'31 f A ; v 't4 I tyfisslintyanrtferDroTer, 77)oms lin!tr The Actress Who! Became Mrs. Richard B r ins ey Sheridan, Whose Portraits Now Command $200,000 ?4" C HPHE Fair of Bath" is coming '"' nt fab0 again. After being l. . ' celebrated in song, story and paint for more than a century, the portraits bf fflzabeth Linley, lovely singer, romantic yride'i'divoted wife, are selling at $200,000 jack, and the demand is greater than the Supply even at that figure. , From the picturesque days when Bath was tn its glory, there has come down to us hq 'more beautiful figure than that of Eliza beth Linley, afterward Mrs. Richard Brinsliy Sheridan. Literally the toast of the town when tt was frequented by all the best catches ind showiest beaux in England, the cvanes tent beauty of the young singer made her a favorite model for the greatest painters of the day. Gainsborough, Sir Joshua Reynolds and others have left unmistakable proofs of Uer,. charm. it One of these proofs, a canvas only twenty right by twenty-five inches, by Gainsborough, was recentU reported sold out of the Knole collection by Lord Sackville for the price "above mentioned. It was painted when Miss linley was only 14 and her. brother only two years younger. it- And since there has been such a revival ofc admiration for the Maid of Bath, there has been a quickening of interest, too, in the town itself '. Not a few there are who have been speculating on its possible return to fashion during the reign of King George end Quen Mary. w ffhe late King Edward was addicted to foreign watering resorts. He liked to get away from home, where he could be free land at ease on his vacations. But so home loving are the present sovereigns, and so little tikely to be interested in the attractions of Marienbad. Monte Carlo and such places, that it would be no surprise if they sought to restore the old prestige of Bath or bring a newer English resort into fashion. Ui- BATH waa always a marrying place. Old dowa gers took their fair daughters there, assured that they would meet the most eligible young , , men. In its heyday It was the universal resort ef tbe world of wealth and fashion. t And aome few yeara before our revolutionary war waa brewing, there began the one romance which has Always been Inseparably linked with Bath. There Waa at the time a composer named Linley who ar ranged the muslo for all affairs of note. He was uni versally consulted and he became quite a figure In the watering place, which made its own celebrities and waa always Jealous of their prestige. f- And thla musician, Linley, had two daughters, the elder of whom. Elisabeth, began to be famed not only for her good looks, but for her lovely voice. Her Success was widespread, and when her father ar ranged muslo for church events In other cities she ires the soloist " And there came to Bath about this time a poor Irish family named Bherldan. And both the brothers and the sisters Bherldan became friends of the Un isys. r- -V,4, Jwthermore. there waa at the same time a Cap Lain Matthews a married man of little principle, who became tone Of the most devoted admirersof the elder Miss Unity. Olrl-llke. ahe allowed the affair to ge on until it arot beyond ber control. Her ad intrer threatened to destroy himself if cut oft from the pleasure ef her society. In thla emergenoy Miss Linley found a counselor fn av rvuuKv Diivriuan oroinM. Hirhsi tnlrffbars her preferenoe had keunger, who. If tbe more brilliant, was likewise the hKre reokleaa 'iuf isanea to the Tnere were many secret meetings in romantio nnoks. when the maid and the dashing young blade. t kcuased the advances of the bad, bold Captain Mat t"" , ni 'L . .means of repelling them. J here' were other meetings, too-and this wm the LJ?Mfcerjfcim .whola aXtalr-petween. Captauj THE OREGON SUNDAY - w. m fsrr-jm a i m . a . ii i a ac a.. tk i l 11 i t . i. m. ,. w m.rmr m iiii if r yrs. Stir Uttliew and young Sheridan, who had become qyite Intimate friend, At laat there cams a time when the young folks decided the iltuation must be brought to an end. v .. .. . mw Vft'&raVtaef'w ran away to France. Where bherldan ot the money II III ' v v - Tlte'.St:SGb0.stiaii "".(''- H "' -' . i T SEEMS strange that tbe most erotic writers take so strongly to the scriptures. There was Wilde, who did Salome in words, and Strauss, the weirdest of modern composers, who added what most folks consider the most outlandish music to the story of the per verted woman's love for St. John. There was Wagner, whose own autobiography, lately published, proves him to have been a liber tine and a gambler. He put the story of Christ to music. Only Wagner, bold as he was, did not dare defy public opinion and called bis hero Parsifal. Now here is D'Annunzio, worst of all perhaps, a man of a multiplicity of loves and an un blushing lack of morals, who has made a play pf he his secured, to taket the name part, Mile Ru- umsiein, a auuuci uvieu nu m jjuiuuo ivi uar pulchritude. In this lattercasd there may be righteous retribution in plenty. Bumor sayg that D'An nunzio loves and would marry Mile. Rubinstein. But she also loves, not the erotio Italian, but a handsoroe Rusalaateiior. . - - - JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 83, 191X ? .-.n -in II ft V'J III. : f ,11:-' -'iv riefan Jrntf H . UTS ,,, u . n i .r a) . . . . , for the Journey la one of the unsolved mysterlea. Rut. at T rate, they fled under the ehaperonare ( m woman of mature yean and reached the other aid SCARCELY a saint has been mere painted than SebaaUan. The atory of his life, fabled or true es it may be. la picturesque to the last degree. Also he is described as a model of male beauty. Brave, adventurous, handsome, martyred all the ele ments to make p6"werful pictures are there. The fourteenth century artists did not tall to take advantage of their opportunities. Nearly all of there haa left one or more acenes from Et Sebastian's Ute. None of them, however, showed him as he waa They all chose the costuming ot their own times, Ignoring tbe faot that he lived about a thousand ysars before them. Maybe It was their pictures that suggested the Idea of a nay to CAnnunslo. At any rate, when be bit upon It, he preserved the costuming of the paint era. And when It came to selecting a person to as sume the name part, he decided that to have a figure of sufficient beauty none but Mile. Rubinstein would do. Even then there arose a difficulty. Mile. Rubin stein's pulchritude waa much too plump. But D'An nunslo, nowise dismayed. Induced her to train down. Possibly as she lost weight she lost Interest also ffl I' Ann undo. Or, maybe, righteous retribution was merely getting In Its work. For, hla whole life through, the Italian has been a short-distance lover. He sprinted through an affair with lime, Duse that left the great actress broken-hearted. He soon die covered that he was not in love with his wife and got rid of her. It haa been, literally, off with tbe old love and en with the new ever since D'Annunzio has been old enough to get Mis name In the papers. People formerly were scandalised, but they have got used to it Much the same It has been with Mile. Rubinstein. The lovely ballerina has a rich Russian husband, in addition to her other lovers. So when he heard that she was getting a divorce to marry the Italian author, he quickly put a stop to the proceedings. Little It mattered to the dancer. ,By the time the divorce business had been ended she had found an other Idol. The lucky man was Baklanoff, a Russian tenor, then singing in Paris, where "The Martyrdom of St Sebastian" was then getting ready for produo-" lion. Rumor, or maybe the press agent, had it that Mile. Rubinstein was tired of being loved and had taken to loving; that he waa really and thoroughly Infatuated with the tenor, and that ahe openly pre ferred him to D'Annunalo, even though ahe waa the principal figure in the latter' play. Anyhow, "The Martyrdom of St Sebastian' was produced. Mile, Rubinstein, waa sufficiently thin for the name part and another saint had been put on the boards by a man and a woman far from saintly. It took a long time to martyr the saint, too, be cause the opening performance lasted from .1S P. M, -to 1.40 A. M. But the story of his life is not a short one. He is supposed to have been a statuesque Gaul . from Narbonne, who was educated . a Christian at Milan; For the purpose of secretly aiding hla own persecuted sect, he took service,., according to the Svocepted etorntta--theomajnrnyj, ;t Undsr, Diocletian - m - mm mm w . ., mm ."..".- vr. mm a m mm , n v i u SJ A . JL 11 , III T t the channel la perfeot aeoreey and aafety. Nothing hvt' the most hI;h-flojjrn sentiments en tered Into th affair- Kevertholesalu became apparent to' the two that they, could not for long to scurrying about Europe togetner wltttout Incurring 'the risk of scandal. They decided, therefore, to eplke the guns of any Kra. Malaprops by a. marriage, which was se cretly undergone at Calais- f ' Meanwhile rather Linley bad got on the track ot the, runaways, and ponnood down upon them at Calala. Ho seems to have appreciated the Innocence of the flight and to hate accepted the situation with a good grace, happy that It , was no worse. And the young people, joyous in hie eomplaiaanoe, neglected to mention the marriage. For a year tbe lovers-thoy were, in reality nothing morehad a hard time of It. Not suspecting that he had a bride and bridegroom on hla hands. Father linley closed tola doors upon Sheridan. It la related that the husband was put to such straits to see his bride that ho disguised hlmaelf as a driver of a coach and by that means managed to convey her from place to puoo aa ahe sang, meanwhlio getuag ta a tew words on the sly. At laat It became apparent that they wore not to be balked and their marrlaa; became a reality. 8UU tbe course of true love was not to run smooth, because Captain Matthews was so wroth over what ho re garded aa a betrayal that he published a most lm- fiudent challenge in a Bath newspaper. Sheridan took t up and they fought a duel, which did not end until they had repaired to the dim lighted parlor of aa Inn, where the coming playwright broke the military man's sword. That made another insult to bo revenged and they fought another duel In which the captain poked eherldan ao hard In the rlba that ho nearly died. But his wit and sisters pulled him through by good nursing, and ho thereupon began to pursue literature with some hope of success. All through thla affair, which la not outdone In any play, the part taken by Miss . Linley la strik ingly similar to that of the character her husband afterward created. Lydla Languish. There waa always a penslvenesa, a romantic melancholy in the attitude of the young woman that made her seem romantic, even to her own day and generation. And If ahe waa Indeed the model after which her husband fashioned Lydla Languish, it waa not the first time she waa presented in a Bath play: for the year before ahe met Bherldan she figured as Miss Linnet la Foote'a satire. "The Maid of Bath." It was not by any means a playful paraphrase, because the Maid of Bath was jilted by a stony hearted bachelor, Mr. Flint. This latter, in real life, was Walter Long, who had been- one of Mlsa Ltnley's admirers, but who, at 61. finally decided not to trust himself to matrimony. In gratitude for being allowed to retain his Joys of single cussedneao Mr. Long paid over to Miaa Linley the substantial sum of.iSOOO It didn't make much of a dent In Mr. Long's fortune, be cause he waa worth about 1250.000, a tremendous for tune in thoee daya. But it waa quite a substantial dot for the girl. Money in thoee days, would buy about ten time! what It will now. and $15,000 waa by no means to be snQ6Kd3 ftt . What with her substantial earnings as a singer and her income from this dot, Mrs. S".,",,!". a much more favorable position, financially, than her young husband. But with both of them it was Prel? Tmafter of the heart, and they were t least a. weU h elderly gentleman who paiKea at satisfied as the elderly gentleman playing the nriaegroom. m -"r'A aK for all. he stayed a bachelor until be reached t5, when h, reined from the world In unmarred and unmarried peace and contentment. 1 "4 f'. I 0. S v i ScMpttrf JnZOC.S., f- ; ''7 . .. he rose to high favor, becoming commander of the first cohort at Milan. His religion discovered, how ever, he waa ordered' to be executed and was aup posedirahot tp death by a troop of archers. This episode, by the way, Is the one most generally painted. When left lor dead, a Christian woman, Irene, found that he atlll retained a epark of Ufa and, taking . him to her horns, nursed him back, to life. After that the Christiana wanted to keep him In concealment. Wut he would have none of tnat He went straight before the emperor and, announcing his recovery, made an open profession of-his religion, A.t, This time Diocletian ordered him beaten to death with clubs. That there might be no further mis carriage of Roman Justice, the sentence was carried out in an amphitheater and the corpse was flung Into '"Ne'tne Christian woman, who caused it to be placed in tne catacomb which still bears fcla name. His martyrdom occurred on January Vt, 28, the date that is still observed with ta .feait day the Latins. But the Greeks, with their seeming deter, mlnatlon not to have thetr calendar in the least like any of the others, celebrate December IS aa the 4ay ; ' sarfardaathe modern church la concerned, it Is one of the earliest feast daya; being celebrated In the fourth eentury. Later, St, Sebastian came to be known ; as the patron saint against the plague; and It is re lated that in (80 a pestilence in Rome was ended byj the dedication, to hUn, of as altar la the church of St iBudoclay- "" ? 1 it, J- - v W if". HMU) JtmtLiimi J V S A Ant Gmifisboroitgfr An tbe world new knows what a success Richard . Brlnsley Sheridan became. It la Just aa well knew that not a , little of his aucoess he . owed to the Fair Maid of Bath, than whom there waa never a more oonacientloua helpmeet and, adviser. The eooen tricltlea ef gentua were never eaay to live) with, and they certainly were hot la the caae of Sheridan, The romantio young lover began to get testy before he waa very far along in life. The older and more suc cessful be became the more crabbed he grew. There were many times when Mr. Sheridan had not only to calm a turbulent nature, but to ehift for her self socially. 'Bath was a gayplaoe. The idea ef re maining secluded In it waa not thought ot There was a round of pleaaure. Into which evesy one was auppoaed to enter. ; In thla atmosphere tt waa to be expected that a beautiful wife who went about without bar Husband would get herself talked about Mra Sheridan cer tainly waa There were stories that her heart had yielded to a handsome young Irish officer. Bod, as tbe whole, there la ample evidence that tbe world Ukee to gossip about a handsome woman and none whatever that Mm Sheridan "waa anything hot a model wife. Anyhow, ahe was ao amiable and the times were so loose that no one has ever had the heart to be erosa with her whatever ahe aid, As for Sheridan, he rose te the most brilliant heights only to die a disappointed pauper. Ha wrote wonderfully successful pi aye j he made a tTortune eat of the management ot Drery Lane Theater. Ho was among the moat noted parliamentarians ef hla day, an orator whose brilllanCo commanded the reapeot and admiration ef auch giants aa Pitt and Burke. He became an ardent adherent te the then prince) of Wales, and he waa the peer ef any df the great men ef the time. Tot the best position he waa able to secure waa that of treasurer of the navy, and when his fortunes, were beginning to decline Drury Lane Theater burned and left him overburdened with debts. Little wonder that he died, a wreck from worry and dissipation, ,a abort time afterward, . Like Sheridan, Bath Itself deplined from a peattlea of almost unprecedented Wealth, fashion and popu larity. In fact It almost went with Sheridan, for his death in lll fell in the oonoludlng half eentary of Its heyday. It was atlll the universal watering place In Dickens' time. He went there as a young reporter, and he afterward made trips there when he had attained a commanding popularity. Nothing about Bath has been more universally enjoyed than his descriptions of the visits of Mr. Pickwick, Samlvel Waller, eta But the present generation haa never aeen the real Bath. It waa In the height of ita glory more than half a century before SheridSn'a time. Aa early aa 1706 It was that Beau Nash descended upon Bath, whoso "king" he was to become. He waa the big, boorish aon of a part owner of a glassworks. In addition to being grossly rude, he was a fop and a gambler. He had found it Impossible to stay la the army, had sold the commission hla father had pur chased for him at a personal sacrifice and had then, aa a last recourse, taken to the gaming tabla From the moment he began to gamble Beau Nash was la clover. He could gratify hia Inordinate vanity by the moat magnificent of clothes, and he did so. He became the rage, though an Ill-born boor, and he ruled Bath with an Iron band. He secured mnaie for the pump house, he caused the famous "assembly rooms" to be built, he made the women qttlt wearing aprons. and the men boots in publio places and he substituted canea for swords. Furthermore, he made popular the custom of early morning hatha well knowing that fresh air, exercise and cleanliness were the beat cures for the night diversions. All of Beau Nash's reforms were quite ahrewdly dealgned to establish ths popularity of Bath, to make It not only a desirable but a safe place of amusement t fashionable England spent a , part of Ita year at Bath. The only thing that didn't endure was the gaming table. Beau Nash made that popular else but parliament placed it under the baa, BEAU BECOMES A BORE With no other source of Income, Beau Nash went into a decline and became a garrulous old bore, who prated of the time when he was the ruler ot fashion until he was ST. Then fate mercifully removed him. It was the Victorian era that saw the gradual decline of Bath. Of recent years it has been but a shadow of its former self, a quaint place where people go to get a real view of the settings of the stories they have read of it Now perhaps, It is to come into ita own again. Not only sentiment, but strong commercial consider ations would make It wise for the new British rulers to make Bath fashionable again. Millions of British dollars are going abroad each year that could be Just as well kept at home, and the . millions of American dollars that are going to the fashionable watering places of continental Europe might be diverted te Bath if it should become England's summer capital. Stranger thlnga have happened, and the aentlment that attaches to the old place through such romancea aa that of Miss Linley and Sheridan may be no small factor In reylvlng Its lost glories. Sample, of Irrigation SVTT In Arlsona, where there; are thousands ef a 1 icraa o arid lands that are worthless ithii Irrigation, ie a'aample of what the forethought mi ingenuity of man oan do. . Near the town If Bis bee a settler from one ot 11 the eastern state was working in a mine, and he noticed the waste water flowing away from it He , eaw that water could be utilized, H selected a aeo tion of land In a lower level a considerable distance from the mine and entered tt as hla homestead. As time and his earnings would permit, he conitruoted a flume to carry the waste water to his land, where he had It distributed in such a manner that Instead of his property being an arid waste, as thousands of other acres were all about him, it would produce crops that were equal to those grown where the country was favored with considerable" rainfall. - His farm today Is one of the finest In that section. And it la atlll. watered by the stream of Waste from ' the mine, Carried to his ranch by flumes and culverts, and other- persons are seeking" to secure control of streams,' which will be carried to a lower level, where the moisture will, make the soil as fertile aa It would :ha.U there. .was , the ordinary rainfall. '