. Mrs. Nabhem 1st Chambermaid. " We will play it on Tuesday, after ' A Les- son for Life.' It will draw, and only plays thirty minutes. Sefton telegraphed you to announce ' A Lesson for Life,' Monday, Tues- day, Wednesday, and Thursday, and ' A Fa- vourite of Fortune,' and ' A Little Treasure ' (I play Maidenhlush) for Friday, and ' Gar- rick ' and ' A Little Treasure,' Saturday. ' A Little Treasure ' only plays for an hour and a quarter, so you can play a rattling melodrama afterwards." " Many thanks for your trouble, and for the many jolly days you gave me and my dog ' Tiger ' in your stunning little yacht. This is a gi^and audience! They literally howl with laughter ; but it 's very stupid in a hotel all by myself. Glad your Othello knocked 'em silly. Did you collar any of Salvini's points? DID you CUT YOUR THROAT? "7 consider I play Claude Melnotte d — d 144 Edward Askew Sothern badly, but others don't, so I don't dispute the point." "What fishing tackle shall we bring down? I would suggest a regular dinner-hour, and club together for the cost. I never was so snug and comfortable as I was when we three lodged together, and your dear wife was so thoughful and kind. Long life to the OLD TIMES, say I!" " S.S. Adriatic. " Here we are at Queenstown. So far a lovely passage. Saker is now in irons, fast- ened to the scuppers. Manning is at the wheel, and we 've only had five collisions. In fact, we quite miss them if they don't occur every hour or so. It 's now half-past eleven a.m., and I have polished off four breakfasts. Mrs. Saker is hauling up the Union Jack in the mizzen-top, and Manning, in a fit of absence of mind, has just upset a lighthouse; but no one seems annoyed. We have just knocked our keel off. Seven hundred and fifty emigrants all in handcuffs, — one man floating on the keel. " Ever yours, "E. A. S. "P.S.— Boiler just burst!!!" " As far as money goes, it 's not worth my while returning to England. My posi- tion here (in America) is stronger than Sothern off the Stage 145 ever it was, and * The Crushed ' is a five-act HOWLER! It has acknowledgedly walked clean over Dundreary's head. I have recon- structed the piece, and in many ways strength- ened my part. Dear old Tiger died on my breast on my way to Canada. I miss him more than I can convey. He knew he was dying." " My eight weeks' New York engagement was a big ' go.' Now I 'm at Boston for four weeks. Then I go to Brooklyn, and again play in New York, at the Grand Opera House, for three weeks, ' on a certainty ' of $12,500, i.e., £2500. Not so ' dusty ' for a poor wan- dering stroller, eh ? I am as well as ever ; but I still move the stage chairs and tables about ( !) and worry property men. Don't engage me for , except for your benefit. Then my terms will be awful! — i.e., nothing! — but one cigar! Be sure to remember me most kindly to . Were it not for two or three like him, I 'd never play in England again, — that is to say, as far as ' money ' goes ; but the said money is not all in this world, thank God!" " I have written to Clarke. His fear is that a preliminary performance of ' The Crushed ' in Birmingham may take the gloss off my Lon- don appearance, and that the Birmingham 146 Edward Askew Sothern critics may cut me up. I can't accept that view, for the Birmingham critics have ever been most generous in their opinions of my acting, though they have once or twice d d the pieces; and they were right!" " I 've taken most comfortable lodgings in Brighton, where no loafing outsiders can coolly walk in and stare at me. The doctors say I 'm better, and possibly I am a little ; but I 'm very weak and ill, and another week will decide if I play next season or not. The amount of tissue that I have lost is startling. I am all but a skeleton." " Thank you for your note. Don't make any mistake. I Tiever lose my spirits unless I am so utterly low that I can't joke and laugh. I am really and dangerously ill, so weak that I can't walk over a few yards. My own feel- ings tell me far more than any doctor could do. I could n't have got as far as Yarmouth. I did the only thing that could be done, — that is, put myself under treatment at once, — and even at that I fear it was too late. I can scarcely walk. I am afraid that I must cancel all my American engagements, — a tre- mendous loss! I was struck down as if by lightning. I never was so staggered ! " Here, too, are characteristic letters written Sothern off the Stage 147 in his later days to his earliest and life-long American friend, Mrs. Vincent: " Lovely One, " Was it four we fixed for the dinner hour? Shall I expect the same little party as we were last night? I hope so. " Ever yours, " Ned." " Dear Little Nice Person, " Why the did n't you reply to my let- ter? Do come and see me. Eh? Will you? Wire ' yes,' and a carriage will meet you. If you don't answer this letter, we are mortal FOES for LIFE ! ! ! " Lovingly yours, " Ned. P.S. — " I 've got some nice birds (lovely pets) for you. If you don't come, I '11 have them hoiled! " Edward." "Beautiful Sinner! " Good ! We will be with you to-night about 11.15. " Thine, « S." 148 Edward Askew Sothern " Beautiful Stalactite ! " Do not forget that you and Smith quietly feed with me at three o'clock to-day. ' The banquet' will be on the festive board pre- cisely at 3.15 Wilkie Collins is coming purposely to meet you. " Yours cringingly, "E. A. Sothern." When serious, and, as it afterwards proved, fatal, illness struck him down, and he was compelled to give up his professional engage- ments, and was almost dragged away to the Continent, he wrote as follows to a dear friend : " ' Here we R,' as the clown says, and which, in the present instance, means, ' Here we R ' at Cannes. Weather lovely and warm; but, oh ! has n't it been cold and disagreeable com- ing so far! However, now we are here, we are going to enjoy ourselves ! I 'm decidedly better, but I feel this enforced rest as though I were handcuffed. I hate being made to do anything. Am I a mule? I would have called on you when in London, but I was really too ' down in my boots ' to call any- where. This is my first real illness, and it cuts rather deeply into my spirits. I feel Sothern off the Stage 149 ' Chained to the Oar,' as Byron's play has it." A little on, and at Rome, the wonderfully elastic spirits had revived, and the worn-out man wrote: " This is such a wilderness of art and beauty ! Until I saw St. Peter's to-day I never saw anything of which the comic side did n't strike me first. Mind cannot conceive any- thing so bewilderingly grand! My pen feels sick when I attempt to even name its splendid vastness. See it, and you '11 understand my feelings and thoughts. " The Colosseum ! I saw it yesterday. Al- though it held nearly 100,000 people, its pro- portions are so exquisite that you would almost believe you could produce a neat comedy in its centre; and the circumference is nearly a third of a mile! What a city it must have been ! A perfect shower of art treasures bewilders the eye each minute. Rome is a place to live and die in. It utterly swamps all little conceit and pride. One goes to bed breathing the atmosphere of immortal genius. There ! You '11 think I 'm idiotically wild about the ' Eternal City.' Good ! Go on un- der that impression until you see it yourself, — and then your wonder will be that my wretched quill did n't scribble for ever and ever! " 150 Edward Askew Sothern Very refreshing to him were the repeated voyages that he took across the Atlantic. His thorough enjoyment of them will be gathered from the following extract from a letter writ- ten in characteristic fashion on October 9, 1871: " Here we are on the gay and festive billow! Wife a little, very little sick — Lytton ditto — Miss Roselle a shade more so — I NOT AT ALL! ! ! Get up at eight. Bed at nine. That's your sort! and never better in my LIFE! A splendid boat, and ditto passage. We ex- pect to get to New York by Monday next, i.e., this day week. This will be posted the day we arrive. Food comes ! so I shut up. " October 18, New York. " Here we are. Not sick all the voyage ! Not one hour! Think of that!" How well in the bright Dundreary and Gar- rick days his handsome face was everywhere known and recognised will be seen by the fol- lowing anecdote. At the Theatre Royal, Bir- mingham, he was fulfilling an engagement while the Michaelmas Onion Fair was being held. In those days, travelling theatres of Sothern off the Stage 151 the Richardson, and Bennett and Patch type, together with shows of all descriptions, were allowed in the busiest part of the town, and, attracted by the curious, bustling, noisy, and by no means unpleasing scene, Sothern was soon in its midst. Having a fancy to visit one of the penny theatres, and not anticipating recognition, he went up the steps leading to the platform on which, until a sufficient num- ber to form an audience had been gathered to- gether, the fantastically costumed performers paraded; but, just as he tendered the modest entrance-fee, the proprietor of the establish- ment stepped forward, and said, " Pardon me, Mr. Sothern, but we could not think of charg- ing the profession!'' Inside the booth it was touchingly curious to notice how these poor mouthing players acted " at " the theatrical idol of the day, and how pleased they seemed when he good-naturedly and unrestrainedly applauded their melancholy efforts. It is per- haps needless to add that at the conclusion of the performance the delighted company had ample opportunity for drinking Lord Dun- dreary's health. Sothern had a wonderful power of winning the affection of men. At the hospitable table of Henry Irving I once met the American tragedian the late John McCullough. Turn- ing to me in the course of the evening, he said, 152 Edward Askew Sothern " I am told you are intimate with Ned Soth- ern," and when I replied " Yes," he said, as if it were a matter of course, " Then you love him." And that, of all men who " off the stage " really knew him well, was true. I CHAPTER III SOTHERN IN THE HUNTING-FIELD During the long runs of the successful Hay- market plays, when, no rehearsals being neces- sary, Sothern had what was for a being of his enthusiastic temperament superabundant time upon his hands, outlets were required for his extraordinary flow of animal life and spirits. These took many forms, and in its turn fox- hunting occupied much of his time and atten- tion; indeed, he took to the sport dear to the hearts of most English gentlemen with a zeal that was absolutely intense. Endowed as he was in those days with an iron nerve, a splen- did physique, and abundant means, the hunt- ing-field became as much a part of his life as was the stage, and in it he probably enjoyed some of the happiest hours of his restless, eager life. It was difficult, of course, to hunt three or four days in the week, and to appear every evening on the stage, and it is not un- likely that the immense strain upon his re- sources that at this time he voluntarily put upon himself shortened his days; but he loved his horses and the music of the hounds; he 153 154 Edward Askew Sothern could not disappoint himself; and he never, whatever the cost might be, disappointed the public. He attributed his remarkable immunity from misadventure, which might have inter- fered with his performances, to the extreme care with which he gave instructions to his grooms and coachmen as to the times and places at which they were to meet him. He invariably gave each man his directions in writing, so that there could be no mistake, and he exacted from all his servants the most implicit obedience to orders. In this way his plans were carefully made, and as carefully carried out. Notwithstanding these elaborate precautions mistakes were sometimes very nearly made. One day that he was out with the Surrey stag-hounds, he had a very narrow escape of missing his performance at the Haymarket. Owing to the non-arrival of the train at the station where he expected to meet it, he was compelled to ride across country to a junc- tion, and there telegraph for a special engine, which, after some delay, was obtained. By bribing the driver, he induced him to out-run an express train which was on their heels, and got into town, and to the theatre, just as the hour for raising the curtain had struck ; but, by pulling a pair of " Dundreary " trou- Sothern in the Hunting-Field 155 sers over his hunting-breeches, and hastening his other preparations, he was able to respond to the summons of the call-boy when it came. What a strain must this sort of thing have been, even upon his wonderful constitution! No rest, no meal, the excitement of the saddle, and the anxious journey to town ex- changed for the exacting drolleries of Dun- dreary, the vociferous applause of a crowded audience, and a subsequent supper with auxious-to-be-amused, " good-natured " friends. Early the next morning, however, Sothern would be ofif to the nearest — or, as the whim might strike him, the furthest — hunting fixture. In those days Buckstone, who had the great- est contempt for this peculiar form of eccen- tricity, and who had made up his mind that Sothern must sooner or later either break his neck or fail to put in an appearance at the right moment, had always one of the old come- dies ready to put upon the stage (after a few words of apology) at an instant's notice. He was never on Sothern's account, however, called upon to change his bill. The exhausted, and often half-famished, fox-hunter always — by hook or by crook — managed to make his stage entrance at his exact time. His love of the sport, and his fondness for the horses that were his sharers in it, will, 156 Edward Askew Sothern perhaps, be best exemplified by some extracts from the letters which at that period he regu- larly wrote to an equally enthusiastic fox- hunting friend. Almost at random I take from them as follows: " I was riding my brown mare, ' Kate,' and she carried me magnificently. T is right about the post and rails. They were so stiff and high that several men shouted at me not to go at them (remember, we had been going nearly an hour!) ; but this nigger's blood was up, and over we spun, ' Kate ' clearing them in lovely style, only four in the whole field fol- lowing. Five minutes more, and a check, and then all 's over. I 've a nasty sore throat, and I can't hunt to-day, nor yet to-morrow, I fear. Too bad! So near the wind-up of the season! Remember, I expect you to finish up with the Queen's." " As you did not turn up, I went with Heathcote's instead of the drag, and we had a splendid day. I had to leave ' Kate ' behind at Leatherhead, and got to the theatre just in time to go on! To-day I have been study- ing hard since nine ('tis now four), and to- morrow I go with the Queen's. B rides the seventeen-hander to-morrow, with the Prince's Harriers, for an eighteen-stone man to see. I bought him to sell, so of course 1 Sothern In the Hunting-Field 157 shall sell. ' Kate ' and ' Blazes ' can do all my work. Do you know a £150 or £200 man who wants a fast, perfect hunter and hack, no fault, no vice, a non-refuser, and clever over every kind of fence?" " Such a day, yesterday, with Heathcote's stag-hounds! Three-quarters of an hour — no road — without a check! Fifteen minutes, and away we go again! I went seventeen miles, and then came to grief in a big ditch, which threw me out. I never saw dogs go such a blazing pace. We were ten minutes behind them towards the end of the run." " A good average day with the Queen's to- day. If all right I shall hunt in Leicester- shire Monday and Tuesday. Is Wednesday's meet a good one with the Warwickshire, or North Warwickshire? If so I might come to Birmingham and hunt. All depends how I am. I enjoyed my day to-day, but the fences did look BIG ! " " ' Topsy ' is nearly fourteen years old — no, not so much, — she was rising seven when I got her, and I 've had her six years. She 's never known a day's illness, and in single or double harness is simply perfect; but her action is too corky and rolling for the saddle, though I rode her for more than a year. She has no 158 Edward Askew Sothern vice, and is as gentle as a child. I gave either £160 or £140 for her and another horse. I bought her of , the horse-dealer, who can tell you all about her. I helieve she is per- fectly sound, and, with care, good for another thirteen years. £100 for the two is the very lowest figure I would take, and they are worth every halfpenny of it. Go and try them, have them examined, drive them yourself, and I don't care a straw whether you have them or not! There! That's business!" "I arrive" (this was a telegram dated September 14, and referring, of course, to cub-hunting) " at five past one, and go direct to the theatre. Two charming runs this morning." Then follows a memorandum in his friend's handwriting: "Received at 10.45 a.m. Soth- ern was hunting at 5 a.m. with the Duke of Beaufort's Hounds at Badminton. He arrived in Birmingham at 1.5 p.m.^ rehearsed for three hours, dined with me, and was ready for act- ing at 7 P.M. Not a bad day's work ! " " We had a poor day of it yesterday, but still we had lots of fencing. I had a nice oppor- tunity on ' Blazes ' of pounding the huntsman, who looked so crestfallen that I gave him a sovereign as a sop. After this little incident the various short runs consisted of the hunts- Sothern in the Hunting-Field 159 man's trying to pound mc! Consequently, we had it entirely to ourselves all day, and he picked out the damnedest, baulkingest, big- gest (I never could spell that word, and I'm not sure whether there ought n't to be two or three more 'g's' in it!) fences he could find. He rode a grey thoroughbred, and he and * Blazes ' had a lively time of it ! To-morrow I go with the Queen's, but a bad country, near Uxbridge. I 'm game for Wednesday, or any other day this week, with the North Warwick- shire or the Pytchley." " By invitation of H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, I went to Victoria Station this morn- ing" (the Prince, by the way, frequently sent for him to go down to the meets in his royal carriage) " to accompany him in his ' special ' to Horley; but the infernal snow stopped us, and here I am at the Cedars again as cross as a bear ! I 'd a grand day on Saturday with Heathcote's. Had to take a ' special ' myself from East Grinstead to Clapham Junction. Got to Richmond 7.10, on the stage 7.30. " I had a clinking run yesterday, and as fast as any I ever was in. I rode a powerful six- or seven-year-old brown Irish horse, up to fifteen stone, beautifully temperate, a lovely hack, so corky; — A 1 action, fast enough for any hounds (carried me amongst the first half- i6o Edward Askew Sothern dozen all the run), and a bold, grand fencer. Steady in single and double. He 's been very neatly fired over the curb bones, but is as sound as a bell. I was awfully tempted to buy him, but I have already too many." " < The Fenian ' is a Belfast horse, and has won several second-class Irish steeplechases. His temper was against him, but all I can say is, I never rode a better-mannered animal. He is a shade too fast at his fences, but does not rush. Indeed, he is so good that I dread find- ing out some idiotic peculiarities in him that he is keeping in the background to surprise me with some fine day. ' Norah ' I bought at auction in Liverpool. I sprained ' Kate's ' back in a brook nine feet deep. We simply disappeared! In her struggle to get out she hurt her back, and I fear I can't hunt her for weeks, if ever ; but she 's all right for double harness. It 's a sad blow, for I am so fond of her ; but ' The Fenian ' can run rings round her. Whether he can fence as cleanly remains to be seen. I dare n't hope for it, for ' Kate ' was the cleanest, safest fencer I ever sat. Alas ! alas ! " " Up to my eyes in study and rehearsals, but managed a day with the Queen's yester- day. We 'd an awfully bad run. I rode my Sothern in the Hunting-Field i6i new horse, ' The Fenian,' and a friend rode my new mare, ' Norah.' They both went grandly. As for ' The Fenian,' he 's the best mover I ever was on — handsomer than ' Blazes,' and much faster. Coming from a stone-wall coun- try, the banks and ditches seemed to puzzle him a little. Some he calmly took in a tre- mendous stride. Hedges he ignored, and went bang through them. A rattling fall or two will cure him of that fancy. I was cautioned, ' Mind he does n't unseat you with his tremen- dous bounds.' On the contrary, he never even moved me in the saddle; charmingly elastic, but so beautifully smooth in his action. He 's up to fourteen stone and close on thorough- bred. He blistered my groom's hands all over when merely exercising him, and it only proves how they ruin horses' mouths, for when he found he could play with his bit, and was n't going to be worried, a child could have held him. He's worth £200 (steady in single and double). I gave £50! ! ! Why? He's not every one's animal." In truth, Sothern's animals (for in those days he would ride anything) were not every one's animals, and, like all really ardent sports- men, he delighted in thinking that he had " picked up for an old song " a valuable horse, that less adventurous men would hesitate to mount. Here is an account of a hunter of i62 Edward Askew Sothern this description that rejoiced in the name of " Spots " : " I lunched to-day with a swell hunting-man, who does the Duke of Beaufort's regularly; went to look at his horses, etc. I asked him if he knew ' Spots.' He replied, ' Rather, con- sidering I 've been after him for two seasons.' " S. What 's his character? The other. The best animal in the country — ^tem- perate, but bold and very fast. S. Why did n't you buy him? The other. Baillie wanted £300 for him. S. Is he worth it? The other. Every penny; but it's over my figure. S. I've bought him! The other. The devil you have! S. (Nods.) The other. Well, I 'm d — d. How on earth did you get him? S. {Explains — and price, etc.) The other. Well, I can't account for his not sell- ing him to some of our men. He 's losing his nerve, and " Spots " was getting too much for him, tem- perate as he is. You 've got a treasure, and if you don't like him, send him here. " As to nags, the only one you 've not seen, I think, is ' Limerick.' Powell of Market Harboro' gave 280 guineas for him last season. Williams, the vet., bought him at Tat's on spec, and let me have him for £60. The cause of his sale was a jarred leg. I had him fired, Sothern in the Hunting-Field 163 and he is now as sound as a bell, and simply a perfect model, — decidedly the most perfectly shaped horse I ever had. A very dark brown, close on thoroughbred; up to fourteen stone; a long, low 'un ; magnificent shoulders, and hips at an enormous angle; and these two points meet so close that a saddle covers nearly all his back, — and still he 's a long horse ! Six- feet-two girth, and from his knee to his fet- lock joint is just a hand's span ! Powell says he was one of his very best horses. In June I shall begin to exercise him in double harness, and thus get him into condition without put- ting weight on his back till September, when I believe he '11 prove a ' 300 guinear.' " " I am going to sell * Grasshopper ' and ' Topsy,' my two carriage horses, because I cannot hunt either of them; and, for the future, I will have nothing but thoroughly use- ful horses. I shall then have Chapman's two horses, and ' Kate,' and the grey, i. e., four car- riage horses, or hunters, or hacks, and no MORE ! ! I 've only one neck, and I 've determined to have four good ones." " If he only strikes on the fetlock joint — T mean, if the blow is confined to a small place — there is nothing like an india-rubber ring to hang loosely over the fetlock joint. If he 164 Edward Askew Sothern hits a space of three or four inches, a ring would be useless, and a cloth boot with a leather side-piece and four little buckles is your game. But if it 's the hind fetlock, the enclosed is the best pattern, as it never turns, which is a great point. The leather should be moulded into the shape of the joint, so as to sit on snugly. India-rubber boots are d — nable — stop the circulation, etc., and should never be used unless as a bandage for a weak ten- don. There ! That 's all I know about it ! " " A capital day on Saturday " (the letter from which this is an extract was written from Edinburgh), "and 'Kate' distinguished her- self over some nasty doubles — a very rare fence in this part of the country, and, conse- quently, a regular stopper to most of the field." " I 've ridden ' Spots ' with harriers. His character is quite correct. He 's reasonably fast (quite as fast as 'Kate'), and goes through dirt as if it were a lawn! He won't ' lark ' ; but get him with the hounds, and he 's a gorgeous fencer — possibly a shade too quick ; but when he knows me better he '11 tone down. Chapman gives a very shy account of ' Lim- erick.' He says he 's a ' floppy ' jumper, and a tremendous puller! We shall see! I mean to hunt him next week with the Cheshire, and Sothern in the Hunting-Field 165 shove that double snaffle in his mouth, and let him pull. If ' Limerick ' is not a fine fencer, I '11 never judge by form again as long as I live." " If you want that black screw exercised for a week or two (say eight or ten days from this), you can lend him to me to take to the Duke of Beaufort's. You can have my £700 grey any time after the 2nd of February — to hunt her tail off, if you like. There ! that 's an offer ; and when she comes you can jump her over your poor black horse, making him previously stand on four bricks! I go to the Duke of Leinster's on Monday for two days, then straight home for the reading of a new piece at the Haymarket." " Your telegram I got at the theatre, and I at once wired to Johnson to come with ' Kate ' and ' Blazes ' to the ' Hen and Chickens ' to- morrow, so please order two loose-boxes for the dear old souls. If they have n't loose-boxes I suppose I must be content with stalls. I shall hunt every day. The season is so nearly over, I must make the most of it, for once I return to town no more hunting! I hear the theatre booking for the week is splendid, and as I had a tremendous house here last night at double the usual prices, I may go to the ex- i66 Edward Askew Sothern travagance of having two hunters down. My argument is, work a little extra hard, and deserve therefore a little extra hunting." " Looking over a letter of yours, I find you want something about 15.3. What do you say to my chestnut mare? You can have any mortal trial, and it is thoroughly understood that I don't care a straw if you don't like her, and, consequently, don't keep her. Why do I part? Simply because with hounds she pulls too much for a cove with only one pulling arm to check her with, and she tires me. She is just on, if not quite, 15.3. Legs as hard as nails, never fill, a splendid feeder, no vice of any description, and steady, quite steady, in double and single harness. In the latter, she is always driven in a plain hansom cab, double ring snafile, and does n't pull one blessed ounce. To wind up, she can trot fourteen miles an hour, and jump any earthly thing a horse can get over ; but, as I said before, she 's not my horse, 'cos she pulls too much after hounds. I 'm going to (for the future) make all my beasts really useful ; they must do hunt- ing and carriage-work." " I 've got myself rather confused in my engagements. I 'd forgotten I dine, hunt, and sleep at Rothschild's on Thursday. . . . Sothern in the Hunting-Field 167 We'd a gorgeous run with Rothschild's yes- terday. ' Limerick pulls, but is a regular clinker, and can ' stay all day,' and the next as well ! ! " " I rode ' Limerick ' over Blackman's to-day, and a finer, more temperate fencer I never rode. Will his leg stand? I doubt it. You 've evidently got a clinker." "I've got an awfully sore throat; knocked up in the middle of the performance last night, and entirely lost my voice. It 's better this morning, though still very husky and painful. It 's a bore, for I had arranged to hunt to- morrow. However, Tuesday, please God, will see me in the saddle again. I had three gor- geous days last week, and one bad one. I must run down soon and do a day with your North Warwickshire. Do they hunt on Mon- days? If so, I could come and stay Sunday night, and get up fresh on Monday. To-day I 'm as heavy as lead." " ' Limerick ' went for thirty-five guineas. I missed his sale by five or ten minutes, or he would have run up to much more. He was a most steady, valuable horse for any class of work, but pulled too much in the hunting-field for me. I 'm sorry you did n't get him. I '11 sell you ' Miss Wilson ' for twenty-five guineas (I gave sixty). She's a big, strong, powerful 1 68 Edward Askew Sothern mare, steady in single and double, and does n't pull one ounce — literally! She can trot easily twelve miles an hour; she is particularly sound, and carries a lady charmingly. She is a per- fect hack, and no vice. She has got a chronic cough, but that never interferes with her, and she is a slight high-blower, but never makes any noise in harness, however fastly driven, and only makes the slightest noise even at full gallop. A child can ride or drive her. I part with her as I shall now be away for seven months, and consequently reduce my stable.*' With bare comment I give these passages from Sothern's fox-hunting letters. They will themselves show the extraordinary energy and delight with which he pursued his exacting pastime; how he loved his horses; how minute and candid he was with regard to their capa- bilities and (a rare thing even with a thorough sportsman) their faults. The ink-pot into which I dip my pen is made out of a horse's hoof, and there is inscribed upon its silver lid, " The hoof of ' Blazes,' the favourite hunter of E. A. Sothern ; killed while hunting with Baron Rothschild's Hounds." Alas, poor " Blazes ! " His untimely death took place in March, 1868, and concerning it there is a little tale which my readers will, I hope, think worth telling. SAM'S LETTER. " I WAS CHANGED AT MY BIRTH. Sothern in the Hunting-Field 169 " I killed poor ' Blazes ' the other day," wrote Sothern, " with the Baron's hounds — jumped him into a road, met a cart at full trot; the old woman in it got frightened, pulled the wrong rein, and up we came, smash — crack against each other. The result was fully eighteen inches of shaft broken off in the poor beast's body. I had him shot at once." When this unfortunate news was broken to the luckless animal's eccentric and not always too prudent groom (he bore the name of John- son), he wept in a muddled way, and asked, "Oh, poor old 'Blazes!' what did he say?" Unable to resist even this melancholy occasion for a " sell," Sothern replied, " His last word was Johnson" and the answer was accepted in good faith! The following extract from the Field of March 20, 1869, will give some notion of the dashing fashion in which he rode to hounds: " During a run with the Essex Stag-hounds, on the 16th inst., Mr. Sothern (the celebrated comedian) was riding a pulling thoroughbred at one of the yawning Essex dykes, when a gentleman unfortunately crossed him, cleared the ditch and bank, but rolled over, horse and all, on the other side. Mr. Sothern thereupon * put on steam ' to clear them, and his horse taking a neat ' on and off ' from the back of the fallen horse, as it was in the act of rising, lyo Edward Askew Sothern landed safely a foot in advance of the head of the prostrate rider." That exceptional authority, Mr. Bowen May, the " father," as he is affectionately and ap- propriately named, of the Queen's Stag-hounds, writes to me as follows: " Sothern and I hunted together for years, and in one season with sixteen different packs of hounds, having followed the chase for five days a week. He always looked upon me as his Mentor, as I always took care to ' pull him up,' even in the middle of a run with stag- hounds, so that he was able to keep his en- gagements at the theatres. On one occasion, when I was absent, he was with the Surrey Stag-hounds, and only kept an engagement at the Richmond Theatre by running a special train from Three Bridges, and then by catch- ing a down-train at Clapham Junction; and then, having no time to change his garments, he appeared on the stage and played his part in a ' cover ' coat. The Prince of Wales al- ways sent for him when H.R.H. went from Paddington and to the Slough meets, to join him in his railway-carriage. " Sothern was a bold rider, and was always well mounted, and as his horses were gener- ally pullers, and as he had a damaged wrist, he could not hold them. Having to ' let them go,' and being only about a ten-stone man, he Sothern in the Hunting-Field] 171 was always in the ' first flight ' with the packs, whether they were fox- or stag-hunters." In 1871, Sothern wrote from New York: " We remain here eight weeks, then Boston for three, Philadelphia for three, etc., etc., etc., then New York again in April, and home in May. But I must come again in December and stay a year, and then retire and HUNT the rest of my life ! ! ! " This dream was never realised, and, oddly enough, in later years, Sothern entirely lost his love of horses and hunting, declaring that salmon-fishing was the only sport worthy of the name. This he followed with the same eager and restless enthusiasm. " I am going," he wrote, " to have some mag- nificent salmon-fishing in June and July. I have rented thirty-nine miles of the best Cana- dian river, and I and three friends will whip it for six or eight weeks. It is eighty miles away from civilisation. We camp out, Indian tents, bear-shooting, rising by daybreak, going to roost seven p.m., and leading the most primitive life possible. A friend of mine fished there last year, and the average weight of his salmon was 19 lb., the smallest 8 lb., the largest 39 lb." " You will find them the best and hand- 172 Edward Askew Sothern somest rods in England. I caught a 471/^ lb. salmon the other day with my salmon-rod and a single gut, and my rod is precisely the same as yours." But Sothern was enthusiastic in small things as well as great. Here is a letter in which he speaks of a very ordinary-looking blackbird which he used to keep, and make much of, in a wicker cage at his house (this was after the bright Kensington "Cedars" days were over), No. 121, in Harley Street: " I am glad you like the blackbird," he wrote "he was leaving on a prolonged provincial tour, and had begged me to find a home for the poor caged creature) ; '^ I was very, very proud of him." There is something refreshing in the thought that this actively engaged man, who was ever rolling two lives into one, could find time in which to be " very, very proud " of a rather inferior, and (as far as my experi- ence of him went) an absolutely songless blackbird ! CHAPTER IV SOTHERN IN HIGH SPIRITS No memoir of Sothern would be complete without allusion being made to his curious and humorous, if not altogether satisfactory, mania for '' practical joking." For the greater part of his life it absolutely possessed him and it no doubt had its origin in the investigations into so-called " spiritualism," which in the pre-Dundreary American days he (with char- acteristic enthusiasm) occupied himself. The story of these researches, and their outcome, was so well told by himself in a letter that in 1865, he felt called upon to write to an Eng- lish newspaper, that it may very fittingly form a commencement to this chapter. It ran as follows : " Sir, " There is an article in the Spiritual Maga- zine in which I am referred to. I should not dream of noticing any article in any such pub- lication, had I not found respectable and rational journals such as yours reproducing statements affecting my credit and candour. 173 1 74 Edward Askew Sothern I consider it due to the conductors of the daily press of these countries, as well as to myself, to notice remarks on me and on my conduct when I find them transferred to their columns. Had they not been excavated from the gloomy obscurity of their original source they might never have attracted my observa- tion, and certainly would never have obtained my notice. " Possibly it may be thought that I am do- ing this spiritual publication a service by bringing it into notice. I do not think so. When you prosecute a pickpocket, you go be- fore the bench as a matter of duty; the pick- pocket is certainly brought into public pro- minence for the time, but it is only that he may be the more effectually recognised, pun- ished, and exposed. Nobody, I suspect, will be perverted to a belief in spiritualism by reading an exposition of spiritual writers. " Now for the article. The main count in the indictment against me is thus stated: " ' A few years ago, a party of spiritualists in New York, composed chiefly of actors and actresses, held regular sittings for the produc- tion of spiritual phenomena. One of the mem- bers of this circle was an actor named Stuart, who was recognised, by all as a most powerful medium. The manifestations witnessed at these seances were so wonderful as to give to Sothern in High Spirits 175 the meeting the distinguishing title of " The Miracle Circle." They created so much inter- est that it was considered a special privilege to be admitted to this magic chamber. Mr. Stuart at that period was better known as Stuart the magnetiser, or magic worker, than Stuart the actor.' " The ' actor named Stuart ' is now better known as the ' actor named Sothern.' Follow- ing sufficiently illustrious precedents, I used an assumed named when I entered on my pro- fession, and I only resumed my own by the ad- vice of my friend, Mr. James Wallack. The ' party of spiritualists' was not composed chiefly of ' actors and actresses.' It would have been none the worse if it had been ; but in reality it was composed of twelve gentlemen of high position in their respective professions, who, actuated by a common curiosity and in- terest, joined in a thorough, practical, and exhaustive investigation of the phenomena of ' spiritualism.' We were quite ready for either result: to believe it, if it were true; to reject it, if found false; and in the latter case I, at least, resolved in due time to expose it. For more than two years we had weekly meetings. At these, by practice, we had succeeded in pro- ducing not only all the wonderful ' manifesta- tions ' of the professional ' media,' but other effects still more startling. We simply tried 176 Edward Askew Sothern to reproduce the appearances and the results which we had heard of, and read of, and seen — and we succeeded. Pushing our practice and experiments further, we attained the ca- pacity to execute feats much more remarkable than those presented at any of the spiritual seances. An American gentleman and myself took the part of the ' media ' ; the rest of the company assisted; and I do not hesitate to say that we outdid anything ever attempted or accomplished by Home, or the Davenports, or any of the other more notorious spiritual exhibitors. " Not the least of our discoveries was that the whole thing was a myth. We did all that the spiritualists did, and more; but we were our own * agents,' and had no need of recourse to supernatural influences, had we had the power to command them. We commenced our seances in a spirit of legitimate investigation; we continued them for the sake of the amuse- ment they gave ourselves and our friends. We became famous in a small way. We had to start an engagement book, and to make ap- pointments. People came from all parts of America, and waited for their turn. We got into a larger line of business than any of the professional exhibitors, and we were exten- sively patronised. The only difference was, we did n't charge anything. We took no Sothern in High Spirits 177 money, directly or indirectly. Our enter- tainment, being free, was liberally supported; and when I add that the evenings invariably wound up with a jolly little supper, given solely at our own expense, it may be under- stood that ' The Miracle Circle ' was much favoured and warmly encouraged. The in- dulgence of our love of fun cost us some money, but yielded us an immensity of pleas- ure. To speak colloquially, it was an expen- sive but extensive ' sell.' We did put pens under the table, and get signatures of Shake- speare, and Garrick, and other valuable auto- graphs; we did produce spirit-hands and spirit-forms; people did float in the air — at least, we made our audience really believe they did, which was quite sufficient for our purpose and theirs. We exhibited phenomena which were startling enough in all conscience, and we made our visitors believe in their reality. How we succeeded in doing this — how we made some of the most intelligent men in America be- lieve that they really saw and felt what they only fancied they saw and felt — how we pro- duced results the causes of which were not apparent to the physical senses of the specta- tors — how, in fine, we did things which must have seemed to be, and what many of our visitors believed to be, supernatural and miraculous, I do not intend to explain. We did 178 Edward Askew Sothern them; how we did them I do not feel any mo- tive to declare; but I have not the slightest hesitation in saying that we did not do them by spiritual agencies. Yet professional and paid ' media ' came and saw, and themselves avowed our superior power over ' the spirits ! ' " I have been told by many scientific per- sons — even in this city where I am now re- siding — that I am a ' wonderful psychologist.' It is extremely pleasant and very flattering to be told that. Perhaps I am a ' wonderful psychologist ' — I hope I am ; but I doubt it. At all events, whatever psychological or quasi- spiritual powers I may possess, I have never exhibited them in public; I have never made money by displaying them; I have recognised the difference between performing an interest- ing and amusing delusion to entertain myself and a private company, and swindling the pub- lic by taking guineas from people for showing them as ' spiritual manifestations,' feats which I could perform by physical and mechanical forces of my own. " I do not know the Messrs. Davenport ; I never saw them but once, when I paid some fifteen shillings, I believe, and came away powerfully impressed with the conviction that either their supporters and believers were mad, or that I was, and yet with a comfort- able belief in my own sanity. I had nothing Sothern in High Spirits 179 to do with their memorable exposures in Eng- land and France. " The object of this writer in the Spiritual Magazine has been to represent me as having exhibited ' spiritual manifestations ' in Amer- ica, and having exposed them here. I have stated, I hope clearly, that I did produce all the ' manifestations ' and did exhibit them, but they were not ' spiritual,' and I did not exhibit them in public, nor for money. I there- fore consider myself free from the imputa- tions of having obtained money under false pretences, encouraged idle superstitions, or perpetrated blasphemous burlesques of sacred things. I look upon every spiritualist as either an impostor or an idiot. I regard every spiritual exhibitor who makes money by his exhibitions as a swindler. The things that these people do are not done by spiritual or supernatural means. I know that; I have proved it. I have done all that they can do, and more. The history of ' spiritualism ' in this country and America is, on the one hand, a chronicle of imbecility, cowardly terror of the supernatural, wilful self-delusion, and irreligion; and on the other, of fraud and impudent chicanery, and blasphemous inde- cency. I do not say that there are not more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in our philosophy; but I do say, that as the i8o Edward Askew Sothern result of such a practical investigation of ' spiritualism ' as I believe few other men have made, I must honestly and fearlessly denounce it as a mockery, a delusion, a snare, and a swindle. " Yours, etc., " E. A. SOTHBRN. " Theatre Royal, Glasgow, December 6, 1865." Yes, these American spiritualistic experi- ments, and the success which attended them, undoubtedly gave Sothern his insatiable taste for practical joking. He had learnt how easily people could be gulled; he had become an adept in all the little arts and contrivances necessary for such purposes; he had acquired a relish for " selling " (he used this word in his letter, and it was with him a favourite one) all with whom he came in contact, both friends and strangers; and sq when, in the days of his popularity and the long runs of his pieces, he had plenty of time on his hands, he mounted and furiously rode his hobby horse. Before I give instances of his more elabo- rate enterprises in this direction, I will speak of the odd freaks that he delighted to play with the post. On one occasion, when he was play- ing in a country theatre, the local postmaster refused to receive and forward a package be- cause it was just a trifle over the regulation Sothern in High Spirits i8i limits. Sothern was annoyed at what he con- sidered official obstructiveness, and, having obtained from the postmaster the precise limits (particularly with regard to weight) of the parcels he would receive, he went to a hat- ter's shop in the town, and purchased two dozen of empty hat-boxes of the usual card- board make. These he addressed by aid of the local directory to the principal inhabi- tants of a notably breezy suburb, and from a dozen different offices had them posted. His delight at seeing the local postman staggering along in a high wind with the huge pile of hat- boxes on his back was infinite, and in the next town that he visited he repeated the perform- ance, only varying it by addressing the two dozen boxes to one individual. Often and often, as he recalled the incident, have I heard Sothern say how much he would have given to have seen the face of this unknown person when the boxes had been stacked away in his hall. Playing pranks with the post became from this point his almost daily practice. He had his envelopes printed with all sorts of odd devices, such as, " Refuge for Reformed Athe- ists," " Mail Boat Betsy Jane," " Society for the Propagation of Pure Deism," " Troop Ship Crocodile," " Asylum for Confirmed Virgins," " Court of Faculties," " Boodles' Bee Hive," and 1 82 Edward Askew Sothern (these were evidently designed to strike terror into the soul of the nervous letter receiver) " Southwell Smallpox Hospital," " Home for Incurable Itch," and '' Curious Specimen of Contagious Bedding." In the last named he would usually enclose a small piece of linen or a fragment cut from a blanket. Then he had a practice of addressing an envelope in pencil to a friend, say, in Brussels, writing to that friend to rub out the address and re- direct the letter in pencil to a friend in Glas- gow, and so successively sending the letter round a dozen places until the envelope was almost covered with postmarks. Then, hav- ing got it back from the last of his correspond- ents, he would erase the pencilled address, and, putting in ink the name and residence of a gentleman in a London Square, and enclos- ing an invitation to dinner for a date a month old, he would revel in the confident expecta- tion that the recipient, utterly unable to con- ceive why a plainly addressed letter to " Mr. Suchaone, Lowndes Square," should have been sent round by Brussels, Glasgow, Dublin, Brighton, Inverness, Chester, Northampton, Cork, Scarborough, etc., would indignantly complain to the Postmaster-General, who would in the usual routine send the letter again on its rounds to the bewilderment of all the postmasters. Sothern in High Spirits 183 One of these extraordinary postmark-be- studded envelopes is before me now, stamped Edinburgh, Bradford, Glasgow, Rio de Ja- neiro, Liverpool, Dundee, London, Suez Canal, and, finally, Birmingham. Another trick of his was to withdraw the letters — anybody's letters — from the post- rack of any country house in which he might happen to be staying, and write on the outside of their envelopes such preposterous but per- plexing messages as, " I will bring the five peacocks with me on Saturday " (this to a lady living on a London flat!), "How are you getting on with the cockroaches now?" and so on. By the way, he always used to declare that this old habit of his of writing messages on the reverse side of stuck-down envelopes (and he would frequently adopt this plan in the carrying on of his own correspondence) was the means of bringing in the useful half- penny post-card. The liberties that he would take with his addresses were extraordinary. Here is an example : Smith John\JSm2/ik4, Esq., (my throat 's so sore it seems I can't even spell) Square, Blackhampton. 184 Edward Askew Sothern Now and then some of Sothern's victims would attempt retaliation, but seldom with success; and now that I am dealing with his post-office pranks, I may as well tell the fol- lowing anecdote. A gallant officer in a cavalry regiment, whom Sothern had " sold," determined on revenge, and elaborately con- cocted a missive, purporting to be written by a fair lady, suggesting a rendezvous. The let- ter was carefully prepared on plain paper, was enclosed in an envelope without crest, mono- gram, or other distinguishing mark, and was duly posted; but the gallant composer forgot that the plain paper he was using bore a water- mark with the name of his club. On receipt of the letter Sothern easily detected the attempted hoax, and proceeded to pay off its would-be perpetrator. He went to a shop in a side- street off Regent Street, and purchased from a dealer in human hair a long tress of the red- dest hue and coarsest texture that he could find. Having had this love-lock carefully oiled by his groom, he attached to it a parchment label addressed, in feminine handwriting, to Captain , at, let us say, the Plungers' Club, where he knew it was the custom to place the members' letters on a large table in the hall. Captain (as Sothern well knew) hap- pened to be out of town for a few days, during which time his brother-officers enjoyed the de- Sothern in High Spirits 185 light of inspecting the " auburn " tress, and, on his return to town, the pleasure of merci- lessly chaffing their comrade. Another man who tried to pay back Sothern in his own coin by sending him a bogus tele- gram which took him away, on a fool's errand, to Liverpool, had an extraordinary punish- ment. With unexampled audacity, Sothern announced his too-daring friend's death in the papers, at the same time advertising the sale of his furniture by an auction, " at which only Jews ivould be allowed to purchase"! The bogus telegram was an all-too-favourite instrument of warfare with Sothern himself, and he would think nothing of " wiring " to a friend in a distant part as follows: " Poor Suchaone " (naming a complete stranger) " died last night at ten o'clock. Please arrange for the reception of his re- mains in your town to-morrow morning " ; and this would be followed by another, saying, " His poor wife and children will start by the 12,30 train. For pity's sake, meet and console them. You will find the wife pretty, and the children most interesting. Your kindness will be appreciated by all parties." I think that it must have been these postal and telegraphic feats that set Sothern think- ing that something odd and whimsical ought to be done with letter-carrying pigeons. Cer- i86 Edward Askew Sothern tainly I know that while filling a professional engagement in a provincial town, celebrated for the fanciers of " homing birds," he took extraordinary pains, and spent a good deal of money, to procure some of " the right sort " ; but, except a marvellous story that he used with much unction to relate, I do not think that out of this notion anything came. I will relate it in his own words: " I used to get a lot of fellows together in the billiard-room at home" (Sothern's circle of acquaintance was a large one, and on the occasions when this trick was aired he no doubt secured the attendance — and I was not one of them — of the most credulous among his friends) , " and after we had smoked and chatted for a time some one, who would be in my confidence, would lead the conversation up to pigeon-flying and the wonderful exploits of the extraordinary birds in my possession. At this I would express annoyance, and my friends asking ' Why ? ' I would say, ' Oh, no- body believes what my birds have done, and can do, and since I am very fond of them, and, after all, only keep them for my own amuse- ment, I don't somehow care to hear them slightingly talked of. Let us change the sub- ject.' After this, of course, no one would change the subject, and some extraordinary pigeon yarns were told by my confidant, my- Sothern in High Spirits 187 self, and other men who did not like to appear ignorant on the matter. Then I would say, with a smile, ' Ah, if only old Jim was at his best I could show these fellows what a pigeon could really do ! ' ' Old Jim ! ' my confeder- ate would cry out. ' What ! you don't mean to say that he 's alive still — the bird that came home from the Himalayas, and that has crossed the Atlantic a hundred and fifty times?' 'Oh, come, come, that's rather too much ! ' some one would now be sure to say. ' I don't believe that ! ' ' Then, damme, sir, you shall believe it ! ' I would answer, ring- ing the bell in apparent ill-temper, and in- structing the servant to bring in old Jim ; and then, when in a wicker cage that eighteen- penny impostor made his appearance, I would take him out, and, stroking his feathers, say: ' Yes, there 's the bird that has brought home to my family a report of my receipts from every provincial town in the three kingdoms, who has secured me one or two splendid Ameri- can engagements, to whose swift wings, in- deed, I owe much of my success. Poor old Jim ! He 's had the pip, he 's got the roup, and some day he'll moult for the last time; but his work 's done, and if it costs me a thousand a year he '11 now roost in peace un- til the end of his days.' ' Could n't you,' my confederate would now say, ' send Jim just a 1 88 Edward Askew Sothern little distance, just to show how extraordinary his powers are? ' And then, after much re- fusal and more persuasion, I would say, ' Well, well, he shall go just as far as Blisworth with a message to Jones. I dare say, after all, a little night-fly like that will freshen the dear old boy up.' Then the message to Jones would be written, affixed to Jim's wing, and through the window the bird would be released. After an hour of billiards and general talk, relieved with good cigars and anything in the way of refreshment that anybody cared to take, a fluttering at the window-panes would be heard, and, rushing out, I would return with an ex- hausted and bedraggled Jim, faithfully bear- ing Jones's reply to my message. Believe it or not as you will, not one of the people who witnessed this thing ever realised the absurd- ity of sending a pigeon to a place to bring a message back from it. They received Jim's double as a prodigy, and wended their inno- cent ways homeward, placidly murmuring * Marvellous ! ' " For the successful carrying out of many of Sothern's elaborately planned joke®, it was necessary that he should have the services of a confederate only second to himself, and there existed no class of people that he better loved to " sell " than those who, when his escapades had become notorious, desired, without any Sothern in High Spirits 189 qualification for the task, to act in that diffi- cult and delicate capacity. On one occasion a somewhat imbecile young man, who had a slight acquaintance with him, and who loved to boast to his club-friends of his close intimacy with the most popular actor of the day, said to him how much he would like to take a part in one of these jokes. " And so you shall, my boy," said Sothern, clapping him on the shoulder and taking him apart, " for I may as well tell you that from the very first moment that I saw you I recognised the fact that you, above all living men, under- stand me and my ways. We ought to have been brothers ! " A scheme was soon planned. On that very night, which, by the way, prom- ised to be a stormy one, Sothern was expected at a supper-party, and it was agreed that the now thoroughly flattered and delighted young man should find his way on to the roof of the house, and station himself close to the chim- ney communicating with the room in which the guests would be assembled. The idea was this' Sothern was to lead the conversation up to ventriloquism, and a confederate in the room was at once to say what a wonderful master of that peculiar power he was known to be. When pressed to do so, Sothern was to modestly say that he would see what he could do to amuse the company, and, talking I go Edward Askew Sothern up the chimney from the room, he was to be answered by the somewhat imbecile young man on the roof. Being perfectly arranged, every- thing went well. Although he professed to be somewhat out of practice, Sothern had by these means at the very commencement of the even- ing performed such wonderful feats of ven- triloquism, that when the party sat down to supper it was generally agreed that in future the redoubtable " Valentine Vox " must be thought of little account. Now, however, he asked, on account of a tired and unpractised voice, to be excused from giving further dem- onstrations of his skill — the fact being that as supper was served in another room he could no longer carry on a conversation with his ambitious young friend on the roof. At this point it had been agreed that he should revisit terra firma, but it is hardly necessary to say that Sothern had made arrangements by vir- tue of which the ladder which had aided in the ascent was by this time removed. He had, however, reckoned without his host, and the last two acts of this entertainment were un- rehearsed ones. By hook or by crook the young man, in despair at finding his ladder gone, found his way to the chimney of the sup- per-room, and lustily called down it, " Soth- ern ! For Heaven's sake, come and help me ! I can't get down, and it 's raining like mad ! " Sothern in High Spirits 191 For a moment Sothern was taken aback, and felt that the whole trick was about to be ex- posed, when, to his delight and amazement, the company rose as one man, and declared that anything half so marvellous in the way of ventriloquism had never before been at- tempted or achieved. " Why," cried his en- thusiastic host, " you said you were tired and out of practice! you declared you could do no more, and yet, at the very moment that you were apparently talking to me, your voice came down the chimney again with a force un- paralleled ! " It was not in Sothern's nature to deny the flattering impeachment, but, in the midst of the congratulations that were now showered upon him, his voice came down the chimney in such much greater force, and be- gan to be identified with so much strong lan- guage (the company unsuspectingly regarded this as a continued manifestation of his "power"), that he suggested that he should once more give amusement by carrying on a short conversation. This he did, and in it artfully contrived to persuade his victim that if he would remain quiet for a very short time he would come and help him down — which now, for obvious reasons, was the best thing that he could do; but, as luck would have it, before the specified short time had elapsed some one in the room, imitating Sothern's 192 Edward Askew Sothern voice, called up the chimney, "Are you still there?" and this proving the last straw upon the rain-drenched back of the much-enduring young man, he replied — and, unfortunately, he accompanied his incisive words with a piece of slate or mortar, or some other roof-top missile that he had managed to find — " Oh, go to H— 1 ! ! ! " Sothern bolted from the room and from the house. I am afraid that he lost his quickly acquired fame as a ventriloquist, and I do not think that he any longer enjoyed the ad- miration and intimacy of the somewhat im- becile young man; but he told the story with an unction that was as infectious as it was delightful. The story of a joke that he perpetrated at the expense of the beautiful and gifted Ade- laide Neilson may be told in his own words: " Miss Neilson happening to ask me for a lit- tle souvenir on her departure to Florida, I in- quired what she would like best. She said she would leave it entirely to me; any trifle would be valued as a parting gift from such an old friend. Whereupon I asked her, on the spur of the moment, whether she would like a grizzly bear as an appropriate playmate and a pleasant ornament to a lady's chamber. She replied, in the same spirit, ' Yes, send him up,' and there the banter ended. However, hap- Sothern in High Spirits 193 pening half an hour afterwards to meet Mr. Moss, the treasurer of Wallack's theatre, he mentioned that he was very much annoyed by a confounded bear that somebody had sent him from California, and which he did not know what on earth to do with. ' Where is he? ' said I. 'At the back of the stage,' said he, ' with half a dozen men sitting on his cage to keep him quiet, one of whom has already lost all his trousers and a good deal of his flesh through the bars.' 'Good,' said I; 'I will relieve you of him. I know just where to place him.' No sooner said than done, and in half an hour ' Grizzly ' was landed at the Fifth Avenue Ho tel by four porters, with a stout chain about as big as the cable of a man-of-war, and a muzzle like a fire-grate, in the middle of Miss Neil sou's drawing-room and a numerous company of guests, who had called to bid the fair Juliet adieu. Miss Neilson took the jest in good part, kept her temper, and tried to keep her bear; but that was an effort beyond her, and Bruin was finally presented to the Zoological Gardens in Central Park, thus ending the modern adaptation, ' with a difference,' of the old story of Beauty and the Beast." It was with Miss Neilson's husband, Mr. Philip Lee, for a victim that he perpetrated that which was probably the most extensive (and expensive) of all his extravagantly con- 194 Edward Askew Sothern ceived and carefully carried out " sells." Un- fortunately for Mr. Lee, he expressed, on the occasion of his first visit to New York, and in Sothern's presence, doubts as to the existence of the wild and delightful American Bohemian life of which he had heard. Sothern told him that his letters of introduction were all to the wrong people, but that if he liked he could introduce him to the right set, and Mr. Lee having expressed his gratitude, a supper-party was arranged. Covers were laid for twelve, Sothern presiding, and Mr. Lee, as the guest of the evening, sitting on his right hand- Previously, it should be stated, he had been introduced by his host and Mr. W. J. Florence (also an inveterate joker, and of course in the secret) to the other (supposed) notabilities who gathered round the sumptuously spread board. For a time all went well, but while the soup was being served one well-known man was seen to take from under his coat a bat- tle-axe, and another celebrity drew from be- neath his collar a dirk-knife with a blade over a foot long, which he gravely unclasped and placed beside his plate. Then another took a " six-shooter " from his pocket, while his neighbour drew a scythe and a policeman's staff from under the table, and laid them in the middle of the board. " For Heaven's sake," whispered the aston- Sothern in High Spirits 195 ished Mr. Lee into Sothern's ear, " what does this mean?" " Keep quiet," replied Sothern ; " it is just what I most feared. These gentlemen have been drinking, and they have quarrelled about a friend of theirs, a Mr. Weymyss Jobson, quite an eminent scholar, and a very estimable gentleman; but I hope, for our sakes, they will not attempt to settle their quarrel here. It is dreadful; but I hope, dear boy, that they will go away quietly and have no row. It is a fashion they have here to settle their dis- putes at a table, or wherever they meet. All we can do now is to await events." " But there will be murder here ! " ex- claimed Mr. Lee. " Can we not give warning to the police?" " Impossible, my dear fellow," said Sothern, regretfully. " Were you even to be suspected by these men of any desire to leave the room, you would be shot like a dog, and no satis- faction would ever be given your relatives in a court of justice. Such is the country." " It is an infernal country, then ! " muttered the guest. For a few moments all went well, when sud- denly a quarrel broke out at the end of the table, and one of the party, springing to his feet, fiercely exclaimed: " Whoever says that the ' History of the 196 Edward Askew Sothern French Revolution,' written by my friend David Weymyss Jobson is not as good a book in every respect as that written by Tom Carlyle on the same subject, is a liar and a thief; and if there is any fool present who de- sires to take it up, I am his man ! " All the guests rose suddenly, and every man grasped his weapon; shots were fired, and the room was filled with smoke and uproar; sev- eral of the guests closed and struggled with each other, and one of the conspirators, thrust- ing a long knife into the amazed victim's now trembling hand, said : " Defend yourself ! This is butchery — sheer butchery ! " But Sothern sat quietly by, and gave as his advice : " Keep cool, and don't get shot." By this time the whole hotel was roused, and I fancy that the " joke " went further than even Sothern in his wildest mood intended. His guests of the evening were a troupe of knock-about negro minstrels, who had been instructed how to act. Among many amusing stories that that clever comedian Mr. John T. Raymond had to tell of his English travelling experiences with Sothern was the following: They were journeying together from Glasgow to Bir- mingham, and, having agreed to appear to be Sothern in High Spirits 197 strangers to each other, they entered a first- class nonsmoking compartment, in which sat two typical English gentlemen. " Do you ob- ject to smoking?" asked Raymond of them. "Certainly not," they politely replied; and the same question was put to Sothern, who angrily answered, " I do, sir — I do most as- suredly. It is a piece of impertinence on your part to ask such a question." " I beg your pardon," replied Eaymond, modestly. " I am only an American, and quite unused to the customs of this country." " That 's easy enough to see, sir," said the apparently indignant Sothern. '' You are evidently either an American or a fool. We don't con- duct ourselves in that way in England." As if terrified half out of his life, Raymond sank back into a corner of the carriage, and the two disgusted Englishmen expressed them selves freely and audibly concerning Sothern's apparently offensive and overbearing conduct. Gazing at them calmly, Sothern quietly took from his pocket a cigar, lighted it, and puffed away in the most easy manner, as indifferent to his surroundings as if he had been alone. This was too much for the honest-minded Eng- lishmen. They looked at the small and in- offensive Raymond — ^they looked at the well-knit, aggressive Sothern, and they " went for him." At first they talked " at " him, then 198 Edward Askew Sothern they talked to him; they tried to make him put his cigar out, explain, apologise; they de- clared they would call the guard, they threat- ened all kinds of things; but Sothern sat imperturbable and silent as the sphynx, calmly smoking his cigar, and filling the compartment with smoke. In the midst of this scene the train stopped at a station; and then Sothern, throwing a contemptuous look on the Eng- lishmen, and taking Raymond by the arm, said, " Come, John, we '11 change carriages here. We '11 leave these ill-mannered fellows to themselves ! " Once, taking a midnight railway journey after a late and exhausting performance, he made efforts to secure a compartment to him- self; but at the last moment, just as the train was starting, another traveller, somewhat rudely pushed by the porter in attendance, opened the door, and claimed and asserted his right of admission. Sothern said nothing, but when the train had started he opened his travelling-bag, and, looking malevolently at his fellow-passenger, commenced stropping his razors. After the first stopping-station had been passed he had that compartment to himself. The following story has been told (with variations) by Mr, Toole, but it is so charac- teristic of Sothern's peculiar vein of humour Sothern in Hicrh Spirits 199 that it must needs be repeated here. With Mrs. John Wood he entered an ironmonger's shop, and, advancing to the counter, said, ' Have you the second edition of Macanlay's ' History of England ' ? " The shop assistant explained the nature of the business, and sug- gested the name of a neighbouring bookseller. '' Well, it don't matter whether it is bound in calf or not," said Sothern. " But, sir, this is not a bookseller's," was the reply. " It does n't matter how you wrap it up," said Sothern; " a piece of brown paper will do — the sort of thing that you would select for your own mother." " Sir," shouted the man, " we don't keep books; this is an ironmonger's shop." " Yes," said Sothern, '* I see the binding dif- fers, but as long as the proper fly-leaf is in, I 'm not very particular." " Sir," fairly shrieked the bewildered man, " can't you see you have made a mistake and come into the wrong shop?" "Certainly," said Sothern; '' I 'm in no hurry, and I '11 wait while you reach it down." Believing that his strange customer was either deaf or mad, the man went off to the back part of the premises, and re- turned with the proprietor of the establish- ment. "What is it that you require, sir?" asked that individual of Sothern, in a bland yet determined voice. " I want," was the prompt and lucid reply, " a small, ordinary 200 Edward Askew Sothern file, about six inches in length." " Certainly, sir," said the ironmonger, producing the arti- cle, and casting a look of supreme disgust upon his unfortunate assistant. Mrs. John Wood, who, when they entered the shop, had no idea what her madcap companion was go- ing to do, very nearly spoiled the joke by her ill-restrained but not inexcusable laughter. His pranks with tradespeople were, indeed, innumerable. Amongst other experiences in this connection, I have been with him when he walked into a post-office, and bewildered the person behind the counter by asking for " some nice fresh stamps, suitable for an invalid." And then, after he had inspected sheets of all the different values, declaring that this was a case in which expense need not be considered, rejecting them all because he " really feared they were not quite fresh enough." At a little social club in Glasgow, Sothern was in the habit of sometimes meeting at after- theatre suppers a college Professor (in his own words "a singularly clever and jolly fellow"), who had a way of abruptly leaving the room without taking the trouble to say good-bye to any one who might be present. On one occa- sion, when both the actor and the Professor were present, the former happened to sit next to an outspoken Major (there is no need to mention names), who, in the course of conver- MR. E. A. SOTHERN AS LORD DUNDREARY. Sothern in High Spirits 201 sation, remarked, " I went to-night to see the world-famed conjurer, Professor , What a pity it is that he should appear before the public in such a shameful condition ! " " Why, what was the matter?" asked Sothern. "He was drunk, sir," replied the Major — " dis- gracefully drunk," Knowing that the Major and the Professor did not know each other, seeing his chance, and yielding to temptation. Sothern quietly nudged his neighbour, at the same time saying, in an impressive aside, ,*' Hush ! " The Major, feeling that he had committed himself, looked up quickly, and Sothern said, " My dear sir, you have made a mistake. You surely don't mean that he was drunk?" "No, no," replied the Major in a disconcerted sort of way, " not exactly drunk, but — but — but — well — confused, you under- stand. I 've seen a good many of the English conjurers, and what I meant to imply was, that I don't consider he comes up to their average." At this juncture, as luck would have it, the Professor rose from the table and left the room, which those who knew him recognised as his quiet way of taking his departure without breaking up a social party; but when he was fairly gone, Sothern turned to the Major and said, " I am afraid this is a very awkward busi- ness ! I wish with all my soul that you had n't said it!" "What is it? What did I say?" 202 Edward Askew Sothern was the not unnatural reply. " Why," said Sothern, " did n't you see the indignant way in which that man got up and left the room? That 's the son-in-law of the conjurer — mar- ried his daughter only two days ago, and of course he naturallj^ feels indignant at the very pointed remark that he heard you make." " D — n it," said the Major, " why did n't you tell me? You nudged me, and you confused me." " Nonsense," said Sothern, seriously ; " I looked at you, and winked at you, feeling that you were an intelligent fellow and would take a hint; but, as the thing is done, my ad- vice to you is to write a manly, straightforward letter, explaining the afifair in a semi-apolo- getic way, and saying, as an easy means of get ting out of it, that, having had a remarkably jolly supper, you were perhaps more or less under the influence of wine." Falling into the trap, the regretful Major wrote a note to Soth- ern's dictation, and Sothern undertook to send it to the Professor. As a matter of course, he did 7iot send it, but the next day wrote a let- ter, and had it copied and signed in the Pro fessor's name, which was one of the most grossly insulting in its character that one could conceive. It read something like this, " Sir, simply because you happen to be a cavalry of- ficer, and I a quiet university Professor, you think you can with impunity insult me by as- Sothern in High Spirits 203 sailing the purity of my honoured father-in- law. As you yourself confess in your note that you are only a drunken cad " — and so forth, and so forth. The next morning the Major called on Sothern and showed him this letter. " He calls me a drunken cad ! " he said excit- edly ; " and I mean to kick him." Sothern soothed him as well as he could, and, directly he was gone, wrote a note to the conjurer in the name of the Major, to the effect that he had received a letter from his son-in-law saying that he would horsewhip him at the first op- portunity. That brought another communica- tion which still further complicated matters; but as Sothern wrote all the missives himself, he held the trump cards in his own hand. These letters went backwards and forwards for several days, and finally Sothern sent one from the Professor challenging the Major, at the same time causing a number of telegrams to be transmitted to him from different parts of Scotland from men with whom he knew he was intimate, expressive of their astonishment that a gentleman so well known for his dis- tinguished bravery should have been guilty of conduct so utterly unbecoming his position. Now, this threw the unfortunate Major into a state of great excitement and perplexity. He was a man of warm temperament and high courage, who would have by no means ob 204 Edward Askew Sothern jected to " meet his man," but who respected his country's laws, and who, as an officer, had his own reasons for strictly regarding them. Sothern at this crisis started for London, leav- ing behind him a batch of letters and telegrams of the most slighting and insulting description, which were delivered to the Major on the fol- lowing day. Rendered desperate by these, he followed Sothern to town, sending him a tele- gram in advance, begging for an appointment, and saying that he should act under his advice. Sothern at once arranged to have the Glasgow Professor to dine with him on the very day on which he asked the Major to call, and when the latter walked into the room he was completely staggered to find the former advance and shake him cordially by the hand. Of course the gallant Major could not resist what he now regarded as an evidence of goodwill, and com- menced to make explanations, to which the innocent Professor listened in astonishment, declaring his entire ignorance of the whole affair. Not having an idea what it was all about, he jumped to the conclusion that the Major was drunk, and as Sothern kept making signs to him, he treated him accordingly. At last the situation became so ludicrous that Sothern felt bound to tell the whole story, and — well, let us hope that he was forgiven. There is a story of a joke that he played in Sothern in High Spirits 205 conjunction with another actor on a fastidious hotel guest, who happened to occupy a room adjoining theirs. He was an elderly gentle- man, and he had been complaining of the noise the two actors made when they came home from the theatre, and so it was determined that he should have a " good time." One night, a little past twelve o'clock, the two actors sat down at the table in their room. On it they placed a large number of plates and glasses, and, having made sure that their irri- table neighbour was in his room, they proceeded to produce in most realistic style the noise and jollification of a large supper-party. First, Sothern would get up and make a speech, at the same time stamping his feet and clapping his hands to personate several other people, while his confederate would rattle the dishes, jingle the glasses, and shout "Hear! hear!" Occasionally, to heighten the illusion, Sothern would go to the door and apparently bid one of the party good night, tramp noisily down the room, and inquire of a score of imaginary persons whether they had all they wanted, and what wines they liked best. Tn this way some dozens of supposititious guests departed from the room, while the unhappy old man next door, thoroughly tired out and disgusted at his vain efforts to go to sleep, paced the floor in despair. Finally, when, at about sun- 2o6 Edward Askew Sothern rise, the actors began to get tired, they bade their last guest a noisy farewell and retired. In the morning the old man gave up his room and left the hotel in high dudgeon. There- after the two actors came in as late and made as much noise as they liked. To Mr. Toole I am indebted for the anec- dote of Florence getting home late one night and finding upon his dining-room table a very tender note in a lady's handwriting. The sig- nature was unknown to him, and, after care- fully considering the epistle, he came to the conclusion that his friend Sothern was the writer of it. Florence immediately wrote, and despatched by a messenger, a furious letter to Sothern, from whose persecution, as he re- garded it, in another matter, he was at the moment keenly suffering. " Your conduct," he wrote, " is neither that of an actor nor a gentleman." In the morning he regretted the hasty letter that he had written, and which must by this time have been delivered and re- ceived. A few weeks afterwards he met Soth- ern in the street. "How d'you do, Florence?" said Sothern. " You 're quite a stranger." " That 's how I have been feeling," said Florence. " Ever since I wrote that letter to you I concluded it would put an end to our friendship." Sothern in High Spirits 207 " That letter— what letter ? Oh yes, I re- member; something about neither an actor nor a gentleman? But there was no name at the top or at the bottom ; I remember now ; so, guessing it was intended for Boucicault, I re- directed it and sent it on ! " When playing in America, under the man- agement of Mr. Abbey, the two had a wager together, the stakes being two silk hats. Soth- ern was the winner, and Mr. Abbey wrote an order to the principal hatter in New York, asking that they should be sent to him at the box-otlice of the theatre. Writing this order quickly, he had left a blank space before the figure two, and when his back was turned, Sothern quickly inserted in front of it a six. The order was duly jjosted, and in course of time, perplexed as the hatter must have been at this extraordinary requirement on the part of Mr. Abbey, the sixty-two hats were deliv- ered, together with a bill, and a letter ex- pressing his satisfaction at being favoured with such a large order. Mr. Abbey happened to be out when the hats arrived, and his amazement on his return at finding the box- office literally filled with the sixty-two hat- boxes was great. The man who delivered the hats also brought Mr. Abbey's order, which was written in pencil; and Sothern, who was on the lookout, had immediately taken the let- 2o8 Edward Askew Sothern ter from him and quietly rubbed out his own six, so that the astonished and indignant Mr. Abbey, when he asked to see the order, read it, just as he had written it, for two hats. He showed it to Sothern, saying, " What the devil does Mr. mean by sending me sixty-two hats when my order was for two ? " " Poor fellow ! " said Sothern, shaking his head ; " I really thought he would leave ofif, but he 's evidently at it again." "At what?" asked Mr. Abbey. " Oh, it only shows what drink will do if a man persists in it," was the reply. " You had better send the hats back with some sound ad- vice concerning his too-well-known habits, and pay the bill." This advice was followed, and an angry correspondence between the hatter and Mr. Abbey had reached an acute stage before the perpetrator of the joke, having thoroughly en- joyed himself, stepped in and cleared the mat- ter up. Mr. Florence has told some wonderful stories of the " sells " that Sothern prepared for his delectation, generously enough premising the narration of them by saying, " For a good square, original, practical joke, no man that I ever heard of can touch Ned Sothern ; his in- ventive powers are marvellous." " He once," this good-natured and even ap- Sothern in High Spirits 209 preciative victim went on to say, " inserted an advertisement in the New York Herald, the substance of which was that I wanted ten dogs, two each Newfoundland, black-and-tan, spitz, setters, and poodles, and that dog deal- ers might apply at seven o'clock in the morn- ing until three in the afternoon, for three days, at my residence. The next morning by eight o'clock the street in front of my house was crowded with men and dogs, fighting their way to my door. Aroused by the awful noise, I got out of my bed, went to the window, and as I drew back the curtain and exposed my head and shoulders, every fellow in that motley crowd held up his dog and yelled ' Here he is, Mr. Florence ; this is the one you want ! ' I don't know what else they said, for the howl- ing and barking of the dogs and the laughter of the crowd drowned all other sounds. I was at a loss to account for this strange sight; but Mrs. Florence, coming to the window, and realising the situation, said, ' I see what it is ; it cannot be anything but one of Ned Soth- ern's jokes. Look — look! There he is him- self ! ' And sure enough there he was, look- ing at a beautiful Skye-terrier which he ulti- mately purchased. He turned to my window, and, with that characteristic way he had of adjusting his eye-glasses, he put them on and looked straight at me as if he had never seen 14 2IO Edward Askew Sothern me, and then innocently asked a boy, who was holding an ugly cur, ' Who lives in this house? What queer person is that who is shaking his fist at us ? ' ' Why, Florence, the actor, lives there, and he advertised for dogs, and that 's what 's the matter,' said the urchin. ' Going into the dog business, I suppose ? ' said Soth- ern, again glancing dreamilj^ at the windows and walking leisurely away. " At another time he sent three or four un- dertakers to my house in the middle of the night. The last trick he played upon me was very good. I had invited a number of fellows to dine with me, and we were expecting a good time. When we were pretty well through the dessert, one of the gentlemen went outside into the hall, and in a few minutes returned, saying that there was an old man at the door who wished to see Mr. Florence, and that he would not go away until I came to him. After a little while I went out, and found the antediluvian on the step outside. He seemed to be very infirm and quite lame. I invited him inside, and he told me that he was about to return to the old country, — that he had lost all his family in America, and was going home to the land of his fathers to die. He had a few things left from the general wreck of his household which he wished to sell, and thereupon he took some mantel ornaments and Sothern in High Spirits 211 other articles of virtu from his pockets, say- ing they were the last things he had saved, and if I could spare him three hundred dollars for them he could buy a steerage ticket that would carry him home. I saw that the articles were valuable, told him that I would keep them, and handed him three hundred dollars. Thinking I had done a pretty good thing, I returned to the dining-room and gave orders to a servant to let the beggar out. The ser- vant returned, saying that the old fellow had already gone; and so, indeed, he had. Some of the company then suggested that he might have been a fraud, and suggested that I should ' just look round and see if he had not taken a few things.' It then bethought me that the articles he produced looked like some of my own. I rushed into the parlour to find that the old thief had taken my own things. The alarm was given and the police sent for. " In a few moments two oflficers appeared and began a search. One of the servants then reported that he had seen the old man going upstairs. The officers rushed up, and after a look through the rooms on the two upper stories discovered him looking over some photo- graphs. The officers, of course, seized him. He resisted, and gave it to them pretty roughly with his tongue. 212 Edward Askew Sothern " ' Bring the old ruffian down,' I cried ; ' bring him into the dining-room.' " Until then I had not thoroughly scanned the aged villain's countenance. Imagine my amazement when I looked into that eye which no power on earth could disguise or change, to find that the old man I had hold of was Sothern himself! It was a dead sell on us all." Sothern, who had actually been one of Mr. Florence's guests at dinner, had, it appeared, come provided with a wig, beard, slippers, a long coat, and a villainous old hat, and, man- aging to slip out of the room, had, in a few moments, transformed himself into the dis- reputable old beggar-man. Mr. Stephen Fiske has also related some curious experiences that befell him when in the company of this incorrigible practical joker. He was walking with Sothern down Regent Street one day, when he said, " You go ahead a little, Fiske, and I '11 go back, but we will both take the Atlas omnibus." " I " (says Mr. Fiske) " followed his instructions, and, entering the omnibus, found Sothern sit- ting in the diagonally opposite corner. I nat urally looked at him with some curiosity to know why he had asked me to go on ahead. Perceiving this, he assumed a very fierce and belligerent expression, and exclaimed, ' Are Sothern in High Spirits 213 you staring at me, sir?' The omnibus was filled with several elderly ladies, two quiet gentlemen who looked like clergymen, and a farmer from the country. I took the cue at once, and replied, ' No ; if I wanted to stare at anybody, I would stare at a better-looking man than yourself.' At this Sothern's indig- nation apparently became uncontrollable, and it required all the force of the clergymen, seconded by the farmer, to keep him in his seat, and prevent him from throwing himself upon me. Finally, he insisted upon stopping the ' bus,' and invited me to step outside, and either apologise then and there for the insult or fight him on the spot. I pretended to pre- fer to do the latter, but said I would remain in the omnibus; whereupon Sothern took off his overcoat, and handed it to the nearest old lady to hold for him while he chastised me for my impertinence. In the course of the de- sultory remarks in which we then indulged, he said that he would allow nobody except his friend John Robinson, of Philadelphia, to speak to him in that way and live; whereupon I immediately informed him that my name was Robinson, Christian name John, and that I had just arrived from America, but that I had n't the pleasure of his acquaintance, nor did I particularly desire it. In an instant Sothern's manner completely changed, and. 214 Edward Askew Sothern climbing over the old ladies, the clergymen, and the farmer, to my corner of the omnibus, he endeavoured to embrace me like a long- lost friend. He declared that he had never been more delighted in his life, stopped the omnibus, and proposed that we should get out together, which we thereupon proceeded to do. The comedy we had enacted, and the astonish- ment depicted on the faces of the inmates of the vehicle, exceeded anything I ever saw on the stage, and afforded food for laughter for many days." Mr. Fiske has also recorded another episode, which he described as " A Spiritual Joke." '' I remember," he said, " a curious experiment which Sothern made in New York, while a well-known actress was playing at the Winter Garden. Sothern was engaged in a discussion on spiritualism with a gentleman in the corri- dor or lobby, and said, ' Now let me give you an instance of the power of a medium. You observe that Miss is on the stage, and of course she can't hear what I say at this in- stant. But if you will watch her while I count " one, two, three/' you will notice that she will tremble, turn pale, and lean against the actor with whom she is playing.' As Sothern did so, he pulled out his handkerchief, rubbed it against the window looking into the audience, and precisely what he had predicted Sothern in High Spirits 215 occurred. It was so naturally done that even I was deceived until after the performance, when the actress, sending for me, said : ' Mr. Fiske, what was Mr. Sothern's object in ask- ing me, as a special favour, to lean against H when he rubbed his handkerchief against the glass?' I did not myself find or.t until, during a subsequent conversation at supper, he explained the joke. It illustrates one of his methods. He had told her what to do." Mr. Fiske's omnibus story reminds me how fond Sothern at all times was of making pub- lic conveyances the targets for his wayward humour. On one occasion, I remember, he called a hansom that was '' crawling " along the Strand, got into it, and began earnestly to read a newspaper. "Where to, sir?" asked the driver, having closed the doors, and touch- ing his hat; but this question had to be re- peated some half-dozen times before Sothern, looking up dreamily from his paper, took any notice of it. '' WJicre to? " he then said somewhat angrily. ''Why, aren't we there yet? Where have you been driving me to, then ? " Cabman. We have n't been driving at all Sothern {interrupting him). We haven't been driving! Of course we haven't been driving! Do 2i6 Edward Askew Sothern you think that when I engaged this cab I meant to come and share your seat, and hold one of the reins? Cabman (sulkily). Well, then, I haven't been driving — there. Sothern. That 's just where you are in the wrong. You ought to have been driving there. What else did I take this cab for? Cabman. But you didn't tell me where you wanted to go to. Sothern. Of course I didn't. If I had known where I wanted to go to, naturally I should have walked there. I leave all that to you. Cabman. Come, now, governor, tell me where I am to drive to. Sothern {looking at him, earnestly). Do you mean to tell me that you really don't know? Cabman (losing his temper). How should I know? Sothern. Why, I was always given to understand that you fellows knew London thoroughly well. Cabman (on his dignify). So I do know London well. No man better. Sothern. I should have thought, then, that Lei- cester Square Cabman. Leicester Square! You never said that before. Sothern. Of course I didn't. Well, now, per- haps, you know where to go. (Cabman indignantly mounts his box and drives off. Sothern again immerses himself in his news- paper. Leicester Square is, of course, soon reached.) Cabman (with his mouth at the roof-trap) . Which number, sir? Sothern. Don't bother me; I'm busy. Cabman. Well, but I only wanted to know which number. Sothern in High Spirits 217 Sothern. That does n't sound a great deal either, does it? Get down, my good fellow, and we '11 talk about it. We shall never come to an understanding while you 're up there, and I 'm down here. Cabman {at the door). Which number, sir? Sothern. Upon my soul, / don't know. What place is this? Cabman {surlily). Leicester Square. Sothern. Indeed? Why did we come here? Cabman. Because you said you wanted to come here. Sothern. No, no; pardon me. I remember now. You suggested Leicester Square, and I, thinking you seemed to be a man of taste, jumped at it. I was right. It 's a pretty place. I like it. I '11 take you by the hour, the day, the week, the month, any- thing you like; only drive quietly round and round it, so that I can see it thoroughly and at my leisure. {The cabman, thinking that he is dealing with a lunatic, and possibly a dangerous one, remounts his box, and drives " round and round " the square. Sothern again buries himself in his newspaper. After a lapse of some three-quarters of an hour the cabman once more stops, gets down, and stands at the door, which he has opened.) Cabman. Look here, governor, for mercy's sake, get out, and, if you like, blow the fare ! We 've been round this 'ere square the dickens only knows how many times, and, however you may feel, me and the old 'orse is both blind dizzy! Sothern is himself responsible for the fol- lowing anecdote, and it may as well be told in his own words. " Not long ago, Mr. Toole and myself were breakfasting with a party of 2i8 Edward Askew Sothern friends at an inn in Greenwich. No sooner had the waiter left the room for an instant than I proposed that we should remove the plate from the cloth, and get under the table. This we did without loss of time, taking every article of silver-ware from the table, down to the spoons, and throwing open the window. After a while the door was opened and the waiter reappeared. " ' Hallo ! ' he cried, seeing the company gone, also the silver, and the window wide open, 'here's a rum go! I'm blest if they aren't run away with the silver! Here, Dick (to a waiter who was passing), the gentlemen 'as run away with the silver! Help me find the guv'nor ! ' With that he made a hasty exit, whereupon the party resumed their places, after shutting down the window and replac- ing the dishes, the knives, the forks, and the spoons. When the ' guv'nor ' appeared, breath- less and cursing, not loud, but deep, he found a party of gentlemen in the full possession of his silver -ware, quietly discussing the fish His ejaculation of rage changed to astonish- ment and relief. "'Eh, what?' said he, 'everything secure? Why, James, you confounded rascal, what do you mean ? ' " ' So help me, guv'nor ' commenced the bewildered waiter. Sothern in High Spirits 219 " ' You 're drunk, you idiot ! ' exclaimed the irate landlord, and then, bowing to the com- pany, ' Gentlemen, I beg your pardon. I will withdraw.' " Sothern also told the following story : " One morning at breakfast in the public-room of the Continental Hotel, Philadelphia, I observed an old gentleman who was obviously very much annoyed at the delay of the waiter in bringing his breakfast. He was continually looking at his watch and apparently muttering oaths of abdominal origin. For some time I paid little attention to him, but at last, be- coming either interested or annoyed with him, I asked the head-waiter who he was. He told me he was General So-and-so, an irascible old bachelor, and one of the regular boarders of the house. While waiting for my own break- fast I had emptied my pockets of the letters which I had to acknowledge that morning, and among them found what we call a ' prop- erty letter,' that had accidentally found its way among my old papers. A property letter, you know, means a letter used on the stage, and this one read as follows : " ' Young inan, I know thy secret — thou lov- est above thy station: if thou hast wit, cour- age, and discretion, I can secure to thee the realisation of thy most sanguine hopes, etc., etc: 220 Edward Askew Sothern " It is the letter which Claude Melnotte reads in ' The Lady of Lyons.' It struck me on the instant that I would enclose it in an envelope, send it to the old gentleman, and watch the effect; so, calling one of the waiters — a coloured man — I told him to go outside in the hall, remain for five minutes, and then re- turn and deliver the letter, saying that the writer would call for a reply during the day. I also instructed the waiter, after giving this reply, to retire quickly, and not be seen again in the hotel until the next day, and that I would make it all right with his employer. " Agreeably to my orders, in a few minutes the servant walked up to the General and put the letter in his hands. The old gentleman ad- justed his spectacles, tore open the envelope, and in an amazed tone commenced to read half aloud, ' Young man, I know thy secret,' and so on. He read it over two or three times, and I never saw anybody more bewildered. At last he called for the head-waiter and de- manded to see the servant who had delivered the letter; of course he was not to be found. The longer he pondered, the more he seemed inclined to fly into a passion, and when his breakfast came the storm burst. ' D — n the breakfast ! ' he exclaimed, almost kicking over the table. * I want to see the lunatic who calls me a " young man," and says he knows my Sothern in High Spirits 221 secret, and can secure the realisation of my fondest hopes. I have n't got any secret, and my fondest hope is to kick the idiot who sent me this insane note!' " During this time two or three ladies had joined me at the breakfast-table, and, notic- ing the extraordinary excitement of the Gen- eral, asked me if I knew who he was. I told them to keep very quiet, and not to attract his attention ; that he was a fratricide, and an es- caped lunatic, whose keepers were outside be- hind the doors waiting for him, and that the letter was only a decoy to enable them to secure him without any unnecessary violence. This thoroughly alarmed them, and they hur- riedly left the table, retreating through the door at the other end of the room. " At this moment the second head-waiter, who had noticed the agitation of the ladies, walked up to me, and asked if they were not satisfied with the breakfast. " ' Oh yes,' I replied, ' I presume so ; but the youngest lady is a dangerous maniac at times, and the instant she saw her father. General So-and-so, disturbed in his mind by the let- ter she had written, I whispered to her friend to take her out of the room.' " In a few moments, having finished my breakfast, I took my own departure. On reaching the office of the hotel, I inquired of 222 Edward Askew Sothern one of the principal clerks whether his head- waiter was quite sound in his mind. He asked me my reason for making the inquiry. I said that I did n't want to get my name mixed up in the matter, but it struck me that the one weak point of his intellect was his apparently intense dislike to the General, and I observed, * If I were you I should just test it by going up to him suddenly, and saying : " Don't you think you will get yourself into trouble about that letter of the General's? ' " " Taking my advice, the clerk walked up to the head-waiter and abruptly put this ques- tion to him. Of course the waiter got very much confused, and stammered in endeavour- ing to make an explanation ; whereupon I, who was behind him, intimated by signs to the clerk that he had better get out of the way, as the fellow had a knife about him and might be- come very violent. " In the meantime I saw the General ap- proach the office to make inquiries, and in a minute or two there was a tremendous hum of conversation. Half a dozen men were talk- ing loudly and excitedly together, among whom were the clerk and the two head-waiters. I hastily paid my bill, seized my travelling- bag, jumped into a conveyance at the door, and was driven away. I never learned what was the result, because I never dared to inquire." Sothern in High Spirits 223 I suppose if anything could be called fair game for these wild exploits, it would be the self-sufficient and absolutely irrepressible amateur actor who believes himself to be an Irving, Kendal, and Toole rolled into one. That Sothern thought him so will be seen by the following anecdote. While taking a short holiday at a seaside town he was introduced to a gentleman who, having played a few parts in the Theatre Royal Back Drawing-Room, believed himself to be a histrionic genius. With time on his hands, this w^as just the sort of man that Soth- ern wanted, and at his expense he at once be- gan to amuse himself. " My dear fellow," he said to him, after an acquaintance of about twenty-four hours, " there is no need to tell me that you are a born actor. I can see it in your eyes and bearing, hear it in your voice, read it in your every action. Why, in the name of goodness, do you waste your time here, when in Lon- don you would find fame and fortune? It is really the saddest case of ' Born to Blush Un- seen ' that I have ever known. Why on earth don't you give yourself a chance?" "Well, yes; but how?" was the answer. " Why, confound it all, look here," replied Sothern. "Though it's dead against my own interest to say it, if I were you I would en- 224 Edward Askew Sothern gage the theatre in this place, send invitations to all the London managers, and appear as Othello. After that you would simply have to name your own terms." Only too readily the poor conceited amateur actor fell into the trap. The theatre was taken, a company (of some sort) recruited, and, under the supervision of Sothern, Shake- speare's tragedy was (in a fashion) rehearsed. On the evening of the production Sothern called his victim on one side and said to him: " You are admirable ; I don't know when I watched rehearsals with greater interest; I don't know when I have learnt more lessons than I have while noting your marvellous con- ception of Othello. But you have one fault, which I, as an old actor, may be pardoned for pointing out to you. You don't speak up enough." " Don't speak up enough ! " said the ama- teur, who had been exercising what he called " his organ " in a manner that was, to say the least of it, remarkable. " Why, all the others declare that I am much too loud!" " Precisely," was the reply ; " and that only just proves what I am saying. Can't you see, my good fellow, that they recognise in you a genius, and that they would like you to make a failure? Now, I, who have your real inter- est at heart, and mean you to succeed, tell you Sothern in High Spirits 225 the truth. To-night I will sit in a box, close to the stage. Keep your eye on me, and when I show my handkerchief raise your voice to its very utmost capacity." The ambitious one thanked his kind patron, and promised to attend to his instructions. It is easy to see what followed. Led on by the ever-displayed handkerchief, Othello roared like a very bull, to the dismay of those who were playing with him, and to the derision of the audience. In the course of the evening he sent for Sothern and said: " I 'm sure I must be loud enough ; I 'm shouting myself faint; the audience laughs at me. Why do you continue to show that con- founded handkerchief?" Sothern looked at him with a sad smile, and said: " My dear boy, this is where the old actor comes in. You think you are shouting, but, as a matter of fact, you are inaudible. Ex- perience alone can teach the true management of the voice. The laughs of which you com- plain mean that you cannot be heard. The London critics who, at my request, have spe- cially come down to see you, have just been say- ing to me, ' You 're right about the man ; he 's got a magnificent stage presence; his poses are unequalled ; he 's grasped the part better than any one since Kemble died; but, damme, IS 226 Edward Askew Sothern why don't he speak up?' If you don't do so in the next act I 'm afraid you 're settled." After the next act the poor mistaken man, who, of course, had acted execrably, was set- tled. With protruded eyeballs, distended veins, and perspiration playing havoc with his blackened face, he bellowed (to the tune of the fluttering handkerchief) until voice and strength forsook him, and, in whispered tones, he told his mentor that " he could not go on any longer." " I was afraid of it," said Soth- ern ; " what a pity ! You have all the attri butes of a great actor except voice power. Well, it was worth trying. If you could have made yourself heard you would have snuffed us all out. As it is, there is nothing to do but grin and bear it." Writing of the shouting Othello reminds me of an odd and harmless trick that Sothern was fond of trying at a dinner-party. Commenc- ing with a confederate across the table, he would converse in loud and yet louder tones, and this, being continued, became so infectious that at last, to his infinite delight, all present would be shouting, the one to the other, at the very pitch of their voices. Mr. Toole, ever a great friend of Sothern's, and a participator in many of his jokes, once agreed with another friend to meet him at one of those old inns in the city where steaks 1^ |I>CC a: < DC Q 2 D Eg o C/2 O u 12: < o l-H W < O o o 3 3 9Q O n' en ^>5 rt 0£ pi PI O z o o s: r H w ■ ' ' z n W O O c o H o z ^ o -0 '* o -S^ 2z I— i ppi - Si vj g ^ Cl- Ol o o p 3 CD n 1Z ; < n 1-1 ;> DO ?n In iSn: <-•■ i"^ > ^_J 5^ '5. ™ ^ O 2 t^ S CD (^ GO M. 12 W O 3 LEIN ASTER" 2 GQ CD o c o o e n CO or 2 5 ; I S o . 01 » . I «i - P-i t? s* S "> - :^ ■ 7. ] MASON OPERA HOUSE A :. TYATT. leise* and Managar E. H. SOTHERN RICHARD LOVELACE By LAURENCE IRVING. • ""^li?^ LORD DUNDREARY In ■OUR AMERICAN COUSIN." • . TRBNCHARD.. • "-" ■■ ""■• HAMLET ItAsERCRANTZ. . m i NEXT ATTRACTION fiNNiNc Monday, January 1 1 ONLY MATINEE SATURDAY HENRY B. HARRIS ^ The Unequalled Dramatic Triumph of ihe Cenlury The Lion and The Moa*c By CHARLES KLEIN COMPLETE SCENIC PRODUCTION Prices: "*a™'^eveni~c $1.50, $1, 75c, and 50c I Seats Now Selling ''""nlfED^'*'' ^^ Comine : "The Wolf" 226 Edward Askew Sothern why don't he speak up ? ' If you don't do so in the next act I 'm afraid you 're settled." A.fter the ne.'x't arf fha nnri-n ■mic^■i-r,^-r/^■r, -rv^r.-^ r> tri n M tr X »Ti ^ •il W g '»^ O W O I r 5 £) d^ 'Co S w *^ '^ > 2 - > T3 2 a ^ a 2. r a o r° ^ a K Q o ^ H '^ w JC ?>^ 2 H Coo C O ?3 g: ij ' r^ »5* ^ I— I w CB w s t^ p O m C - - M M S. tlO ffilf 50 3 3 W ■ > ft! C t: t- ?3 r r w S' " »^ >; > ^ g 2 ►n r^ ... . 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Soth- ern happening to be first at the meeting-place — a quiet coffee-room in an old-fashioned hos- telry — was attracted by the appearance of the only diner, a quaint and sedate-looking elderly gentleman, who, with the air of one well ac- customed to the place, was quietly enjoying one of the famous steaks to the accompaniment of a pint of choice port. Immediately an idea came into his head, and, acting upon it, in his usually impulsive manner, he walked quickly up to the old gen- tleman and gave him such a hearty slap on the back that, half falling across the table, he sent the succulent steak flying from its dish, and upset the wine-bottle. " How are you, old boy?" said Sothern, extending his hand, and in apparent delight. "I haven't seen you for years. This is unexpected! How are they all at home?" "Sir," ejaculated the in- dignant and choking old gentleman, " what do you mean by taking this liberty? Who are you? I — " Instantly Sothern's mobile face underwent a change. " My dear sir," he said, in the most apologetic of tones, " I fear I have made a most unpardonable mistake. I thought you were one of the most intimate of my friends, and now T find that I have ac- costed, nay, assaulted a stranger. I really, my dear sir, don't know what to say to you." 2 28 Edward Askew Sothern Sothern's earnest manner quickly and com- pletely mollified the old gentleman, who, re- jecting an offer that the spilt wine should be replaced, cheerfully ordered a second pint bottle, said it was " all a mistake," and re- sumed his rudely interrupted meal. Sothern left the coffee-room, strolled to the hotel door, and there encountered the man who was to meet Toole and himself. " I am afraid that I am late," said the new-comer. " A little," said Sothern ; " but it does n't matter. Toole has n't come yet. By the way, should you like to take a part in one of those little jokes of mine about which people talk so much?" This was generally an irresistible temptation, and his friend, falling into the trap, said, " By all means." " To begin with, then," said ^^othern, " go into the coffee-room. There you will find an old gentleman busy with his din- ner. Bang him across the back as if you had known him for years, calling out, ' Well, old cock, how are you ? ' and then make profuse apologies, saying that you have made a mis- take." Not seeing much difficulty or danger in this, the friend departed on his errand, and by-and-by returned. " Well," asked Sothern, with the familiar twinkle in his marvellous eye, " how did he take it? " " Not at all well," was the reply. " He 's a surly old fellow, and made a tremendous fuss. I 'd no idea a man Sothern in High Spirits 229 could so lose his temper over what might, after all, have been an excusable mistake. How- ever, he 's all right now. I broke his half-bot- tle of wine, but he let me pay for another, and he 's now at work again." At this moment Toole arrived, full of apologies at keeping the others waiting. ^' It does n't matter," said Sothern, " especially if you will win me a bet that I have just made." "What is it?" asked Toole. " Why," said Rothern, " in the coflfee- room there is a crusty-looking old boy of the John Bull pattern, evidently an habitue of the place, pecking a steak, and sipping a pint of port, and I 've just told our friend here that when you came I 'd get you to go and give him a rouser in the back, send him sprawling on to the table on top of his steak and his wine, just as if he was your dearest friend. This man bets me a fiver that you dare n't do it." " What nonsense ! " said Toole. " There 's nothing in that. I '11 do it at once, because, of course, I can make it up with an immediate and complete apology." Off went Toole to the coffee-room, and from thence there soon came the sound of the loud voice of an elderly gen- tleman boiling over with indignation, the sharp ringing of bells, and a great cry for the landlord. Stopping that individual in the pas- sage, Sothern said, " I 'm sorry this should have happened. Mr. Toole, the comedian is in 230 Edward Askew Sothern the coffee-room, and I have reason to believe that he is wantonly insulting one of your old- est customers." Then, passing quickly into the street, he hailed a cab, and, in the best of spirits, drove away. Dr. Westland Marston tells the famous story of Sothern and the undertaker as follows: " One of the best anecdotes of him is that which tells of a visit to a furnishing under- taker, from whom he ordered, on a most elabo- rate scale, all that was necessary for a funeral. Before the preparations could have gone far he reappeared with great solicitude to ask how they were progressing. Again, at a brief interval, he presented himself, with an anx- ious face, to inquire when he could count upon possession of the body — a question which natu- rally amazed the undertaker, who was at a loss to discover his meaning. ' Of course you provide the body,' said Sothern, coming to his enlightenment. ' The body ! ' stammered the bewildered undertaker. ' Why, do you not say,' exclaimed the actor, exhibiting a card of the shop, ' " All things necessary for funer- als promptly supplied " ? Is not a body the very first necessity ? ' " Although it appeared in the days of his im- paired health, the following extraordinary story, contributed, with his name attached to it, to the 1878 Christmas number of the ISew Sothern in High Spirits 231 York Spirit of the Times, may suitably be added to this chapter on " Sothern in High Spirits." AN INCIDENT IN THE LIFE OF A PAGAN BABY, BY E. A. SOTHERN. " The little story I am about to relate will possess a special interest for those who, like myself, have occupied some portion of their leisure in the fascinating yet perplexing study of metempsychosis. It will, doubtless, sur- prise many to whom I am known only as an amusing — perhaps not invariably amusing — performer on the dramatic stage, to learn that I have, for more than thirty years, devoted my spare moments to the investigation of this phenomenon, on the severest lines of the analy- tic and inductive system of the ancients. But in this duplex development of activity I am not alone. If the public only knew as much as I do of the inner and separate lives of those whom the public so liberally establishes as favourites, people would cease to regard the farceur only as a farceur, the entertainer only as an entertainer, the comedian only as a comedian, and might now and then catch a glimpse of the philosopher's robe beneath the gaudy garments' of ' the poor player, who 232 Edward Askew Sothern struts and frets his hour upon the stage, and then is heard no more.' " Will my readers pardon me if, for one seri- ous moment, I occupy their attention with a simple statement of the signification which, it appears to me, should inexorably attach to the doctrine of metempsychosis? It may make more clear the true bearing of the singular story which I have undertaken to write for the Christmas Spirit. Inductive philosophy, if it teaches us anything, surely establishes as an eternal axiom that physical promptings cannot, with impunity, be disregarded. I do not overlook or undervalue the importance — the sad importance — of unconquerable Force, with all the cruel conditions that follow in its wake. The logic of facts impels us irresistibly to this conclusion. Nothing in nature is more certain; and those who refer to supernatural characteristics the overmastering instincts of elementary humanity, will inevitably eventu- ate in that deep and discordant chaos into which the daring mind must fall, which de- fiantly assumes to limit the sphere of the ma- terial man to an incoherent effort to give efficient expression to the Infinite and the Eternal. I ask pardon for this digression, but it was necessary. What follows will now be more clearly understood, and more fully comprehended. " THAT 'S SAM'S mother. Sothern in High Spirits 233 " In the month of October, 187 — , I was sit- ting on the balcony of a small hotel in the town of . I think it better, in the interest of persons still living, that I should not give the names of places which might be identified. It was a calm evening; the leaves were falling and fluttering to earth, sad emblems of the perennial decay of nature to which all life submits. A grey-bearded, aged man, wearing a fez cap, was silently smoking on an adjacent chair. His Orientalism was patent, but the diagnosis of his nationality was sufficiently difficult. With a lazy efl;ort of careless curi- osity, I addressed him, making a remark on the beauty of the weather; but he smoked on tranquilly without moving his head. I con- cluded from his silence that he was not fa- miliar with French, German, or Italian, and was equally unacquainted with the somewhat unmusical English tongue. My knowledge of Arabic, I regret to say, is limited to a few everyday phrases, and these too were unavail- ing to arouse the absorbed attention of my neighbour. I tried him in Telegu, of which I speak a few words, with no better result. Piqued by his silence and my own failure, I summoned up all the Chinese I had acquired when I was in San Francisco and Sacramento, and was agreeably relieved when, at once throwing ofif his languor, and beaming with 2 34 Edward Askew Sothern vivacity and animation, he drew his chair to- ward me, and, fixing his eyes on mine, spoke rapidly in that language for several minutes. His accent was peculiar, a kind of Perso-Copt intonation permeating his delivery, and he made frequent employment of idiomatic phrases which I readily recognised as characteristics of the Cantonese; but I understood him per- fectly, and we were soon engaged in a most agreeable conversation, in which, I must mod- estly admit, he took a principal part. " Conversation begat confidence, and he told me the story of his life. He was born in the village of Hi-Ho, near the sources of the well- known ' Yellow River.' His father was a maker of wooden pattens, used by the Chinese in damp weather as a needful defence against the humidity of the country. Like all Chinese of his social standing, his own impoverished condition was no hindrance to his parental ambition. He was fully imbued with those sentiments of equality which are so remark- able a feature in the social and political condition of China, where the extremes of re- publican theory and dynastic autocracy seem to coexist not inharmoniously. Ground to the earth by sordid poverty, living in a chronic state of semi-starvation, ignorant as a pair of his own pattens, A-chi cherished the confident aspiration that one day a son would be born Sothern in High Spirits 235 to him in his mud-cabin who would rise to the loftiest pinnacle of state in the empire. In this hope he was justified, and in this expecta- tion he was not disappointed. The day ar- rived, and an infant was placed in his arms on whose yet undeveloped features the fond father could trace, with the eye of ambition and exultation, the stamp of future greatness. " It is a trite remark that, in ethics, evil is but a consequence of good; sorrow gives birth to joy; memory changes into misery; what is a blessing to-day may be a curse to-morrow. There is evidence to warrant the opinion that these conclusions are not fortuitous nor acci- dental, but are the outcome of a remorseless logic, rooted in Fact alone. '' I myself have never yielded an absolute acquiescence to the doctrine of Confucius, so ably expounded in his eleventh book of his ' Moral Propositions.' Yet in the career of the young Chinese whose story I am relating, we might discern a confirmation of all the great Chinese apostle has advanced, if we could only abstract our confidence from vague specula- tions, and bind it rigorously down by the iron bands of reason, and reason alone. " But I wander from my story. Passing rapidly through the communal schools of the district, and the College of Canton, the son of A-chi, who as yet had received no distinctive 236 Edward Askew Sothern name, for reasons which will appear hereafter, reached the academic acme of Chinese acquire- ment, the Athenaeum of Pekin, where his grand effort was to be made. His remarkable career had already attracted general notice, and a re- port of his splendid talents had been made to the Grand Central Commissioner of Educa- tion, and had even reached the Imperial cham- ber itself. Naturally, when the culminating epoch had arrived, and the son of A-chi, the patten-maker of Hi-Ho, entered the Examina- tion Hall, and, with elaborate ceremonial, was inducted into the secluded apartment from which he would emerge, after many days, either first of the first, with all China at his feet, or a broken and humiliated creature, the excitement was very great. Never before had a youth of such promise passed the venerable portals. The destiny of the very empire it- self might hang on the issue of the trial. Every precaution was adopted; chosen guards were stationed at the door and relieved night and day. All access to the outer world and its human sympathies was jealously cut off. The son of A-chi was alone with himself and with Fate. '^ From that hour to this he has never heen heard of. The story is told. The reader will draw his own conclusions. I have my theory, which must for ever be kept secret. Nothing Sothern in High Spirits 237 would induce me to div^ulge it, or even give a clue to the solution of the tremendous mys- tery. The consequence might be too dreadful. One word, and one word only, I may venture to add. This story is literally true. On that I stake my credit and my reputation. But if there be — as I firmly believe there are — minds so acute that they can, as it were, with an in- verted eye, glance in ' behind the veil,' there they may trace the mighty workings of those eternal principles which have been to me an inexpressible consolation, and have impressed deep on my soul the assured conviction that we are happy because we are good, that every- thing is nothing, and that virtue is its own reward." The editor of the Spirit of the Times says, in an " editorial note " in his leading columns : " We regard that incident in a pagan baby's life as Sothern's latest and most stupendous joke. If any reader can inform us what the incident was, or where the pagan baby comes in, his penetration exceeds ours. In this pro- duction we can only fancy that Sothern in- tends to represent the inconsequential intellect of Dundreary when grappling with metaphy- sical or psychological themes. There is no more connection between the title and what follows it than there is betw^een the question and answer to one of ' My Lord's ' most feeble 238 Edward Askew Sothern conundrums. The reader begins the article with the thought that Sothern intends to be serious for once, but as he proceeds he finds himself wallowing in a bog of high-sounding inanity, and emerges from the perusal without an idea remaining. What Sothern means bv it should be added to the World's list of questions." Sothern's friends will remember his odd and irresistible way of sending out an invitation, " Don't forget," he would write on a prodi- gious number of post-cards, " that you break- fast with me at twelve o'clock on Sunday, the — inst." Each recipient of the communication would probably jump to the conclusion that he had made an appointment which he had forgot- ten, accept this as a reminder, and make a very special point of keeping his supposed en- gagement. And when he found himself under Sothern's roof, and in the presence of a veri- table host of mutual friends, he would have occasion to remember not only the quaint in- vitation but his unbounded hospitality. Sothern's elaborately planned practical jokes were never absolutely complete to him unless he contrived to get them noticed in a news- paper. On the face of it this looks like a de- sire for advertisement; but I do not believe that this had anything to do with it. He knew a good deal about newspapers, and was Sothern in High Spirits 239 fully alive to the fact that those who have to do with them are generally on the alert. When he could, to use his own words, " sell an editor," his joy was supreme. A remarkably successful effort in this direction (although the cutting is before me I may be excused from mentioning the name of the paper from which it was taken) runs as follows: " A Crazy Admirer. '^ Singula?' Conduct in a Theatre. "At the Canterbury Theatre, the other even- ing, Mr. Sothern and Mr. Sefton's London Company were performing ' David Garrick,' the principal lady part in which was filled by Miss Amy Roselle, a very graceful and pleasing young actress. Shortly before the curtain rose, a pretty little bouquet of snow- drops and green leaves was left at the stage door, with a note addressed to Miss Roselle, couched in terms of admiration, but jjerfectly respectful and polite. The writer said he had come from Tunbridge Wells to see Miss Ro- selle act once more, and offered ' the few first flowers of spring ' for her acceptance, hoping she would wear them. There was nothing in this to create much surprise, such floral trib- utes to pretty and popular actresses being not uncommon. Miss Roselle wore the snowdrops 240 Edward Askew Sothern in the opening act of the play, during the course of which a second note, this time writ- ten in pencil, but on the same kind of paper, was delivered at the stage door. This epistle was more ardent, and induced a suspicion of the perfect sanity of the writer, which was turned into certainty by what followed. Dur- ing the second act a third note found its way to the green-room, and this time the undis- ciplined feelings of the swain had found vent in poetry. The following lines were enclosed: * I '11 dream of thee to-night, Roselle, I'll dream of thee to-night; Thy face will haunt my dreams, Roselle, Though absent from my sight; My love for thee no words can tell, My own, my beautiful Roselle! ' F. R. M.' The writer said he was occupying a stall, the number of which he indicated. At the end of the play Miss Roselle found awaiting her a fourth letter with a parcel. The former con- tained a most enthusiastic declaration of ar- dent affection, referred to the writer's large properties in the West Indies, and solicited permission to present to her the accompany- ing example of the produce of an estate in Havana — the said ' example ' proving on ex- amination to be an enormous piece of sugar- stick, literally stick, for it was upwards of Sothern in High Spirits 241 two feet long, and fully an inch thick. The sender of the singular token said he was in mourning for his mother, and that, however peculiar his conduct might appear, he really was not mad, though false friends said he was. In a postscript he added that he now was go- ing to purchase something which he hoped Miss Roselle would wear for his sake. In about a quarter of an hour a fifth letter was handed in, containing a soft parcel. When this was examined it proved to be a penny packet of egg powder for making custards, and a state- ment that he who placed this token at her fair feet was ready to die for her if necessary. By this time there was no room for doubt as to there being a lunatic among the audience, and a watch being set, a respectably attired and gentlemanly-looking man, with a very wild eye and excited demeanour, was remarked in the back of the pit. Just as the last piece — in which Miss Roselle did not appear — was being played, this person was observed to jump up and down, and to throw his arms about wildly; but the officials of the theatre being prepared, he was at once quietly but firmly removed, without attracting the attention of the audi- ence. He went away perfectly quiet, and without remonstrance or resistance, from which it may be concluded he was the author of the extraordinary series of letters, and the sender 242 Edward Askew Sothern of the still more extraordinary tokens of ad- miration which we have described. Not being known by any one about the theatre, it is sup- posed that he had really, as he said, come over from Tunbridge Wells." The whole of this ridiculous story is per- fectly true up to the period of the presenta- tion of the egg powder. So far Sothern, in one of his wild moods, could easily plan it; but there was no madman in the stalls, and no scene in the pit, and no removal of any one. After the performance was over Sothern in- vited the editor of the country paper to chat with him in the hotel in which he was stay- ing, and, talking over " the strange occur- rences of the evening," very easily induced him to ask a friend who was present to write an account of them for his paper. Then a sub- sequent paragraph went the round of the pa- pers to the effect that this same " lunatic lover " would go to the theatres in which Miss Roselle appeared, " dressed all in blue, with a packet of Borwick's baking powder ready to throw at the feet of the subject of his adora- tion," and Sothern was perfectly happy. I do not think that until many years later on Miss Amy Roselle (now Mrs. Arthur Dacre, and under whose permission I publish this anecdote) knew that she had been the victim of a hoax. Sothern in High Spirits 243 In America, Sothern seemed to find news- paper reports of his ridiculous escapades easier to obtain than in England, and that, in his odd way, he set great store by them is proved by his own carefully kept scrap-book, which still exists. Again let me say that I do not believe that Sothern did these things for the sake of notoriety. No actor was ever more keenly alive to the commercial value in these adver- tising days of legitimate (perhaps I ought to add, and illegitimate) advertisement, and to obtain one I have known him do extraordinary things (such as giving a sovereign to a railway porter, where sixpence would have sufficed, so that he might talk to his comrades of the mu- nificence of Sothern, and set them thinking they would go and see this auriferous being on the stage) ; but with him these jokes were a thing apart, that satisfied some curious want in his restless nature. He did not retain a single advertisement of his stage performances, but he carefully cherished the records of his diablerie. Let me quote from his scrap- book. During one of his American engagements (it was in 1878) he inveigled some one into writing to the Inter-Ocean as follows: "Is Mr. Sothern a medium? This is the question that fifteen puzzled investigators are asking themselves this morning, after witness- 244 Edward Askew Sothern ing a number of astounding manifestations at a a private seance given by Mr. Sothern last night. " It lacked a few minutes of twelve when a number of Mr. Sothern's friends, who had been given to understand that something remark- able was to be performed, assembled in the former's rooms at the Sherman House, and took seats in a circle around a marble-top table which was placed in the centre of the apartment. On the table were a number of glasses, two very large bottles, and five lem- ons. A sprightly young gentleman attempted to crack a joke about spirits being confined in the bottles, but the company frowned him down, and for once Mr. Sothern had a sober audience to begin with. " There was a good deal of curiosity regard- ing the object of the gathering, but no one was able to explain. Each gentleman testified to the fact that Mr. Sothern's agent had waited upon him, and solicited his presence at a little exhibition to be given by the actor, not of a comical nature. " Mr. Sothern himself soon after appeared, and, after shaking hands with the party, thus addressed them: " ' Gentlemen, I have invited you here this evening to witness a few manifestations, dem- onstrations, tests, or whatever you choose to Sothern in High Spirits 245 call them, which I have accidentally discovered that I am able to perform. " * I am a fire-eater, as it were. (Applause.) I used to dread the fire, having been scorched once when an innocent child. (A laugh.) I hope there will be no levity here, and I wish to say now that demonstrations of any kind are liable to upset me, while demonstrations of particular kinds may upset the audience.' '' Silence and decorum being restored, Mr. Sothern thus continued : " < Thirteen weeks ago, while walking up Greenwich Street in New York, I stepped into a store to buy a cigar. To show you there was no trick about it, here are cigars out of the same box from which I selected the one that I that day lighted.' " Here Mr. Sothern passed round a box of tolerable cigars. " ' Well ! I stepped to the little hanging gas- jet to light it, and, having done so, stood con- templatively holding the cigar and the gas-jet in either hand, thinking what a saving it would be to smoke a pipe, when, in my absent-mind- edness, I dropped the cigar and put the gas-jet into my mouth. Strange as it may appear, I felt no pain, and stood there holding the thing in my mouth and puffing, until the man in charge yelled out to me that I was swal- lowing his gas. Then I looked up, and sure 246 Edward Askew Sothern enough there I was, pulling away at the slen- der flame that came from the glass tube. " ' I dropped it instantly and felt my mouth, but noticed no inconvenience or unpleasant sensation whatever. '''''What do you mean by it?" asked the proprietor. " ' As I did n't know what I meant by it I could n't answer, so I picked up my cigar and went home. Once there, I tried the experi- ment again, and in doing so I found that not only my mouth, but my hands and face, in- deed, all my body, was proof against fire. I called on a physician, and he examined me and reported nothing wrong with my flesh, which appeared to be in its normal condition. I said nothing about it publicly, but the fact greatly surprised me, and I have invited you here to- night to witness a few experiments.' " Saying this, Mr. Sothern, who had lit a cigar while pausing in his speech, turned the fire-end into his mouth, and sat down smoking unconcernedly. " I suppose you wish to give us the fire test? ' remarked one of the company. " There was probably a company never more dumfounded than that present in the room- A few questions were asked, and then five gentlemen were appointed to examine Mr. Sothern's hands, etc., before he began his ex- Sothern in High Spirits 247 periments. Having thoroughly washed the parts that he proposed to subject to the flames, Mr. Sothern began by baring his arm, and passing it through the gas-jet very slowly, twice stopping the motion, and holding it still in the flames. He then picked up a poker with a sort of hook on the end, and proceeded to fish a small coil of wire from the grate. The wire came out fairly white with heat. Mr. Sothern took the coil in his hands and coolly proceeded to wrap it round his left leg to the knee. Having done so, he stood on the table in the centre of the circle, and requested the committee to examine the wrappings and the leg, and report if both were there. The com mittee did so, and reported in the affirmative. " While this was going on there was a smile, almost seraphic in its beauty, on Sothern 's face. " After this, an enormous iron, in the shape of a horse-shoe, was brought in, and after be- ing heated red-hot was placed over his neck and shoulders like a horse-collar, where it cooled, and was taken off without leaving a sign of a burn. " As a final test a tailor's goose was put on the coals, and, after being thoroughly heated, was placed on Mr. Sothern's chair. The lat- ter lighted a fresh cigar, and then coolly took his seat on the goose without the least seem- 248 Edward Askew Sothern ing inconvenience. During the last experi- ment, Mr. Sothern sang in excellent taste and voice, ' I 'm sitting on the stile, Mary.' " The question now is, were the fifteen audi- tors of Mr. Sothern fooled and deceived, or was this a genuine manifestation of extraor- dinary power? Sothern is such an inveterate joker that he may have put the thing upon the boys for his own amusement, but if so it was one of the nicest tricks ever witnessed by, " Yours truly, " One of the Committee. " P.S. — What is equally marvellous to me is that the fire did n't burn his clothes where it touched them, any more than his flesh." Although he inserted this remarkable com- munication, the editor of the Inter Ocean seems to " have had his doubts," for he adds in a foot-note : [" There is nothing new in this. Mr. Soth- ern has long been known as one of the most expert jugglers in the profession. Some years ago he gained the soubriquet of ' the Fire King.' He frequently amuses his friends by eating fire, though he long since ceased to give public exhibitions. Probably the success of the experiments last night was largely owing to the presence of the lemons. There is a good deal of trickery in those same lemons."] MR. E. A. SOTHERN AS LORD DUNDREARY. Sothern in High Spirits 249 The ubiquitous American interviewer was no doubt considered by Sothern as the fairest of fair game for his " sells." Here is an ac- count that he gave to one of them of the origin of " The Crushed Tragedian," the original creation of H. J. Byron: " ' " The Crushed Tragedian," ' said Mr. Soth- ern, ' presents a character that I discovered under very quaint circumstances about five years since, while travelling in a carriage of the Midland Railway of England. My only companion was an extraordinary creature, whose reproduction is the Fitzaltamont of the play. Shortly after the train started, the stranger, who had been suspiciously restless, rose to his feet and began pacing the carriage, muttering deeply the while. As his frenzy in- creased, I became alarmed, and speculated upon the chances of jumping through the win- dow. Just as the train reached the mouth of a tunnel, the fellow seized me by the arm. I, wide awake, but terrified, struck him a blow between the eyes, knocking him down, and as I knelt upon his chest I asked him, with nat- ural asperity, what the devil he wanted. The luckless wretch, gasping for breath, whispered, " Wanted ? Why, I wanted you to buy a box for my benefit at Birmingham." This,' he concluded, ' was the original Crushed Trage- dian.' I asked Mr. Sothern if he bought the 250 Edward Askew Sothern box, and although he made me no answer, I am satisfied that when the genuine and since counterfeit articles separated, there was enough crisp paper in the pocket of a certain threadbare vest to buy something more than a bottle of arnica." Another interviewer, not quite so easily taken in, had the laugh of Sothern, by pub lishing his nonsense as follows : " I believe I mentioned Mr. Sothern's hesita- tion in saying anything about himself. I had great difficulty in overcoming it, but finally succeeded in worming out of him certain re- markable facts in his history which enable me to give you a succinct biography, which, in the event of his death, can be built upon and serve as an obituary. The facts that I give you, although a trifle different from the public be- lief in regard to the gentleman, I can vouch for as strictly correct, for I gained every line of my information from himself. Mr. Sothern claims to be a Turk. The newspaper reports that have been widely circulated to the effect that he is a Russian, he indignantly denies, and states that they are utterly untrue. I have, in addition to his own statement, other good authority for this, and I am satisfied that he is a Turk. He was born in Constantinople on the fourth day of March, 1829. This was the year when the celebrated — but I am wander- Sothern in High Spirits 251 iug from my topic. His early youth was only remarkable for his failure to distinguish him- self. This however, he hopes to overcome. He has done more to annihilate the institution of the harem than any other Moslem on the stage. His father, as every one is aware, was a Rus- sian. His mother was a Polish exile. His early life was passed in Tartary, hence his ex- traordinary knowledge of languages, and his passionate appetite for Siberian crab-apples and tonic beer. It seems sad to learn that he contemplates leaving the stage, but with his peculiar vein of humour there is, when I think of it, no reason why he should not make a suc- cessful undertaker. He informs me that at the close of his engagement in Baltimore he will proceed at once to Pekin, China, where he has made a brief engagement at the Royal Opera House. He also contemplates a visit to Africa and Eastern Shore, Maryland. His ob ject in visiting the latter section of the coun- try is to be on hand when, under existing laws, a vacancy exists for United States sena- tor. He is now making arrangements with George Francis Train, Benjamin F. Butler, and Henry Ward Beecher, for a course of in- struction to fit him to become a member of the second branch of the Baltimore city council, where he intends making his political del) 11 1. With these few remarks with regard to Mr. 252 Edward Askew Sothern Sothern, I will close by saying, ' Truth is often stranger than fiction.' " ^ On being " interviewed " concerning the | " fire test," and a " challenge " that had been sent him in connection therewith, Sothern sent for the manager of the hotel in which he was staying, and in which the so-called experi- ments had been carried on, and said: " Now, I '11 tell you what I '11 do. I '11 send for an ironmonger and have the floor plated with boiler iron, if you will allow me to build a furnace in the centre of the room. I merely want to make the test. I don't want to bet, because then I should feel as if I were swin- dling somebody. I have never tried this, but I feel perfectly sure of the result." "What do you want with the furnace?" asked the hotel manager. " I will permit myself," said Sothern, " to be imbedded in a mass of any kind of fuel my challenger may select — tar barrels, and resin, ad libitum. Then I will allow any member of a committee to apply the torch." " Is n't that going a little too far, Mr. Soth- ern ? " asked the newspaper interviewer. " Well, I may be mistaken," replied Sothern, " but I feel sure of the result — sure of it. At all events, I will give ten thousand dollars to any charitable fund in this city if I do not come out unscathed." Sothern in High Spirits 253 " What ! " exclaimed the hotel manager, with his eyes like saucers. " Provided," continued Sothern, ^' that my challenger will undergo the same test at the same time — neither of us to remain in the fur- nace more than fifteen minutes after the whole mass of fuel shall be in flames, and both of us to be perfectly nude." This point of the question having been set- tled, the interviewer went on: " Have you ever, Mr. Sothern, submitted yourself to any other tests?" '' Oh yes ; I once played six weeks in Phila- delphia during the Exhibition, with the ther- mometer in my dressing-room at 128." How he showed up the tricks of a profes- sional mesmerist is in the Chicago Tribune thus recorded: " A few days since, Mr. Sothern, who is often credited with being a spiritual medium, but who is in reality a ' hard-shell ' sceptic in regard to all such matters, invited Mr. Car- penter to his rooms in the Sherman House, for the purpose of testing his powers. Favourable enough conditions were named, but Mr. Car- penter saw fit to postpone the stance till yes- terday afternoon, when a select party of some fifteen people — at least one-third of them be- ing ladies — were present. If sincerity of pur- pose can be named as a favourable condition 254 Edward Askew Sothern for such manifestations, the Professor could certainly have found no cause to object. It was not one of Sothern's ' sells ' by any means. The company were one and all prepared to be convinced, and they submitted to the manipu- lations of the operator very readily. But, alas! one after another persisted in declining to keep their eyes closed after being com- manded to do so. There was not one who would see snakes in canes, or babies in broom- handles, or perform any funny tricks at the bidding of the magician. The Professor sud- denly discovered that he had struck an obsti- nate crowd of folks who had no object in being duped. " Ah ! yes ; there was one, — an uninvited guest, — a very young man of mild aspect, with dreamy eyes and uncertain features, who had come into the room almost unobserved. He turned out to be a friend of Mr. Carpenter's The mesmerist, after making futile passes over the eyes of all the rest, suddenly found in the eyes of the young person a remarkably sensi- tive organisation. He mesmerised him in five seconds. He made him nearly tumble off a piano stool ; he caused him to stiffen his arms ; he invited the company to pinch his hands, which, he claimed, were dead to the sense of touch. It would have been a convincing test to an ordinary audience, but it was a very ill- Sothern in High Spirits 255 disguised case of confederacy to all the guests in the room. " Mr. Sothern took a brass pin from one of the ladies and deliberately bored it through the lobe of his own ear, never changing a muscle. ' Now,' he said, ' you can stick a knife through my hand, and I won't flinch. I can do that awake. Is that any proof of your powers?' " The Professor gave it up, and the young man sat down rather sheepishly. Mr. Carpen- ter, of course, claimed, as most spiritual medi- iums do, that the physical and atmospheric conditions were unfavourable, and so forth. The seance proved to be a conspicuous failure, as seances generally do in the presence of a company of intelligent people, unless with the aid of intelligent confederates. The inference is that the people who so amused the audience at Mr. Carpenter's seance at the theatre last Sunday had had a careful rehearsal of their parts before they went on to the stage to make fools of themselves. There may be something in mesmerism, but there is evidently something in Mr. Carpenter's operations that calls for investigation by believers, if believers can be persuaded to doubt at all. " At the close of the exhibition Mr. Sothern mesmerised the entire company, one after an- other, in a manner which would have convinced any audience that he possessed supernatural 256 Edward Askew Sothern power, did they not know, — what turned out to be the fact, — that by a clever contrivance of the arch- juggler every member of the party was trying to fool each other. This may not be the whole secret of mesmerism ; but ' con- fedding,' as Sothern calls it, evidently con- stitutes an important element in the operations of Mr. Carpenter. When next he gives an ex- hibition, it may be well to interview his ' sub- jects,' and find out who they are, and what inducements they had to go out of their minds for the amusement of the public." An escapade that gained for Sothern the doubtful notoriety of an awful illustration in an Illustrated Police News, entitled, " Sothern the Comedian, and the Ruffian Intruder," and in which the soul of this inveterate practical joker absolutely revelled, was thus reported in a Californian paper : " We have already in- formed our readers that Mr. Sothern, during his trip from New York, had got into some little trouble on the cars. Our reporter called on Mr. Sothern, but was unable to see him. Our reporter then interviewed the conductor. It appears that Mr. Towne had the thoughtful courtesy to telegraph to Odgen to the effect that Mr. Sothern was to have the sole use of the directors' car. Mr. Sothern appreciated the kind compliment, and telegraphed his thanks. The following morning, however, he Sothern in High Spirits 257 discovered a six-feet-twoer calmly stretched on his sofa, coolly smoking his cigars, and sip- ping his iced claret. Mr. Sothern suggested, in the gentlest terms, that the big stranger had made a slight mistake, as the car was a pri- vate one. ' Private be hanged ! ' exclaimed the stalwart stranger. ' It 's big enough for a dozen thin fellows like you ! ' ' Possibly,' re- plied Mr. Sothern ; ' but as you have not even the politeness to apologise for the intrusion, I request you to leave it.' ' Not if I know it,' ejaculated the brawny stranger. Enter the conductor. Conductor: 'Now then, sir; please to move to your own seat.' Mysterious stranger: *■ If either of you bother me any longer, I '11 knock your heads together and pitch you out of the car. It 's only going twenty-five miles an hour, and it won't hurt much.' Sothern {coolly talcing his coat off) : ' Come, this is getting interesting. Conductor, sit down and do a gentle smoke whilst I en- deavour to bring our large friend to his senses,' Conductor sits and smokes. Gloomy stranger rises, glares, and makes a rush at Sothern, hitting him a blow on the mouth, ' There, that settles the matter,' says the stranger, ' Not quite,' replied Sothern ; and, playfully giving him one, two, three, on the eyes, nose, and mouth, closes with him, and sends him spinning over the rail at the end of the 258 Edward Askew Sothern car. The alarm is given, and the train stops. The mysterious stranger is picked up insensi- ble, bleeding at the nose, ears, and mouth. Sothern relinquishes the private car to him. A doctor on the train attends to him, and says, ' A compound fracture.' He still lies in extreme danger; but the verdict of every one is, ' Served him right.' " Concerning the exact truth of this advent- ure, Sothern was always reticent. There was, beyond all doubt, a noisy struggle in a rail- way carriage between him and what looked very like a man, — and a something wearing coat, waistcoat, and trousers was by him hurled from the train, — but it is quite certain that he never in that way took, or nearly took, the life of a fellow-creature. The story, how- ever, got about and was implicitly believed. The coarsely executed engraving, showing Sothern wrestling with a veritable giant, is in its way delicious, and at the time of its ap- pearance gave him infinite delight. Another " illustrated " episode, which ap- peared in a similar publication, was entitled, " Farewell Appearance of Mr. Sothern at an Unlicensed Performance on Ramsgate Sands. An Acrobat Discomfited," and was described as follows: " Considerable excitement was caused on Sothern in High Spirits 259 Ramsgate Sands the other morning by the ap- pearance of a man with his arms tied behind him, raving and shouting at the top of his voice, and a crowd around him convulsed with laughter. The man was, it seems, a travelling mountebank, performing what he called the rope trick; and on the morning in question he had offered himself to be tied up by any of the bystanders. Mr. Sothern, the comedian, pass- ing at the time, determined to try upon him the effect of his celebrated ' Tom Fool Knot.' The success of it was proved beyond doubt by the acrobat stamping about for an hour with fruitless endeavours to get loose, when Mr. Sothern took compassion on him and undid his bonds." This anecdote was founded on absolute fact. I will conclude a chapter which, if I related all the jokes in which Sothern acted as prin- cipal or took part, might be spun out into a goodly sized volume, with an account of one (I am afraid it has often been told before) eminently characteristic of him. At a dinner party in his own house, at which ten gentlemen were present, his friend and sometime agent, Mr. English, was apparently unexpectedly an- nounced. Sothern immediately appealed to his guests to conceal themselves under the 26o Edward Askew Sothern dinner-table, declaring that they would " sell " English in a manner beyond all precedent. His compliant friends at once fell in with his request, and Mr. English, coming into the room, sat down by Sothern, and, without tak- ing any notice of the vacant chairs or the disordered table, began leisurely to discuss the business that had brought him to the house. Sothern on his part said nothing about his guests, until one by one, tired with their posi- tion under the table, and quite unable to see where the humour of the situation came in, they crawled out, took their seats, and the in- terrupted dinner went on. Neither Sothern nor his agent (of course he was on this oc- casion also his accomplice) took the slightest notice of them, and to the end of their days they will fail to see how it was that " English was sold." I have now said enough concerning these elaborately contrived, humorous, but generally unsatisfactory, and sometimes almost pitiless undertakings, I ought, however, to add that whereas Sothern's delight in recounting them knew no bounds, his remorse when he felt that through them he had annoyed a friend was limitless. The handsome presents that, the joke being over, he would lavish upon his vic- tims must have cost him a small fortune of 2840 PRINCE OF WALES THEATRE. 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