CHAPTER XIX.
While our friend was in this way living very happily, Melina and the rest were
in quite a different case. Wilhelm they haunted like evil spirits; and not only by
their presence, but frequently by rueful faces and bitter words, they caused him
many a sorry moment. Serlo had not admitted them to the most trifling part, far
less held out to them any hope of a permanent engagement; and yet he had
contrived, by degrees, to get acquainted with the capabilities of every one of
them. Whenever any actors were assembled in leisure hours about him, he was
wont to make them read, and frequently to read along with them. On such
occasions he took plays which were by and by to be acted, which for a long time
had remained unacted; and generally by portions. In like manner, after any first
representation, he caused such passages to be repeated as he had any thing to say
upon: by which means he sharpened the discernment of his actors, and
strengthened their certainty of hitting the proper point. And as a person of
slender but correct understanding may produce more agreeable effect on others
than a perplexed and unpurified genius, he would frequently exalt men of
mediocre talents, by the clear views which he imperceptibly afforded them, to a
wonderful extent of power. Nor was it an unimportant item in his scheme, that
he likewise had poems read before him in their meetings; for by these he
nourished in his people the feeling of that charm which a well-pronounced
rhythm is calculated to awaken in the soul: whereas, in other companies, those
prose compositions were already getting introduced for which any tyro was
adequate.
On occasions such as these, he had contrived to make himself acquainted with
the new-come players: he had decided what they were, and what they might be,
and silently made up his mind to take advantage of their talents, in a revolution
which was now threatening his own company. For a while he let the matter rest;
declined every one of Wilhelm’s intercessions for his comrades, with a shrug of
the shoulders; till at last he saw his time, and altogether unexpectedly made the
proposal to our friend, “that he himself should come upon the stage; that, on this
condition, the others, too, might be admitted.”
“These people must not be so useless as you formerly described them,”
answered Wilhelm, “if they can now be all received at once; and I suppose their
talents would remain the same without me as with me.”
Under seal of secrecy, Serlo hereupon explained his situation, — how his
first actor was giving hints about a rise of salary at the renewal of their contract;
how he himself did not incline conceding this, the rather as the individual in
question was no longer in such favor with the public; how, if he dismissed him, a
whole train would follow; whereby, it was true, his company would lose some
good, but likewise some indifferent, actors. He then showed Wilhelm what he
hoped to gain in him, in Laertes, Old Boisterous, and even Frau Melina. Nay, he
promised to procure for the silly Pedant himself, in the character of Jew,
minister, but chiefly of villain, a decided approbation.
Wilhelm faltered; the proposal fluttered him; he knew not what to say. That he
might say something, he rejoined, with a deep-drawn breath, “You speak very
graciously about the good you find and hope to find in us; but how is it with our
weak points, which certainly have not escaped your penetration?”
“These,” said Serlo, “by diligence, practice, and reflection, we shall soon
make strong points. Though you are yet but freshmen and bunglers, there is not
one among you that does not warrant expectation more or less: for, so far as I
can judge, no stick, properly so called, is to be met with in the company; and
your stick is the only person that can never be improved, never bent or guided,
whether it be self-conceit, stupidity, or hypochondria, that renders him unpliant.”
The manager next stated, in a few words, the terms he meant to offer;
requested Wilhelm to determine soon, and left him in no small perplexity.
In the marvellous composition of those travels, which he had at first engaged
with, as it were, in jest, and was now carrying on in conjunction with Laertes, his
mind had by degrees grown more attentive to the circumstances and the every-
day life of the actual world than it was wont. He now first understood the object
of his father in so earnestly recommending him to keep a journal. He now, for
the first time, felt how pleasant and how useful it might be to become
participator in so many trades and requisitions, and to take a hand in diffusing
activity and life into the deepest nooks of the mountains and forests of Europe.
The busy trading-town in which he was; the unrest of Laertes, who dragged him
about to examine every thing, — afforded him the most impressive image of a
mighty centre, from which every thing was flowing out, to which every thing
was coming back; and it was the first time that his spirit, in contemplating this
species of activity, had really felt delight. At such a juncture Serlo’s offer had
been made him; had again awakened his desires, his tendencies, his faith in a
natural talent, and again brought into mind his solemn obligation to his helpless
comrades.
“Here standest thou once more,” said he within himself, “at the Parting of the
Ways, between the two women who appeared before thee in thy youth. The one
no longer looks so pitiful as then, nor does the other look so glorious. To obey
the one, or to obey the other, thou art not without a kind of inward calling:
outward reasons are on both sides strong enough, and to decide appears to thee
impossible. Thou wishest some preponderancy from without would fix thy
choice; and yet, if thou consider well, it is external circumstances only that
inspire thee with a wish to trade, to gather, to possess; whilst it is thy inmost
want that has created, that has nourished, the desire still further to unfold and
perfect what endowments soever for the beautiful and good, be they mental or
bodily, may lie within thee. And ought I not to honor Fate, which, without
furtherance of mine, has led me hither to the goal of all my wishes? Has not all
that I, in old times, meditated and forecast, now happened accidentally, and
without my co-operation? Singular enough! We seem to be so intimate with
nothing as we are with our own wishes and hopes, which have long been kept
and cherished in our hearts; yet when they meet us, when they, as it were, press
forward to us, then we know them not, then we recoil from them. All that, since
the hapless night which severed me from Mariana, I have but allowed myself to
dream, now stands before me, entreating my acceptance. Hither I intended to
escape by flight; hither I am softly guided: with Serlo I meant to seek a place; he
now seeks me, and offers me conditions, which, as a beginner, I could not have
looked for. Was it, then, mere love to Mariana that bound me to the stage? Or
love to art that bound me to her? Was that prospect, that outlet, which the theatre
presented me, nothing but the project of a restless, disorderly, and disobedient
boy, wishing to lead a life which the customs of the civic world would not admit
of? Or was all this different, worthier, purer? If so, what moved thee to alter the
persuasions of that period? Hast thou not hitherto, even without knowing it,
pursued thy plan? Is not the concluding step still further to be justified, now that
no side-purposes combine with it; now that in making it thou mayest fulfil a
solemn promise, and nobly free thyself from a heavy debt?”
All that could affect his heart and his imagination was now moving, and
conflicting in the liveliest strife within him. The thought that he might retain
Mignon, that he should not need to put away the harper, was not an
inconsiderable item in the balance, which, however, had not ceased to waver to
the one and to the other side, when he went, as he was wont, to see his friend
Aurelia.
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