The friends in question kept him supplied with sound rappee.
Jests and music he was abundantly competent to supply himself.
He played the piano and the organ, and he sang--in a clear,
sweet, slightly faded tenor. Of secular composers his
favourites were "the lucid Scarlatti, the luminous Bach." But
the music that roused him to enthusiasm was Gregorian. He
would have none other at St. Mary of the Lilies. He had
trained his priests and his people there to sing it admirably
--you should have heard them sing Vespers; and he sang it
admirably himself--you should have heard him sing a Mass--you
should have heard that sweet old tenor voice of his in the
Preface and the Pater Noster.
So, then, Beatrice stood before a pier-glass, and studied her
new hat; whilst the Cardinal, amused, indulgent, sat in his
high-backed armchair, and watched her.
"Well--? What do you think?" she asked, turning towards him.
"You appeal to me as an expert?" he questioned.
His speaking-voice, as well as his singing-voice, was sweet,
but with a kind of trenchant edge upon it, a genial asperity,
that gave it character, tang.
"As one who should certainly be able to advise," said she.
Well, then--" said he. He took his chin into his hand, as if
it were a beard, and looked up at her, considering; and the
lines of amusement--the "parentheses"--deepened at either side
of his mouth. "Well, then, I think if the feather were to be
lifted a little higher in front, and brought down a little
lower behind--"
"Good gracious, I don't mean my hat," cried Beatrice. "What in
the world can an old dear like you know about hats?"
There was a further deepening of the parentheses.
"Surely," he contended, "a cardinal should know much. Is it
not 'the badge of all our tribe,' as your poet Byron says?"
Beatrice laughed. Then, "Byron--?" she doubted, with a look.
The Cardinal waved his hand--a gesture of amiable concession.
"Oh, if you prefer, Shakespeare. Everything in English is one
or the other. We will not fall out, like the Morellists, over
an attribution. The point is that I should be a good judge of
hats."
He took snuff.
"It's a shame you haven't a decent snuff-box," Beatrice
observed, with an eye on the enamelled wooden one, cheap and
shabby, from which he helped himself.
"The box is but the guinea-stamp; the snuff's the thing.--Was
it Shakespeare or Byron who said that?" enquired the Cardinal.