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+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">When William Came, by Saki</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, When William Came, by Saki
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: When William Came
+
+Author: Saki
+
+Release Date: December 31, 2004 [eBook #14540]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHEN WILLIAM CAME***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1914 John Lane edition by David Price, ccx074@coventry.ac.uk</p>
+<h1>When William Came</h1>
+<h2>CHAPTER I: THE SINGING-BIRD AND THE BAROMETER</h2>
+<p>Cicely Yeovil sat in a low swing chair, alternately looking at herself
+in a mirror and at the other occupant of the room in the flesh.&nbsp;
+Both prospects gave her undisguised satisfaction.&nbsp; Without being
+vain she was duly appreciative of good looks, whether in herself or
+in another, and the reflection that she saw in the mirror, and the young
+man whom she saw seated at the piano, would have come with credit out
+of a more severely critical inspection.&nbsp; Probably she looked longer
+and with greater appreciation at the piano player than at her own image;
+her good looks were an inherited possession, that had been with her
+more or less all her life, while Ronnie Storre was a comparatively new
+acquisition, discovered and achieved, so to speak, by her own enterprise,
+selected by her own good taste.&nbsp; Fate had given her adorable eyelashes
+and an excellent profile.&nbsp; Ronnie was an indulgence she had bestowed
+on herself.</p>
+<p>Cicely had long ago planned out for herself a complete philosophy
+of life, and had resolutely set to work to carry her philosophy into
+practice.&nbsp; &ldquo;When love is over how little of love even the
+lover understands,&rdquo; she quoted to herself from one of her favourite
+poets, and transposed the saying into &ldquo;While life is with us how
+little of life even the materialist understands.&rdquo;&nbsp; Most people
+that she knew took endless pains and precautions to preserve and prolong
+their lives and keep their powers of enjoyment unimpaired; few, very
+few, seemed to make any intelligent effort at understanding what they
+really wanted in the way of enjoying their lives, or to ascertain what
+were the best means for satisfying those wants.&nbsp; Fewer still bent
+their whole energies to the one paramount aim of getting what they wanted
+in the fullest possible measure.&nbsp; Her scheme of life was not a
+wholly selfish one; no one could understand what she wanted as well
+as she did herself, therefore she felt that she was the best person
+to pursue her own ends and cater for her own wants.&nbsp; To have others
+thinking and acting for one merely meant that one had to be perpetually
+grateful for a lot of well-meant and usually unsatisfactory services.&nbsp;
+It was like the case of a rich man giving a community a free library,
+when probably the community only wanted free fishing or reduced tram-fares.&nbsp;
+Cicely studied her own whims and wishes, experimented in the best method
+of carrying them into effect, compared the accumulated results of her
+experiments, and gradually arrived at a very clear idea of what she
+wanted in life, and how best to achieve it.&nbsp; She was not by disposition
+a self-centred soul, therefore she did not make the mistake of supposing
+that one can live successfully and gracefully in a crowded world without
+taking due notice of the other human elements around one.&nbsp; She
+was instinctively far more thoughtful for others than many a person
+who is genuinely but unseeingly addicted to unselfishness.</p>
+<p>Also she kept in her armoury the weapon which can be so mightily
+effective if used sparingly by a really sincere individual&mdash;the
+knowledge of when to be a humbug.&nbsp; Ambition entered to a certain
+extent into her life, and governed it perhaps rather more than she knew.&nbsp;
+She desired to escape from the doom of being a nonentity, but the escape
+would have to be effected in her own way and in her own time; to be
+governed by ambition was only a shade or two better than being governed
+by convention.</p>
+<p>The drawing-room in which she and Ronnie were sitting was of such
+proportions that one hardly knew whether it was intended to be one room
+or several, and it had the merit of being moderately cool at two o&rsquo;clock
+on a particularly hot July afternoon.&nbsp; In the coolest of its many
+alcoves servants had noiselessly set out an improvised luncheon table:
+a tempting array of caviare, crab and mushroom salads, cold asparagus,
+slender hock bottles and high-stemmed wine goblets peeped out from amid
+a setting of Charlotte Klemm roses.</p>
+<p>Cicely rose from her seat and went over to the piano.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come,&rdquo; she said, touching the young man lightly with
+a finger-tip on the top of his very sleek, copper-hued head, &ldquo;we&rsquo;re
+going to have picnic-lunch to-day up here; it&rsquo;s so much cooler
+than any of the downstairs rooms, and we shan&rsquo;t be bothered with
+the servants trotting in and out all the time.&nbsp; Rather a good idea
+of mine, wasn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ronnie, after looking anxiously to see that the word &ldquo;picnic&rdquo;
+did not portend tongue sandwiches and biscuits, gave the idea his blessing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is young Storre&rsquo;s profession?&rdquo; some one had
+once asked concerning him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He has a great many friends who have independent incomes,&rdquo;
+had been the answer.</p>
+<p>The meal was begun in an appreciative silence; a picnic in which
+three kinds of red pepper were available for the caviare demanded a
+certain amount of respectful attention.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My heart ought to be like a singing-bird to-day, I suppose,&rdquo;
+said Cicely presently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because your good man is coming home?&rdquo; asked Ronnie.</p>
+<p>Cicely nodded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s expected some time this afternoon, though I&rsquo;m
+rather vague as to which train he arrives by.&nbsp; Rather a stifling
+day for railway travelling.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And <i>is</i> your heart doing the singing-bird business?&rdquo;
+asked Ronnie.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That depends,&rdquo; said Cicely, &ldquo;if I may choose the
+bird.&nbsp; A missel-thrush would do, perhaps; it sings loudest in stormy
+weather, I believe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ronnie disposed of two or three stems of asparagus before making
+any comment on this remark.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is there going to be stormy weather?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The domestic barometer is set rather that way,&rdquo; said
+Cicely.&nbsp; &ldquo;You see, Murrey has been away for ever so long,
+and, of course, there will be lots of things he won&rsquo;t be used
+to, and I&rsquo;m afraid matters may be rather strained and uncomfortable
+for a time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you mean that he will object to me?&rdquo; asked Ronnie.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not in the least,&rdquo; said Cicely, &ldquo;he&rsquo;s quite
+broad-minded on most subjects, and he realises that this is an age in
+which sensible people know thoroughly well what they want, and are determined
+to get what they want.&nbsp; It pleases me to see a lot of you, and
+to spoil you and pay you extravagant compliments about your good looks
+and your music, and to imagine at times that I&rsquo;m in danger of
+getting fond of you; I don&rsquo;t see any harm in it, and I don&rsquo;t
+suppose Murrey will either&mdash;in fact, I shouldn&rsquo;t be surprised
+if he takes rather a liking to you.&nbsp; No, it&rsquo;s the general
+situation that will trouble and exasperate him; he&rsquo;s not had time
+to get accustomed to the <i>fait</i> <i>accompli</i> like we have.&nbsp;
+It will break on him with horrible suddenness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He was somewhere in Russia when the war broke out, wasn&rsquo;t
+he?&rdquo; said Ronnie.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Somewhere in the wilds of Eastern Siberia, shooting and bird
+collecting, miles away from a railway or telegraph line, and it was
+all over before he knew anything about it; it didn&rsquo;t last very
+long, when you come to think of it.&nbsp; He was due home somewhere
+about that time, and when the weeks slipped by without my hearing from
+him, I quite thought he&rsquo;d been captured in the Baltic or somewhere
+on the way back.&nbsp; It turned out that he was down with marsh fever
+in some out-of-the-way spot, and everything was over and finished with
+before he got back to civilisation and newspapers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It must have been a bit of a shock,&rdquo; said Ronnie, busy
+with a well-devised salad; &ldquo;still, I don&rsquo;t see why there
+should be domestic storms when he comes back.&nbsp; You are hardly responsible
+for the catastrophe that has happened.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Cicely, &ldquo;but he&rsquo;ll come back naturally
+feeling sore and savage with everything he sees around him, and he won&rsquo;t
+realise just at once that we&rsquo;ve been through all that ourselves,
+and have reached the stage of sullen acquiescence in what can&rsquo;t
+be helped.&nbsp; He won&rsquo;t understand, for instance, how we can
+be enthusiastic and excited over Gorla Mustelford&rsquo;s d&eacute;but,
+and things of that sort; he&rsquo;ll think we are a set of callous revellers,
+fiddling while Rome is burning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In this case,&rdquo; said Ronnie, &ldquo;Rome isn&rsquo;t
+burning, it&rsquo;s burnt.&nbsp; All that remains to be done is to rebuild
+it&mdash;when possible.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Exactly, and he&rsquo;ll say we&rsquo;re not doing much towards
+helping at that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; protested Ronnie, &ldquo;the whole thing has only
+just happened; &lsquo;Rome wasn&rsquo;t built in a day,&rsquo; and we
+can&rsquo;t rebuild our Rome in a day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know,&rdquo; said Cicely, &ldquo;but so many of our friends,
+and especially Murrey&rsquo;s friends, have taken the thing in a tragical
+fashion, and cleared off to the Colonies, or shut themselves up in their
+country houses, as though there was a sort of moral leprosy infecting
+London.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see what good that does,&rdquo; said Ronnie.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It doesn&rsquo;t do any good, but it&rsquo;s what a lot of
+them have done because they felt like doing it, and Murrey will feel
+like doing it too.&nbsp; That is where I foresee trouble and disagreement.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ronnie shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I would take things tragically if I saw the good of it,&rdquo;
+he said; &ldquo;as matters stand it&rsquo;s too late in the day and
+too early to be anything but philosophical about what one can&rsquo;t
+help.&nbsp; For the present we&rsquo;ve just got to make the best of
+things.&nbsp; Besides, you can&rsquo;t very well turn down Gorla at
+the last moment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not going to turn down Gorla, or anybody,&rdquo;
+said Cicely with decision.&nbsp; &ldquo;I think it would be silly, and
+silliness doesn&rsquo;t appeal to me.&nbsp; That is why I foresee storms
+on the domestic horizon.&nbsp; After all, Gorla has her career to think
+of.&nbsp; Do you know,&rdquo; she added, with a change of tone, &ldquo;I
+rather wish you would fall in love with Gorla; it would make me horribly
+jealous, and a little jealousy is such a good tonic for any woman who
+knows how to dress well.&nbsp; Also, Ronnie, it would prove that you
+are capable of falling in love with some one, of which I&rsquo;ve grave
+doubts up to the present.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Love is one of the few things in which the make-believe is
+superior to the genuine,&rdquo; said Ronnie, &ldquo;it lasts longer,
+and you get more fun out of it, and it&rsquo;s easier to replace when
+you&rsquo;ve done with it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Still, it&rsquo;s rather like playing with coloured paper
+instead of playing with fire,&rdquo; objected Cicely.</p>
+<p>A footman came round the corner with the trained silence that tactfully
+contrives to make itself felt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Luton to see you, Madam,&rdquo; he announced, &ldquo;shall
+I say you are in?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Luton?&nbsp; Oh, yes,&rdquo; said Cicely, &ldquo;he&rsquo;ll
+probably have something to tell us about Gorla&rsquo;s concert,&rdquo;
+she added, turning to Ronnie.</p>
+<p>Tony Luton was a young man who had sprung from the people, and had
+taken care that there should be no recoil.&nbsp; He was scarcely twenty
+years of age, but a tightly packed chronicle of vicissitudes lay behind
+his sprightly insouciant appearance.&nbsp; Since his fifteenth year
+he had lived, Heaven knew how, getting sometimes a minor engagement
+at some minor music-hall, sometimes a temporary job as secretary-valet-companion
+to a roving invalid, dining now and then on plovers&rsquo; eggs and
+asparagus at one of the smarter West End restaurants, at other times
+devouring a kipper or a sausage in some stuffy Edgware Road eating-house;
+always seemingly amused by life, and always amusing.&nbsp; It is possible
+that somewhere in such heart as he possessed there lurked a rankling
+bitterness against the hard things of life, or a scrap of gratitude
+towards the one or two friends who had helped him disinterestedly, but
+his most intimate associates could not have guessed at the existence
+of such feelings.&nbsp; Tony Luton was just a merry-eyed dancing faun,
+whom Fate had surrounded with streets instead of woods, and it would
+have been in the highest degree inartistic to have sounded him for a
+heart or a heartache.</p>
+<p>The dancing of the faun took one day a livelier and more assured
+turn, the joyousness became more real, and the worst of the vicissitudes
+seemed suddenly over.&nbsp; A musical friend, gifted with mediocre but
+marketable abilities, supplied Tony with a song, for which he obtained
+a trial performance at an East End hall.&nbsp; Dressed as a jockey,
+for no particular reason except that the costume suited him, he sang,
+&ldquo;They quaff the gay bubbly in Eccleston Square&rdquo; to an appreciative
+audience, which included the manager of a famous West End theatre of
+varieties.&nbsp; Tony and his song won the managerial favour, and were
+immediately transplanted to the West End house, where they scored a
+success of which the drooping music-hall industry was at the moment
+badly in need.</p>
+<p>It was just after the great catastrophe, and men of the London world
+were in no humour to think; they had witnessed the inconceivable befall
+them, they had nothing but political ruin to stare at, and they were
+anxious to look the other way.&nbsp; The words of Tony&rsquo;s song
+were more or less meaningless, though he sang them remarkably well,
+but the tune, with its air of slyness and furtive joyousness, appealed
+in some unaccountable manner to people who were furtively unhappy, and
+who were trying to appear stoically cheerful.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What must be, must be,&rdquo; and &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a poor
+heart that never rejoices,&rdquo; were the popular expressions of the
+London public at that moment, and the men who had to cater for that
+public were thankful when they were able to stumble across anything
+that fitted in with the prevailing mood.&nbsp; For the first time in
+his life Tony Luton discovered that agents and managers were a leisured
+class, and that office boys had manners.</p>
+<p>He entered Cicely&rsquo;s drawing-room with the air of one to whom
+assurance of manner has become a sheathed weapon, a court accessory
+rather than a trade implement.&nbsp; He was more quietly dressed than
+the usual run of music-hall successes; he had looked critically at life
+from too many angles not to know that though clothes cannot make a man
+they can certainly damn him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you, I have lunched already,&rdquo; he said in answer
+to a question from Cicely.&nbsp; &ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; he said again
+in a cheerful affirmative, as the question of hock in a tall ice-cold
+goblet was propounded to him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve come to tell you the latest about the Gorla Mustelford
+evening,&rdquo; he continued.&nbsp; &ldquo;Old Laurent is putting his
+back into it, and it&rsquo;s really going to be rather a big affair.&nbsp;
+She&rsquo;s going to out-Russian the Russians.&nbsp; Of course, she
+hasn&rsquo;t their technique nor a tenth of their training, but she&rsquo;s
+having tons of advertisement.&nbsp; The name Gorla is almost an advertisement
+in itself, and then there&rsquo;s the fact that she&rsquo;s the daughter
+of a peer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She has temperament,&rdquo; said Cicely, with the decision
+of one who makes a vague statement in a good cause.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So Laurent says,&rdquo; observed Tony.&nbsp; &ldquo;He discovers
+temperament in every one that he intends to boom.&nbsp; He told me that
+I had temperament to the finger-tips, and I was too polite to contradict
+him.&nbsp; But I haven&rsquo;t told you the really important thing about
+the Mustelford d&eacute;but.&nbsp; It is a profound secret, more or
+less, so you must promise not to breathe a word about it till half-past
+four, when it will appear in all the six o&rsquo;clock newspapers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tony paused for dramatic effect, while he drained his goblet, and
+then made his announcement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Majesty is going to be present.&nbsp; Informally and unofficially,
+but still present in the flesh.&nbsp; A sort of casual dropping in,
+carefully heralded by unconfirmed rumour a week ahead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Heavens!&rdquo; exclaimed Cicely, in genuine excitement, &ldquo;what
+a bold stroke.&nbsp; Lady Shalem has worked that, I bet.&nbsp; I suppose
+it will go down all right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Trust Laurent to see to that,&rdquo; said Tony, &ldquo;he
+knows how to fill his house with the right sort of people, and he&rsquo;s
+not the one to risk a fiasco.&nbsp; He knows what he&rsquo;s about.&nbsp;
+I tell you, it&rsquo;s going to be a big evening.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I say!&rdquo; exclaimed Ronnie suddenly, &ldquo;give a supper
+party here for Gorla on the night, and ask the Shalem woman and all
+her crowd.&nbsp; It will be awful fun.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Cicely caught at the suggestion with some enthusiasm.&nbsp; She did
+not particularly care for Lady Shalem, but she thought it would be just
+as well to care for her as far as outward appearances went.</p>
+<p>Grace, Lady Shalem, was a woman who had blossomed into sudden importance
+by constituting herself a sort of foster-mother to the <i>fait</i> <i>accompli</i>.&nbsp;
+At a moment when London was denuded of most of its aforetime social
+leaders she had seen her opportunity, and made the most of it.&nbsp;
+She had not contented herself with bowing to the inevitable, she had
+stretched out her hand to it, and forced herself to smile graciously
+at it, and her polite attentions had been reciprocated.&nbsp; Lady Shalem,
+without being a beauty or a wit, or a grand lady in the traditional
+sense of the word, was in a fair way to becoming a power in the land;
+others, more capable and with stronger claims to social recognition,
+would doubtless overshadow her and displace her in due course, but for
+the moment she was a person whose good graces counted for something,
+and Cicely was quite alive to the advantage of being in those good graces.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It would be rather fun,&rdquo; she said, running over in her
+mind the possibilities of the suggested supper-party.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It would be jolly useful,&rdquo; put in Ronnie eagerly; &ldquo;you
+could get all sorts of interesting people together, and it would be
+an excellent advertisement for Gorla.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ronnie approved of supper-parties on principle, but he was also thinking
+of the advantage which might accrue to the drawing-room concert which
+Cicely had projected (with himself as the chief performer), if he could
+be brought into contact with a wider circle of music patrons.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know it would be useful,&rdquo; said Cicely, &ldquo;it would
+be almost historical; there&rsquo;s no knowing who might not come to
+it&mdash;and things are dreadfully slack in the entertaining line just
+now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The ambitious note in her character was making itself felt at that
+moment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s go down to the library, and work out a list of
+people to invite,&rdquo; said Ronnie.</p>
+<p>A servant entered the room and made a brief announcement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Yeovil has arrived, madam.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bother,&rdquo; said Ronnie sulkily.&nbsp; &ldquo;Now you&rsquo;ll
+cool off about that supper party, and turn down Gorla and the rest of
+us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was certainly true that the supper already seemed a more difficult
+proposition in Cicely&rsquo;s eyes than it had a moment or two ago.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;&lsquo;You&rsquo;ll not forget my only daughter,<br />
+E&rsquo;en though Saphia has crossed the sea,&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>quoted Tony, with mocking laughter in his voice and eyes.</p>
+<p>Cicely went down to greet her husband.&nbsp; She felt that she was
+probably very glad that he was home once more; she was angry with herself
+for not feeling greater certainty on the point.&nbsp; Even the well-beloved,
+however, can select the wrong moment for return.&nbsp; If Cicely Yeovil&rsquo;s
+heart was like a singing-bird, it was of a kind that has frequent lapses
+into silence.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER II: THE HOMECOMING</h2>
+<p>Murrey Yeovil got out of the boat-train at Victoria Station, and
+stood waiting, in an attitude something between listlessness and impatience,
+while a porter dragged his light travelling kit out of the railway carriage
+and went in search of his heavier baggage with a hand-truck.&nbsp; Yeovil
+was a grey-faced young man, with restless eyes, and a rather wistful
+mouth, and an air of lassitude that was evidently only a temporary characteristic.&nbsp;
+The hot dusty station, with its blended crowds of dawdling and scurrying
+people, its little streams of suburban passengers pouring out every
+now and then from this or that platform, like ants swarming across a
+garden path, made a wearisome climax to what had been a rather wearisome
+journey.&nbsp; Yeovil glanced quickly, almost furtively, around him
+in all directions, with the air of a man who is constrained by morbid
+curiosity to look for things that he would rather not see.&nbsp; The
+announcements placed in German alternatively with English over the booking
+office, left-luggage office, refreshment buffets, and so forth, the
+crowned eagle and monogram displayed on the post boxes, caught his eye
+in quick succession.</p>
+<p>He turned to help the porter to shepherd his belongings on to the
+truck, and followed him to the outer yard of the station, where a string
+of taxi-cabs was being slowly absorbed by an outpouring crowd of travellers.</p>
+<p>Portmanteaux, wraps, and a trunk or two, much be-labelled and travel-worn,
+were stowed into a taxi, and Yeovil turned to give the direction to
+the driver.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Twenty-eight, Berkshire Street.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Berkschirestrasse, acht-und-zwanzig,&rdquo; echoed the man,
+a bulky spectacled individual of unmistakable Teuton type.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Twenty-eight, Berkshire Street,&rdquo; repeated Yeovil, and
+got into the cab, leaving the driver to re-translate the direction into
+his own language.</p>
+<p>A succession of cabs leaving the station blocked the roadway for
+a moment or two, and Yeovil had leisure to observe the fact that Viktoria
+Strasse was lettered side by side with the familiar English name of
+the street.&nbsp; A notice directing the public to the neighbouring
+swimming baths was also written up in both languages.&nbsp; London had
+become a bi-lingual city, even as Warsaw.</p>
+<p>The cab threaded its way swiftly along Buckingham Palace Road towards
+the Mall.&nbsp; As they passed the long front of the Palace the traveller
+turned his head resolutely away, that he might not see the alien uniforms
+at the gates and the eagle standard flapping in the sunlight.&nbsp;
+The taxi driver, who seemed to have combative instincts, slowed down
+as he was turning into the Mall, and pointed to the white pile of memorial
+statuary in front of the palace gates.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Grossmutter Denkmal, yes,&rdquo; he announced, and resumed
+his journey.</p>
+<p>Arrived at his destination, Yeovil stood on the steps of his house
+and pressed the bell with an odd sense of forlornness, as though he
+were a stranger drifting from nowhere into a land that had no cognisance
+of him; a moment later he was standing in his own hall, the object of
+respectful solicitude and attention.&nbsp; Sprucely garbed and groomed
+lackeys busied themselves with his battered travel-soiled baggage; the
+door closed on the guttural-voiced taxi driver, and the glaring July
+sunshine.&nbsp; The wearisome journey was over.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Poor dear, how dreadfully pulled-down you look,&rdquo; said
+Cicely, when the first greetings had been exchanged.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s been a slow business, getting well,&rdquo; said
+Yeovil.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;m only three-quarter way there yet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He looked at his reflection in a mirror and laughed ruefully.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You should have seen what I looked like five or six weeks
+ago,&rdquo; he added.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You ought to have let me come out and nurse you,&rdquo; said
+Cicely; &ldquo;you know I wanted to.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, they nursed me well enough,&rdquo; said Yeovil, &ldquo;and
+it would have been a shame dragging you out there; a small Finnish health
+resort, out of the season, is not a very amusing place, and it would
+have been worse for any one who didn&rsquo;t talk Russian.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You must have been buried alive there,&rdquo; said Cicely,
+with commiseration in her voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wanted to be buried alive,&rdquo; said Yeovil.&nbsp; &ldquo;The
+news from the outer world was not of a kind that helped a despondent
+invalid towards convalescence.&nbsp; They spoke to me as little as possible
+about what was happening, and I was grateful for your letters because
+they also told me very little.&nbsp; When one is abroad, among foreigners,
+one&rsquo;s country&rsquo;s misfortunes cause one an acuter, more personal
+distress, than they would at home even.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, you are at home now, anyway,&rdquo; said Cicely, &ldquo;and
+you can jog along the road to complete recovery at your own pace.&nbsp;
+A little quiet shooting this autumn and a little hunting, just enough
+to keep you fit and not to overtire you; you mustn&rsquo;t overtax your
+strength.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m getting my strength back all right,&rdquo; said
+Yeovil.&nbsp; &ldquo;This journey hasn&rsquo;t tired me half as much
+as one might have expected.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s the awful drag of listlessness,
+mental and physical, that is the worst after-effect of these marsh fevers;
+they drain the energy out of you in bucketfuls, and it trickles back
+again in teaspoonfuls.&nbsp; And just now untiring energy is what I
+shall need, even more than strength; I don&rsquo;t want to degenerate
+into a slacker.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look here, Murrey,&rdquo; said Cicely, &ldquo;after we&rsquo;ve
+had dinner together to-night, I&rsquo;m going to do a seemingly unwifely
+thing.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m going to go out and leave you alone with an old
+friend.&nbsp; Doctor Holham is coming in to drink coffee and smoke with
+you.&nbsp; I arranged this because I knew it was what you would like.&nbsp;
+Men can talk these things over best by themselves, and Holham can tell
+you everything that happened&mdash;since you went away.&nbsp; It will
+be a dreary story, I&rsquo;m afraid, but you will want to hear it all.&nbsp;
+It was a nightmare time, but now one sees it in a calmer perspective.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I feel in a nightmare still,&rdquo; said Yeovil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We all felt like that,&rdquo; said Cicely, rather with the
+air of an elder person who tells a child that it will understand things
+better when it grows up; &ldquo;time is always something of a narcotic
+you know.&nbsp; Things seem absolutely unbearable, and then bit by bit
+we find out that we are bearing them.&nbsp; And now, dear, I&rsquo;ll
+fill up your notification paper and leave you to superintend your unpacking.&nbsp;
+Robert will give you any help you want.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is the notification paper?&rdquo; asked Yeovil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, a stupid form to be filled up when any one arrives, to
+say where they come from, and their business and nationality and religion,
+and all that sort of thing.&nbsp; We&rsquo;re rather more bureaucratic
+than we used to be, you know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yeovil said nothing, but into the sallow greyness of his face there
+crept a dark flush, that faded presently and left his colour more grey
+and bloodless than before.</p>
+<p>The journey seemed suddenly to have recommenced; he was under his
+own roof, his servants were waiting on him, his familiar possessions
+were in evidence around him, but the sense of being at home had vanished.&nbsp;
+It was as though he had arrived at some wayside hotel, and been asked
+to register his name and status and destination.&nbsp; Other things
+of disgust and irritation he had foreseen in the London he was coming
+to&mdash;the alterations on stamps and coinage, the intrusive Teuton
+element, the alien uniforms cropping up everywhere, the new orientation
+of social life; such things he was prepared for, but this personal evidence
+of his subject state came on him unawares, at a moment when he had,
+so to speak, laid his armour aside.&nbsp; Cicely spoke lightly of the
+hateful formality that had been forced on them; would he, too, come
+to regard things in the same acquiescent spirit?</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER III: &ldquo;THE METSKIE TSAR&rdquo;</h2>
+<p>&ldquo;I was in the early stages of my fever when I got the first
+inkling of what was going on,&rdquo; said Yeovil to the doctor, as they
+sat over their coffee in a recess of the big smoking-room; &ldquo;just
+able to potter about a bit in the daytime, fighting against depression
+and inertia, feverish as evening came on, and delirious in the night.&nbsp;
+My game tracker and my attendant were both Buriats, and spoke very little
+Russian, and that was the only language we had in common to converse
+in.&nbsp; In matters concerning food and sport we soon got to understand
+each other, but on other subjects we were not easily able to exchange
+ideas.&nbsp; One day my tracker had been to a distant trading-store
+to get some things of which we were in need; the store was eighty miles
+from the nearest point of railroad, eighty miles of terribly bad roads,
+but it was in its way a centre and transmitter of news from the outside
+world.&nbsp; The tracker brought back with him vague tidings of a conflict
+of some sort between the &lsquo;Metskie Tsar&rsquo; and the &lsquo;Angliskie
+Tsar,&rsquo; and kept repeating the Russian word for defeat.&nbsp; The
+&lsquo;Angliskie Tsar&rsquo; I recognised, of course, as the King of
+England, but my brain was too sick and dull to read any further meaning
+into the man&rsquo;s reiterated gabble.&nbsp; I grew so ill just then
+that I had to give up the struggle against fever, and make my way as
+best I could towards the nearest point where nursing and doctoring could
+be had.&nbsp; It was one evening, in a lonely rest-hut on the edge of
+a huge forest, as I was waiting for my boy to bring the meal for which
+I was feverishly impatient, and which I knew I should loathe as soon
+as it was brought, that the explanation of the word &lsquo;Metskie&rsquo;
+flashed on me.&nbsp; I had thought of it as referring to some Oriental
+potentate, some rebellious rajah perhaps, who was giving trouble, and
+whose followers had possibly discomfited an isolated British force in
+some out-of-the-way corner of our Empire.&nbsp; And all of a sudden
+I knew that &lsquo;Nemetskie Tsar,&rsquo; German Emperor, had been the
+name that the man had been trying to convey to me.&nbsp; I shouted for
+the tracker, and put him through a breathless cross-examination; he
+confirmed what my fears had told me.&nbsp; The &lsquo;Metskie Tsar&rsquo;
+was a big European ruler, he had been in conflict with the &lsquo;Angliskie
+Tsar,&rsquo; and the latter had been defeated, swept away; the man spoke
+the word that he used for ships, and made energetic pantomime to express
+the sinking of a fleet.&nbsp; Holham, there was nothing for it but to
+hope that this was a false, groundless rumour, that had somehow crept
+to the confines of civilisation.&nbsp; In my saner balanced moments
+it was possible to disbelieve it, but if you have ever suffered from
+delirium you will know what raging torments of agony I went through
+in the nights, how my brain fought and refought that rumoured disaster.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The doctor gave a murmur of sympathetic understanding.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then,&rdquo; continued Yeovil, &ldquo;I reached the small
+Siberian town towards which I had been struggling.&nbsp; There was a
+little colony of Russians there, traders, officials, a doctor or two,
+and some army officers.&nbsp; I put up at the primitive hotel-restaurant,
+which was the general gathering-place of the community.&nbsp; I knew
+quickly that the news was true.&nbsp; Russians are the most tactful
+of any European race that I have ever met; they did not stare with insolent
+or pitying curiosity, but there was something changed in their attitude
+which told me that the travelling Briton was no longer in their eyes
+the interesting respect-commanding personality that he had been in past
+days.&nbsp; I went to my own room, where the samovar was bubbling its
+familiar tune and a smiling red-shirted Russian boy was helping my Buriat
+servant to unpack my wardrobe, and I asked for any back numbers of newspapers
+that could be supplied at a moment&rsquo;s notice.&nbsp; I was given
+a bundle of well-thumbed sheets, odd pieces of the <i>Novoe</i> <i>Vremya</i>,
+the <i>Moskovskie</i> <i>Viedomosti</i>, one or two complete numbers
+of local papers published at Perm and Tobolsk.&nbsp; I do not read Russian
+well, though I speak it fairly readily, but from the fragments of disconnected
+telegrams that I pieced together I gathered enough information to acquaint
+me with the extent of the tragedy that had been worked out in a few
+crowded hours in a corner of North-Western Europe.&nbsp; I searched
+frantically for telegrams of later dates that would put a better complexion
+on the matter, that would retrieve something from the ruin; presently
+I came across a page of the illustrated supplement that the <i>Novoe</i>
+<i>Vremya</i> publishes once a week.&nbsp; There was a photograph of
+a long-fronted building with a flag flying over it, labelled &lsquo;The
+new standard floating over Buckingham Palace.&rsquo;&nbsp; The picture
+was not much more than a smudge, but the flag, possibly touched up,
+was unmistakable.&nbsp; It was the eagle of the Nemetskie Tsar.&nbsp;
+I have a vivid recollection of that plainly-furnished little room, with
+the inevitable gilt ikon in one corner, and the samovar hissing and
+gurgling on the table, and the thrumming music of a balalaika orchestra
+coming up from the restaurant below; the next coherent thing I can remember
+was weeks and weeks later, discussing in an impersonal detached manner
+whether I was strong enough to stand the fatigue of the long railway
+journey to Finland.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Since then, Holham, I have been encouraged to keep my mind
+as much off the war and public affairs as possible, and I have been
+glad to do so.&nbsp; I knew the worst and there was no particular use
+in deepening my despondency by dragging out the details.&nbsp; But now
+I am more or less a live man again, and I want to fill in the gaps in
+my knowledge of what happened.&nbsp; You know how much I know, and how
+little; those fragments of Russian newspapers were about all the information
+that I had.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t even know clearly how the whole thing
+started.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yeovil settled himself back in his chair with the air of a man who
+has done some necessary talking, and now assumes the r&ocirc;le of listener.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It started,&rdquo; said the doctor, &ldquo;with a wholly unimportant
+disagreement about some frontier business in East Africa; there was
+a slight attack of nerves in the stock markets, and then the whole thing
+seemed in a fair way towards being settled.&nbsp; Then the negotiations
+over the affair began to drag unduly, and there was a further flutter
+of nervousness in the money world.&nbsp; And then one morning the papers
+reported a highly menacing speech by one of the German Ministers, and
+the situation began to look black indeed.&nbsp; &lsquo;He will be disavowed,&rsquo;
+every one said over here, but in less than twenty-four hours those who
+knew anything knew that the crisis was on us&mdash;only their knowledge
+came too late.&nbsp; &lsquo;War between two such civilised and enlightened
+nations is an impossibility,&rsquo; one of our leaders of public opinion
+had declared on the Saturday; by the following Friday the war had indeed
+become an impossibility, because we could no longer carry it on.&nbsp;
+It burst on us with calculated suddenness, and we were just not enough,
+everywhere where the pressure came.&nbsp; Our ships were good against
+their ships, our seamen were better than their seamen, but our ships
+were not able to cope with their ships plus their superiority in aircraft.&nbsp;
+Our trained men were good against their trained men, but they could
+not be in several places at once, and the enemy could.&nbsp; Our half-trained
+men and our untrained men could not master the science of war at a moment&rsquo;s
+notice, and a moment&rsquo;s notice was all they got.&nbsp; The enemy
+were a nation apprenticed in arms, we were not even the idle apprentice:
+we had not deemed apprenticeship worth our while.&nbsp; There was courage
+enough running loose in the land, but it was like unharnessed electricity,
+it controlled no forces, it struck no blows.&nbsp; There was no time
+for the heroism and the devotion which a drawn-out struggle, however
+hopeless, can produce; the war was over almost as soon as it had begun.&nbsp;
+After the reverses which happened with lightning rapidity in the first
+three days of warfare, the newspapers made no effort to pretend that
+the situation could be retrieved; editors and public alike recognised
+that these were blows over the heart, and that it was a matter of moments
+before we were counted out.&nbsp; One might liken the whole affair to
+a snap checkmate early in a game of chess; one side had thought out
+the moves, and brought the requisite pieces into play, the other side
+was hampered and helpless, with its resources unavailable, its strategy
+discounted in advance.&nbsp; That, in a nutshell, is the history of
+the war.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yeovil was silent for a moment or two, then he asked:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the sequel, the peace?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The collapse was so complete that I fancy even the enemy were
+hardly prepared for the consequences of their victory.&nbsp; No one
+had quite realised what one disastrous campaign would mean for an island
+nation with a closely packed population.&nbsp; The conquerors were in
+a position to dictate what terms they pleased, and it was not wonderful
+that their ideas of aggrandisement expanded in the hour of intoxication.&nbsp;
+There was no European combination ready to say them nay, and certainly
+no one Power was going to be rash enough to step in to contest the terms
+of the treaty that they imposed on the conquered.&nbsp; Annexation had
+probably never been a dream before the war; after the war it suddenly
+became temptingly practical.&nbsp; <i>Warum</i> <i>nicht</i>? became
+the theme of leader-writers in the German press; they pointed out that
+Britain, defeated and humiliated, but with enormous powers of recuperation,
+would be a dangerous and inevitable enemy for the Germany of to-morrow,
+while Britain incorporated within the Hohenzollern Empire would merely
+be a disaffected province, without a navy to make its disaffection a
+serious menace, and with great tax-paying capabilities, which would
+be available for relieving the burdens of the other Imperial States.&nbsp;
+Wherefore, why not annex?&nbsp; The <i>warum</i> <i>nicht</i>? party
+prevailed.&nbsp; Our King, as you know, retired with his Court to Delhi,
+as Emperor in the East, with most of his overseas dominions still subject
+to his sway.&nbsp; The British Isles came under the German Crown as
+a <i>Reichsland</i>, a sort of Alsace-Lorraine washed by the North Sea
+instead of the Rhine.&nbsp; We still retain our Parliament, but it is
+a clipped and pruned-down shadow of its former self, with most of its
+functions in abeyance; when the elections were held it was difficult
+to get decent candidates to come forward or to get people to vote.&nbsp;
+It makes one smile bitterly to think that a year or two ago we were
+seriously squabbling as to who should have votes.&nbsp; And, of course,
+the old party divisions have more or less crumbled away.&nbsp; The Liberals
+naturally are under the blackest of clouds, for having steered the country
+to disaster, though to do them justice it was no more their fault than
+the fault of any other party.&nbsp; In a democracy such as ours was
+the Government of the day must more or less reflect the ideas and temperament
+of the nation in all vital matters, and the British nation in those
+days could not have been persuaded of the urgent need for military apprenticeship
+or of the deadly nature of its danger.&nbsp; It was willing now and
+then to be half-frightened and to have half-measures, or, one might
+better say, quarter-measures taken to reassure it, and the governments
+of the day were willing to take them, but any political party or group
+of statesmen that had said &lsquo;the danger is enormous and immediate,
+the sacrifices and burdens must be enormous and immediate,&rsquo; would
+have met with certain defeat at the polls.&nbsp; Still, of course, the
+Liberals, as the party that had held office for nearly a decade, incurred
+the odium of a people maddened by defeat and humiliation; one Minister,
+who had had less responsibility for military organisation than perhaps
+any of them, was attacked and nearly killed at Newcastle, another was
+hiding for three days on Exmoor, and escaped in disguise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the Conservatives?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are also under eclipse, but it is more or less voluntary
+in their case.&nbsp; For generations they had taken their stand as supporters
+of Throne and Constitution, and when they suddenly found the Constitution
+gone and the Throne filled by an alien dynasty, their political orientation
+had vanished.&nbsp; They are in much the same position as the Jacobites
+occupied after the Hanoverian accession.&nbsp; Many of the leading Tory
+families have emigrated to the British lands beyond the seas, others
+are shut up in their country houses, retrenching their expenses, selling
+their acres, and investing their money abroad.&nbsp; The Labour faction,
+again, are almost in as bad odour as the Liberals, because of having
+hob-nobbed too effusively and ostentatiously with the German democratic
+parties on the eve of the war, exploiting an evangel of universal brotherhood
+which did not blunt a single Teuton bayonet when the hour came.&nbsp;
+I suppose in time party divisions will reassert themselves in some form
+or other; there will be a Socialist Party, and the mercantile and manufacturing
+interests will evolve a sort of bourgeoise party, and the different
+religious bodies will try to get themselves represented&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yeovil made a movement of impatience.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All these things that you forecast,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;must
+take time, considerable time; is this nightmare, then, to go on for
+ever?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is not a nightmare, unfortunately,&rdquo; said the doctor,
+&ldquo;it is a reality.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, surely&mdash;a nation such as ours, a virile, highly-civilised
+nation with an age-long tradition of mastery behind it, cannot be held
+under for ever by a few thousand bayonets and machine guns.&nbsp; We
+must surely rise up one day and drive them out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear man,&rdquo; said the doctor, &ldquo;we might, of course,
+at some given moment overpower the garrison that is maintained here,
+and seize the forts, and perhaps we might be able to mine the harbours;
+what then?&nbsp; In a fortnight or so we could be starved into unconditional
+submission.&nbsp; Remember, all the advantages of isolated position
+that told in our favour while we had the sea dominion, tell against
+us now that the sea dominion is in other hands.&nbsp; The enemy would
+not need to mobilise a single army corps or to bring a single battleship
+into action; a fleet of nimble cruisers and destroyers circling round
+our coasts would be sufficient to shut out our food supplies.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you trying to tell me that this is a final overthrow?&rdquo;
+said Yeovil in a shaking voice; &ldquo;are we to remain a subject race
+like the Poles?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let us hope for a better fate,&rdquo; said the doctor.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Our opportunity may come if the Master Power is ever involved
+in an unsuccessful naval war with some other nation, or perhaps in some
+time of European crisis, when everything hung in the balance, our latent
+hostility might have to be squared by a concession of independence.&nbsp;
+That is what we have to hope for and watch for.&nbsp; On the other hand,
+the conquerors have to count on time and tact to weaken and finally
+obliterate the old feelings of nationality; the middle-aged of to-day
+will grow old and acquiescent in the changed state of things; the young
+generations will grow up never having known anything different.&nbsp;
+It&rsquo;s a far cry to Delhi, as the old Indian proverb says, and the
+strange half-European, half-Asiatic Court out there will seem more and
+more a thing exotic and unreal.&nbsp; &lsquo;The King across the water&rsquo;
+was a rallying-cry once upon a time in our history, but a king on the
+further side of the Indian Ocean is a shadowy competitor for one who
+alternates between Potsdam and Windsor.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I want you to tell me everything,&rdquo; said Yeovil, after
+another pause; &ldquo;tell me, Holham, how far has this obliterating
+process of &lsquo;time and tact&rsquo; gone?&nbsp; It seems to be pretty
+fairly started already.&nbsp; I bought a newspaper as soon as I landed,
+and I read it in the train coming up.&nbsp; I read things that puzzled
+and disgusted me.&nbsp; There were announcements of concerts and plays
+and first-nights and private views; there were even small dances.&nbsp;
+There were advertisements of house-boats and week-end cottages and string
+bands for garden parties.&nbsp; It struck me that it was rather like
+merrymaking with a dead body lying in the house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yeovil,&rdquo; said the doctor, &ldquo;you must bear in mind
+two things.&nbsp; First, the necessity for the life of the country going
+on as if nothing had happened.&nbsp; It is true that many thousands
+of our working men and women have emigrated and thousands of our upper
+and middle class too; they were the people who were not tied down by
+business, or who could afford to cut those ties.&nbsp; But those represent
+comparatively a few out of the many.&nbsp; The great businesses and
+the small businesses must go on, people must be fed and clothed and
+housed and medically treated, and their thousand-and-one wants and necessities
+supplied.&nbsp; Look at me, for instance; however much I loathe coming
+under a foreign domination and paying taxes to an alien government,
+I can&rsquo;t abandon my practice and my patients, and set up anew in
+Toronto or Allahabad, and if I could, some other doctor would have to
+take my place here.&nbsp; I or that other doctor must have our servants
+and motors and food and furniture and newspapers, even our sport.&nbsp;
+The golf links and the hunting field have been well-nigh deserted since
+the war, but they are beginning to get back their votaries because out-door
+sport has become a necessity, and a very rational necessity, with numbers
+of men who have to work otherwise under unnatural and exacting conditions.&nbsp;
+That is one factor of the situation.&nbsp; The other affects London
+more especially, but through London it influences the rest of the country
+to a certain extent.&nbsp; You will see around you here much that will
+strike you as indications of heartless indifference to the calamity
+that has befallen our nation.&nbsp; Well, you must remember that many
+things in modern life, especially in the big cities, are not national
+but international.&nbsp; In the world of music and art and the drama,
+for instance, the foreign names are legion, they confront you at every
+turn, and some of our British devotees of such arts are more acclimatised
+to the ways of Munich or Moscow than they are familiar with the life,
+say, of Stirling or York.&nbsp; For years they have lived and thought
+and spoken in an atmosphere and jargon of denationalised culture&mdash;even
+those of them who have never left our shores.&nbsp; They would take
+pains to be intimately familiar with the domestic affairs and views
+of life of some Galician gipsy dramatist, and gravely quote and discuss
+his opinions on debts and mistresses and cookery, while they would shudder
+at &lsquo;D&rsquo;ye ken John Peel?&rsquo; as a piece of uncouth barbarity.&nbsp;
+You cannot expect a world of that sort to be permanently concerned or
+downcast because the Crown of Charlemagne takes its place now on the
+top of the Royal box in the theatres, or at the head of programmes at
+State concerts.&nbsp; And then there are the Jews.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are many in the land, or at least in London,&rdquo;
+said Yeovil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are even more of them now than there used to be,&rdquo;
+said Holham.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am to a great extent a disliker of Jews
+myself, but I will be fair to them, and admit that those of them who
+were in any genuine sense British have remained British and have stuck
+by us loyally in our misfortune; all honour to them.&nbsp; But of the
+others, the men who by temperament and everything else were far more
+Teuton or Polish or Latin than they were British, it was not to be expected
+that they would be heartbroken because London had suddenly lost its
+place among the political capitals of the world, and became a cosmopolitan
+city.&nbsp; They had appreciated the free and easy liberty of the old
+days, under British rule, but there was a stiff insularity in the ruling
+race that they chafed against.&nbsp; Now, putting aside some petty Government
+restrictions that Teutonic bureaucracy has brought in, there is really,
+in their eyes, more licence and social adaptability in London than before.&nbsp;
+It has taken on some of the aspects of a No-Man&rsquo;s-Land, and the
+Jew, if he likes, may almost consider himself as of the dominant race;
+at any rate he is ubiquitous.&nbsp; Pleasure, of the caf&eacute; and
+cabaret and boulevard kind, the sort of thing that gave Berlin the aspect
+of the gayest capital in Europe within the last decade, that is the
+insidious leaven that will help to denationalise London.&nbsp; Berlin
+will probably climb back to some of its old austerity and simplicity,
+a world-ruling city with a great sense of its position and its responsibilities,
+while London will become more and more the centre of what these people
+understand by life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yeovil made a movement of impatience and disgust.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know, I know,&rdquo; said the doctor, sympathetically; &ldquo;life
+and enjoyment mean to you the howl of a wolf in a forest, the call of
+a wild swan on the frozen tundras, the smell of a wood fire in some
+little inn among the mountains.&nbsp; There is more music to you in
+the quick thud, thud of hoofs on desert mud as a free-stepping horse
+is led up to your tent door than in all the dronings and flourishes
+that a highly-paid orchestra can reel out to an expensively fed audience.&nbsp;
+But the tastes of modern London, as we see them crystallised around
+us, lie in a very different direction.&nbsp; People of the world that
+I am speaking of, our dominant world at the present moment, herd together
+as closely packed to the square yard as possible, doing nothing worth
+doing, and saying nothing worth saying, but doing it and saying it over
+and over again, listening to the same melodies, watching the same artistes,
+echoing the same catchwords, ordering the same dishes in the same restaurants,
+suffering each other&rsquo;s cigarette smoke and perfumes and conversation,
+feverishly, anxiously making arrangements to meet each other again to-morrow,
+next week, and the week after next, and repeat the same gregarious experience.&nbsp;
+If they were not herded together in a corner of western London, watching
+each other with restless intelligent eyes, they would be herded together
+at Brighton or Dieppe, doing the same thing.&nbsp; Well, you will find
+that life of that sort goes forward just as usual, only it is even more
+prominent and noticeable now because there is less public life of other
+kinds.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yeovil said something which was possibly the Buriat word for the
+nether world.&nbsp; Outside in the neighbouring square a band had been
+playing at intervals during the evening.&nbsp; Now it struck up an air
+that Yeovil had already heard whistled several times since his landing,
+an air with a captivating suggestion of slyness and furtive joyousness
+running through it.</p>
+<p>He rose and walked across to the window, opening it a little wider.&nbsp;
+He listened till the last notes had died away.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is that tune they have just played?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll hear it often enough,&rdquo; said the doctor.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;A Frenchman writing in the <i>Matin</i> the other day called
+it the &lsquo;National Anthem of the <i>fait</i> <i>accompli</i>.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV: &ldquo;ES IST VERBOTEN&rdquo;</h2>
+<p>Yeovil wakened next morning to the pleasant sensation of being in
+a household where elaborate machinery for the smooth achievement of
+one&rsquo;s daily life was noiselessly and unceasingly at work.&nbsp;
+Fever and the long weariness of convalescence in indifferently comfortable
+surroundings had given luxury a new value in his eyes.&nbsp; Money had
+not always been plentiful with him in his younger days; in his twenty-eighth
+year he had inherited a fairly substantial fortune, and he had married
+a wealthy woman a few months later.&nbsp; It was characteristic of the
+man and his breed that the chief use to which he had put his newly-acquired
+wealth had been in seizing the opportunity which it gave him for indulging
+in unlimited travel in wild, out-of-the-way regions, where the comforts
+of life were meagrely represented.&nbsp; Cicely occasionally accompanied
+him to the threshold of his expeditions, such as Cairo or St. Petersburg
+or Constantinople, but her own tastes in the matter of roving were more
+or less condensed within an area that comprised Cannes, Homburg, the
+Scottish Highlands, and the Norwegian Fiords.&nbsp; Things outlandish
+and barbaric appealed to her chiefly when presented under artistic but
+highly civilised stage management on the boards of Covent Garden, and
+if she wanted to look at wolves or sand grouse, she preferred doing
+so in the company of an intelligent Fellow of the Zoological Society
+on some fine Sunday afternoon in Regent&rsquo;s Park.&nbsp; It was one
+of the bonds of union and good-fellowship between her husband and herself
+that each understood and sympathised with the other&rsquo;s tastes without
+in the least wanting to share them; they went their own ways and were
+pleased and comrade-like when the ways happened to run together for
+a span, without self-reproach or heart-searching when the ways diverged.&nbsp;
+Moreover, they had separate and adequate banking accounts, which constitute,
+if not the keys of the matrimonial Heaven, at least the oil that lubricates
+them.</p>
+<p>Yeovil found Cicely and breakfast waiting for him in the cool breakfast-room,
+and enjoyed, with the appreciation of a recent invalid, the comfort
+and resources of a meal that had not to be ordered or thought about
+in advance, but seemed as though it were there, fore-ordained from the
+beginning of time in its smallest detail.&nbsp; Each desire of the breakfasting
+mind seemed to have its realisation in some dish, lurking unobtrusively
+in hidden corners until asked for.&nbsp; Did one want grilled mushrooms,
+English fashion, they were there, black and moist and sizzling, and
+extremely edible; did one desire mushrooms <i>&agrave;</i> <i>la</i>
+<i>Russe</i>, they appeared, blanched and cool and toothsome under their
+white blanketing of sauce.&nbsp; At one&rsquo;s bidding was a service
+of coffee, prepared with rather more forethought and circumspection
+than would go to the preparation of a revolution in a South American
+Republic.</p>
+<p>The exotic blooms that reigned in profusion over the other parts
+of the house were scrupulously banished from the breakfast-room; bowls
+of wild thyme and other flowering weeds of the meadow and hedgerow gave
+it an atmosphere of country freshness that was in keeping with the morning
+meal.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You look dreadfully tired still,&rdquo; said Cicely critically,
+&ldquo;otherwise I would recommend a ride in the Park, before it gets
+too hot.&nbsp; There is a new cob in the stable that you will just love,
+but he is rather lively, and you had better content yourself for the
+present with some more sedate exercise than he is likely to give you.&nbsp;
+He is apt to try and jump out of his skin when the flies tease him.&nbsp;
+The Park is rather jolly for a walk just now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think that will be about my form after my long journey,&rdquo;
+said Yeovil, &ldquo;an hour&rsquo;s stroll before lunch under the trees.&nbsp;
+That ought not to fatigue me unduly.&nbsp; In the afternoon I&rsquo;ll
+look up one or two people.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t count on finding too many of your old set,&rdquo;
+said Cicely rather hurriedly.&nbsp; &ldquo;I dare say some of them will
+find their way back some time, but at present there&rsquo;s been rather
+an exodus.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Bredes,&rdquo; said Yeovil, &ldquo;are they here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, the Bredes are in Scotland, at their place in Sutherlandshire;
+they don&rsquo;t come south now, and the Ricardes are farming somewhere
+in East Africa, the whole lot of them.&nbsp; Valham has got an appointment
+of some sort in the Straits Settlement, and has taken his family with
+him.&nbsp; The Collards are down at their mother&rsquo;s place in Norfolk;
+a German banker has bought their house in Manchester Square.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the Hebways?&rdquo; asked Yeovil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dick Hebway is in India,&rdquo; said Cicely, &ldquo;but his
+mother lives in Paris; poor Hugo, you know, was killed in the war.&nbsp;
+My friends the Allinsons are in Paris too.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s rather a
+clearance, isn&rsquo;t it?&nbsp; However, there are some left, and I
+expect others will come back in time.&nbsp; Pitherby is here; he&rsquo;s
+one of those who are trying to make the best of things under the new
+<i>r&eacute;gime</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He would be,&rdquo; said Yeovil, shortly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a difficult question,&rdquo; said Cicely, &ldquo;whether
+one should stay at home and face the music or go away and live a transplanted
+life under the British flag.&nbsp; Either attitude might be dictated
+by patriotism.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is one thing to face the music, it is another thing to
+dance to it,&rdquo; said Yeovil.</p>
+<p>Cicely poured out some more coffee for herself and changed the conversation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be in to lunch, I suppose?&nbsp; The Clubs are
+not very attractive just now, I believe, and the restaurants are mostly
+hot in the middle of the day.&nbsp; Ronnie Storre is coming in; he&rsquo;s
+here pretty often these days.&nbsp; A rather good-looking young animal
+with something mid-way between talent and genius in the piano-playing
+line.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not long-haired and Semetic or Tcheque or anything of that
+sort, I suppose?&rdquo; asked Yeovil.</p>
+<p>Cicely laughed at the vision of Ronnie conjured up by her husband&rsquo;s
+words.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, beautifully groomed and clipped and Anglo-Saxon.&nbsp;
+I expect you&rsquo;ll like him.&nbsp; He plays bridge almost as well
+as he plays the piano.&nbsp; I suppose you wonder at any one who can
+play bridge well wanting to play the piano.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not quite so intolerant as all that,&rdquo; said
+Yeovil; &ldquo;anyhow I promise to like Ronnie.&nbsp; Is any one else
+coming to lunch?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Joan Mardle will probably drop in, in fact I&rsquo;m afraid
+she&rsquo;s a certainty.&nbsp; She invited herself in that way of hers
+that brooks of no refusal.&nbsp; On the other hand, as a mitigating
+circumstance, there will be a <i>point</i> <i>d&rsquo;asperge</i> omelette
+such as few kitchens could turn out, so don&rsquo;t be late.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yeovil set out for his morning walk with the curious sensation of
+one who starts on a voyage of discovery in a land that is well known
+to him.&nbsp; He turned into the Park at Hyde Park corner and made his
+way along the familiar paths and alleys that bordered the Row.&nbsp;
+The familiarity vanished when he left the region of fenced-in lawns
+and rhododendron bushes and came to the open space that stretched away
+beyond the bandstand.&nbsp; The bandstand was still there, and a military
+band, in sky-blue Saxon uniform, was executing the first item in the
+forenoon programme of music.&nbsp; Around it, instead of the serried
+rows of green chairs that Yeovil remembered, was spread out an acre
+or so of small round tables, most of which had their quota of customers,
+engaged in a steady consumption of lager beer, coffee, lemonade and
+syrups.&nbsp; Further in the background, but well within earshot of
+the band, a gaily painted pagoda-restaurant sheltered a number of more
+commodious tables under its awnings, and gave a hint of convenient indoor
+accommodation for wet or windy weather.&nbsp; Movable screens of trellis-trained
+foliage and climbing roses formed little hedges by means of which any
+particular table could be shut off from its neighbours if semi-privacy
+were desired.&nbsp; One or two decorative advertisements of popularised
+brands of champagne and Rhine wines adorned the outside walls of the
+building, and under the central gable of its upper story was a flamboyant
+portrait of a stern-faced man, whose image and superscription might
+also be found on the newer coinage of the land.&nbsp; A mass of bunting
+hung in folds round the flag-pole on the gable, and blew out now and
+then on a favouring breeze, a long three-coloured strip, black, white,
+and scarlet, and over the whole scene the elm trees towered with an
+absurd sardonic air of nothing having changed around their roots.</p>
+<p>Yeovil stood for a minute or two, taking in every detail of the unfamiliar
+spectacle.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They have certainly accomplished something that we never attempted,&rdquo;
+he muttered to himself.&nbsp; Then he turned on his heel and made his
+way back to the shady walk that ran alongside the Row.&nbsp; At first
+sight little was changed in the aspect of the well-known exercising
+ground.&nbsp; One or two riding masters cantered up and down as of yore,
+with their attendant broods of anxious-faced young girls and awkwardly
+bumping women pupils, while horsey-looking men put marketable animals
+through their paces or drew up to the rails for long conversations with
+horsey-looking friends on foot.&nbsp; Sportingly attired young women,
+sitting astride of their horses, careered by at intervals as though
+an extremely game fox were leading hounds a merry chase a short way
+ahead of them; it all seemed much as usual.</p>
+<p>Presently, from the middle distance a bright patch of colour set
+in a whirl of dust drew rapidly nearer and resolved itself into a group
+of cavalry officers extending their chargers in a smart gallop.&nbsp;
+They were well mounted and sat their horses to perfection, and they
+made a brave show as they raced past Yeovil with a clink and clatter
+and rhythmic thud, thud, of hoofs, and became once more a patch of colour
+in a whirl of dust.&nbsp; An answering glow of colour seemed to have
+burned itself into the grey face of the young man, who had seen them
+pass without appearing to look at them, a stinging rush of blood, accompanied
+by a choking catch in the throat and a hot white blindness across the
+eyes.&nbsp; The weakness of fever broke down at times the rampart of
+outward indifference that a man of Yeovil&rsquo;s temperament builds
+coldly round his heartstrings.</p>
+<p>The Row and its riders had become suddenly detestable to the wanderer;
+he would not run the risk of seeing that insolently joyous cavalcade
+come galloping past again.&nbsp; Beyond a narrow stretch of tree-shaded
+grass lay the placid sunlit water of the Serpentine, and Yeovil made
+a short cut across the turf to reach its gravelled bank.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t you read either English or German?&rdquo; asked
+a policeman who confronted him as he stepped off the turf.</p>
+<p>Yeovil stared at the man and then turned to look at the small neatly-printed
+notice to which the official was imperiously pointing; in two languages
+it was made known that it was forbidden and <i>verboten</i>, punishable
+and <i>straffbar</i>, to walk on the grass.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Three shilling fine,&rdquo; said the policeman, extending
+his hand for the money.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do I pay you?&rdquo; asked Yeovil, feeling almost inclined
+to laugh; &ldquo;I&rsquo;m rather a stranger to the new order of things.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You pay me,&rdquo; said the policeman, &ldquo;and you receive
+a quittance for the sum paid,&rdquo; and he proceeded to tear a counterfoil
+receipt for a three shilling fine from a small pocket book.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;May I ask,&rdquo; said Yeovil, as he handed over the sum demanded
+and received his quittance, &ldquo;what the red and white band on your
+sleeve stands for?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bi-lingual,&rdquo; said the constable, with an air of importance.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Preference is given to members of the Force who qualify in both
+languages.&nbsp; Nearly all the police engaged on Park duty are bi-lingual.&nbsp;
+About as many foreigners as English use the parks nowadays; in fact,
+on a fine Sunday afternoon, you&rsquo;ll find three foreigners to every
+two English.&nbsp; The park habit is more Continental than British,
+I take it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And are there many Germans in the police Force?&rdquo; asked
+Yeovil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, yes, a good few; there had to be,&rdquo; said the constable;
+&ldquo;there were such a lot of resignations when the change came, and
+they had to be filled up somehow.&nbsp; Lots of men what used to be
+in the Force emigrated or found work of some other kind, but everybody
+couldn&rsquo;t take that line; wives and children had to be thought
+of.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tisn&rsquo;t every head of a family that can chuck
+up a job on the chance of finding another.&nbsp; Starvation&rsquo;s
+been the lot of a good many what went out.&nbsp; Those of us that stayed
+on got better pay than we did before, but then of course the duties
+are much more multitudinous.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They must be,&rdquo; said Yeovil, fingering his three shilling
+State document; &ldquo;by the way,&rdquo; he asked, &ldquo;are all the
+grass plots in the Park out of bounds for human feet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Everywhere where you see the notices,&rdquo; said the policeman,
+&ldquo;and that&rsquo;s about three-fourths of the whole grass space;
+there&rsquo;s been a lot of new gravel walks opened up in all directions.&nbsp;
+People don&rsquo;t want to walk on the grass when they&rsquo;ve got
+clean paths to walk on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And with this parting reproof the bi-lingual constable strode heavily
+away, his loss of consideration and self-esteem as a unit of a sometime
+ruling race evidently compensated for to some extent by his enhanced
+importance as an official.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The women and children,&rdquo; thought Yeovil, as he looked
+after the retreating figure; &ldquo;yes, that is one side of the problem.&nbsp;
+The children that have to be fed and schooled, the women folk that have
+to be cared for, an old mother, perhaps, in the home that cannot be
+broken up.&nbsp; The old case of giving hostages.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He followed the path alongside the Serpentine, passing under the
+archway of the bridge and continuing his walk into Kensington Gardens.&nbsp;
+In another moment he was within view of the Peter Pan statue and at
+once observed that it had companions.&nbsp; On one side was a group
+representing a scene from one of the Grimm fairy stories, on the other
+was Alice in conversation with Gryphon and Mockturtle, the episode looking
+distressingly stiff and meaningless in its sculptured form.&nbsp; Two
+other spaces had been cleared in the neighbouring turf, evidently for
+the reception of further statue groups, which Yeovil mentally assigned
+to Struwelpeter and Little Lord Fauntleroy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;German middle-class taste,&rdquo; he commented, &ldquo;but
+in this matter we certainly gave them a lead.&nbsp; I suppose the idea
+is that childish fancy is dead and that it is only decent to erect some
+sort of memorial to it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The day was growing hotter, and the Park had ceased to seem a desirable
+place to loiter in.&nbsp; Yeovil turned his steps homeward, passing
+on his way the bandstand with its surrounding acreage of tables.&nbsp;
+It was now nearly one o&rsquo;clock, and luncheon parties were beginning
+to assemble under the awnings of the restaurant.&nbsp; Lighter refreshments,
+in the shape of sausages and potato salads, were being carried out by
+scurrying waiters to the drinkers of lager beer at the small tables.&nbsp;
+A park orchestra, in brilliant trappings, had taken the place of the
+military band.&nbsp; As Yeovil passed the musicians launched out into
+the tune which the doctor had truly predicted he would hear to repletion
+before he had been many days in London; the &ldquo;National Anthem of
+the <i>fait</i> <i>accompli</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER V: L&rsquo;ART D&rsquo;ETRE COUSINE</h2>
+<p>Joan Mardle had reached forty in the leisurely untroubled fashion
+of a woman who intends to be comely and attractive at fifty.&nbsp; She
+cultivated a jovial, almost joyous manner, with a top-dressing of hearty
+good will and good nature which disarmed strangers and recent acquaintances;
+on getting to know her better they hastily re-armed themselves.&nbsp;
+Some one had once aptly described her as a hedgehog with the protective
+mimicry of a puffball.&nbsp; If there was an awkward remark to be made
+at an inconvenient moment before undesired listeners, Joan invariably
+made it, and when the occasion did not present itself she was usually
+capable of creating it.&nbsp; She was not without a certain popularity,
+the sort of popularity that a dashing highwayman sometimes achieved
+among those who were not in the habit of travelling on his particular
+highway.&nbsp; A great-aunt on her mother&rsquo;s side of the family
+had married so often that Joan imagined herself justified in claiming
+cousin-ship with a large circle of disconnected houses, and treating
+them all on a relationship footing, which theoretical kinship enabled
+her to exact luncheons and other accommodations under the plea of keeping
+the lamp of family life aglow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I felt I simply had to come to-day,&rdquo; she chuckled at
+Yeovil; &ldquo;I was just dying to see the returned traveller.&nbsp;
+Of course, I know perfectly well that neither of you want me, when you
+haven&rsquo;t seen each other for so long and must have heaps and heaps
+to say to one another, but I thought I would risk the odium of being
+the third person on an occasion when two are company and three are a
+nuisance.&nbsp; Wasn&rsquo;t it brave of me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She spoke in full knowledge of the fact that the luncheon party would
+not in any case have been restricted to Yeovil and his wife, having
+seen Ronnie arrive in the hall as she was being shown upstairs.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ronnie Storre is coming, I believe,&rdquo; said Cicely, &ldquo;so
+you&rsquo;re not breaking into a t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ronnie, oh I don&rsquo;t count him,&rdquo; said Joan gaily;
+&ldquo;he&rsquo;s just a boy who looks nice and eats asparagus.&nbsp;
+I hear he&rsquo;s getting to play the piano really well.&nbsp; Such
+a pity.&nbsp; He will grow fat; musicians always do, and it will ruin
+him.&nbsp; I speak feelingly because I&rsquo;m gravitating towards plumpness
+myself.&nbsp; The Divine Architect turns us out fearfully and wonderfully
+built, and the result is charming to the eye, and then He adds another
+chin and two or three extra inches round the waist, and the effect is
+ruined.&nbsp; Fortunately you can always find another Ronnie when this
+one grows fat and uninteresting; the supply of boys who look nice and
+eat asparagus is unlimited.&nbsp; Hullo, Mr. Storre, we were all talking
+about you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing very damaging, I hope?&rdquo; said Ronnie, who had
+just entered the room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, we were merely deciding that, whatever you may do with
+your life, your chin must remain single.&nbsp; When one&rsquo;s chin
+begins to lead a double life one&rsquo;s own opportunities for depravity
+are insensibly narrowed.&nbsp; You needn&rsquo;t tell me that you haven&rsquo;t
+any hankerings after depravity; people with your coloured eyes and hair
+are always depraved.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let me introduce you to my husband, Ronnie,&rdquo; said Cicely,
+&ldquo;and then let&rsquo;s go and begin lunch.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You two must almost feel as if you were honeymooning again,&rdquo;
+said Joan as they sat down; &ldquo;you must have quite forgotten each
+other&rsquo;s tastes and peculiarities since you last met.&nbsp; Old
+Emily Fronding was talking about you yesterday, when I mentioned that
+Murrey was expected home; &lsquo;curious sort of marriage tie,&rsquo;
+she said, in that stupid staring way of hers, &lsquo;when husband and
+wife spend most of their time in different continents.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t
+call it marriage at all.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Nonsense,&rsquo; I said,
+&lsquo;it&rsquo;s the best way of doing things.&nbsp; The Yeovils will
+be a united and devoted couple long after heaps of their married contemporaries
+have trundled through the Divorce Court.&rsquo;&nbsp; I forgot at the
+moment that her youngest girl had divorced her husband last year, and
+that her second girl is rumoured to be contemplating a similar step.&nbsp;
+One can&rsquo;t remember everything.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Joan Mardle was remarkable for being able to remember the smallest
+details in the family lives of two or three hundred acquaintances.</p>
+<p>From personal matters she went with a bound to the political small
+talk of the moment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Official Declaration as to the House of Lords is out at
+last,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;I bought a paper just before coming here,
+but I left it in the Tube.&nbsp; All existing titles are to lapse if
+three successive holders, including the present ones, fail to take the
+oath of allegiance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have any taken it up to the present?&rdquo; asked Yeovil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Only about nineteen, so far, and none of them representing
+very leading families; of course others will come in gradually, as the
+change of Dynasty becomes more and more an accepted fact, and of course
+there will be lots of new creations to fill up the gaps.&nbsp; I hear
+for certain that Pitherby is to get a title of some sort, in recognition
+of his literary labours.&nbsp; He has written a short history of the
+House of Hohenzollern, for use in schools you know, and he&rsquo;s bringing
+out a popular Life of Frederick the Great&mdash;at least he hopes it
+will be popular.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t know that writing was much in his line,&rdquo;
+said Yeovil, &ldquo;beyond the occasional editing of a company prospectus.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I understand his historical researches have given every satisfaction
+in exalted quarters,&rdquo; said Joan; &ldquo;something may be lacking
+in the style, perhaps, but the august approval can make good that defect
+with the style of Baron.&nbsp; Pitherby has such a kind heart; &lsquo;kind
+hearts are more than coronets,&rsquo; we all know, but the two go quite
+well together.&nbsp; And the dear man is not content with his services
+to literature, he&rsquo;s blossoming forth as a liberal patron of the
+arts.&nbsp; He&rsquo;s taken quite a lot of tickets for dear Gorla&rsquo;s
+d&eacute;but; half the second row of the dress-circle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you mean Gorla Mustelford?&rdquo; asked Yeovil, catching
+at the name; &ldquo;what on earth is she having a d&eacute;but about?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo; cried Joan, in loud-voiced amazement; &ldquo;haven&rsquo;t
+you heard?&nbsp; Hasn&rsquo;t Cicely told you?&nbsp; How funny that
+you shouldn&rsquo;t have heard.&nbsp; Why, it&rsquo;s going to be one
+of the events of the season.&nbsp; Everybody&rsquo;s talking about it.&nbsp;
+She&rsquo;s going to do suggestion dancing at the Caravansery Theatre.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good Heavens, what is suggestion dancing?&rdquo; asked Yeovil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, something quite new,&rdquo; explained Joan; &ldquo;at
+any rate the name is quite new and Gorla is new as far as the public
+are concerned, and that is enough to establish the novelty of the thing.&nbsp;
+Among other things she does a dance suggesting the life of a fern; I
+saw one of the rehearsals, and to me it would have equally well suggested
+the life of John Wesley.&nbsp; However, that is probably the fault of
+my imagination&mdash;I&rsquo;ve either got too much or too little.&nbsp;
+Anyhow it is an understood thing that she is to take London by storm.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When I last saw Gorla Mustelford,&rdquo; observed Yeovil,
+&ldquo;she was a rather serious flapper who thought the world was in
+urgent need of regeneration and was not certain whether she would regenerate
+it or take up miniature painting.&nbsp; I forget which she attempted
+ultimately.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She is quite serious about her art,&rdquo; put in Cicely;
+&ldquo;she&rsquo;s studied a good deal abroad and worked hard at mastering
+the technique of her profession.&nbsp; She&rsquo;s not a mere amateur
+with a hankering after the footlights.&nbsp; I fancy she will do well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what do her people say about it?&rdquo; asked Yeovil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, they&rsquo;re simply furious about it,&rdquo; answered
+Joan; &ldquo;the idea of a daughter of the house of Mustelford prancing
+and twisting about the stage for Prussian officers and Hamburg Jews
+to gaze at is a dreadful cup of humiliation for them.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s
+unfortunate, of course, that they should feel so acutely about it, but
+still one can understand their point of view.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see what other point of view they could possibly
+take,&rdquo; said Yeovil sharply; &ldquo;if Gorla thinks that the necessities
+of art, or her own inclinations, demand that she should dance in public,
+why can&rsquo;t she do it in Paris or even Vienna?&nbsp; Anywhere would
+be better, one would think, than in London under present conditions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He had given Joan the indication that she was looking for as to his
+attitude towards the <i>fait</i> <i>accompli</i>.&nbsp; Without asking
+a question she had discovered that husband and wife were divided on
+the fundamental issue that underlay all others at the present moment.&nbsp;
+Cicely was weaving social schemes for the future, Yeovil had come home
+in a frame of mind that threatened the destruction of those schemes,
+or at any rate a serious hindrance to their execution.&nbsp; The situation
+presented itself to Joan&rsquo;s mind with an alluring piquancy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are giving a grand supper-party for Gorla on the night
+of her d&eacute;but, aren&rsquo;t you?&rdquo; she asked Cicely; &ldquo;several
+people spoke to me about it, so I suppose it must be true.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tony Luton and young Storre had taken care to spread the news of
+the projected supper function, in order to ensure against a change of
+plans on Cicely&rsquo;s part.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gorla is a great friend of mine,&rdquo; said Cicely, trying
+to talk as if the conversation had taken a perfectly indifferent turn;
+&ldquo;also I think she deserves a little encouragement after the hard
+work she has been through.&nbsp; I thought it would be doing her a kindness
+to arrange a supper party for her on her first night.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was a moment&rsquo;s silence.&nbsp; Yeovil said nothing, and
+Joan understood the value of being occasionally tongue-tied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The whole question is,&rdquo; continued Cicely, as the silence
+became oppressive, &ldquo;whether one is to mope and hold aloof from
+the national life, or take our share in it; the life has got to go on
+whether we participate in it or not.&nbsp; It seems to me to be more
+patriotic to come down into the dust of the marketplace than to withdraw
+oneself behind walls or beyond the seas.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course the industrial life of the country has to go on,&rdquo;
+said Yeovil; &ldquo;no one could criticise Gorla if she interested herself
+in organising cottage industries or anything of that sort, in which
+she would be helping her own people.&nbsp; That one could understand,
+but I don&rsquo;t think a cosmopolitan concern like the music-hall business
+calls for personal sacrifices from young women of good family at a moment
+like the present.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is just at a moment like the present that the people want
+something to interest them and take them out of themselves,&rdquo; said
+Cicely argumentatively; &ldquo;what has happened, has happened, and
+we can&rsquo;t undo it or escape the consequences.&nbsp; What we can
+do, or attempt to do, is to make things less dreary, and make people
+less unhappy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In a word, more contented,&rdquo; said Yeovil; &ldquo;if I
+were a German statesman, that is the end I would labour for and encourage
+others to labour for, to make the people forget that they were discontented.&nbsp;
+All this work of regalvanising the social side of London life may be
+summed up in the phrase &lsquo;<i>travailler</i> <i>pour</i> <i>le</i>
+<i>roi</i> <i>de</i> <i>Prusse</i>.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think there is any use in discussing the matter
+further,&rdquo; said Cicely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can see that grand supper-party not coming off,&rdquo; said
+Joan provocatively.</p>
+<p>Ronnie looked anxiously at Cicely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can see it coming on, if you&rsquo;re gifted with prophetic
+vision of a reliable kind,&rdquo; said Cicely; &ldquo;of course as Murrey
+doesn&rsquo;t take kindly to the idea of Gorla&rsquo;s enterprise I
+won&rsquo;t have the party here.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll give it at a restaurant,
+that&rsquo;s all.&nbsp; I can see Murrey&rsquo;s point of view, and
+sympathise with it, but I&rsquo;m not going to throw Gorla over.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was another pause of uncomfortably protracted duration.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I say, this is a top-hole omelette,&rdquo; said Ronnie.</p>
+<p>It was his only contribution to the conversation, but it was a valuable
+one.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI: HERR VON KWARL</h2>
+<p>Herr Von Kwarl sat at his favourite table in the Brandenburg Caf&eacute;,
+the new building that made such an imposing show (and did such thriving
+business) at the lower end of what most of its patrons called the Regentstrasse.&nbsp;
+Though the establishment was new it had already achieved its unwritten
+code of customs, and the sanctity of Herr von Kwarl&rsquo;s specially
+reserved table had acquired the authority of a tradition.&nbsp; A set
+of chessmen, a copy of the <i>Kreuz</i> <i>Zeitung</i> and the <i>Times</i>,
+and a slim-necked bottle of Rhenish wine, ice-cool from the cellar,
+were always to be found there early in the forenoon, and the honoured
+guest for whom these preparations were made usually arrived on the scene
+shortly after eleven o&rsquo;clock.&nbsp; For an hour or so he would
+read and silently digest the contents of his two newspapers, and then
+at the first sign of flagging interest on his part, another of the caf&eacute;&rsquo;s
+regular customers would march across the floor, exchange a word or two
+on the affairs of the day, and be bidden with a wave of the hand into
+the opposite seat.&nbsp; A waiter would instantly place the chessboard
+with its marshalled ranks of combatants in the required position, and
+the contest would begin.</p>
+<p>Herr von Kwarl was a heavily built man of mature middle-age, of the
+blond North-German type, with a facial aspect that suggested stupidity
+and brutality.&nbsp; The stupidity of his mien masked an ability and
+shrewdness that was distinctly above the average, and the suggestion
+of brutality was belied by the fact that von Kwarl was as kind-hearted
+a man as one could meet with in a day&rsquo;s journey.&nbsp; Early in
+life, almost before he was in his teens, Fritz von Kwarl had made up
+his mind to accept the world as it was, and to that philosophical resolution,
+steadfastly adhered to, he attributed his excellent digestion and his
+unruffled happiness.&nbsp; Perhaps he confused cause and effect; the
+excellent digestion may have been responsible for at least some of the
+philosophical serenity.</p>
+<p>He was a bachelor of the type that is called confirmed, and which
+might better be labelled consecrated; from his early youth onward to
+his present age he had never had the faintest flickering intention of
+marriage.&nbsp; Children and animals he adored, women and plants he
+accounted somewhat of a nuisance.&nbsp; A world without women and roses
+and asparagus would, he admitted, be robbed of much of its charm, but
+with all their charm these things were tiresome and thorny and capricious,
+always wanting to climb or creep in places where they were not wanted,
+and resolutely drooping and fading away when they were desired to flourish.&nbsp;
+Animals, on the other hand, accepted the world as it was and made the
+best of it, and children, at least nice children, uncontaminated by
+grown-up influences, lived in worlds of their own making.</p>
+<p>Von Kwarl held no acknowledged official position in the country of
+his residence, but it was an open secret that those responsible for
+the real direction of affairs sought his counsel on nearly every step
+that they meditated, and that his counsel was very rarely disregarded.&nbsp;
+Some of the shrewdest and most successful enactments of the ruling power
+were believed to have originated in the brain-cells of the bovine-fronted
+<i>Stammgast</i> of the Brandenburg Caf&eacute;.</p>
+<p>Around the wood-panelled walls of the Caf&eacute; were set at intervals
+well-mounted heads of boar, elk, stag, roe-buck, and other game-beasts
+of a northern forest, while in between were carved armorial escutcheons
+of the principal cities of the lately expanded realm, Magdeburg, Manchester,
+Hamburg, Bremen, Bristol, and so forth.&nbsp; Below these came shelves
+on which stood a wonderful array of stone beer-mugs, each decorated
+with some fantastic device or motto, and most of them pertaining individually
+and sacredly to some regular and unfailing customer.&nbsp; In one particular
+corner of the highest shelf, greatly at his ease and in nowise to be
+disturbed, slept Wotan, the huge grey house-cat, dreaming doubtless
+of certain nimble and audacious mice down in the cellar three floors
+below, whose nimbleness and audacity were as precious to him as the
+forwardness of the birds is to a skilled gun on a grouse moor.&nbsp;
+Once every day Wotan came marching in stately fashion across the polished
+floor, halted mid-way to resume an unfinished toilet operation, and
+then proceeded to pay his leisurely respects to his friend von Kwarl.&nbsp;
+The latter was said to be prouder of this daily demonstration of esteem
+than of his many coveted orders of merit.&nbsp; Several of his friends
+and acquaintances shared with him the distinction of having achieved
+the Black Eagle, but not one of them had ever succeeded in obtaining
+the slightest recognition of their existence from Wotan.</p>
+<p>The daily greeting had been exchanged and the proud grey beast had
+marched away to the music of a slumberous purr.&nbsp; The <i>Kreuz</i>
+<i>Zeitung</i> and the <i>Times</i> underwent a final scrutiny and were
+pushed aside, and von Kwarl glanced aimlessly out at the July sunshine
+bathing the walls and windows of the Piccadilly Hotel.&nbsp; Herr Rebinok,
+the plump little Pomeranian banker, stepped across the floor, almost
+as noiselessly as Wotan had done, though with considerably less grace,
+and some half-minute later was engaged in sliding pawns and knights
+and bishops to and fro on the chess-board in a series of lightning moves
+bewildering to look on.&nbsp; Neither he nor his opponent played with
+the skill that they severally brought to bear on banking and statecraft,
+nor did they conduct their game with the politeness that they punctiliously
+observed in other affairs of life.&nbsp; A running fire of contemptuous
+remarks and aggressive satire accompanied each move, and the mere record
+of the conversation would have given an uninitiated onlooker the puzzling
+impression that an easy and crushing victory was assured to both the
+players.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Aha, he is puzzled.&nbsp; Poor man, he doesn&rsquo;t know
+what to do . . .&nbsp; Oho, he thinks he will move there, does he?&nbsp;
+Much good that will do him. . . .&nbsp; Never have I seen such a mess
+as he is in . . . he cannot do anything, he is absolutely helpless,
+helpless.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, you take my bishop, do you?&nbsp; Much I care for that.&nbsp;
+Nothing.&nbsp; See, I give you check.&nbsp; Ah, now he is in a fright!&nbsp;
+He doesn&rsquo;t know where to go.&nbsp; What a mess he is in . . .
+&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So the game proceeded, with a brisk exchange of pieces and incivilities
+and a fluctuation of fortunes, till the little banker lost his queen
+as the result of an incautious move, and, after several woebegone contortions
+of his shoulders and hands, declined further contest.&nbsp; A sleek-headed
+piccolo rushed forward to remove the board, and the erstwhile combatants
+resumed the courteous dignity that they discarded in their chess-playing
+moments.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you seen the <i>Germania</i> to-day?&rdquo; asked Herr
+Rebinok, as soon as the boy had receded to a respectful distance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said von Kwarl, &ldquo;I never see the <i>Germania</i>.&nbsp;
+I count on you to tell me if there is anything noteworthy in it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It has an article to-day headed, &lsquo;Occupation or Assimilation,&rsquo;&rdquo;
+said the banker.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is of some importance, and well written.&nbsp;
+It is very pessimistic.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Catholic papers are always pessimistic about the things of
+this world,&rdquo; said von Kwarl, &ldquo;just as they are unduly optimistic
+about the things of the next world.&nbsp; What line does it take?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It says that our conquest of Britain can only result in a
+temporary occupation, with a &lsquo;notice to quit&rsquo; always hanging
+over our heads; that we can never hope to assimilate the people of these
+islands in our Empire as a sort of maritime Saxony or Bavaria, all the
+teaching of history is against it; Saxony and Bavaria are part of the
+Empire because of their past history.&nbsp; England is being bound into
+the Empire in spite of her past history; and so forth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The writer of the article has not studied history very deeply,&rdquo;
+said von Kwarl.&nbsp; &ldquo;The impossible thing that he speaks of
+has been done before, and done in these very islands, too.&nbsp; The
+Norman Conquest became an assimilation in comparatively few generations.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, in those days, yes,&rdquo; said the banker, &ldquo;but
+the conditions were altogether different.&nbsp; There was not the rapid
+transmission of news and the means of keeping the public mind instructed
+in what was happening; in fact, one can scarcely say that the public
+mind was there to instruct.&nbsp; There was not the same strong bond
+of brotherhood between men of the same nation that exists now.&nbsp;
+Northumberland was almost as foreign to Devon or Kent as Normandy was.&nbsp;
+And the Church in those days was a great international factor, and the
+Crusades bound men together fighting under one leader for a common cause.&nbsp;
+Also there was not a great national past to be forgotten as there is
+in this case.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are many factors, certainly, that are against us,&rdquo;
+conceded the statesman, &ldquo;but you must also take into account those
+that will help us.&nbsp; In most cases in recent history where the conquered
+have stood out against all attempts at assimilation, there has been
+a religious difference to add to the racial one&mdash;take Poland, for
+instance, and the Catholic parts of Ireland.&nbsp; If the Bretons ever
+seriously begin to assert their nationality as against the French, it
+will be because they have remained more Catholic in practice and sentiment
+than their neighbours.&nbsp; Here there is no such complication; we
+are in the bulk a Protestant nation with a Catholic minority, and the
+same may be said of the British.&nbsp; Then in modern days there is
+the alchemy of Sport and the Drama to bring men of different races amicably
+together.&nbsp; One or two sportsmanlike Germans in a London football
+team will do more to break down racial antagonism than anything that
+Governments or Councils can effect.&nbsp; As for the Stage, it has long
+been international in its tendencies.&nbsp; You can see that every day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The banker nodded his head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;London is not our greatest difficulty,&rdquo; continued von
+Kwarl.&nbsp; &ldquo;You must remember the steady influx of Germans since
+the war; whole districts are changing the complexion of their inhabitants,
+and in some streets you might almost fancy yourself in a German town.&nbsp;
+We can scarcely hope to make much impression on the country districts
+and the provincial towns at present, but you must remember that thousands
+and thousands of the more virile and restless-souled men have emigrated,
+and thousands more will follow their example.&nbsp; We shall fill up
+their places with our own surplus population, as the Teuton races colonised
+England in the old pre-Christian days.&nbsp; That is better, is it not,
+to people the fat meadows of the Thames valley and the healthy downs
+and uplands of Sussex and Berkshire than to go hunting for elbow-room
+among the flies and fevers of the tropics?&nbsp; We have somewhere to
+go to, now, better than the scrub and the veldt and the thorn-jungles.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course, of course,&rdquo; assented Herr Rebinok, &ldquo;but
+while this desirable process of infiltration and assimilation goes on,
+how are you going to provide against the hostility of the conquered
+nation?&nbsp; A people with a great tradition behind them and the ruling
+instinct strongly developed, won&rsquo;t sit with their eyes closed
+and their hands folded while you carry on the process of Germanisation.&nbsp;
+What will keep them quiet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The hopelessness of the situation.&nbsp; For centuries Britain
+has ruled the seas, and been able to dictate to half the world in consequence;
+then she let slip the mastery of the seas, as something too costly and
+onerous to keep up, something which aroused too much jealousy and uneasiness
+in others, and now the seas rule her.&nbsp; Every wave that breaks on
+her shore rattles the keys of her prison.&nbsp; I am no fire-eater,
+Herr Rebinok, but I confess that when I am at Dover, say, or Southampton,
+and see those dark blots on the sea and those grey specks in the sky,
+our battleships and cruisers and aircraft, and realise what they mean
+to us my heart beats just a little quicker.&nbsp; If every German was
+flung out of England to-morrow, in three weeks&rsquo; time we should
+be coming in again on our own terms.&nbsp; With our sea scouts and air
+scouts spread in organised network around, not a shipload of foodstuff
+could reach the country.&nbsp; They know that; they can calculate how
+many days of independence and starvation they could endure, and they
+will make no attempt to bring about such a certain fiasco.&nbsp; Brave
+men fight for a forlorn hope, but the bravest do not fight for an issue
+they know to be hopeless.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is so,&rdquo; said Herr Rebinok, &ldquo;as things are
+at present they can do nothing from within, absolutely nothing.&nbsp;
+We have weighed all that beforehand.&nbsp; But, as the <i>Germania</i>
+points out, there is another Britain beyond the seas.&nbsp; Supposing
+the Court at Delhi were to engineer a league&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A league?&nbsp; A league with whom?&rdquo; interrupted the
+statesman.&nbsp; &ldquo;Russia we can watch and hold.&nbsp; We are rather
+nearer to its western frontier than Delhi is, and we could throttle
+its Baltic trade at five hours&rsquo; notice.&nbsp; France and Holland
+are not inclined to provoke our hostility; they would have everything
+to lose by such a course.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are other forces in the world that might be arrayed
+against us,&rdquo; argued the banker; &ldquo;the United States, Japan,
+Italy, they all have navies.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Does the teaching of history show you that it is the strong
+Power, armed and ready, that has to suffer from the hostility of the
+world?&rdquo; asked von Kwarl.&nbsp; &ldquo;As far as sentiment goes,
+perhaps, but not in practice.&nbsp; The danger has always been for the
+weak, dismembered nation.&nbsp; Think you a moment, has the enfeebled
+scattered British Empire overseas no undefended territories that are
+a temptation to her neighbours?&nbsp; Has Japan nothing to glean where
+we have harvested?&nbsp; Are there no North American possessions which
+might slip into other keeping?&nbsp; Has Russia herself no traditional
+temptations beyond the Oxus?&nbsp; Mind you, we are not making the mistake
+Napoleon made, when he forced all Europe to be for him or against him.&nbsp;
+We threaten no world aggressions, we are satiated where he was insatiable.&nbsp;
+We have cast down one overshadowing Power from the face of the world,
+because it stood in our way, but we have made no attempt to spread our
+branches over all the space that it covered.&nbsp; We have not tried
+to set up a tributary Canadian republic or to partition South Africa;
+we have dreamed no dream of making ourselves Lords of Hindostan.&nbsp;
+On the contrary, we have given proof of our friendly intentions towards
+our neighbours.&nbsp; We backed France up the other day in her squabble
+with Spain over the Moroccan boundaries, and proclaimed our opinion
+that the Republic had as indisputable a mission on the North Africa
+coast as we have in the North Sea.&nbsp; That is not the action or the
+language of aggression.&nbsp; No,&rdquo; continued von Kwarl, after
+a moment&rsquo;s silence, &ldquo;the world may fear us and dislike us,
+but, for the present at any rate, there will be no leagues against us.&nbsp;
+No, there is one rock on which our attempt at assimilation will founder
+or find firm anchorage.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And that is&mdash;?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The youth of the country, the generation that is at the threshold
+now.&nbsp; It is them that we must capture.&nbsp; We must teach them
+to learn, and coax them to forget.&nbsp; In course of time Anglo-Saxon
+may blend with German, as the Elbe Saxons and the Bavarians and Swabians
+have blended with the Prussians into a loyal united people under the
+sceptre of the Hohenzollerns.&nbsp; Then we should be doubly strong,
+Rome and Carthage rolled into one, an Empire of the West greater than
+Charlemagne ever knew.&nbsp; Then we could look Slav and Latin and Asiatic
+in the face and keep our place as the central dominant force of the
+civilised world.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The speaker paused for a moment and drank a deep draught of wine,
+as though he were invoking the prosperity of that future world-power.&nbsp;
+Then he resumed in a more level tone:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On the other hand, the younger generation of Britons may grow
+up in hereditary hatred, repulsing all our overtures, forgetting nothing
+and forgiving nothing, waiting and watching for the time when some weakness
+assails us, when some crisis entangles us, when we cannot be everywhere
+at once.&nbsp; Then our work will be imperilled, perhaps undone.&nbsp;
+There lies the danger, there lies the hope, the younger generation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is another danger,&rdquo; said the banker, after he
+had pondered over von Kwarl&rsquo;s remarks for a moment or two amid
+the incense-clouds of a fat cigar; &ldquo;a danger that I foresee in
+the immediate future; perhaps not so much a danger as an element of
+exasperation which may ultimately defeat your plans.&nbsp; The law as
+to military service will have to be promulgated shortly, and that cannot
+fail to be bitterly unpopular.&nbsp; The people of these islands will
+have to be brought into line with the rest of the Empire in the matter
+of military training and military service, and how will they like that?&nbsp;
+Will not the enforcing of such a measure enfuriate them against us?&nbsp;
+Remember, they have made great sacrifices to avoid the burden of military
+service.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear God,&rdquo; exclaimed Herr von Kwarl, &ldquo;as you say,
+they have made sacrifices on that altar!&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII: THE LURE</h2>
+<p>Cicely had successfully insisted on having her own way concerning
+the projected supper-party; Yeovil had said nothing further in opposition
+to it, whatever his feelings on the subject might be.&nbsp; Having gained
+her point, however, she was anxious to give her husband the impression
+of having been consulted, and to put her victory as far as possible
+on the footing of a compromise.&nbsp; It was also rather a relief to
+be able to discuss the matter out of range of Joan&rsquo;s disconcerting
+tongue and observant eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope you are not really annoyed about this silly supper-party,&rdquo;
+she said on the morning before the much-talked-of first night.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I had pledged myself to give it, so I couldn&rsquo;t back out
+without seeming mean to Gorla, and in any case it would have been impolitic
+to cry off.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why impolitic?&rdquo; asked Yeovil coldly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It would give offence in quarters where I don&rsquo;t want
+to give offence,&rdquo; said Cicely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In quarters where the <i>fait</i> <i>accompli</i> is an object
+of solicitude,&rdquo; said Yeovil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look here,&rdquo; said Cicely in her most disarming manner,
+&ldquo;it&rsquo;s just as well to be perfectly frank about the whole
+matter.&nbsp; If one wants to live in the London of the present day
+one must make up one&rsquo;s mind to accept the <i>fait</i> <i>accompli</i>
+with as good a grace as possible.&nbsp; I do want to live in London,
+and I don&rsquo;t want to change my way of living and start under different
+conditions in some other place.&nbsp; I can&rsquo;t face the prospect
+of tearing up my life by the roots; I feel certain that I shouldn&rsquo;t
+bear transplanting.&nbsp; I can&rsquo;t imagine myself recreating my
+circle of interests in some foreign town or colonial centre or even
+in a country town in England.&nbsp; India I couldn&rsquo;t stand.&nbsp;
+London is not merely a home to me, it is a world, and it happens to
+be just the world that suits me and that I am suited to.&nbsp; The German
+occupation, or whatever one likes to call it, is a calamity, but it&rsquo;s
+not like a molten deluge from Vesuvius that need send us all scuttling
+away from another Pompeii.&nbsp; Of course,&rdquo; she added, &ldquo;there
+are things that jar horribly on one, even when one has got more or less
+accustomed to them, but one must just learn to be philosophical and
+bear them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Supposing they are not bearable?&rdquo; said Yeovil; &ldquo;during
+the few days that I&rsquo;ve been in the land I&rsquo;ve seen things
+that I cannot imagine will ever be bearable.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is because they&rsquo;re new to you,&rdquo; said Cicely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t wish that they should ever come to seem bearable,&rdquo;
+retorted Yeovil.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been bred and reared as a unit
+of a ruling race; I don&rsquo;t want to find myself settling down resignedly
+as a member of an enslaved one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no need to make things out worse than they are,&rdquo;
+protested Cicely.&nbsp; &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve had a military disaster on
+a big scale, and there&rsquo;s been a great political dislocation in
+consequence.&nbsp; But there&rsquo;s no reason why everything shouldn&rsquo;t
+right itself in time, as it has done after other similar disasters in
+the history of nations.&nbsp; We are not scattered to the winds or wiped
+off the face of the earth, we are still an important racial unit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A racial unit in a foreign Empire,&rdquo; commented Yeovil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We may arrive at the position of being the dominant factor
+in that Empire,&rdquo; said Cicely, &ldquo;impressing our national characteristics
+on it, and perhaps dictating its dynastic future and the whole trend
+of its policy.&nbsp; Such things have happened in history.&nbsp; Or
+we may become strong enough to throw off the foreign connection at a
+moment when it can be done effectually and advantageously.&nbsp; But
+meanwhile it is necessary to preserve our industrial life and our social
+life, and for that reason we must accommodate ourselves to present circumstances,
+however distasteful they may be.&nbsp; Emigration to some colonial wilderness,
+or holding ourselves rigidly aloof from the life of the capital, won&rsquo;t
+help matters.&nbsp; Really, Murrey, if you will think things over a
+bit, you will see that the course I am following is the one dictated
+by sane patriotism.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whom the gods wish to render harmless they first afflict with
+sanity,&rdquo; said Yeovil bitterly.&nbsp; &ldquo;You may be content
+to wait for a hundred years or so, for this national revival to creep
+and crawl us back into a semblance of independence and world-importance.&nbsp;
+I&rsquo;m afraid I haven&rsquo;t the patience or the philosophy to sit
+down comfortably and wait for a change of fortune that won&rsquo;t come
+in my time&mdash;if it comes at all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Cicely changed the drift of the conversation; she had only introduced
+the argument for the purpose of defining her point of view and accustoming
+Yeovil to it, as one leads a nervous horse up to an unfamiliar barrier
+that he is required eventually to jump.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In any case,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;from the immediately
+practical standpoint England is the best place for you till you have
+shaken off all traces of that fever.&nbsp; Pass the time away somehow
+till the hunting begins, and then go down to the East Wessex country;
+they are looking out for a new master after this season, and if you
+were strong enough you might take it on for a while.&nbsp; You could
+go to Norway for fishing in the summer and hunt the East Wessex in the
+winter.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll come down and do a bit of hunting too, and
+we&rsquo;ll have house-parties, and get a little golf in between whiles.&nbsp;
+It will be like old times.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yeovil looked at his wife and laughed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who was that old fellow who used to hunt his hounds regularly
+through the fiercest times of the great Civil War?&nbsp; There is a
+picture of him, by Caton Woodville, I think, leading his pack between
+King Charles&rsquo;s army and the Parliament forces just as some battle
+was going to begin.&nbsp; I have often thought that the King must have
+disliked him rather more than he disliked the men who were in arms against
+him; they at least cared, one way or the other.&nbsp; I fancy that old
+chap would have a great many imitators nowadays, though, when it came
+to be a question of sport against soldiering.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t know
+whether anyone has said it, but one might almost assert that the German
+victory was won on the golf-links of Britain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see why you should saddle one particular form
+of sport with a special responsibility,&rdquo; protested Cicely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course not,&rdquo; said Yeovil, &ldquo;except that it absorbed
+perhaps more of the energy and attention of the leisured class than
+other sports did, and in this country the leisured class was the only
+bulwark we had against official indifference.&nbsp; The working classes
+had a big share of the apathy, and, indirectly, a greater share of the
+responsibility, because the voting power was in their hands.&nbsp; They
+had not the leisure, however, to sit down and think clearly what the
+danger was; their own industrial warfare was more real to them than
+anything that was threatening from the nation that they only knew from
+samples of German clerks and German waiters.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In any case,&rdquo; said Cicely, &ldquo;as regards the hunting,
+there is no Civil War or national war raging just now, and there is
+no immediate likelihood of one.&nbsp; A good many hunting seasons will
+have to come and go before we can think of a war of independence as
+even a distant possibility, and in the meantime hunting and horse-breeding
+and country sports generally are the things most likely to keep Englishmen
+together on the land.&nbsp; That is why so many men who hate the German
+occupation are trying to keep field sports alive, and in the right hands.&nbsp;
+However, I won&rsquo;t go on arguing.&nbsp; You and I always think things
+out for ourselves and decide for ourselves, which is much the best way
+in the long run.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Cicely slipped away to her writing-room to make final arrangements
+over the telephone for the all-important supper-party, leaving Yeovil
+to turn over in his mind the suggestion that she had thrown out.&nbsp;
+It was an obvious lure, a lure to draw him away from the fret and fury
+that possessed him so inconveniently, but its obvious nature did not
+detract from its effectiveness.&nbsp; Yeovil had pleasant recollections
+of the East Wessex, a cheery little hunt that afforded good sport in
+an unpretentious manner, a joyous thread of life running through a rather
+sleepy countryside, like a merry brook careering through a placid valley.&nbsp;
+For a man coming slowly and yet eagerly back to the activities of life
+from the weariness of a long fever, the prospect of a leisurely season
+with the East Wessex was singularly attractive, and side by side with
+its attractiveness there was a tempting argument in favour of yielding
+to its attractions.&nbsp; Among the small squires and yeoman farmers,
+doctors, country tradesmen, auctioneers and so forth who would gather
+at the covert-side and at the hunt breakfasts, there might be a local
+nucleus of revolt against the enslavement of the land, a discouraged
+and leaderless band waiting for some one to mould their resistance into
+effective shape and keep their loyalty to the old dynasty and the old
+national cause steadily burning.&nbsp; Yeovil could see himself taking
+up that position, stimulating the spirit of hostility to the <i>fait</i>
+<i>accompli</i>, organising stubborn opposition to every Germanising
+influence that was brought into play, schooling the youth of the countryside
+to look steadily Delhiward.&nbsp; That was the bait that Yeovil threw
+out to his conscience, while slowly considering the other bait that
+was appealing so strongly to his senses.&nbsp; The dry warm scent of
+the stable, the nip of the morning air, the pleasant squelch-squelch
+of the saddle leather, the moist earthy fragrance of the autumn woods
+and wet fallows, the cold white mists of winter days, the whimper of
+hounds and the hot restless pushing of the pack through ditch and hedgerow
+and undergrowth, the birds that flew up and clucked and chattered as
+you passed, the hearty greeting and pleasant gossip in farmhouse kitchens
+and market-day bar-parlours&mdash;all these remembered delights of the
+chase marshalled themselves in the brain, and made a cumulative appeal
+that came with special intensity to a man who was a little tired of
+his wanderings, more than a little drawn away from the jarring centres
+of life.&nbsp; The hot London sunshine baking the soot-grimed walls
+and the ugly incessant hoot and grunt of the motor traffic gave an added
+charm to the vision of hill and hollow and copse that flickered in Yeovil&rsquo;s
+mind.&nbsp; Slowly, with a sensuous lingering over detail, his imagination
+carried him down to a small, sleepy, yet withal pleasantly bustling
+market town, and placed him unerringly in a wide straw-littered yard,
+half-full of men and quarter-full of horses, with a bob-tailed sheep-dog
+or two trying not to get in everybody&rsquo;s way, but insisting on
+being in the thick of things.&nbsp; The horses gradually detached themselves
+from the crowd of unimportant men and came one by one into momentary
+prominence, to be discussed and appraised for their good points and
+bad points, and finally to be bid for.&nbsp; And always there was one
+horse that detached itself conspicuously from the rest, the ideal hunter,
+or at any rate, Yeovil&rsquo;s ideal of the ideal hunter.&nbsp; Mentally
+it was put through its paces before him, its pedigree and brief history
+recounted to him; mentally he saw a stable lad put it over a jump or
+two, with credit to all concerned, and inevitably he saw himself outbidding
+less discerning rivals and securing the desired piece of horseflesh,
+to be the chief glory and mainstay of his hunting stable, to carry him
+well and truly and cleverly through many a joyous long-to-be-remembered
+run.&nbsp; That scene had been one of the recurring half-waking dreams
+of his long days of weakness in the far-away Finnish nursing-home, a
+dream sometimes of tantalising mockery, sometimes of pleasure in the
+foretaste of a joy to come.&nbsp; And now it need scarcely be a dream
+any longer, he had only to go down at the right moment and take an actual
+part in his oft-rehearsed vision.&nbsp; Everything would be there, exactly
+as his imagination had placed it, even down to the bob-tailed sheep-dogs;
+the horse of his imagining would be there waiting for him, or if not
+absolutely the ideal animal, something very like it.&nbsp; He might
+even go beyond the limits of his dream and pick up a couple of desirable
+animals&mdash;there would probably be fewer purchasers for good class
+hunters in these days than of yore.&nbsp; And with the coming of this
+reflection his dream faded suddenly and his mind came back with a throb
+of pain to the things he had for the moment forgotten, the weary, hateful
+things that were symbolised for him by the standard that floated yellow
+and black over the frontage of Buckingham Palace.</p>
+<p>Yeovil wandered down to his snuggery, a mood of listless dejection
+possessing him.&nbsp; He fidgetted aimlessly with one or two books and
+papers, filled a pipe, and half filled a waste-paper basket with torn
+circulars and accumulated writing-table litter.&nbsp; Then he lit the
+pipe and settled down in his most comfortable armchair with an old note-book
+in his hand.&nbsp; It was a sort of disjointed diary, running fitfully
+through the winter months of some past years, and recording noteworthy
+days with the East Wessex.</p>
+<p>And over the telephone Cicely talked and arranged and consulted with
+men and women to whom the joys of a good gallop or the love of a stricken
+fatherland were as letters in an unknown alphabet.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII: THE FIRST-NIGHT</h2>
+<p>Huge posters outside the Caravansery Theatre of Varieties announced
+the first performance of the uniquely interesting Suggestion Dances,
+interpreted by the Hon. Gorla Mustelford.&nbsp; An impressionist portrait
+of a rather severe-looking young woman gave the public some idea of
+what the <i>danseuse</i> might be like in appearance, and the further
+information was added that her performance was the greatest dramatic
+event of the season.&nbsp; Yet another piece of information was conveyed
+to the public a few minutes after the doors had opened, in the shape
+of large notices bearing the brief announcement, &ldquo;house full.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+For the first-night function most of the seats had been reserved for
+specially-invited guests or else bespoken by those who considered it
+due to their own importance to be visible on such an occasion.</p>
+<p>Even at the commencement of the ordinary programme of the evening
+(Gorla was not due to appear till late in the list) the theatre was
+crowded with a throng of chattering, expectant human beings; it seemed
+as though every one had come early to see every one else arrive.&nbsp;
+As a matter of fact it was the rumour-heralded arrival of one personage
+in particular that had drawn people early to their seats and given a
+double edge to the expectancy of the moment.</p>
+<p>At first sight and first hearing the bulk of the audience seemed
+to comprise representatives of the chief European races in well-distributed
+proportions, but if one gave it closer consideration it could be seen
+that the distribution was geographically rather than ethnographically
+diversified.&nbsp; Men and women there were from Paris, Munich, Rome,
+Moscow and Vienna, from Sweden and Holland and divers other cities and
+countries, but in the majority of cases the Jordan Valley had supplied
+their forefathers with a common cradle-ground.&nbsp; The lack of a fire
+burning on a national altar seemed to have drawn them by universal impulse
+to the congenial flare of the footlights, whether as artists, producers,
+impresarios, critics, agents, go-betweens, or merely as highly intelligent
+and fearsomely well-informed spectators.&nbsp; They were prominent in
+the chief seats, they were represented, more sparsely but still in fair
+numbers, in the cheaper places, and everywhere they were voluble, emphatic,
+sanguine or sceptical, prodigal of word and gesture, with eyes that
+seemed to miss nothing and acknowledge nothing, and a general restless
+dread of not being seen and noticed.&nbsp; Of the theatre-going London
+public there was also a fair muster, more particularly centred in the
+less expensive parts of the house, while in boxes, stalls and circles
+a sprinkling of military uniforms gave an unfamiliar tone to the scene
+in the eyes of those who had not previously witnessed a first-night
+performance under the new conditions.</p>
+<p>Yeovil, while standing aloof from his wife&rsquo;s participation
+in this social event, had made private arrangements for being a personal
+spectator of the scene; as one of the ticket-buying public he had secured
+a seat in the back row of a low-priced gallery, whence he might watch,
+observant and unobserved, the much talked-of d&eacute;but of Gorla Mustelford,
+and the writing of a new chapter in the history of the <i>fait</i> <i>accompli</i>.&nbsp;
+Around him he noticed an incessant undercurrent of jangling laughter,
+an unending give-and-take of meaningless mirthless jest and catchword.&nbsp;
+He had noticed the same thing in streets and public places since his
+arrival in London, a noisy, empty interchange of chaff and laughter
+that he had been at a loss to account for.&nbsp; The Londoner is not
+well adapted for the irresponsible noisiness of jesting tongue that
+bubbles up naturally in a Southern race, and the effort to be volatile
+was the more noticeable because it so obviously was an effort.&nbsp;
+Turning over the pages of a book that told the story of Bulgarian social
+life in the days of Turkish rule, Yeovil had that morning come across
+a passage that seemed to throw some light on the thing that had puzzled
+him:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bondage has this one advantage: it makes a nation merry.&nbsp;
+Where far-reaching ambition has no scope for its development the community
+squanders its energy on the trivial and personal cares of its daily
+life, and seeks relief and recreation in simple and easily obtained
+material enjoyment.&rdquo;&nbsp; The writer was a man who had known
+bondage, so he spoke at any rate with authority.&nbsp; Of the London
+of the moment it could not, however, be said with any truth that it
+was merry, but merely that its inhabitants made desperate endeavour
+not to appear crushed under their catastrophe.&nbsp; Surrounded as he
+was now with a babble of tongues and shrill mechanical repartee, Yeovil&rsquo;s
+mind went back to the book and its account of a theatre audience in
+the Turkish days of Bulgaria, with its light and laughing crowd of critics
+and spectators.&nbsp; Bulgaria!&nbsp; The thought of that determined
+little nation came to him with a sharp sense of irony.&nbsp; There was
+a people who had not thought it beneath the dignity of their manhood
+to learn the trade and discipline of arms.&nbsp; They had their reward;
+torn and exhausted and debt-encumbered from their campaigns, they were
+masters in their own house, the Bulgarian flag flew over the Bulgarian
+mountains.&nbsp; And Yeovil stole a glance at the crown of Charlemagne
+set over the Royal box.</p>
+<p>In a capacious box immediately opposite the one set aside for royalty
+the Lady Shalem sat in well-considered prominence, confident that every
+press critic and reporter would note her presence, and that one or two
+of them would describe, or misdescribe, her toilet.&nbsp; Already quite
+a considerable section of the audience knew her by name, and the frequency
+with which she graciously nodded towards various quarters of the house
+suggested the presence of a great many personal acquaintances.&nbsp;
+She had attained to that desirable feminine altitude of purse and position
+when people who go about everywhere know you well by sight and have
+never met your dress before.</p>
+<p>Lady Shalem was a woman of commanding presence, of that type which
+suggests a consciousness that the command may not necessarily be obeyed;
+she had observant eyes and a well-managed voice.&nbsp; Her successes
+in life had been worked for, but they were also to some considerable
+extent the result of accident.&nbsp; Her public history went back to
+the time when, in the person of her husband, Mr. Conrad Dort, she had
+contested two hopeless and very expensive Parliamentary elections on
+behalf of her party; on each occasion the declaration of the poll had
+shown a heavy though reduced majority on the wrong side, but she might
+have perpetrated an apt misquotation of the French monarch&rsquo;s traditional
+message after the defeat of Pavia, and assured the world &ldquo;all
+is lost save honours.&rdquo;&nbsp; The forthcoming Honours List had
+duly proclaimed the fact that Conrad Dort, Esquire, had entered Parliament
+by another door as Baron Shalem, of Wireskiln, in the county of Suffolk.&nbsp;
+Success had crowned the lady&rsquo;s efforts as far as the achievement
+of the title went, but her social ambitions seemed unlikely to make
+further headway.&nbsp; The new Baron and his wife, their title and money
+notwithstanding, did not &ldquo;go down&rdquo; in their particular segment
+of county society, and in London there were other titles and incomes
+to compete with.&nbsp; People were willing to worship the Golden Calf,
+but allowed themselves a choice of altars.&nbsp; No one could justly
+say that the Shalems were either oppressively vulgar or insufferably
+bumptious; probably the chief reason for their lack of popularity was
+their intense and obvious desire to be popular.&nbsp; They kept open
+house in such an insistently open manner that they created a social
+draught.&nbsp; The people who accepted their invitations for the second
+or third time were not the sort of people whose names gave importance
+to a dinner party or a house gathering.&nbsp; Failure, in a thinly-disguised
+form, attended the assiduous efforts of the Shalems to play a leading
+r&ocirc;le in the world that they had climbed into.&nbsp; The Baron
+began to observe to his acquaintances that &ldquo;gadding about&rdquo;
+and entertaining on a big scale was not much in his line; a quiet after-dinner
+pipe and talk with some brother legislator was his ideal way of spending
+an evening.</p>
+<p>Then came the great catastrophe, involving the old order of society
+in the national overthrow.&nbsp; Lady Shalem, after a decent interval
+of patriotic mourning, began to look around her and take stock of her
+chances and opportunities under the new r&eacute;gime.&nbsp; It was
+easier to achieve distinction as a titled oasis in the social desert
+that London had become than it had been to obtain recognition as a new
+growth in a rather overcrowded field.&nbsp; The observant eyes and agile
+brain quickly noted this circumstance, and her ladyship set to work
+to adapt herself to the altered conditions that governed her world.&nbsp;
+Lord Shalem was one of the few Peers who kissed the hand of the new
+Sovereign, his wife was one of the few hostesses who attempted to throw
+a semblance of gaiety and lavish elegance over the travesty of a London
+season following the year of disaster.&nbsp; The world of tradesmen
+and purveyors and caterers, and the thousands who were dependent on
+them for employment, privately blessed the example set by Shalem House,
+whatever their feelings might be towards the <i>fait</i> <i>accompli</i>,
+and the august newcomer who had added an old Saxon kingdom and some
+of its accretions to the Teutonic realm of Charlemagne was duly beholden
+to an acquired subject who was willing to forget the bitterness of defeat
+and to help others to forget it also.&nbsp; Among other acts of Imperial
+recognition an earldom was being held in readiness for the Baron who
+had known how to accept accomplished facts with a good grace.&nbsp;
+One of the wits of the Cockatrice Club had asserted that the new earl
+would take as supporters for his coat of arms a lion and a unicorn oubli&eacute;.</p>
+<p>In the box with Lady Shalem was the Gr&auml;fin von Tolb, a well-dressed
+woman of some fifty-six years, comfortable and placid in appearance,
+yet alert withal, rather suggesting a thoroughly wide-awake dormouse.&nbsp;
+Rich, amiable and intelligent were the adjectives which would best have
+described her character and her life-story.&nbsp; In her own rather
+difficult social circle at Paderborn she had earned for herself the
+reputation of being one of the most tactful and discerning hostesses
+in Germany, and it was generally suspected that she had come over and
+taken up her residence in London in response to a wish expressed in
+high quarters; the lavish hospitality which she dispensed at her house
+in Berkeley Square was a considerable reinforcement to the stricken
+social life of the metropolis.</p>
+<p>In a neighbouring box Cicely Yeovil presided over a large and lively
+party, which of course included Ronnie Storre, who was for once in a
+way in a chattering mood, and also included an American dowager, who
+had never been known to be in anything else.&nbsp; A tone of literary
+distinction was imparted to the group by the presence of Augusta Smith,
+better known under her pen-name of Rhapsodic Pantril, author of a play
+that had had a limited but well-advertised success in Sheffield and
+the United States of America, author also of a book of reminiscences,
+entitled &ldquo;Things I Cannot Forget.&rdquo;&nbsp; She had beautiful
+eyes, a knowledge of how to dress, and a pleasant disposition, cankered
+just a little by a perpetual dread of the non-recognition of her genius.&nbsp;
+As the woman, Augusta Smith, she probably would have been unreservedly
+happy; as the super-woman, Rhapsodic Pantril, she lived within the border-line
+of discontent.&nbsp; Her most ordinary remarks were framed with the
+view of arresting attention; some one once said of her that she ordered
+a sack of potatoes with the air of one who is making enquiry for a love-philtre.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you see what colour the curtain is?&rdquo; she asked Cicely,
+throwing a note of intense meaning into her question.</p>
+<p>Cicely turned quickly and looked at the drop-curtain.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rather a nice blue,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alexandrine blue&mdash;<i>my</i> colour&mdash;the colour of
+hope,&rdquo; said Rhapsodie impressively.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It goes well with the general colour-scheme,&rdquo; said Cicely,
+feeling that she was hardly rising to the occasion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say, is it really true that His Majesty is coming?&rdquo;
+asked the lively American dowager.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve put on my
+nooest frock and my best diamonds on purpose, and I shall be mortified
+to death if he doesn&rsquo;t see them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There!&rdquo; pouted Ronnie, &ldquo;I felt certain you&rsquo;d
+put them on for me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why no, I should have put on rubies and orange opals for you.&nbsp;
+People with our colour of hair always like barbaric display&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They don&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said Ronnie, &ldquo;they have chaste
+cold tastes.&nbsp; You are absolutely mistaken.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I think I ought to know!&rdquo; protested the dowager;
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve lived longer in the world than you have, anyway.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Ronnie with devastating truthfulness, &ldquo;but
+my hair has been this colour longer than yours has.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peace was restored by the opportune arrival of a middle-aged man
+of blond North-German type, with an expression of brutality on his rather
+stupid face, who sat in the front of the box for a few minutes on a
+visit of ceremony to Cicely.&nbsp; His appearance caused a slight buzz
+of recognition among the audience, and if Yeovil had cared to make enquiry
+of his neighbours he might have learned that this decorated and obviously
+important personage was the redoubtable von Kwarl, artificer and shaper
+of much of the statecraft for which other men got the public credit.</p>
+<p>The orchestra played a selection from the &ldquo;Gondola Girl,&rdquo;
+which was the leading musical-comedy of the moment.&nbsp; Most of the
+audience, those in the more expensive seats at any rate, heard the same
+airs two or three times daily, at restaurant lunches, teas, dinners
+and suppers, and occasionally in the Park; they were justified therefore
+in treating the music as a background to slightly louder conversation
+than they had hitherto indulged in.&nbsp; The music came to an end,
+episode number two in the evening&rsquo;s entertainment was signalled,
+the curtain of Alexandrine blue rolled heavily upward, and a troupe
+of performing wolves was presented to the public.&nbsp; Yeovil had encountered
+wolves in North Africa deserts and in Siberian forest and wold, he had
+seen them at twilight stealing like dark shadows across the snow, and
+heard their long whimpering howl in the darkness amid the pines; he
+could well understand how a magic lore had grown up round them through
+the ages among the peoples of four continents, how their name had passed
+into a hundred strange sayings and inspired a hundred traditions.&nbsp;
+And now he saw them ride round the stage on tricycles, with grotesque
+ruffles round their necks and clown caps on their heads, their eyes
+blinking miserably in the blaze of the footlights.&nbsp; In response
+to the applause of the house a stout, atrociously smiling man in evening
+dress came forward and bowed; he had had nothing to do either with the
+capture or the training of the animals, having bought them ready for
+use from a continental emporium where wild beasts were prepared for
+the music-hall market, but he continued bowing and smiling till the
+curtain fell.</p>
+<p>Two American musicians with comic tendencies (denoted by the elaborate
+rags and tatters of their costumes) succeeded the wolves.&nbsp; Their
+musical performance was not without merit, but their comic &ldquo;business&rdquo;
+seemed to have been invented long ago by some man who had patented a
+monopoly of all music-hall humour and forthwith retired from the trade.&nbsp;
+Some day, Yeovil reflected, the rights of the monopoly might expire
+and new &ldquo;business&rdquo; become available for the knockabout profession.</p>
+<p>The audience brightened considerably when item number five of the
+programme was signalled.&nbsp; The orchestra struck up a rollicking
+measure and Tony Luton made his entrance amid a rousing storm of applause.&nbsp;
+He was dressed as an errand-boy of some West End shop, with a livery
+and box-tricycle, as spruce and decorative as the most ambitious errand-boy
+could see himself in his most ambitious dreams.&nbsp; His song was a
+lively and very audacious chronicle of life behind the scenes of a big
+retail establishment, and sparkled with allusions which might fitly
+have been described as suggestive&mdash;at any rate they appeared to
+suggest meanings to the audience quite as clearly as Gorla Mustelford&rsquo;s
+dances were likely to do, even with the aid, in her case, of long explanations
+on the programmes.&nbsp; When the final verse seemed about to reach
+an unpardonable climax a stage policeman opportunely appeared and moved
+the lively songster on for obstructing the imaginary traffic of an imaginary
+Bond Street.&nbsp; The house received the new number with genial enthusiasm,
+and mingled its applause with demands for an earlier favourite.&nbsp;
+The orchestra struck up the familiar air, and in a few moments the smart
+errand-boy, transformed now into a smart jockey, was singing &ldquo;They
+quaff the gay bubbly in Eccleston Square&rdquo; to an audience that
+hummed and nodded its unstinted approval.</p>
+<p>The next number but one was the Gorla Mustelford d&eacute;but, and
+the house settled itself down to yawn and fidget and chatter for ten
+or twelve minutes while a troupe of talented Japanese jugglers performed
+some artistic and quite uninteresting marvels with fans and butterflies
+and lacquer boxes.&nbsp; The interval of waiting was not destined, however,
+to be without its interest; in its way it provided the one really important
+and dramatic moment of the evening.&nbsp; One or two uniforms and evening
+toilettes had already made their appearance in the Imperial box; now
+there was observable in that quarter a slight commotion, an unobtrusive
+reshuffling and reseating, and then every eye in the suddenly quiet
+semi-darkened house focussed itself on one figure.&nbsp; There was no
+public demonstration from the newly-loyal, it had been particularly
+wished that there should be none, but a ripple of whisper went through
+the vast audience from end to end.&nbsp; Majesty had arrived.&nbsp;
+The Japanese marvel-workers went through their display with even less
+attention than before.&nbsp; Lady Shalem, sitting well in the front
+of her box, lowered her observant eyes to her programme and her massive
+bangles.&nbsp; The evidence of her triumph did not need staring at.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX: AN EVENING &ldquo;TO BE REMEMBERED&rdquo;</h2>
+<p>To the uninitiated or unappreciative the dancing of Gorla Mustelford
+did not seem widely different from much that had been exhibited aforetime
+by exponents of the posturing school.&nbsp; She was not naturally graceful
+of movement, she had not undergone years of arduous tutelage, she had
+not the instinct for sheer joyous energy of action that is stored in
+some natures; out of these unpromising negative qualities she had produced
+a style of dancing that might best be labelled a conscientious departure
+from accepted methods.&nbsp; The highly imaginative titles that she
+had bestowed on her dances, the &ldquo;Life of a fern,&rdquo; the &ldquo;Soul-dream
+of a topaz,&rdquo; and so forth, at least gave her audience and her
+critics something to talk about.&nbsp; In themselves they meant absolutely
+nothing, but they induced discussion, and that to Gorla meant a great
+deal.&nbsp; It was a season of dearth and emptiness in the footlights
+and box-office world, and her performance received a welcome that would
+scarcely have befallen it in a more crowded and prosperous day.&nbsp;
+Her success, indeed, had been waiting for her, ready-made, as far as
+the managerial profession was concerned, and nothing had been left undone
+in the way of advertisement to secure for it the appearance, at any
+rate, of popular favour.&nbsp; And loud above the interested applause
+of those who had personal or business motives for acclaiming a success
+swelled the exaggerated enthusiasm of the fairly numerous art-satellites
+who are unstinted in their praise of anything that they are certain
+they cannot understand.&nbsp; Whatever might be the subsequent verdict
+of the theatre-filling public the majority of the favoured first-night
+audience was determined to set the seal of its approval on the suggestion
+dances, and a steady roll of applause greeted the conclusion of each
+item.&nbsp; The dancer gravely bowed her thanks; in marked contradistinction
+to the gentleman who had &ldquo;presented&rdquo; the performing wolves
+she did not permit herself the luxury of a smile.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It teaches us a great deal,&rdquo; said Rhapsodic Pantril
+vaguely, but impressively, after the Fern dance had been given and applauded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At any rate we know now that a fern takes life very seriously,&rdquo;
+broke in Joan Mardle, who had somehow wriggled herself into Cicely&rsquo;s
+box.</p>
+<p>As Yeovil, from the back of his gallery, watched Gorla running and
+ricochetting about the stage, looking rather like a wagtail in energetic
+pursuit of invisible gnats and midges, he wondered how many of the middle-aged
+women who were eagerly applauding her would have taken the least notice
+of similar gymnastics on the part of their offspring in nursery or garden,
+beyond perhaps asking them not to make so much noise.&nbsp; And a bitterer
+tinge came to his thoughts as he saw the bouquets being handed up, thoughts
+of the brave old dowager down at Torywood, the woman who had worked
+and wrought so hard and so unsparingly in her day for the well-being
+of the State&mdash;the State that had fallen helpless into alien hands
+before her tired eyes.&nbsp; Her eldest son lived invalid-wise in the
+South of France, her second son lay fathoms deep in the North Sea, with
+the hulk of a broken battleship for a burial-vault; and now the grand-daughter
+was standing here in the limelight, bowing her thanks for the patronage
+and favour meted out to her by this cosmopolitan company, with its lavish
+sprinkling of the uniforms of an alien army.</p>
+<p>Prominent among the flowers at her feet was one large golden-petalled
+bouquet of gorgeous blooms, tied with a broad streamer of golden riband,
+the tribute rendered by C&aelig;sar to the things that were C&aelig;sar&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+The new chapter of the <i>fait</i> <i>accompli</i> had been written
+that night and written well.&nbsp; The audience poured slowly out with
+the triumphant music of Jancovius&rsquo;s <i>Kaiser</i> <i>Wilhelm</i>
+march, played by the orchestra as a happy inspiration, pealing in its
+ears.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It has been a great evening, a most successful evening,&rdquo;
+said Lady Shalem to Herr von Kwarl, whom she was conveying in her electric
+brougham to Cicely Yeovil&rsquo;s supper party; &ldquo;an important
+evening,&rdquo; she added, choosing her adjectives with deliberation.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It should give pleasure in high quarters, should it not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And she turned her observant eyes on the impassive face of her companion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gracious lady,&rdquo; he replied with deliberation and meaning,
+&ldquo;it has given pleasure.&nbsp; It is an evening to be remembered.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The gracious lady suppressed a sigh of satisfaction.&nbsp; Memory
+in high places was a thing fruitful and precious beyond computation.</p>
+<p>Cicely&rsquo;s party at the Porphyry Restaurant had grown to imposing
+dimensions.&nbsp; Every one whom she had asked had come, and so had
+Joan Mardle.&nbsp; Lady Shalem had suggested several names at the last
+moment, and there was quite a strong infusion of the Teutonic military
+and official world.&nbsp; It was just as well, Cicely reflected, that
+the supper was being given at a restaurant and not in Berkshire Street.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite like ole times,&rdquo; purred the beaming proprietor
+in Cicely&rsquo;s ear, as the staircase and cloak-rooms filled up with
+a jostling, laughing throng.</p>
+<p>The guests settled themselves at four tables, taking their places
+where chance or fancy led them, late comers having to fit in wherever
+they could find room.&nbsp; A babel of tongues in various languages
+reigned round the tables, amid which the rattle of knives and forks
+and plates and the popping of corks made a subdued hubbub.&nbsp; Gorla
+Mustelford, the motive for all this sound and movement, this chatter
+of guests and scurrying of waiters, sat motionless in the fatigued self-conscious
+silence of a great artist who has delivered a great message.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do sit at Lady Peach&rsquo;s table, like a dear boy,&rdquo;
+Cicely begged of Tony Luton, who had come in late; &ldquo;she and Gerald
+Drowly have got together, in spite of all my efforts, and they are both
+so dull.&nbsp; Try and liven things up a bit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A loud barking sound, as of fur-seals calling across Arctic ice,
+came from another table, where Mrs. Mentieth-Mendlesohnn (one of the
+Mendlesohnns of Invergordon, as she was wont to describe herself) was
+proclaiming the glories and subtleties of Gorla&rsquo;s achievement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was a revelation,&rdquo; she shouted; &ldquo;I sat there
+and saw a whole new scheme of thought unfold itself before my eyes.&nbsp;
+One could not define it, it was thought translated into action&mdash;the
+best art cannot be defined.&nbsp; One just sat there and knew that one
+was seeing something one had never seen before, and yet one felt that
+one had seen it, in one&rsquo;s brain, all one&rsquo;s life.&nbsp; That
+was what was so wonderful&mdash;yes, please,&rdquo; she broke off sharply
+as a fat quail in aspic was presented to her by a questioning waiter.</p>
+<p>The voice of Mr. Mauleverer Morle came across the table, like another
+seal barking at a greater distance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rostand,&rdquo; he observed with studied emphasis, &ldquo;has
+been called <i>le</i> <i>Prince</i> <i>de</i> <i>l&rsquo;adjectif</i>
+<i>Inopin&egrave;</i>; Miss Mustelford deserves to be described as the
+Queen of Unexpected Movement.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I say, do you hear that?&rdquo; exclaimed Mrs. Mentieth-Mendlesohnn
+to as wide an audience as she could achieve; &ldquo;Rostand has been
+called&mdash;tell them what you said, Mr. Morle,&rdquo; she broke off,
+suddenly mistrusting her ability to handle a French sentence at the
+top of her voice.</p>
+<p>Mr. Morle repeated his remark.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pass it on to the next table,&rdquo; commanded Mrs. Mentieth-Mendlesohnn.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s too good to be lost.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At the next table however, a grave impressive voice was dwelling
+at length on a topic remote from the event of the evening.&nbsp; Lady
+Peach considered that all social gatherings, of whatever nature, were
+intended for the recital of minor domestic tragedies.&nbsp; She lost
+no time in regaling the company around her with the detailed history
+of an interrupted week-end in a Norfolk cottage.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The most charming and delightful old-world spot that you could
+imagine, clean and quite comfortable, just a nice distance from the
+sea and within an easy walk of the Broads.&nbsp; The very place for
+the children.&nbsp; We&rsquo;d brought everything for a four days&rsquo;
+stay and meant to have a really delightful time.&nbsp; And then on Sunday
+morning we found that some one had left the springhead, where our only
+supply of drinking water came from, uncovered, and a dead bird was floating
+in it; it had fallen in somehow and got drowned.&nbsp; Of course we
+couldn&rsquo;t use the water that a dead body had been floating in,
+and there was no other supply for miles round, so we had to come away
+then and there.&nbsp; Now what do you say to that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Ah, that a linnet should die in the Spring,&rsquo;&rdquo;
+quoted Tony Luton with intense feeling.</p>
+<p>There was an immediate outburst of hilarity where Lady Peach had
+confidently looked for expressions of concern and sympathy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t Tony just perfectly cute?&nbsp; Isn&rsquo;t he?&rdquo;
+exclaimed a young American woman, with an enthusiasm to which Lady Peach
+entirely failed to respond.&nbsp; She had intended following up her
+story with the account of another tragedy of a similar nature that had
+befallen her three years ago in Argyllshire, and now the opportunity
+had gone.&nbsp; She turned morosely to the consolations of a tongue
+salad.</p>
+<p>At the centre table the excellent von Tolb led a chorus of congratulation
+and compliment, to which Gorla listened with an air of polite detachment,
+much as the Sheikh Ul Islam might receive the homage of a Wesleyan Conference.&nbsp;
+To a close observer it would have seemed probable that her attitude
+of fatigued indifference to the flattering remarks that were showered
+on her had been as carefully studied and rehearsed as any of her postures
+on the stage.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is something that one will appreciate more and more fully
+every time one sees it . . . One cannot see it too often . . . I could
+have sat and watched it for hours . . . Do you know, I am just looking
+forward to to-morrow evening, when I can see it again. . . .&nbsp; I
+knew it was going to be good, but I had no idea&mdash;&rdquo; so chimed
+the chorus, between mouthfuls of quail and bites of asparagus.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weren&rsquo;t the performing wolves wonderful?&rdquo; exclaimed
+Joan in her fresh joyous voice, that rang round the room like laughter
+of the woodpecker.</p>
+<p>If there is one thing that disturbs the complacency of a great artist
+of the Halls it is the consciousness of sharing his or her triumphs
+with performing birds and animals, but of course Joan was not to be
+expected to know that.&nbsp; She pursued her subject with the assurance
+of one who has hit on a particularly acceptable topic.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It must have taken them years of training and concentration
+to master those tricycles,&rdquo; she continued in high-pitched soliloquy.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;The nice thing about them is that they don&rsquo;t realise a
+bit how clever and educational they are.&nbsp; It would be dreadful
+to have them putting on airs, wouldn&rsquo;t it?&nbsp; And yet I suppose
+the knowledge of being able to jump through a hoop better than any other
+wolf would justify a certain amount of &lsquo;side.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fortunately at this moment a young Italian journalist at another
+table rose from his seat and delivered a two-minute oration in praise
+of the heroine of the evening.&nbsp; He spoke in rapid nervous French,
+with a North Italian accent, but much of what he said could be understood
+by the majority of those present, and the applause was unanimous.&nbsp;
+At any rate he had been brief and it was permissible to suppose that
+he had been witty.</p>
+<p>It was the opening for which Mr. Gerald Drowly had been watching
+and waiting.&nbsp; The moment that the Italian enthusiast had dropped
+back into his seat amid a rattle of hand-clapping and rapping of forks
+and knives on the tables, Drowly sprang to his feet, pushed his chair
+well away, as for a long separation, and begged to endorse what had
+been so very aptly and gracefully, and, might he add, truly said by
+the previous speaker.&nbsp; This was only the prelude to the real burden
+of his message; with the dexterity that comes of practice he managed,
+in a couple of hurried sentences, to divert the course of his remarks
+to his own personality and career, and to inform his listeners that
+he was an actor of some note and experience, and had had the honour
+of acting under&mdash;and here followed a string of names of eminent
+actor managers of the day.&nbsp; He thought he might be pardoned for
+mentioning the fact that his performance of &ldquo;Peterkin&rdquo; in
+the &ldquo;Broken Nutshell,&rdquo; had won the unstinted approval of
+the dramatic critics of the Provincial press.&nbsp; Towards the end
+of what was a long speech, and which seemed even longer to its hearers,
+he reverted to the subject of Gorla&rsquo;s dancing and bestowed on
+it such laudatory remarks as he had left over.&nbsp; Drawing his chair
+once again into his immediate neighbourhood he sat down, aglow with
+the satisfied consciousness of a good work worthily performed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I once acted a small part in some theatricals got up for a
+charity,&rdquo; announced Joan in a ringing, confidential voice; &ldquo;the
+<i>Clapham</i> <i>Courier</i> said that all the minor parts were very
+creditably sustained.&nbsp; Those were its very words.&nbsp; I felt
+I must tell you that, and also say how much I enjoyed Miss Mustelford&rsquo;s
+dancing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Tony Luton cheered wildly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the cleverest speech so far,&rdquo; he proclaimed.&nbsp;
+He had been asked to liven things up at his table and was doing his
+best to achieve that result, but Mr. Gerald Drowly joined Lady Peach
+in the unfavourable opinion she had formed of that irrepressible youth.</p>
+<p>Ronnie, on whom Cicely kept a solicitous eye, showed no sign of any
+intention of falling in love with Gorla.&nbsp; He was more profitably
+engaged in paying court to the Gr&auml;fin von Tolb, whose hospitable
+mansion in Belgrave Square invested her with a special interest in his
+eyes.&nbsp; As a professional Prince Charming he had every inducement
+to encourage the cult of Fairy Godmother.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes, agreed, I will come and hear you play, that is a
+promise,&rdquo; said the Gr&auml;fin, &ldquo;and you must come and dine
+with me one night and play to me afterwards, that is a promise, also,
+yes?&nbsp; That is very nice of you, to come and see a tiresome old
+woman.&nbsp; I am passionately fond of music; if I were honest I would
+tell you also that I am very fond of good-looking boys, but this is
+not the age of honesty, so I must leave you to guess that.&nbsp; Come
+on Thursday in next week, you can?&nbsp; That is nice.&nbsp; I have
+a reigning Prince dining with me that night.&nbsp; Poor man, he wants
+cheering up; the art of being a reigning Prince is not a very pleasing
+one nowadays.&nbsp; He has made it a boast all his life that he is Liberal
+and his subjects Conservative; now that is all changed&mdash;no, not
+all; he is still Liberal, but his subjects unfortunately are become
+Socialists.&nbsp; You must play your best for him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are there many Socialists over there, in Germany I mean?&rdquo;
+asked Ronnie, who was rather out of his depth where politics were concerned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Ueberall</i>,&rdquo; said the Gr&auml;fin with emphasis;
+&ldquo;everywhere, I don&rsquo;t know what it comes from; better education
+and worse digestions I suppose.&nbsp; I am sure digestion has a good
+deal to do with it.&nbsp; In my husband&rsquo;s family for example,
+his generation had excellent digestions, and there wasn&rsquo;t a case
+of Socialism or suicide among them; the younger generation have no digestions
+worth speaking of, and there have been two suicides and three Socialists
+within the last six years.&nbsp; And now I must really be going.&nbsp;
+I am not a Berliner and late hours don&rsquo;t suit my way of life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ronnie bent low over the Gr&auml;fin&rsquo;s hand and kissed it,
+partly because she was the kind of woman who naturally invoked such
+homage, but chiefly because he knew that the gesture showed off his
+smooth burnished head to advantage.</p>
+<p>The observant eyes of Lady Shalem had noted the animated conversation
+between the Gr&auml;fin and Ronnie, and she had overheard fragments
+of the invitation that had been accorded to the latter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Take us the little foxes, the little foxes that spoil the
+vines,&rdquo; she quoted to herself; &ldquo;not that that music-boy
+would do much in the destructive line, but the principle is good.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER X: SOME REFLECTIONS AND A &ldquo;TE DEUM&rdquo;</h2>
+<p>Cicely awoke, on the morning after the &ldquo;memorable evening,&rdquo;
+with the satisfactory feeling of victory achieved, tempered by a troubled
+sense of having achieved it in the face of a reasonably grounded opposition.&nbsp;
+She had burned her boats, and was glad of it, but the reek of their
+burning drifted rather unpleasantly across the jubilant incense-swinging
+of her <i>Te</i> <i>Deum</i> service.</p>
+<p>Last night had marked an immense step forward in her social career;
+without running after the patronage of influential personages she had
+seen it quietly and tactfully put at her service.&nbsp; People such
+as the Gr&auml;fin von Tolb were going to be a power in the London world
+for a very long time to come.&nbsp; Herr von Kwarl, with all his useful
+qualities of brain and temperament, might conceivably fall out of favour
+in some unexpected turn of the political wheel, and the Shalems would
+probably have their little day and then a long afternoon of diminishing
+social importance; the placid dormouse-like Gr&auml;fin would outlast
+them all.&nbsp; She had the qualities which make either for contented
+mediocrity or else for very durable success, according as circumstances
+may dictate.&nbsp; She was one of those characters that can neither
+thrust themselves to the front, nor have any wish to do so, but being
+there, no ordinary power can thrust them away.</p>
+<p>With the Gr&auml;fin as her friend Cicely found herself in altogether
+a different position from that involved by the mere interested patronage
+of Lady Shalem.&nbsp; A vista of social success was opened up to her,
+and she did not mean it to be just the ordinary success of a popular
+and influential hostess moving in an important circle.&nbsp; That people
+with naturally bad manners should have to be polite and considerate
+in their dealings with her, that people who usually held themselves
+aloof should have to be gracious and amiable, that the self-assured
+should have to be just a little humble and anxious where she was concerned,
+these things of course she intended to happen; she was a woman.&nbsp;
+But, she told herself, she intended a great deal more than that when
+she traced the pattern for her scheme of social influence.&nbsp; In
+her heart she detested the German occupation as a hateful necessity,
+but while her heart registered the hatefulness the brain recognised
+the necessity.&nbsp; The great fighting-machines that the Germans had
+built up and maintained, on land, on sea, and in air, were three solid
+crushing facts that demonstrated the hopelessness of any immediate thought
+of revolt.&nbsp; Twenty years hence, when the present generation was
+older and greyer, the chances of armed revolt would probably be equally
+hopeless, equally remote-seeming.&nbsp; But in the meantime something
+could have been effected in another way.&nbsp; The conquerors might
+partially Germanise London, but, on the other hand, if the thing were
+skilfully managed, the British element within the Empire might impress
+the mark of its influence on everything German.&nbsp; The fighting men
+might remain Prussian or Bavarian, but the thinking men, and eventually
+the ruling men, could gradually come under British influence, or even
+be of British blood.&nbsp; An English Liberal-Conservative &ldquo;Centre&rdquo;
+might stand as a bulwark against the Junkerdom and Socialism of Continental
+Germany.&nbsp; So Cicely reasoned with herself, in a fashion induced
+perhaps by an earlier apprenticeship to the reading of <i>Nineteenth</i>
+<i>Century</i> articles, in which the possible political and racial
+developments of various countries were examined and discussed and put
+away in the pigeon-holes of probable happenings.&nbsp; She had sufficient
+knowledge of political history to know that such a development might
+possibly come to pass, she had not sufficient insight into actual conditions
+to know that the possibility was as remote as that of armed resistance.&nbsp;
+And the r&ocirc;le which she saw herself playing was that of a deft
+and courtly political intriguer, rallying the British element and making
+herself agreeable to the German element, a political inspiration to
+the one and a social distraction to the other.&nbsp; At the back of
+her mind there lurked an honest confession that she was probably over-rating
+her powers of statecraft and personality, that she was more likely to
+be carried along by the current of events than to control or divert
+its direction; the political day-dream remained, however, as day-dreams
+will, in spite of the clear light of probability shining through them.&nbsp;
+At any rate she knew, as usual, what she wanted to do, and as usual
+she had taken steps to carry out her intentions.&nbsp; Last night remained
+in her mind a night of important victory.&nbsp; There also remained
+the anxious proceeding of finding out if the victory had entailed any
+serious losses.</p>
+<p>Cicely was not one of those ill-regulated people who treat the first
+meal of the day as a convenient occasion for serving up any differences
+or contentions that have been left over from the day before or overlooked
+in the press of other matters.&nbsp; She enjoyed her breakfast and gave
+Yeovil unhindered opportunity for enjoying his; a discussion as to the
+right cooking of a dish that he had first tasted among the Orenburg
+Tartars was the prevailing topic on this particular morning, and blended
+well with trout and toast and coffee.&nbsp; In a cosy nook of the smoking-room,
+in participation of the after-breakfast cigarettes, Cicely made her
+dash into debatable ground.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You haven&rsquo;t asked me how my supper-party went off,&rdquo;
+she said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is a notice of it in two of the morning papers, with
+a list of those present,&rdquo; said Yeovil; &ldquo;the conquering race
+seems to have been very well represented.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Several races were represented,&rdquo; said Cicely; &ldquo;a
+function of that sort, celebrating a dramatic first-night, was bound
+to be cosmopolitan.&nbsp; In fact, blending of races and nationalities
+is the tendency of the age we live in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The blending of races seems to have been consummated already
+in one of the individuals at your party,&rdquo; said Yeovil drily; &ldquo;the
+name Mentieth-Mendlesohnn struck me as a particularly happy obliteration
+of racial landmarks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Cicely laughed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A noisy and very wearisome sort of woman,&rdquo; she commented;
+&ldquo;she reminds one of garlic that&rsquo;s been planted by mistake
+in a conservatory.&nbsp; Still, she&rsquo;s useful as an advertising
+agent to any one who rubs her the right way.&nbsp; She&rsquo;ll be invaluable
+in proclaiming the merits of Gorla&rsquo;s performance to all and sundry;
+that&rsquo;s why I invited her.&nbsp; She&rsquo;ll probably lunch to-day
+at the Hotel Cecil, and every one sitting within a hundred yards of
+her table will hear what an emotional education they can get by going
+to see Gorla dance at the Caravansery.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She seems to be like the Salvation Army,&rdquo; said Yeovil;
+&ldquo;her noise reaches a class of people who wouldn&rsquo;t trouble
+to read press notices.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Exactly,&rdquo; said Cicely.&nbsp; &ldquo;Gorla gets quite
+good notices on the whole, doesn&rsquo;t she?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The one that took my fancy most was the one in the <i>Standard</i>,&rdquo;
+said Yeovil, picking up that paper from a table by his side and searching
+its columns for the notice in question.&nbsp; &ldquo;&lsquo;The wolves
+which appeared earlier in the evening&rsquo;s entertainment are, the
+programme assures us, trained entirely by kindness.&nbsp; It would have
+been a further kindness, at any rate to the audience, if some of the
+training, which the wolves doubtless do not appreciate at its proper
+value, had been expended on Miss Mustelford&rsquo;s efforts at stage
+dancing.&nbsp; We are assured, again on the authority of the programme,
+that the much-talked-of Suggestion Dances are the last word in Posture
+dancing.&nbsp; The last word belongs by immemorial right to the sex
+which Miss Mustelford adorns, and it would be ungallant to seek to deprive
+her of her privilege.&nbsp; As far as the educational aspect of her
+performance is concerned we must admit that the life of the fern remains
+to us a private life still.&nbsp; Miss Mustelford has abandoned her
+own private life in an unavailing attempt to draw the fern into the
+gaze of publicity.&nbsp; And so it was with her other suggestions.&nbsp;
+They suggested many things, but nothing that was announced on the programme.&nbsp;
+Chiefly they suggested one outstanding reflection, that stage-dancing
+is not like those advertised breakfast foods that can be served up after
+three minutes&rsquo; preparation.&nbsp; Half a life-time, or rather
+half a youth-time is a much more satisfactory allowance.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The <i>Standard</i> is prejudiced,&rdquo; said Cicely; &ldquo;some
+of the other papers are quite enthusiastic.&nbsp; The <i>Dawn</i> gives
+her a column and a quarter of notice, nearly all of it complimentary.&nbsp;
+It says the report of her fame as a dancer went before her, but that
+her performance last night caught it up and outstripped it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should not like to suggest that the <i>Dawn</i> is prejudiced,&rdquo;
+said Yeovil, &ldquo;but Shalem is a managing director on it, and one
+of its biggest shareholders.&nbsp; Gorla&rsquo;s dancing is an event
+of the social season, and Shalem is one of those most interested in
+keeping up the appearance, at any rate, of a London social season.&nbsp;
+Besides, her d&eacute;but gave the opportunity for an Imperial visit
+to the theatre&mdash;the first appearance at a festive public function
+of the Conqueror among the conquered.&nbsp; Apparently the experiment
+passed off well; Shalem has every reason to feel pleased with himself
+and well-disposed towards Gorla.&nbsp; By the way,&rdquo; added Yeovil,
+&ldquo;talking of Gorla, I&rsquo;m going down to Torywood one day next
+week.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To Torywood?&rdquo; exclaimed Cicely.&nbsp; The tone of her
+exclamation gave the impression that the announcement was not very acceptable
+to her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I promised the old lady that I would go and have a talk with
+her when I came back from my Siberian trip; she travelled in eastern
+Russia, you know, long before the Trans-Siberian railway was built,
+and she&rsquo;s enormously interested in those parts.&nbsp; In any case
+I should like to see her again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She does not see many people nowadays,&rdquo; said Cicely;
+&ldquo;I fancy she is breaking up rather.&nbsp; She was very fond of
+the son who went down, you know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She has seen a great many of the things she cared for go down,&rdquo;
+said Yeovil; &ldquo;it is a sad old life that is left to her, when one
+thinks of all that the past has been to her, of the part she used to
+play in the world, the work she used to get through.&nbsp; It used to
+seem as though she could never grow old, as if she would die standing
+up, with some unfinished command on her lips.&nbsp; And now I suppose
+her tragedy is that she has grown old, bitterly old, and cannot die.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Cicely was silent for a moment, and seemed about to leave the room.&nbsp;
+Then she turned back and said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think I would say anything about Gorla to her
+if I were you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It would not have occurred to me to drag her name into our
+conversation,&rdquo; said Yeovil coldly, &ldquo;but in any case the
+accounts of her dancing performance will have reached Torywood through
+the newspapers&mdash;also the record of your racially-blended supper-party.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Cicely said nothing.&nbsp; She knew that by last night&rsquo;s affair
+she had definitely identified herself in public opinion with the Shalem
+clique, and that many of her old friends would look on her with distrust
+and suspicion on that account.&nbsp; It was unfortunate, but she reckoned
+it a lesser evil than tearing herself away from her London life, its
+successes and pleasures and possibilities.&nbsp; These social dislocations
+and severing of friendships were to be looked for after any great and
+violent change in State affairs.&nbsp; It was Yeovil&rsquo;s attitude
+that really troubled her; she would not give way to his prejudices and
+accept his point of view, but she knew that a victory that involved
+estrangement from him would only bring a mockery of happiness.&nbsp;
+She still hoped that he would come round to an acceptance of established
+facts and deaden his political <i>malaise</i> in the absorbing distraction
+of field sports.&nbsp; The visit to Torywood was a misfortune; it might
+just turn the balance in the undesired direction.&nbsp; Only a few weeks
+of late summer and early autumn remained before the hunting season,
+and its preparations would be at hand, and Yeovil might be caught in
+the meshes of an old enthusiasm; in those few weeks, however, he might
+be fired by another sort of enthusiasm, an enthusiasm which would sooner
+or later mean voluntary or enforced exile for his part, and the probable
+breaking up of her own social plans and ambitions.</p>
+<p>But Cicely knew something of the futility of improvising objections
+where no real obstacle exists.&nbsp; The visit to Torywood was a graceful
+attention on Yeovil&rsquo;s part to an old friend; there was no decent
+ground on which it could be opposed.&nbsp; If the influence of that
+visit came athwart Yeovil&rsquo;s life and hers with disastrous effect,
+that was &ldquo;Kismet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And once again the reek from her burned and smouldering boats mingled
+threateningly with the incense fumes of her <i>Te</i> <i>Deum</i> for
+victory.&nbsp; She left the room, and Yeovil turned once more to an
+item of news in the morning&rsquo;s papers that had already arrested
+his attention.&nbsp; The Imperial <i>Aufkl&auml;rung</i> on the subject
+of military service was to be made public in the course of the day.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI: THE TEA SHOP</h2>
+<p>Yeovil wandered down Piccadilly that afternoon in a spirit of restlessness
+and expectancy.&nbsp; The long-awaited <i>Aufkl&auml;rung</i> dealing
+with the new law of military service had not yet appeared; at any moment
+he might meet the hoarse-throated newsboys running along with their
+papers, announcing the special edition which would give the terms of
+the edict to the public.&nbsp; Every sound or movement that detached
+itself with isolated significance from the general whirr and scurry
+of the streets seemed to Yeovil to herald the oncoming clamour and rush
+that he was looking for.&nbsp; But the long endless succession of motors
+and &rsquo;buses and vans went by, hooting and grunting, and such newsboys
+as were to be seen hung about listlessly, bearing no more attractive
+bait on their posters than the announcement of an &ldquo;earthquake
+shock in Hungary: feared loss of life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Green Park end of Piccadilly was a changed, and in some respects
+a livelier thoroughfare to that which Yeovil remembered with affectionate
+regret.&nbsp; A great political club had migrated from its palatial
+home to a shrunken habitation in a less prosperous quarter; its place
+was filled by the flamboyant frontage of the Hotel Konstantinopel.&nbsp;
+Gorgeous Turkey carpets were spread over the wide entrance steps, and
+boys in Circassian and Anatolian costumes hung around the doors, or
+dashed forth in un-Oriental haste to carry such messages as the telephone
+was unable to transmit.&nbsp; Picturesque sellers of Turkish delight,
+attar-of-roses, and brass-work coffee services, squatted under the portico,
+on terms of obvious good understanding with the hotel management.&nbsp;
+A few doors further down a service club that had long been a Piccadilly
+landmark was a landmark still, as the home of the Army Aeronaut Club,
+and there was a constant coming and going of gay-hued uniforms, Saxon,
+Prussian, Bavarian, Hessian, and so forth, through its portals.&nbsp;
+The mastering of the air and the creation of a scientific aerial war
+fleet, second to none in the world, was an achievement of which the
+conquering race was pardonably proud, and for which it had good reason
+to be duly thankful.&nbsp; Over the gateways was blazoned the badge
+of the club, an elephant, whale, and eagle, typifying the three armed
+forces of the State, by land and sea and air; the eagle bore in its
+beak a scroll with the proud legend: &ldquo;The last am I, but not the
+least.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To the eastward of this gaily-humming hive the long shuttered front
+of a deserted ducal mansion struck a note of protest and mourning amid
+the noise and whirl and colour of a seemingly uncaring city.&nbsp; On
+the other side of the roadway, on the gravelled paths of the Green Park,
+small ragged children from the back streets of Westminster looked wistfully
+at the smooth trim stretches of grass on which it was now forbidden,
+in two languages, to set foot.&nbsp; Only the pigeons, disregarding
+the changes of political geography, walked about as usual, wondering
+perhaps, if they ever wondered at anything, at the sudden change in
+the distribution of park humans.</p>
+<p>Yeovil turned his steps out of the hot sunlight into the shade of
+the Burlington Arcade, familiarly known to many of its newer frequenters
+as the Passage.&nbsp; Here the change that new conditions and requirements
+had wrought was more immediately noticeable than anywhere else in the
+West End.&nbsp; Most of the shops on the western side had been cleared
+away, and in their place had been installed an &ldquo;open-air&rdquo;
+caf&eacute;, converting the long alley into a sort of promenade tea-garden,
+flanked on one side by a line of haberdashers&rsquo;, perfumers&rsquo;,
+and jewellers&rsquo; show windows.&nbsp; The patrons of the caf&eacute;
+could sit at the little round tables, drinking their coffee and syrups
+and <i>ap&eacute;ritifs</i>, and gazing, if they were so minded, at
+the pyjamas and cravats and Brazilian diamonds spread out for inspection
+before them.&nbsp; A string orchestra, hidden away somewhere in a gallery,
+was alternating grand opera with the <i>Gondola</i> <i>Girl</i> and
+the latest gems of Transatlantic melody.&nbsp; From around the tightly-packed
+tables arose a babble of tongues, made up chiefly of German, a South
+American rendering of Spanish, and a North American rendering of English,
+with here and there the sharp shaken-out staccato of Japanese.&nbsp;
+A sleepy-looking boy, in a nondescript uniform, was wandering to and
+fro among the customers, offering for sale the <i>Matin</i>, <i>New</i>
+<i>York</i> <i>Herald</i>, <i>Berliner</i> <i>Tageblatt</i>, and a host
+of crudely coloured illustrated papers, embodying the hard-worked wit
+of a world-legion of comic artists.&nbsp; Yeovil hurried through the
+Arcade; it was not here, in this atmosphere of staring alien eyes and
+jangling tongues, that he wanted to read the news of the Imperial <i>Aufkl&auml;rung</i>.</p>
+<p>By a succession of by-ways he reached Hanover Square, and thence
+made his way into Oxford Street.&nbsp; There was no commotion of activity
+to be noticed yet among the newsboys; the posters still concerned themselves
+with the earthquake in Hungary, varied with references to the health
+of the King of Roumania, and a motor accident in South London.&nbsp;
+Yeovil wandered aimlessly along the street for a few dozen yards, and
+then turned down into the smoking-room of a cheap tea-shop, where he
+judged that the flourishing foreign element would be less conspicuously
+represented.&nbsp; Quiet-voiced, smooth-headed youths, from neighbouring
+shops and wholesale houses, sat drinking tea and munching pastry, some
+of them reading, others making a fitful rattle with dominoes on the
+marble-topped tables.&nbsp; A clean, wholesome smell of tea and coffee
+made itself felt through the clouds of cigarette smoke; cleanliness
+and listlessness seemed to be the dominant notes of the place, a cleanliness
+that was commendable, and a listlessness that seemed unnatural and undesirable
+where so much youth was gathered together for refreshment and recreation.&nbsp;
+Yeovil seated himself at a table already occupied by a young clergyman
+who was smoking a cigarette over the remains of a plateful of buttered
+toast.&nbsp; He had a keen, clever, hard-lined face, the face of a man
+who, in an earlier stage of European history, might have been a warlike
+prior, awkward to tackle at the council-board, greatly to be avoided
+where blows were being exchanged.&nbsp; A pale, silent damsel drifted
+up to Yeovil and took his order with an air of being mentally some hundreds
+of miles away, and utterly indifferent to the requirements of those
+whom she served; if she had brought calf&rsquo;s-foot jelly instead
+of the pot of China tea he had asked for, Yeovil would hardly have been
+surprised.&nbsp; However, the tea duly arrived on the table, and the
+pale damsel scribbled a figure on a slip of paper, put it silently by
+the side of the teapot, and drifted silently away.&nbsp; Yeovil had
+seen the same sort of thing done on the musical-comedy stage, and done
+rather differently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can you tell me, sir, is the Imperial announcement out yet?&rdquo;
+asked the young clergyman, after a brief scrutiny of his neighbour.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I have been waiting about for the last half-hour on the
+look-out for it,&rdquo; said Yeovil; &ldquo;the special editions ought
+to be out by now.&rdquo;&nbsp; Then he added: &ldquo;I have only just
+lately come from abroad.&nbsp; I know scarcely anything of London as
+it is now.&nbsp; You may imagine that a good deal of it is very strange
+to me.&nbsp; Your profession must take you a good deal among all classes
+of people.&nbsp; I have seen something of what one may call the upper,
+or, at any rate, the richer classes, since I came back; do tell me something
+about the poorer classes of the community.&nbsp; How do they take the
+new order of things?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Badly,&rdquo; said the young cleric, &ldquo;badly, in more
+senses than one.&nbsp; They are helpless and they are bitter&mdash;bitter
+in the useless kind of way that produces no great resolutions.&nbsp;
+They look round for some one to blame for what has happened; they blame
+the politicians, they blame the leisured classes; in an indirect way
+I believe they blame the Church.&nbsp; Certainly, the national disaster
+has not drawn them towards religion in any form.&nbsp; One thing you
+may be sure of, they do not blame themselves.&nbsp; No true Londoner
+ever admits that fault lies at his door.&nbsp; &lsquo;No, I never!&rsquo;
+is an exclamation that is on his lips from earliest childhood, whenever
+he is charged with anything blameworthy or punishable.&nbsp; That is
+why school discipline was ever a thing repugnant to the schoolboard
+child and its parents; no schoolboard scholar ever deserved punishment.&nbsp;
+However obvious the fault might seem to a disciplinarian, &lsquo;No,
+I never&rsquo; exonerated it as something that had not happened.&nbsp;
+Public schoolboys and private schoolboys of the upper and middle class
+had their fling and took their thrashings, when they were found out,
+as a piece of bad luck, but &lsquo;our Bert&rsquo; and &lsquo;our Sid&rsquo;
+were of those for whom there is no condemnation; if <i>they</i> were
+punished it was for faults that &lsquo;no, they never&rsquo; committed.&nbsp;
+Naturally the grown-up generation of Berts and Sids, the voters and
+householders, do not realise, still less admit, that it was they who
+called the tune to which the politicians danced.&nbsp; They had to choose
+between the vote-mongers and the so-called &lsquo;scare-mongers,&rsquo;
+and their verdict was for the vote-mongers all the time.&nbsp; And now
+they are bitter; they are being punished, and punishment is not a thing
+that they have been schooled to bear.&nbsp; The taxes that are falling
+on them are a grievous source of discontent, and the military service
+that will be imposed on them, for the first time in their lives, will
+be another.&nbsp; There is a more lovable side to their character under
+misfortune, though,&rdquo; added the young clergyman.&nbsp; &ldquo;Deep
+down in their hearts there was a very real affection for the old dynasty.&nbsp;
+Future historians will perhaps be able to explain how and why the Royal
+Family of Great Britain captured the imaginations of its subjects in
+so genuine and lasting a fashion.&nbsp; Among the poorest and the most
+matter-of-fact, for whom the name of no public man, politician or philanthropist,
+stands out with any especial significance, the old Queen, and the dead
+King, the dethroned monarch and the young prince live in a sort of domestic
+Pantheon, a recollection that is a proud and wistful personal possession
+when so little remains to be proud of or to possess.&nbsp; There is
+no favour that I am so often asked for among my poorer parishioners
+as the gift of the picture of this or that member of the old dynasty.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;I have got all of them, only except Princess Mary,&rsquo; an
+old woman said to me last week, and she nearly cried with pleasure when
+I brought her an old <i>Bystander</i> portrait that filled the gap in
+her collection.&nbsp; And on Queen Alexandra&rsquo;s day they bring
+out and wear the faded wild-rose favours that they bought with their
+pennies in days gone by.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The tragedy of the enactment that is about to enforce military
+service on these people is that it comes when they&rsquo;ve no longer
+a country to fight for,&rdquo; said Yeovil.</p>
+<p>The young clergyman gave an exclamation of bitter impatience.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is the cruel mockery of the whole thing.&nbsp; Every
+now and then in the course of my work I have come across lads who were
+really drifting to the bad through the good qualities in them.&nbsp;
+A clean combative strain in their blood, and a natural turn for adventure,
+made the ordinary an&aelig;mic routine of shop or warehouse or factory
+almost unbearable for them.&nbsp; What splendid little soldiers they
+would have made, and how grandly the discipline of a military training
+would have steadied them in after-life when steadiness was wanted.&nbsp;
+The only adventure that their surroundings offered them has been the
+adventure of practising mildly criminal misdeeds without getting landed
+in reformatories and prisons; those of them that have not been successful
+in keeping clear of detection are walking round and round prison yards,
+experiencing the operation of a discipline that breaks and does not
+build.&nbsp; They were merry-hearted boys once, with nothing of the
+criminal or ne&rsquo;er-do-weel in their natures, and now&mdash;have
+you ever seen a prison yard, with that walk round and round and round
+between grey walls under a blue sky?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yeovil nodded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s good enough for criminals and imbeciles,&rdquo;
+said the parson, &ldquo;but think of it for those boys, who might have
+been marching along to the tap of the drum, with a laugh on their lips
+instead of Hell in their hearts.&nbsp; I have had Hell in my heart sometimes,
+when I have come in touch with cases like those.&nbsp; I suppose you
+are thinking that I am a strange sort of parson.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was just defining you in my mind,&rdquo; said Yeovil, &ldquo;as
+a man of God, with an infinite tenderness for little devils.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The clergyman flushed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rather a fine epitaph to have on one&rsquo;s tombstone,&rdquo;
+he said, &ldquo;especially if the tombstone were in some crowded city
+graveyard.&nbsp; I suppose I am a man of God, but I don&rsquo;t think
+I could be called a man of peace.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Looking at the strong young face, with its suggestion of a fighting
+prior of bygone days more marked than ever, Yeovil mentally agreed that
+he could not.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have learned one thing in life,&rdquo; continued the young
+man, &ldquo;and that is that peace is not for this world.&nbsp; Peace
+is what God gives us when He takes us into His rest.&nbsp; Beat your
+sword into a ploughshare if you like, but beat your enemy into smithereens
+first.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A long-drawn cry, repeated again and again, detached itself from
+the throb and hoot and whir of the street traffic.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Speshul!&nbsp; Military service, spesh-ul!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The young clergyman sprang from his seat and went up the staircase
+in a succession of bounds, causing the domino players and novelette
+readers to look up for a moment in mild astonishment.&nbsp; In a few
+seconds he was back again, with a copy of an afternoon paper.&nbsp;
+The Imperial Rescript was set forth in heavy type, in parallel columns
+of English and German.&nbsp; As the young man read a deep burning flush
+spread over his face, then ebbed away into a chalky whiteness.&nbsp;
+He read the announcement to the end, then handed the paper to Yeovil,
+and left without a word.</p>
+<p>Beneath the courtly politeness and benignant phraseology of the document
+ran a trenchant searing irony.&nbsp; The British born subjects of the
+Germanic Crown, inhabiting the islands of Great Britain and Ireland,
+had habituated themselves as a people to the disuse of arms, and resolutely
+excluded military service and national training from their political
+system and daily life.&nbsp; Their judgment that they were unsuited
+as a race to bear arms and conform to military discipline was not to
+be set aside.&nbsp; Their new Overlord did not propose to do violence
+to their feelings and customs by requiring from them the personal military
+sacrifices and services which were rendered by his subjects German-born.&nbsp;
+The British subjects of the Crown were to remain a people consecrated
+to peaceful pursuits, to commerce and trade and husbandry.&nbsp; The
+defence of their coasts and shipping and the maintenance of order and
+general safety would be guaranteed by a garrison of German troops, with
+the co-operation of the Imperial war fleet.&nbsp; German-born subjects
+residing temporarily or permanently in the British Isles would come
+under the same laws respecting compulsory military service as their
+fellow-subjects of German blood in the other parts of the Empire, and
+special enactments would be drawn up to ensure that their interests
+did not suffer from a periodical withdrawal on training or other military
+calls.&nbsp; Necessarily a heavily differentiated scale of war taxation
+would fall on British taxpayers, to provide for the upkeep of the garrison
+and to equalise the services and sacrifices rendered by the two branches
+of his Majesty&rsquo;s subjects.&nbsp; As military service was not henceforth
+open to any subject of British birth no further necessity for any training
+or exercise of a military nature existed, therefore all rifle clubs,
+drill associations, cadet corps and similar bodies were henceforth declared
+to be illegal.&nbsp; No weapons other than guns for specified sporting
+purposes, duly declared and registered and open to inspection when required,
+could be owned, purchased, or carried.&nbsp; The science of arms was
+to be eliminated altogether from the life of a people who had shown
+such marked repugnance to its study and practice.</p>
+<p>The cold irony of the measure struck home with the greater force
+because its nature was so utterly unexpected.&nbsp; Public anticipation
+had guessed at various forms of military service, aggressively irksome
+or tactfully lightened as the case might be, in any event certain to
+be bitterly unpopular, and now there had come this contemptuous boon,
+which had removed, at one stroke, the bogey of compulsory military service
+from the troubled imaginings of the British people, and fastened on
+them the cruel distinction of being in actual fact what an enemy had
+called them in splenetic scorn long years ago&mdash;a nation of shopkeepers.&nbsp;
+Aye, something even below that level, a race of shopkeepers who were
+no longer a nation.</p>
+<p>Yeovil crumpled the paper in his hand and went out into the sunlit
+street.&nbsp; A sudden roll of drums and crash of brass music filled
+the air.&nbsp; A company of Bavarian infantry went by, in all the pomp
+and circumstance of martial array and the joyous swing of rapid rhythmic
+movement.&nbsp; The street echoed and throbbed in the Englishman&rsquo;s
+ears with the exultant pulse of youth and mastery set to loud Pagan
+music.&nbsp; A group of lads from the tea-shop clustered on the pavement
+and watched the troops go by, staring at a phase of life in which they
+had no share.&nbsp; The martial trappings, the swaggering joy of life,
+the comradeship of camp and barracks, the hard discipline of drill yard
+and fatigue duty, the long sentry watches, the trench digging, forced
+marches, wounds, cold, hunger, makeshift hospitals, and the blood-wet
+laurels&mdash;these were not for them.&nbsp; Such things they might
+only guess at, or see on a cinema film, darkly; they belonged to the
+civilian nation.</p>
+<p>The function of afternoon tea was still being languidly observed
+in the big drawing-room when Yeovil returned to Berkshire Street.&nbsp;
+Cicely was playing the part of hostess to a man of perhaps forty-one
+years of age, who looked slightly older from his palpable attempts to
+look very much younger.&nbsp; Percival Plarsey was a plump, pale-faced,
+short-legged individual, with puffy cheeks, over-prominent nose, and
+thin colourless hair.&nbsp; His mother, with nothing more than maternal
+prejudice to excuse her, had discovered some twenty odd years ago that
+he was a well-favoured young man, and had easily imbued her son with
+the same opinion.&nbsp; The slipping away of years and the natural transition
+of the unathletic boy into the podgy unhealthy-looking man did little
+to weaken the tradition; Plarsey had never been able to relinquish the
+idea that a youthful charm and comeliness still centred in his person,
+and laboured daily at his toilet with the devotion that a hopelessly
+lost cause is so often able to inspire.&nbsp; He babbled incessantly
+about himself and the accessory futilities of his life in short, neat,
+complacent sentences, and in a voice that Ronald Storre said reminded
+one of a fat bishop blessing a butter-making competition.&nbsp; While
+he babbled he kept his eyes fastened on his listeners to observe the
+impression which his important little announcements and pronouncements
+were making.&nbsp; On the present occasion he was pattering forth a
+detailed description of the upholstery and fittings of his new music-room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All the hangings, <i>violette</i> <i>de</i> <i>Parme</i>,
+all the furniture, rosewood.&nbsp; The only ornament in the room is
+a <i>replica</i> of the Mozart statue in Vienna.&nbsp; Nothing but Mozart
+is to be played in the room.&nbsp; Absolutely, nothing but Mozart.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will get rather tired of that, won&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;
+said Cicely, feeling that she was expected to comment on this tremendous
+announcement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One gets tired of everything,&rdquo; said Plarsey, with a
+fat little sigh of resignation. &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t tell you <i>how</i>
+tired I am of Rubenstein, and one day I suppose I shall be tired of
+Mozart, and <i>violette</i> <i>de</i> <i>Parme</i> and rosewood.&nbsp;
+I never thought it possible that I could ever tire of jonquils, and
+now I simply won&rsquo;t have one in the house.&nbsp; Oh, the scene
+the other day because some one brought some jonquils into the house!&nbsp;
+I&rsquo;m afraid I was dreadfully rude, but I really couldn&rsquo;t
+help it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He could talk like this through a long summer day or a long winter
+evening.</p>
+<p>Yeovil belonged to a race forbidden to bear arms.&nbsp; At the moment
+he would gladly have contented himself with the weapons with which nature
+had endowed him, if he might have kicked and pommelled the abhorrent
+specimen of male humanity whom he saw before him.</p>
+<p>Instead he broke into the conversation with an inspired flash of
+malicious untruthfulness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is wonderful,&rdquo; he observed carelessly, &ldquo;how
+popular that Viennese statue of Mozart has become.&nbsp; A friend who
+inspects County Council Art Schools tells me you find a copy of it in
+every class-room you go into.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was a poor substitute for physical violence, but it was all that
+civilisation allowed him in the way of relieving his feelings; it had,
+moreover, the effect of making Plarsey profoundly miserable.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII: THE TRAVELLING COMPANIONS</h2>
+<p>The train bearing Yeovil on his visit to Torywood slid and rattled
+westward through the hazy dreamland of an English summer landscape.&nbsp;
+Seen from the train windows the stark bare ugliness of the metalled
+line was forgotten, and the eye rested only on the green solitude that
+unfolded itself as the miles went slipping by.&nbsp; Tall grasses and
+meadow-weeds stood in deep shocks, field after field, between the leafy
+boundaries of hedge or coppice, thrusting themselves higher and higher
+till they touched the low sweeping branches of the trees that here and
+there overshadowed them.&nbsp; Broad streams, bordered with a heavy
+fringe of reed and sedge, went winding away into a green distance where
+woodland and meadowland seemed indefinitely prolonged; narrow streamlets,
+lost to view in the growth that they fostered, disclosed their presence
+merely by the water-weed that showed in a riband of rank verdure threading
+the mellower green of the fields.&nbsp; On the stream banks moorhens
+walked with jerky confident steps, in the easy boldness of those who
+had a couple of other elements at their disposal in an emergency; more
+timorous partridges raced away from the apparition of the train, looking
+all leg and neck, like little forest elves fleeing from human encounter.&nbsp;
+And in the distance, over the tree line, a heron or two flapped with
+slow measured wing-beats and an air of being bent on an immeasurably
+longer journey than the train that hurtled so frantically along the
+rails.&nbsp; Now and then the meadowland changed itself suddenly into
+orchard, with close-growing trees already showing the measure of their
+coming harvest, and then strawyard and farm buildings would slide into
+view; heavy dairy cattle, roan and skewbald and dappled, stood near
+the gates, drowsily resentful of insect stings, and bunched-up companies
+of ducks halted in seeming irresolution between the charms of the horse-pond
+and the alluring neighbourhood of the farm kitchen.&nbsp; Away by the
+banks of some rushing mill-stream, in a setting of copse and cornfield,
+a village might be guessed at, just a hint of red roof, grey wreathed
+chimney and old church tower as seen from the windows of the passing
+train, and over it all brooded a happy, settled calm, like the dreaming
+murmur of a trout-stream and the far-away cawing of rooks.</p>
+<p>It was a land where it seemed as if it must be always summer and
+generally afternoon, a land where bees hummed among the wild thyme and
+in the flower beds of cottage gardens, where the harvest-mice rustled
+amid the corn and nettles, and the mill-race flowed cool and silent
+through water-weeds and dark tunnelled sluices, and made soft droning
+music with the wooden mill-wheel.&nbsp; And the music carried with it
+the wording of old undying rhymes, and sang of the jolly, uncaring,
+uncared-for miller, of the farmer who went riding upon his grey mare,
+of the mouse who lived beneath the merry mill-pin, of the sweet music
+on yonder green hill and the dancers all in yellow&mdash;the songs and
+fancies of a lingering olden time, when men took life as children take
+a long summer day, and went to bed at last with a simple trust in something
+they could not have explained.</p>
+<p>Yeovil watched the passing landscape with the intent hungry eyes
+of a man who revisits a scene that holds high place in his affections.&nbsp;
+His imagination raced even quicker than the train, following winding
+roads and twisting valleys into unseen distances, picturing farms and
+hamlets, hills and hollows, clattering inn yards and sleepy woodlands.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A beautiful country,&rdquo; said his only fellow-traveller,
+who was also gazing at the fleeting landscape; &ldquo;surely a country
+worth fighting for.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He spoke in fairly correct English, but he was unmistakably a foreigner;
+one could have allotted him with some certainty to the Eastern half
+of Europe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A beautiful country, as you say,&rdquo; replied Yeovil; then
+he added the question, &ldquo;Are you German?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, Hungarian,&rdquo; said the other; &ldquo;and you, you
+are English?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have been much in England, but I am from Russia,&rdquo;
+said Yeovil, purposely misleading his companion on the subject of his
+nationality in order to induce him to talk with greater freedom on a
+delicate topic.&nbsp; While living among foreigners in a foreign land
+he had shrunk from hearing his country&rsquo;s disaster discussed, or
+even alluded to; now he was anxious to learn what unprejudiced foreigners
+thought of the catastrophe and the causes which had led up to it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is a strange spectacle, a wonder, is it not so?&rdquo;
+resumed the other, &ldquo;a great nation such as this was, one of the
+greatest nations in modern times, or of any time, carrying its flag
+and its language into all parts of the world, and now, after one short
+campaign, it is&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he shrugged his shoulders many times and made clucking noises
+at the roof of his voice, like a hen calling to a brood of roving chickens.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They grew soft,&rdquo; he resumed; &ldquo;great world-commerce
+brings great luxury, and luxury brings softness.&nbsp; They had everything
+to warn them, things happening in their own time and before their eyes,
+and they would not be warned.&nbsp; They had seen, in one generation,
+the rise of the military and naval power of the Japanese, a brown-skinned
+race living in some island rice fields in a tropical sea, a people one
+thought of in connection with paper fans and flowers and pretty tea-gardens,
+who suddenly marched and sailed into the world&rsquo;s gaze as a Great
+Power; they had seen, too, the rise of the Bulgars, a poor herd of <i>zaptieh</i>-ridden
+peasants, with a few students scattered in exile in Bukarest and Odessa,
+who shot up in one generation to be an armed and aggressive nation with
+history in its hands.&nbsp; The English saw these things happening around
+them, and with a war-cloud growing blacker and bigger and always more
+threatening on their own threshold they sat down to grow soft and peaceful.&nbsp;
+They grew soft and accommodating in all things in religion&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In religion?&rdquo; said Yeovil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In religion, yes,&rdquo; said his companion emphatically;
+&ldquo;they had come to look on the Christ as a sort of amiable elder
+Brother, whose letters from abroad were worth reading.&nbsp; Then, when
+they had emptied all the divine mystery and wonder out of their faith
+naturally they grew tired of it, oh, but dreadfully tired of it.&nbsp;
+I know many English of the country parts, and always they tell me they
+go to church once in each week to set the good example to the servants.&nbsp;
+They were tired of their faith, but they were not virile enough to become
+real Pagans; their dancing fauns were good young men who tripped Morris
+dances and ate health foods and believed in a sort of Socialism which
+made for the greatest dulness of the greatest number.&nbsp; You will
+find plenty of them still if you go into what remains of social London.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yeovil gave a grunt of acquiescence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They grew soft in their political ideas,&rdquo; continued
+the unsparing critic; &ldquo;for the old insular belief that all foreigners
+were devils and rogues they substituted another belief, equally grounded
+on insular lack of knowledge, that most foreigners were amiable, good
+fellows, who only needed to be talked to and patted on the back to become
+your friends and benefactors.&nbsp; They began to believe that a foreign
+Minister would relinquish long-cherished schemes of national policy
+and hostile expansion if he came over on a holiday and was asked down
+to country houses and shown the tennis court and the rock-garden and
+the younger children.&nbsp; Listen.&nbsp; I once heard it solemnly stated
+at an after-dinner debate in some literary club that a certain very
+prominent German statesman had a daughter at school in England, and
+that future friendly relations between the two countries were improved
+in prospect, if not assured, by that circumstance.&nbsp; You think I
+am laughing; I am recording a fact, and the men present were politicians
+and statesmen as well as literary dilettanti.&nbsp; It was an insular
+lack of insight that worked the mischief, or some of the mischief.&nbsp;
+We, in Hungary, we live too much cheek by jowl with our racial neighbours
+to have many illusions about them.&nbsp; Austrians, Roumanians, Serbs,
+Italians, Czechs, we know what they think of us, and we know what to
+think of them, we know what we want in the world, and we know what they
+want; that knowledge does not send us flying at each other&rsquo;s throats,
+but it does keep us from growing soft.&nbsp; Ah, the British lion was
+in a hurry to inaugurate the Millennium and to lie down gracefully with
+the lamb.&nbsp; He made two mistakes, only two, but they were very bad
+ones; the Millennium hadn&rsquo;t arrived, and it was not a lamb that
+he was lying down with.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You do not like the English, I gather,&rdquo; said Yeovil,
+as the Hungarian went off into a short burst of satirical laughter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have always liked them,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;but now
+I am angry with them for being soft.&nbsp; Here is my station,&rdquo;
+he added, as the train slowed down, and he commenced to gather his belongings
+together.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am angry with them,&rdquo; he continued, as
+a final word on the subject, &ldquo;because I <i>hate</i> the Germans.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He raised his hat punctiliously in a parting salute and stepped out
+on to the platform.&nbsp; His place was taken by a large, loose-limbed
+man, with florid face and big staring eyes, and an immense array of
+fishing-basket, rod, fly-cases, and so forth.&nbsp; He was of the type
+that one could instinctively locate as a loud-voiced, self-constituted
+authority on whatever topic might happen to be discussed in the bars
+of small hotels.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you English?&rdquo; he asked, after a preliminary stare
+at Yeovil.</p>
+<p>This time Yeovil did not trouble to disguise his nationality; he
+nodded curtly to his questioner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Glad of that,&rdquo; said the fisherman; &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t
+like travelling with Germans.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Unfortunately,&rdquo; said Yeovil, &ldquo;we have to travel
+with them, as partners in the same State concern, and not by any means
+the predominant partner either.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, that will soon right itself,&rdquo; said the other with
+loud assertiveness, &ldquo;that will right itself damn soon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing in politics rights itself,&rdquo; said Yeovil; &ldquo;things
+have to be righted, which is a different matter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What d&rsquo;y&rsquo;mean?&rdquo; said the fisherman, who
+did not like to have his assertions taken up and shaken into shape.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We have given a clever and domineering people a chance to
+plant themselves down as masters in our land; I don&rsquo;t imagine
+that they are going to give us an easy chance to push them out.&nbsp;
+To do that we shall have to be a little cleverer than they are, a little
+harder, a little fiercer, and a good deal more self-sacrificing than
+we have been in my lifetime or in yours.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll be that, right enough,&rdquo; said the fisherman;
+&ldquo;we mean business this time.&nbsp; The last war wasn&rsquo;t a
+war, it was a snap.&nbsp; We weren&rsquo;t prepared and they were.&nbsp;
+That won&rsquo;t happen again, bless you.&nbsp; I know what I&rsquo;m
+talking about.&nbsp; I go up and down the country, and I hear what people
+are saying.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yeovil privately doubted if he ever heard anything but his own opinions.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It stands to reason,&rdquo; continued the fisherman, &ldquo;that
+a highly civilised race like ours, with the record that we&rsquo;ve
+had for leading the whole world, is not going to be held under for long
+by a lot of damned sausage-eating Germans.&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t you believe
+it!&nbsp; I know what I&rsquo;m talking about.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve travelled
+about the world a bit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yeovil shrewdly suspected that the world travels amounted to nothing
+more than a trip to the United States and perhaps the Channel Islands,
+with, possibly, a week or fortnight in Paris.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t the past we&rsquo;ve got to think of, it&rsquo;s
+the future,&rdquo; said Yeovil.&nbsp; &ldquo;Other maritime Powers had
+pasts to look back on; Spain and Holland, for instance.&nbsp; The past
+didn&rsquo;t help them when they let their sea-sovereignty slip from
+them.&nbsp; That is a matter of history and not very distant history
+either.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, that&rsquo;s where you make a mistake,&rdquo; said the
+other; &ldquo;our sea-sovereignty hasn&rsquo;t slipped from us, and
+won&rsquo;t do, neither.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s the British Empire beyond
+the seas; Canada, Australia, New Zealand, East Africa.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He rolled the names round his tongue with obvious relish.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If it was a list of first-class battleships, and armoured
+cruisers and destroyers and airships that you were reeling off, there
+would be some comfort and hope in the situation,&rdquo; said Yeovil;
+&ldquo;the loyalty of the colonies is a splendid thing, but it is only
+pathetically splendid because it can do so little to recover for us
+what we&rsquo;ve lost.&nbsp; Against the Zeppelin air fleet, and the
+Dreadnought sea squadrons and the new Gelberhaus cruisers, the last
+word in maritime mobility, of what avail is loyal devotion plus half-a-dozen
+warships, one keel to ten, scattered over one or two ocean coasts?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, but they&rsquo;ll build,&rdquo; said the fisherman confidently;
+&ldquo;they&rsquo;ll build.&nbsp; They&rsquo;re only waiting to enlarge
+their dockyard accommodation and get the right class of artificers and
+engineers and workmen together.&nbsp; The money will be forthcoming
+somehow, and they&rsquo;ll start in and build.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And do you suppose,&rdquo; asked Yeovil in slow bitter contempt,
+&ldquo;that the victorious nation is going to sit and watch and wait
+till the defeated foe has created a new war fleet, big enough to drive
+it from the seas?&nbsp; Do you suppose it is going to watch keel added
+to keel, gun to gun, airship to airship, till its preponderance has
+been wiped out or even threatened?&nbsp; That sort of thing is done
+once in a generation, not twice.&nbsp; Who is going to protect Australia
+or New Zealand while they enlarge their dockyards and hangars and build
+their dreadnoughts and their airships?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s my station and I&rsquo;m not sorry,&rdquo; said
+the fisherman, gathering his tackle together and rising to depart; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
+listened to you long enough.&nbsp; You and me wouldn&rsquo;t agree,
+not if we was to talk all day.&nbsp; Fact is, I&rsquo;m an out-and-out
+patriot and you&rsquo;re only a half-hearted one.&nbsp; That&rsquo;s
+what you are, half-hearted.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And with that parting shot he left the carriage and lounged heavily
+down the platform, a patriot who had never handled a rifle or mounted
+a horse or pulled an oar, but who had never flinched from demolishing
+his country&rsquo;s enemies with his tongue.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;England has never had any lack of patriots of that type,&rdquo;
+thought Yeovil sadly; &ldquo;so many patriots and so little patriotism.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII: TORYWOOD</h2>
+<p>Yeovil got out of the train at a small, clean, wayside station, and
+rapidly formed the conclusion that neatness, abundant leisure, and a
+devotion to the cultivation of wallflowers and wyandottes were the prevailing
+influences of the station-master&rsquo;s life.&nbsp; The train slid
+away into the hazy distance of trees and meadows, and left the traveller
+standing in a world that seemed to be made up in equal parts of rock
+garden, chicken coops, and whiskey advertisements.&nbsp; The station-master,
+who appeared also to act as emergency porter, took Yeovil&rsquo;s ticket
+with the gesture of a kind-hearted person brushing away a troublesome
+wasp, and returned to a study of the <i>Poultry</i> <i>Chronicle</i>,
+which was giving its readers sage counsel concerning the ailments of
+belated July chickens.&nbsp; Yeovil called to mind the station-master
+of a tiny railway town in Siberia, who had held him in long and rather
+intelligent converse on the poetical merits and demerits of Shelley,
+and he wondered what the result would be if he were to engage the English
+official in a discussion on Lermontoff&mdash;or for the matter of that,
+on Shelley.&nbsp; The temptation to experiment was, however, removed
+by the arrival of a young groom, with brown eyes and a friendly smile,
+who hurried into the station and took Yeovil once more into a world
+where he was of fleeting importance.</p>
+<p>In the roadway outside was a four-wheeled dogcart with a pair of
+the famous Torywood blue roans.&nbsp; It was an agreeable variation
+in modern locomotion to be met at a station with high-class horseflesh
+instead of the ubiquitous motor, and the landscape was not of such a
+nature that one wished to be whirled through it in a cloud of dust.&nbsp;
+After a quick spin of some ten or fifteen minutes through twisting hedge-girt
+country roads, the roans turned in at a wide gateway, and went with
+dancing, rhythmic step along the park drive.&nbsp; The screen of oak-crowned
+upland suddenly fell away and a grey sharp-cornered building came into
+view in a setting of low growing beeches and dark pines.&nbsp; Torywood
+was not a stately, reposeful-looking house; it lay amid the sleepy landscape
+like a couched watchdog with pricked ears and wakeful eyes.&nbsp; Built
+somewhere about the last years of Dutch William&rsquo;s reign, it had
+been a centre, ever since, for the political life of the countryside;
+a storm centre of discontent or a rallying ground for the well affected,
+as the circumstances of the day might entail.&nbsp; On the stone-flagged
+terrace in front of the house, with its quaint leaden figures of Diana
+pursuing a hound-pressed stag, successive squires and lords of Torywood
+had walked to and fro with their friends, watching the thunderclouds
+on the political horizon or the shifting shadows on the sundial of political
+favour, tapping the political barometer for indications of change, working
+out a party campaign or arranging for the support of some national movement.&nbsp;
+To and fro they had gone in their respective generations, men with the
+passion for statecraft and political combat strong in their veins, and
+many oft-recurring names had echoed under those wakeful-looking casements,
+names spoken in anger or exultation, or murmured in fear and anxiety:
+Bolingbroke, Charles Edward, Walpole, the Farmer King, Bonaparte, Pitt,
+Wellington, Peel, Gladstone&mdash;echo and Time might have graven those
+names on the stone flags and grey walls.&nbsp; And now one tired old
+woman walked there, with names on her lips that she never uttered.</p>
+<p>A friendly riot of fox terriers and spaniels greeted the carriage,
+leaping and rolling and yelping in an exuberance of sociability, as
+though horses and coachman and groom were comrades who had been absent
+for long months instead of half an hour.&nbsp; An indiscriminately affectionate
+puppy lay flat and whimpering at Yeovil&rsquo;s feet, sending up little
+showers of gravel with its wildly thumping tail, while two of the terriers
+raced each other madly across lawn and shrubbery, as though to show
+the blue roans what speed really was.&nbsp; The laughing-eyed young
+groom disentangled the puppy from between Yeovil&rsquo;s legs, and then
+he was ushered into the grey silence of the entrance hall, leaving sunlight
+and noise and the stir of life behind him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Her ladyship will see you in her writing room,&rdquo; he was
+told, and he followed a servant along the dark passages to the well-remembered
+room.</p>
+<p>There was something tragic in the sudden contrast between the vigour
+and youth and pride of life that Yeovil had seen crystallised in those
+dancing, high-stepping horses, scampering dogs, and alert, clean-limbed
+young men-servants, and the age-frail woman who came forward to meet
+him.</p>
+<p>Eleanor, Dowager Lady Greymarten, had for more than half a century
+been the ruling spirit at Torywood.&nbsp; The affairs of the county
+had not sufficed for her untiring activities of mind and body; in the
+wider field of national and Imperial service she had worked and schemed
+and fought with an energy and a far-sightedness that came probably from
+the blend of caution and bold restlessness in her Scottish blood.&nbsp;
+For many educated minds the arena of politics and public life is a weariness
+of dust and disgust, to others it is a fascinating study, to be watched
+from the comfortable seat of a spectator.&nbsp; To her it was a home.&nbsp;
+In her town house or down at Torywood, with her writing-pad on her knee
+and the telephone at her elbow, or in personal counsel with some trusted
+colleague or persuasive argument with a halting adherent or half-convinced
+opponent, she had laboured on behalf of the poor and the ill-equipped,
+had fought for her idea of the Right, and above all, for the safety
+and sanity of her Fatherland.&nbsp; Spadework when necessary and leadership
+when called for, came alike within the scope of her activities, and
+not least of her achievements, though perhaps she hardly realised it,
+was the force of her example, a lone, indomitable fighter calling to
+the half-caring and the half-discouraged, to the laggard and the slow-moving.</p>
+<p>And now she came across the room with &ldquo;the tired step of a
+tired king,&rdquo; and that look which the French so expressively called
+<i>l&rsquo;air</i> <i>d&eacute;fait</i>.&nbsp; The charm which Heaven
+bestows on old ladies, reserving its highest gift to the end, had always
+seemed in her case to be lost sight of in the dignity and interest of
+a great dame who was still in the full prime of her fighting and ruling
+powers.&nbsp; Now, in Yeovil&rsquo;s eyes, she had suddenly come to
+be very old, stricken with the forlorn languor of one who knows that
+death will be weary to wait for.&nbsp; She had spared herself nothing
+in the long labour, the ceaseless building, the watch and ward, and
+in one short autumn week she had seen the overthrow of all that she
+had built, the falling asunder of the world in which she had laboured.&nbsp;
+Her life&rsquo;s end was like a harvest home when blight and storm have
+laid waste the fruit of long toil and unsparing outlay.&nbsp; Victory
+had been her goal, the death or victory of old heroic challenge, for
+she had always dreamed to die fighting to the last; death or victory&mdash;and
+the gods had given her neither, only the bitterness of a defeat that
+could not be measured in words, and the weariness of a life that had
+outlived happiness or hope.&nbsp; Such was Eleanor, Dowager Lady Greymarten,
+a shadow amid the young red-blooded life at Torywood, but a shadow that
+was too real to die, a shadow that was stronger than the substance that
+surrounded it.</p>
+<p>Yeovil talked long and hurriedly of his late travels, of the vast
+Siberian forests and rivers, the desolate tundras, the lakes and marshes
+where the wild swans rear their broods, the flower carpet of the summer
+fields and the winter ice-mantle of Russia&rsquo;s northern sea.&nbsp;
+He talked as a man talks who avoids the subject that is uppermost in
+his mind, and in the mind of his hearer, as one who looks away from
+a wound or deformity that is too cruel to be taken notice of.</p>
+<p>Tea was served in a long oak-panelled gallery, where generations
+of Mustelfords had romped and played as children, and remained yet in
+effigy, in a collection of more or less faithful portraits.&nbsp; After
+tea Yeovil was taken by his hostess to the aviaries, which constituted
+the sole claim which Torywood possessed to being considered a show place.&nbsp;
+The third Earl of Greymarten had collected rare and interesting birds,
+somewhere about the time when Gilbert White was penning the last of
+his deathless letters, and his successors in the title had perpetuated
+the hobby.&nbsp; Little lawns and ponds and shrubberies were partitioned
+off for the various ground-loving species, and higher cages with interlacing
+perches and rockwork shelves accommodated the birds whose natural expression
+of movement was on the wing.&nbsp; Quails and francolins scurried about
+under low-growing shrubs, peacock-pheasants strutted and sunned themselves,
+pugnacious ruffs engaged in perfunctory battles, from force of habit
+now that the rivalry of the mating season was over; choughs, ravens,
+and loud-throated gulls occupied sections of a vast rockery, and bright-hued
+Chinese pond-herons and delicately stepping egrets waded among the waterlilies
+of a marble-terraced tank.&nbsp; One or two dusky shapes seen dimly
+in the recesses of a large cage built round a hollow tree would be lively
+owls when evening came on.</p>
+<p>In the course of his many wanderings Yeovil had himself contributed
+three or four inhabitants to this little feathered town, and he went
+round the enclosures, renewing old acquaintances and examining new additions.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The falcon cage is empty,&rdquo; said Lady Greymarten, pointing
+to a large wired dome that towered high above the other enclosures,
+&ldquo;I let the lanner fly free one day.&nbsp; The other birds may
+be reconciled to their comfortable quarters and abundant food and absence
+of dangers, but I don&rsquo;t think all those things could make up to
+a falcon for the wild range of cliff and desert.&nbsp; When one has
+lost one&rsquo;s own liberty one feels a quicker sympathy for other
+caged things, I suppose.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was silence for a moment, and then the Dowager went on, in
+a wistful, passionate voice:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am an old woman now, Murrey, I must die in my cage.&nbsp;
+I haven&rsquo;t the strength to fight.&nbsp; Age is a very real and
+very cruel thing, though we may shut our eyes to it and pretend it is
+not there.&nbsp; I thought at one time that I should never really know
+what it meant, what it brought to one.&nbsp; I thought of it as a messenger
+that one could keep waiting out in the yard till the very last moment.&nbsp;
+I know now what it means. . . .&nbsp; But you, Murrey, you are young,
+you can fight.&nbsp; Are you going to be a fighter, or the very humble
+servant of the <i>fait</i> <i>accompli</i>?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall never be the servant of the <i>fait</i> <i>accompli</i>,&rdquo;
+said Yeovil.&nbsp; &ldquo;I loathe it.&nbsp; As to fighting, one must
+first find out what weapon to use, and how to use it effectively.&nbsp;
+One must watch and wait.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One must not wait too long,&rdquo; said the old woman.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Time is on their side, not ours.&nbsp; It is the young people
+we must fight for now, if they are ever to fight for us.&nbsp; A new
+generation will spring up, a weaker memory of old glories will survive,
+the <i>&eacute;clat</i> of the ruling race will capture young imaginations.&nbsp;
+If I had your youth, Murrey, and your sex, I would become a commercial
+traveller.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A commercial traveller!&rdquo; exclaimed Yeovil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, one whose business took him up and down the country,
+into contact with all classes, into homes and shops and inns and railway
+carriages.&nbsp; And as I travelled I would work, work on the minds
+of every boy and girl I came across, every young father and young mother
+too, every young couple that were going to be man and wife.&nbsp; I
+would awaken or keep alive in their memory the things that we have been,
+the grand, brave things that some of our race have done, and I would
+stir up a longing, a determination for the future that we must win back.&nbsp;
+I would be a counter-agent to the agents of the <i>fait</i> <i>accompli</i>.&nbsp;
+In course of time the Government would find out what I was doing, and
+I should be sent out of the country, but I should have accomplished
+something, and others would carry on the work.&nbsp; That is what I
+would do.&nbsp; Murrey, even if it is to be a losing battle, fight it,
+fight it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yeovil knew that the old lady was fighting her last battle, rallying
+the discouraged, and spurring on the backward.</p>
+<p>A footman came to announce that the carriage waited to take him back
+to the station.&nbsp; His hostess walked with him through the hall,
+and came out on to the stone-flagged terrace, the terrace from which
+a former Lady Greymarten had watched the twinkling bonfires that told
+of Waterloo.</p>
+<p>Yeovil said good-bye to her as she stood there, a wan, shrunken shadow,
+yet with a greater strength and reality in her flickering life than
+those parrot men and women that fluttered and chattered through London
+drawing-rooms and theatre foyers.</p>
+<p>As the carriage swung round a bend in the drive Yeovil looked back
+at Torywood, a lone, grey building, couched like a watchdog with pricked
+ears and wakeful eyes in the midst of the sleeping landscape.&nbsp;
+An old pleading voice was still ringing in his ears:</p>
+<blockquote><p><i>Imperious</i> <i>and</i> <i>yet</i> <i>forlorn</i>,<br />
+<i>Came</i> <i>through</i> <i>the</i> <i>silence</i> <i>of</i> <i>the</i>
+<i>trees</i>,<br />
+<i>The</i> <i>echoes</i> <i>of</i> <i>a</i> <i>golden</i> <i>horn</i>,<br />
+<i>Calling</i> <i>to</i> <i>distances</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Somehow Yeovil knew that he would never hear that voice again, and
+he knew, too, that he would hear it always, with its message, &ldquo;Be
+a fighter.&rdquo;&nbsp; And he knew now, with a shamefaced consciousness
+that sprang suddenly into existence, that the summons would sound for
+him in vain.</p>
+<p>The weary brain-torturing months of fever had left their trail behind,
+a lassitude of spirit and a sluggishness of blood, a quenching of the
+desire to roam and court adventure and hardship.&nbsp; In the hours
+of waking and depression between the raging intervals of delirium he
+had speculated, with a sort of detached, listless indifference, on the
+chances of his getting back to life and strength and energy.&nbsp; The
+prospect of filling a corner of some lonely Siberian graveyard or Finnish
+cemetery had seemed near realisation at times, and for a man who was
+already half dead the other half didn&rsquo;t particularly matter.&nbsp;
+But when he had allowed himself to dwell on the more hopeful side of
+the case it had always been a complete recovery that awaited him; the
+same Yeovil as of yore, a little thinner and more lined about the eyes
+perhaps, would go through life in the same way, alert, resolute, enterprising,
+ready to start off at short notice for some desert or upland where the
+eagles were circling and the wild-fowl were calling.&nbsp; He had not
+reckoned that Death, evaded and held off by the doctors&rsquo; skill,
+might exact a compromise, and that only part of the man would go free
+to the West.</p>
+<p>And now he began to realise how little of mental and physical energy
+he could count on.&nbsp; His own country had never seemed in his eyes
+so comfort-yielding and to-be-desired as it did now when it had passed
+into alien keeping and become a prison land as much as a homeland.&nbsp;
+London with its thin mockery of a Season, and its chattering horde of
+empty-hearted self-seekers, held no attraction for him, but the spell
+of English country life was weaving itself round him, now that the charm
+of the desert was receding into a mist of memories.&nbsp; The waning
+of pleasant autumn days in an English woodland, the whir of game birds
+in the clean harvested fields, the grey moist mornings in the saddle,
+with the magical cry of hounds coming up from some misty hollow, and
+then the delicious abandon of physical weariness in bathroom and bedroom
+after a long run, and the heavenly snatched hour of luxurious sleep,
+before stirring back to life and hunger, the coming of the dinner hour
+and the jollity of a well-chosen house-party.</p>
+<p>That was the call which was competing with that other trumpet-call,
+and Yeovil knew on which side his choice would incline.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV: &ldquo;A PERFECTLY GLORIOUS AFTERNOON&rdquo;</h2>
+<p>It was one of the last days of July, cooled and freshened by a touch
+of rain and dropping back again to a languorous warmth.&nbsp; London
+looked at its summer best, rain-washed and sun-lit, with the maximum
+of coming and going in its more fashionable streets.</p>
+<p>Cicely Yeovil sat in a screened alcove of the Anchorage Restaurant,
+a feeding-ground which had lately sprung into favour.&nbsp; Opposite
+her sat Ronnie, confronting the ruins of what had been a dish of prawns
+in aspic.&nbsp; Cool and clean and fresh-coloured, he was good to look
+on in the eyes of his companion, and yet, perhaps, there was a ruffle
+in her soul that called for some answering disturbance on the part of
+that superbly tranquil young man, and certainly called in vain.&nbsp;
+Cicely had set up for herself a fetish of onyx with eyes of jade, and
+doubtless hungered at times with an unreasonable but perfectly natural
+hunger for something of flesh and blood.&nbsp; It was the religion of
+her life to know exactly what she wanted and to see that she got it,
+but there was no possible guarantee against her occasionally experiencing
+a desire for something else.&nbsp; It is the golden rule of all religions
+that no one should really live up to their precepts; when a man observes
+the principles of his religion too exactly he is in immediate danger
+of founding a new sect.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To-day is going to be your day of triumph,&rdquo; said Cicely
+to the young man, who was wondering at the moment whether he would care
+to embark on an artichoke; &ldquo;I believe I&rsquo;m more nervous than
+you are,&rdquo; she added, &ldquo;and yet I rather hate the idea of
+you scoring a great success.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; asked Ronnie, diverting his mind for a moment
+from the artichoke question and its ramifications of <i>sauce</i> <i>hollandaise</i>
+or <i>vinaigre</i>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I like you as you are,&rdquo; said Cicely, &ldquo;just a nice-looking
+boy to flatter and spoil and pretend to be fond of.&nbsp; You&rsquo;ve
+got a charming young body and you&rsquo;ve no soul, and that&rsquo;s
+such a fascinating combination.&nbsp; If you had a soul you would either
+dislike or worship me, and I&rsquo;d much rather have things as they
+are.&nbsp; And now you are going to go a step beyond that, and other
+people will applaud you and say that you are wonderful, and invite you
+to eat with them and motor with them and yacht with them.&nbsp; As soon
+as that begins to happen, Ronnie, a lot of other things will come to
+an end.&nbsp; Of course I&rsquo;ve always known that you don&rsquo;t
+really care for me, but as soon as the world knows it you are irrevocably
+damaged as a plaything.&nbsp; That is the great secret that binds us
+together, the knowledge that we have no real affection for one another.&nbsp;
+And this afternoon every one will know that you are a great artist,
+and no great artist was ever a great lover.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shan&rsquo;t be difficult to replace, anyway,&rdquo; said
+Ronnie, with what he imagined was a becoming modesty; &ldquo;there are
+lots of boys standing round ready to be fed and flattered and put on
+an imaginary pedestal, most of them more or less good-looking and well
+turned out and amusing to talk to.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I dare say I could find a successor for your vacated niche,&rdquo;
+said Cicely lightly; &ldquo;one thing I&rsquo;m determined on though,
+he shan&rsquo;t be a musician.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s so unsatisfactory to
+have to share a grand passion with a grand piano.&nbsp; He shall be
+a delightful young barbarian who would think Saint Sa&euml;ns was a
+Derby winner or a claret.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be in too much of a hurry to replace me,&rdquo;
+said Ronnie, who did not care to have his successor too seriously discussed.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I may not score the success you expect this afternoon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear boy, a minor crowned head from across the sea is coming
+to hear you play, and that alone will count as a success with most of
+your listeners.&nbsp; Also, I&rsquo;ve secured a real Duchess for you,
+which is rather an achievement in the London of to-day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An English Duchess?&rdquo; asked Ronnie, who had early in
+life learned to apply the Merchandise Marks Act to ducal titles.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;English, oh certainly, at least as far as the title goes;
+she was born under the constellation of the Star-spangled Banner.&nbsp;
+I don&rsquo;t suppose the Duke approves of her being here, lending her
+countenance to the <i>fait</i> <i>accompli</i>, but when you&rsquo;ve
+got republican blood in your veins a Kaiser is quite as attractive a
+lodestar as a King, rather more so.&nbsp; And Canon Mousepace is coming,&rdquo;
+continued Cicely, referring to a closely-written list of guests; &ldquo;the
+excellent von Tolb has been attending his church lately, and the Canon
+is longing to meet her.&nbsp; She is just the sort of person he adores.&nbsp;
+I fancy he sincerely realises how difficult it will be for the rich
+to enter the Kingdom of Heaven, and he tries to make up for it by being
+as nice as possible to them in this world.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ronnie held out his hand for the list.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think you know most of the others,&rdquo; said Cicely, passing
+it to him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Leutnant von Gabelroth?&rdquo; read out Ronnie; &ldquo;who
+is he?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In one of the hussar regiments quartered here; a friend of
+the Gr&auml;fin&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Ugly but amiable, and I&rsquo;m told
+a good cross-country rider.&nbsp; I suppose Murrey will be disgusted
+at meeting the &lsquo;outward and visible sign&rsquo; under his roof,
+but these encounters are inevitable as long as he is in London.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t know Murrey was coming,&rdquo; said Ronnie.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe he&rsquo;s going to look in on us,&rdquo; said Cicely;
+&ldquo;it&rsquo;s just as well, you know, otherwise we should have Joan
+asking in her loudest voice when he was going to be back in England
+again.&nbsp; I haven&rsquo;t asked her, but she overheard the Gr&auml;fin
+arranging to come and hear you play, and I fancy that will be quite
+enough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How about some Turkish coffee?&rdquo; said Ronnie, who had
+decided against the artichoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Turkish coffee, certainly, and a cigarette, and a moment&rsquo;s
+peace before the serious business of the afternoon claims us.&nbsp;
+Talking about peace, do you know, Ronnie, it has just occurred to me
+that we have left out one of the most important things in our <i>affaire</i>;
+we have never had a quarrel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hate quarrels,&rdquo; said Ronnie, &ldquo;they are so domesticated.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the first time I&rsquo;ve ever heard you talk
+about your home,&rdquo; said Cicely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I fancy it would apply to most homes,&rdquo; said Ronnie.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The last boy-friend I had used to quarrel furiously with me
+at least once a week,&rdquo; said Cicely reflectively; &ldquo;but then
+he had dark slumberous eyes that lit up magnificently when he was angry,
+so it would have been a sheer waste of God&rsquo;s good gifts not to
+have sent him into a passion now and then.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With your excursions into the past and the future you are
+making me feel dreadfully like an instalment of a serial novel,&rdquo;
+protested Ronnie; &ldquo;we have now got to &lsquo;synopsis of earlier
+chapters.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It shan&rsquo;t be teased,&rdquo; said Cicely; &ldquo;we will
+live in the present and go no further into the future than to make arrangements
+for Tuesday&rsquo;s dinner-party.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve asked the Duchess;
+she would never have forgiven me if she&rsquo;d found out that I had
+a crowned head dining with me and hadn&rsquo;t asked her to meet him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>A sudden hush descended on the company gathered in the great drawing-room
+at Berkshire Street as Ronnie took his seat at the piano; the voice
+of Canon Mousepace outlasted the others for a moment or so, and then
+subsided into a regretful but gracious silence.&nbsp; For the next nine
+or ten minutes Ronnie held possession of the crowded room, a tense slender
+figure, with cold green eyes aflame in a sudden fire, and smooth burnished
+head bent low over the keyboard that yielded a disciplined riot of melody
+under his strong deft fingers.&nbsp; The world-weary Landgraf forgot
+for the moment the regrettable trend of his subjects towards Parliamentary
+Socialism, the excellent Gr&auml;fin von Tolb forgot all that the Canon
+had been saying to her for the last ten minutes, forgot the depressing
+certainty that he would have a great deal more that he wanted to say
+in the immediate future, over and above the thirty-five minutes or so
+of discourse that she would contract to listen to next Sunday.&nbsp;
+And Cicely listened with the wistful equivocal triumph of one whose
+goose has turned out to be a swan and who realises with secret concern
+that she has only planned the r&ocirc;le of goosegirl for herself.</p>
+<p>The last chords died away, the fire faded out of the jade-coloured
+eyes, and Ronnie became once more a well-groomed youth in a drawing-room
+full of well-dressed people.&nbsp; But around him rose an explosive
+clamour of applause and congratulation, the sincere tribute of appreciation
+and the equally hearty expression of imitative homage.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is a great gift, a great gift,&rdquo; chanted Canon Mousepace,
+&ldquo;You must put it to a great use.&nbsp; A talent is vouchsafed
+to us for a purpose; you must fulfil the purpose.&nbsp; Talent such
+as yours is a responsibility; you must meet that responsibility.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The dictionary of the English language was an inexhaustible quarry,
+from which the Canon had hewn and fashioned for himself a great reputation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You must gom and blay to me at Schlachsenberg,&rdquo; said
+the kindly-faced Landgraf, whom the world adored and thwarted in about
+equal proportions.&nbsp; &ldquo;At Christmas, yes, that will be a good
+time.&nbsp; We still keep the Christ-Fest at Schlachsenberg, though
+the &lsquo;Sozi&rsquo; keep telling our schoolchildren that it is only
+a Christ myth.&nbsp; Never mind, I will have the Vice-President of our
+Landtag to listen to you; he is &lsquo;Sozi&rsquo; but we are good friends
+outside the Parliament House; you shall blay to him, my young friendt,
+and gonfince him that there is a Got in Heaven.&nbsp; You will gom?&nbsp;
+Yes?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was beautiful,&rdquo; said the Gr&auml;fin simply; &ldquo;it
+made me cry.&nbsp; Go back to the piano again, please, at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Perhaps the near neighbourhood of the Canon inspired this command,
+but the Gr&auml;fin had been genuinely charmed.&nbsp; She adored good
+music and she was unaffectedly fond of good-looking boys.</p>
+<p>Ronnie went back to the piano and tasted the matured pleasure of
+a repeated success.&nbsp; Any measure of nervousness that he may have
+felt at first had completely passed away.&nbsp; He was sure of his audience
+and he played as though they did not exist.&nbsp; A renewed clamour
+of excited approval attended the conclusion of his performance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is a triumph, a perfectly <i>glorious</i> triumph,&rdquo;
+exclaimed the Duchess of Dreyshire, turning to Yeovil, who sat silent
+among his wife&rsquo;s guests; &ldquo;isn&rsquo;t it just <i>glorious</i>?&rdquo;
+she demanded, with a heavy insistent intonation of the word.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it?&rdquo; said Yeovil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo; she cried, with a rising inflection,
+&ldquo;isn&rsquo;t it just <i>perfectly</i> glorious?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; confessed Yeovil; &ldquo;you see
+glory hasn&rsquo;t come very much my way lately.&rdquo;&nbsp; Then,
+before he exactly realised what he was doing, he raised his voice and
+quoted loudly for the benefit of half the room:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Other Romans shall arise,<br />
+Heedless of a soldier&rsquo;s name,<br />
+Sounds, not deeds, shall win the prize,<br />
+Harmony the path to fame.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>There was a sort of shiver of surprised silence at Yeovil&rsquo;s
+end of the room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hell!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The word rang out in a strong young voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hell!&nbsp; And it&rsquo;s true, that&rsquo;s the worst of
+it.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s damned true!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yeovil turned, with some dozen others, to see who was responsible
+for this vigorously expressed statement.</p>
+<p>Tony Luton confronted him, an angry scowl on his face, a blaze in
+his heavy-lidded eyes.&nbsp; The boy was without a conscience, almost
+without a soul, as priests and parsons reckon souls, but there was a
+slumbering devil-god within him, and Yeovil&rsquo;s taunting words had
+broken the slumber.&nbsp; Life had been for Tony a hard school, in which
+right and wrong, high endeavour and good resolve, were untaught subjects;
+but there was a sterling something in him, just that something that
+helped poor street-scavenged men to die brave-fronted deaths in the
+trenches of Salamanca, that fired a handful of apprentice boys to shut
+the gates of Derry and stare unflinchingly at grim leaguer and starvation.&nbsp;
+It was just that nameless something that was lacking in the young musician,
+who stood at the further end of the room, bathed in a flood of compliment
+and congratulation, enjoying the honey-drops of his triumph.</p>
+<p>Luton pushed his way through the crowd and left the room, without
+troubling to take leave of his hostess.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What a strange young man,&rdquo; exclaimed the Duchess; &ldquo;now
+do take me into the next room,&rdquo; she went on almost in the same
+breath, &ldquo;I&rsquo;m just dying for some iced coffee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yeovil escorted her through the throng of Ronnie-worshippers to the
+desired haven of refreshment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Marvellous!&rdquo; Mrs. Menteith-Mendlesohnn was exclaiming
+in ringing trumpet tones; &ldquo;of course I always knew he could play,
+but this is not mere piano playing, it is tone-mastery, it is sound
+magic.&nbsp; Mrs. Yeovil has introduced us to a new star in the musical
+firmament.&nbsp; Do you know, I feel this afternoon just like Cortez,
+in the poem, gazing at the newly discovered sea.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Silent upon a peak in Darien,&rsquo;&rdquo; quoted
+a penetrating voice that could only belong to Joan Mardle; &ldquo;I
+say, can any one picture Mrs. Menteith-Mendlesohnn silent on any peak
+or under any circumstances?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>If any one had that measure of imagination, no one acknowledged the
+fact.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A great gift and a great responsibility,&rdquo; Canon Mousepace
+was assuring the Gr&auml;fin; &ldquo;the power of evoking sublime melody
+is akin to the power of awakening thought; a musician can appeal to
+dormant consciousness as the preacher can appeal to dormant conscience.&nbsp;
+It is a responsibility, an instrument for good or evil.&nbsp; Our young
+friend here, we may be sure, will use it as an instrument for good.&nbsp;
+He has, I feel certain, a sense of his responsibility.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is a nice boy,&rdquo; said the Gr&auml;fin simply; &ldquo;he
+has such pretty hair.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In one of the window recesses Rhapsodie Pantril was talking vaguely
+but beautifully to a small audience on the subject of chromatic chords;
+she had the advantage of knowing what she was talking about, an advantage
+that her listeners did not in the least share.&nbsp; &ldquo;All through
+his playing there ran a tone-note of malachite green,&rdquo; she declared
+recklessly, feeling safe from immediate contradiction; &ldquo;malachite
+green, <i>my</i> colour&mdash;the colour of striving.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Having satisfied the ruling passion that demanded gentle and dextrous
+self-advertisement, she realised that the Augusta Smith in her craved
+refreshment, and moved with one of her over-awed admirers towards the
+haven where peaches and iced coffee might be considered a certainty.</p>
+<p>The refreshment alcove, which was really a good-sized room, a sort
+of chapel-of-ease to the larger drawing-room, was already packed with
+a crowd who felt that they could best discuss Ronnie&rsquo;s triumph
+between mouthfuls of fruit salad and iced draughts of hock-cup.&nbsp;
+So brief is human glory that two or three independent souls had even
+now drifted from the theme of the moment on to other more personally
+interesting topics.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Iced mulberry salad, my dear, it&rsquo;s a <i>sp&eacute;cialit&eacute;</i>
+<i>de</i> <i>la</i> <i>maison</i>, so to speak; they say the roving
+husband brought the recipe from Astrakhan, or Seville, or some such
+outlandish place.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish my husband would roam about a bit and bring back strange
+palatable dishes.&nbsp; No such luck, he&rsquo;s got asthma and has
+to keep on a gravel soil with a south aspect and all sorts of other
+restrictions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think you&rsquo;re to be pitied in the least;
+a husband with asthma is like a captive golf-ball, you can always put
+your hand on him when you want him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All the hangings, <i>violette</i> <i>de</i> <i>Parme</i>,
+all the furniture, rosewood.&nbsp; Nothing is to be played in it except
+Mozart.&nbsp; Mozart only.&nbsp; Some of my friends wanted me to have
+a replica of the Mozart statue at Vienna put up in a corner of the room,
+with flowers always around it, but I really couldn&rsquo;t.&nbsp; I
+<i>couldn&rsquo;t</i>.&nbsp; One is <i>so</i> tired of it, one sees
+it everywhere.&nbsp; I couldn&rsquo;t do it.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m like that,
+you know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I&rsquo;ve secured the hero of the hour, Ronnie Storre,
+oh yes, rather.&nbsp; He&rsquo;s going to join our yachting trip, third
+week of August.&nbsp; We&rsquo;re going as far afield as Fiume, in the
+Adriatic&mdash;or is it the &AElig;gean?&nbsp; Won&rsquo;t it be jolly.&nbsp;
+Oh no, we&rsquo;re not asking Mrs. Yeovil; it&rsquo;s quite a small
+yacht you know&mdash;at least, it&rsquo;s a small party.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The excellent von Tolb took her departure, bearing off with her the
+Landgraf, who had already settled the date and duration of Ronnie&rsquo;s
+Christmas visit.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will be dull, you know,&rdquo; he warned the prospective
+guest; &ldquo;our Landtag will not be sitting, and what is a bear-garden
+without the bears?&nbsp; However, we haf some wildt schwein in our woods,
+we can show you some sport in that way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ronnie instantly saw himself in a well-fitting shooting costume,
+with a Tyrolese hat placed at a very careful angle on his head, but
+he confessed that the other details of boar-hunting were rather beyond
+him.</p>
+<p>With the departure of the von Tolb party Canon Mousepace gravitated
+decently but persistently towards a corner where the Duchess, still
+at concert pitch, was alternatively praising Ronnie&rsquo;s performance
+and the mulberry salad.&nbsp; Joan Mardle, who formed one of the group,
+was not openly praising any one, but she was paying a silent tribute
+to the salad.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We were just talking about Ronnie Storre&rsquo;s music, Canon,&rdquo;
+said the Duchess; &ldquo;I consider it just perfectly glorious.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a great talent, isn&rsquo;t it, Canon,&rdquo; put
+in Joan briskly, &ldquo;and of course it&rsquo;s a responsibility as
+well, don&rsquo;t you think?&nbsp; Music can be such an influence, just
+as eloquence can; don&rsquo;t you agree with me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The quarry of the English language was of course a public property,
+but it was disconcerting to have one&rsquo;s own particular barrow-load
+of sentence-building material carried off before one&rsquo;s eyes.&nbsp;
+The Canon&rsquo;s impressive homily on Ronnie&rsquo;s gift and its possibilities
+had to be hastily whittled down to a weakly acquiescent, &ldquo;Quite
+so, quite so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you tasted this iced mulberry salad, Canon?&rdquo; asked
+the Duchess; &ldquo;it&rsquo;s perfectly luscious.&nbsp; Just hurry
+along and get some before it&rsquo;s all gone.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And her Grace hurried along in an opposite direction, to thank Cicely
+for past favours and to express lively gratitude for the Tuesday to
+come.</p>
+<p>The guests departed, with a rather irritating slowness, for which
+perhaps the excellence of Cicely&rsquo;s buffet arrangements was partly
+responsible.&nbsp; The great drawing-room seemed to grow larger and
+more oppressive as the human wave receded, and the hostess fled at last
+with some relief to the narrower limits of her writing-room and the
+sedative influences of a cigarette.&nbsp; She was inclined to be sorry
+for herself; the triumph of the afternoon had turned out much as she
+had predicted at lunch time.&nbsp; Her idol of onyx had not been swept
+from its pedestal, but the pedestal itself had an air of being packed
+up ready for transport to some other temple.&nbsp; Ronnie would be flattered
+and spoiled by half a hundred people, just because he could conjure
+sounds out of a keyboard, and Cicely felt no great incentive to go on
+flattering and spoiling him herself.&nbsp; And Ronnie would acquiesce
+in his dismissal with the good grace born of indifference&mdash;the
+surest guarantor of perfect manners.&nbsp; Already he had social engagements
+for the coming months in which she had no share; the drifting apart
+would be mutual.&nbsp; He had been an intelligent and amusing companion,
+and he had played the game as she had wished it to be played, without
+the fatigue of keeping up pretences which neither of them could have
+believed in.&nbsp; &ldquo;Let us have a wonderfully good time together&rdquo;
+had been the single stipulation in their unwritten treaty of comradeship,
+and they had had the good time.&nbsp; Their whole-hearted pursuit of
+material happiness would go on as keenly as before, but they would hunt
+in different company, that was all.&nbsp; Yes, that was all. . . .</p>
+<p>Cicely found the effect of her cigarette less sedative than she was
+disposed to exact.&nbsp; It might be necessary to change the brand.&nbsp;
+Some ten or eleven days later Yeovil read an announcement in the papers
+that, in spite of handsome offers of increased salary, Mr. Tony Luton,
+the original singer of the popular ditty &ldquo;Eccleston Square,&rdquo;
+had terminated his engagement with Messrs. Isaac Grosvenor and Leon
+Hebhardt of the Caravansery Theatre, and signed on as a deck hand in
+the Canadian Marine.</p>
+<p>Perhaps after all there had been some shred of glory amid the trumpet
+triumph of that July afternoon.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XV: THE INTELLIGENT ANTICIPATOR OF WANTS</h2>
+<p>Two of Yeovil&rsquo;s London clubs, the two that he had been accustomed
+to frequent, had closed their doors after the catastrophe.&nbsp; One
+of them had perished from off the face of the earth, its fittings had
+been sold and its papers lay stored in some solicitor&rsquo;s office,
+a tit-bit of material for the pen of some future historian.&nbsp; The
+other had transplanted itself to Delhi, whither it had removed its early
+Georgian furniture and its traditions, and sought to reproduce its St.
+James&rsquo;s Street atmosphere as nearly as the conditions of a tropical
+Asiatic city would permit.&nbsp; There remained the Cartwheel, a considerably
+newer institution, which had sprung into existence somewhere about the
+time of Yeovil&rsquo;s last sojourn in England; he had joined it on
+the solicitation of a friend who was interested in the venture, and
+his bankers had paid his subscription during his absence.&nbsp; As he
+had never been inside its doors there could be no depressing comparisons
+to make between its present state and aforetime glories, and Yeovil
+turned into its portals one afternoon with the adventurous detachment
+of a man who breaks new ground and challenges new experiences.</p>
+<p>He entered with a diffident sense of intrusion, conscious that his
+standing as a member might not be recognised by the keepers of the doors;
+in a moment, however, he realised that a rajah&rsquo;s escort of elephants
+might almost have marched through the entrance hall and vestibule without
+challenge.&nbsp; The general atmosphere of the scene suggested a blend
+of the railway station at Cologne, the Hotel Bristol in any European
+capital, and the second act in most musical comedies.&nbsp; A score
+of brilliant and brilliantined pages decorated the foreground, while
+Hebraic-looking gentlemen, wearing tartan waistcoats of the clans of
+their adoption, flitted restlessly between the tape machines and telephone
+boxes.&nbsp; The army of occupation had obviously established a firm
+footing in the hospitable premises; a kaleidoscopic pattern of uniforms,
+sky-blue, indigo, and bottle-green, relieved the civilian attire of
+the groups that clustered in lounge and card rooms and corridors.&nbsp;
+Yeovil rapidly came to the conclusion that the joys of membership were
+not for him.&nbsp; He had turned to go, after a very cursory inspection
+of the premises and their human occupants, when he was hailed by a young
+man, dressed with strenuous neatness, whom he remembered having met
+in past days at the houses of one or two common friends.</p>
+<p>Hubert Herlton&rsquo;s parents had brought him into the world, and
+some twenty-one years later had put him into a motor business.&nbsp;
+Having taken these pardonable liberties they had completely exhausted
+their ideas of what to do with him, and Hubert seemed unlikely to develop
+any ideas of his own on the subject.&nbsp; The motor business elected
+to conduct itself without his connivance; journalism, the stage, tomato
+culture (without capital), and other professions that could be entered
+on at short notice were submitted to his consideration by nimble-minded
+relations and friends.&nbsp; He listened to their suggestions with polite
+indifference, being rude only to a cousin who demonstrated how he might
+achieve a settled income of from two hundred to a thousand pounds a
+year by the propagation of mushrooms in a London basement.&nbsp; While
+his walk in life was still an undetermined promenade his parents died,
+leaving him with a carefully-invested income of thirty-seven pounds
+a year.&nbsp; At that point of his career Yeovil&rsquo;s knowledge of
+him stopped short; the journey to Siberia had taken him beyond the range
+of Herlton&rsquo;s domestic vicissitudes.</p>
+<p>The young man greeted him in a decidedly friendly manner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t know you were a member here,&rdquo; he exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s the first time I&rsquo;ve ever been in the club,&rdquo;
+said Yeovil, &ldquo;and I fancy it will be the last.&nbsp; There is
+rather too much of the fighting machine in evidence here.&nbsp; One
+doesn&rsquo;t want a perpetual reminder of what has happened staring
+one in the face.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We tried at first to keep the alien element out,&rdquo; said
+Herlton apologetically, &ldquo;but we couldn&rsquo;t have carried on
+the club if we&rsquo;d stuck to that line.&nbsp; You see we&rsquo;d
+lost more than two-thirds of our old members so we couldn&rsquo;t afford
+to be exclusive.&nbsp; As a matter of fact the whole thing was decided
+over our heads; a new syndicate took over the concern, and a new committee
+was installed, with a good many foreigners on it.&nbsp; I know it&rsquo;s
+horrid having these uniforms flaunting all over the place, but what
+is one to do?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yeovil said nothing, with the air of a man who could have said a
+great deal.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose you wonder, why remain a member under those conditions?&rdquo;
+continued Herlton.&nbsp; &ldquo;Well, as far as I am concerned, a place
+like this is a necessity for me.&nbsp; In fact, it&rsquo;s my profession,
+my source of income.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you as good at bridge as all that?&rdquo; asked Yeovil;
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m a fairly successful player myself, but I should be
+sorry to have to live on my winnings, year in, year out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t play cards,&rdquo; said Herlton, &ldquo;at least
+not for serious stakes.&nbsp; My winnings or losings wouldn&rsquo;t
+come to a tenner in an average year.&nbsp; No, I live by commissions,
+by introducing likely buyers to would-be sellers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sellers of what?&rdquo; asked Yeovil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Anything, everything; horses, yachts, old masters, plate,
+shootings, poultry-farms, week-end cottages, motor cars, almost anything
+you can think of.&nbsp; Look,&rdquo; and he produced from his breast
+pocket a bulky note-book illusorily inscribed &ldquo;engagements.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here,&rdquo; he explained, tapping the book, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
+got a double entry of every likely client that I know, with a note of
+the things he may have to sell and the things he may want to buy.&nbsp;
+When it is something that he has for sale there are cross-references
+to likely purchasers of that particular line of article.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t
+limit myself to things that I actually know people to be in want of,
+I go further than that and have theories, carefully indexed theories,
+as to the things that people might want to buy.&nbsp; At the right moment,
+if I can get the opportunity, I mention the article that is in my mind&rsquo;s
+eye to the possible purchaser who has also been in my mind&rsquo;s eye,
+and I frequently bring off a sale.&nbsp; I started a chance acquaintance
+on a career of print-buying the other day merely by telling him of a
+couple of good prints that I knew of, that were to be had at a quite
+reasonable price; he is a man with more money than he knows what to
+do with, and he has laid out quite a lot on old prints since his first
+purchase.&nbsp; Most of his collection he has got through me, and of
+course I net a commission on each transaction.&nbsp; So you see, old
+man, how useful, not to say necessary, a club with a large membership
+is to me.&nbsp; The more mixed and socially chaotic it is, the more
+serviceable it is.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; said Yeovil, &ldquo;and I suppose, as a
+matter of fact, a good many of your clients belong to the conquering
+race.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, you see, they are the people who have got the money,&rdquo;
+said Herlton; &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t mean to say that the invading Germans
+are usually people of wealth, but while they live over here they escape
+the crushing taxation that falls on the British-born subject.&nbsp;
+They serve their country as soldiers, and we have to serve it in garrison
+money, ship money and so forth, besides the ordinary taxes of the State.&nbsp;
+The German shoulders the rifle, the Englishman has to shoulder everything
+else.&nbsp; That is what will help more than anything towards the gradual
+Germanising of our big towns; the comparatively lightly-taxed German
+workman over here will have a much bigger spending power and purchasing
+power than his heavily taxed English neighbour.&nbsp; The public-houses,
+bars, eating-houses, places of amusement and so forth, will come to
+cater more and more for money-yielding German patronage.&nbsp; The stream
+of British emigration will swell rather than diminish, and the stream
+of Teuton immigration will be equally persistent and progressive.&nbsp;
+Yes, the military-service ordinance was a cunning stroke on the part
+of that old fox, von Kwarl.&nbsp; As a civilian statesman he is far
+and away cleverer than Bismarck was; he smothers with a feather-bed
+where Bismarck would have tried to smash with a sledge-hammer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you got me down on your list of noteworthy people?&rdquo;
+asked Yeovil, turning the drift of the conversation back to the personal
+topic.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly I have,&rdquo; said Herlton, turning the pages of
+his pocket directory to the letter Y.&nbsp; &ldquo;As soon as I knew
+you were back in England I made several entries concerning you.&nbsp;
+In the first place it was possible that you might have a volume on Siberian
+travel and natural history notes to publish, and I&rsquo;ve cross-referenced
+you to a publisher I know who rather wants books of that sort on his
+list.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I may tell you at once that I&rsquo;ve no intentions in that
+direction,&rdquo; said Yeovil, in some amusement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just as well,&rdquo; said Herlton cheerfully, scribbling a
+hieroglyphic in his book; &ldquo;that branch of business is rather outside
+my line&mdash;too little in it, and the gratitude of author and publisher
+for being introduced to one another is usually short-lived.&nbsp; A
+more serious entry was the item that if you were wintering in England
+you would be looking out for a hunter or two.&nbsp; You used to hunt
+with the East Wessex, I remember; I&rsquo;ve got just the very animal
+that will suit that country, ready waiting for you.&nbsp; A beautiful
+clean jumper.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve put it over a fence or two myself, and
+you and I ride much the same weight.&nbsp; A stiffish price is being
+asked for it, but I&rsquo;ve got the letters D.O. after your name.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In Heaven&rsquo;s name,&rdquo; said Yeovil, now openly grinning,
+&ldquo;before I die of curiosity tell me what D.O. stands for.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It means some one who doesn&rsquo;t object to pay a good price
+for anything that really suits him.&nbsp; There are some people of course
+who won&rsquo;t consider a thing unless they can get it for about a
+third of what they imagine to be its market value.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve
+got another suggestion down against you in my book; you may not be staying
+in the country at all, you may be clearing out in disgust at existing
+conditions.&nbsp; In that case you would be selling a lot of things
+that you wouldn&rsquo;t want to cart away with you.&nbsp; That involves
+another set of entries and a whole lot of cross references.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid I&rsquo;ve given you a lot of trouble,&rdquo;
+said Yeovil drily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; said Herlton, &ldquo;but it would simplify
+matters if we take it for granted that you are going to stay here, for
+this winter anyhow, and are looking out for hunters.&nbsp; Can you lunch
+with me here on Wednesday, and come and look at the animal afterwards?&nbsp;
+It&rsquo;s only thirty-five minutes by train.&nbsp; It will take us
+longer if we motor.&nbsp; There is a two-fifty-three from Charing Cross
+that we could catch comfortably.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you are going to persuade me to hunt in the East Wessex
+country this season,&rdquo; said Yeovil, &ldquo;you must find me a convenient
+hunting box somewhere down there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I <i>have</i> found it,&rdquo; said Herlton, whipping out
+a stylograph, and hastily scribbling an &ldquo;order to view&rdquo;
+on a card; &ldquo;central as possible for all the meets, grand stabling
+accommodation, excellent water-supply, big bathroom, game larder, cellarage,
+a bakehouse if you want to bake your own bread&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Any land with it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not enough to be a nuisance.&nbsp; An acre or two of paddock
+and about the same of garden.&nbsp; You are fond of wild things; a wood
+comes down to the edge of the garden, a wood that harbours owls and
+buzzards and kestrels.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you got all those details in your book?&rdquo; asked
+Yeovil; &ldquo;&lsquo;wood adjoining property, O.B.K.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I keep those details in my head,&rdquo; said Herlton, &ldquo;but
+they are quite reliable.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall insist on something substantial off the rent if there
+are no buzzards,&rdquo; said Yeovil; &ldquo;now that you have mentioned
+them they seem an indispensable accessory to any decent hunting-box.&nbsp;
+Look,&rdquo; he exclaimed, catching sight of a plump middle-aged individual,
+crossing the vestibule with an air of restrained importance, &ldquo;there
+goes the delectable Pitherby.&nbsp; Does he come on your books at all?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should say!&rdquo; exclaimed Herlton fervently.&nbsp; &ldquo;The
+delectable P. nourishes expectations of a barony or viscounty at an
+early date.&nbsp; Most of his life has been spent in streets and squares,
+with occasional migrations to the esplanades of fashionable watering-places
+or the gravelled walks of country house gardens.&nbsp; Now that <i>noblesse</i>
+is about to impose its obligations on him, quite a new catalogue of
+wants has sprung into his mind.&nbsp; There are things that a plain
+esquire may leave undone without causing scandalised remark, but a fiercer
+light beats on a baron.&nbsp; Trigger-pulling is one of the obligations.&nbsp;
+Up to the present Pitherby has never hit a partridge in anger, but this
+year he has commissioned me to rent him a deer forest.&nbsp; Some pedigree
+Herefords for his &lsquo;home farm&rsquo; was another commission, and
+a dozen and a half swans for a swannery.&nbsp; The swannery, I may say,
+was my idea; I said once in his hearing that it gave a baronial air
+to an estate; you see I knew a man who had got a lot of surplus swan
+stock for sale.&nbsp; Now Pitherby wants a heronry as well.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve
+put him in communication with a client of mine who suffers from superfluous
+herons, but of course I can&rsquo;t guarantee that the birds&rsquo;
+nesting arrangements will fall in with his territorial requirement.&nbsp;
+I&rsquo;m getting him some carp, too, of quite respectable age, for
+a carp pond; I thought it would look so well for his lady-wife to be
+discovered by interviewers feeding the carp with her own fair hands,
+and I put the same idea into Pitherby&rsquo;s mind.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had no idea that so many things were necessary to endorse
+a patent of nobility,&rdquo; said Yeovil.&nbsp; &ldquo;If there should
+be any miscarriage in the bestowal of the honour at least Pitherby will
+have absolved himself from any charge of contributory negligence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shall we say Wednesday, here, one o&rsquo;clock, lunch first,
+and go down and look at the horse afterwards?&rdquo; said Herlton, returning
+to the matter in hand.</p>
+<p>Yeovil hesitated, then he nodded his head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is no harm in going to look at the animal,&rdquo; he
+said.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI: SUNRISE</h2>
+<p>Mrs. Kerrick sat at a little teak-wood table in the verandah of a
+low-pitched teak-built house that stood on the steep slope of a brown
+hillside.&nbsp; Her youngest child, with the grave natural dignity of
+nine-year old girlhood, maintained a correct but observant silence,
+looking carefully yet unobtrusively after the wants of the one guest,
+and checking from time to time the incursions of ubiquitous ants that
+were obstinately disposed to treat the table-cloth as a foraging ground.&nbsp;
+The wayfaring visitor, who was experiencing a British blend of Eastern
+hospitality, was a French naturalist, travelling thus far afield in
+quest of feathered specimens to enrich the aviaries of a bird-collecting
+Balkan King.&nbsp; On the previous evening, while shrugging his shoulders
+and unloosing his vocabulary over the meagre accommodation afforded
+by the native rest-house, he had been enchanted by receiving an invitation
+to transfer his quarters to the house on the hillside, where he found
+not only a pleasant-voiced hostess and some drinkable wine, but three
+brown-skinned English youngsters who were able to give him a mass of
+intelligent first-hand information about the bird life of the region.&nbsp;
+And now, at the early morning breakfast, ere yet the sun was showing
+over the rim of the brown-baked hills, he was learning something of
+the life of the little community he had chanced on.&nbsp; &ldquo;I was
+in these parts many years ago,&rdquo; explained the hostess, &ldquo;when
+my husband was alive and had an appointment out here.&nbsp; It is a
+healthy hill district and I had pleasant memories of the place, so when
+it became necessary, well, desirable let us say, to leave our English
+home and find a new one, it occurred to me to bring my boys and my little
+girl here&mdash;my eldest girl is at school in Paris.&nbsp; Labour is
+cheap here and I try my hand at farming in a small way.&nbsp; Of course
+it is very different work to just superintending the dairy and poultry-yard
+arrangements of an English country estate.&nbsp; There are so many things,
+insect ravages, bird depredations, and so on, that one only knows on
+a small scale in England, that happen here in wholesale fashion, not
+to mention droughts and torrential rains and other tropical visitations.&nbsp;
+And then the domestic animals are so disconcertingly different from
+the ones one has been used to; humped cattle never seem to behave in
+the way that straight-backed cattle would, and goats and geese and chickens
+are not a bit the same here that they are in Europe&mdash;and of course
+the farm servants are utterly unlike the same class in England.&nbsp;
+One has to unlearn a good deal of what one thought one knew about stock-keeping
+and agriculture, and take note of the native ways of doing things; they
+are primitive and unenterprising of course, but they have an accumulated
+store of experience behind them, and one has to tread warily in initiating
+improvements.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Frenchman looked round at the brown sun-scorched hills, with
+the dusty empty road showing here and there in the middle distance and
+other brown sun-scorched hills rounding off the scene; he looked at
+the lizards on the verandah walls, at the jars for keeping the water
+cool, at the numberless little insect-bored holes in the furniture,
+at the heat-drawn lines on his hostess&rsquo;s comely face.&nbsp; Notwithstanding
+his present wanderings he had a Frenchman&rsquo;s strong homing instinct,
+and he marvelled to hear this lady, who should have been a lively and
+popular figure in the social circle of some English county town, talking
+serenely of the ways of humped cattle and native servants.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And your children, how do they like the change?&rdquo; he
+asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is healthy up here among the hills,&rdquo; said the mother,
+also looking round at the landscape and thinking doubtless of a very
+different scene; &ldquo;they have an outdoor life and plenty of liberty.&nbsp;
+They have their ponies to ride, and there is a lake up above us that
+is a fine place for them to bathe and boat in; the three boys are there
+now, having their morning swim.&nbsp; The eldest is sixteen and he is
+allowed to have a gun, and there is some good wild fowl shooting to
+be had in the reed beds at the further end of the lake.&nbsp; I think
+that part of the joy of his shooting expeditions lies in the fact that
+many of the duck and plover that he comes across belong to the same
+species that frequent our English moors and rivers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was the first hint that she had given of a wistful sense of exile,
+the yearning for other skies, the message that a dead bird&rsquo;s plumage
+could bring across rolling seas and scorching plains.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the education of your boys, how do you manage for that?&rdquo;
+asked the visitor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is a young tutor living out in these wilds,&rdquo; said
+Mrs. Kerrick; &ldquo;he was assistant master at a private school in
+Scotland, but it had to be given up when&mdash;when things changed;
+so many of the boys left the country.&nbsp; He came out to an uncle
+who has a small estate eight miles from here, and three days in the
+week he rides over to teach my boys, and three days he goes to another
+family living in the opposite direction.&nbsp; To-day he is due to come
+here.&nbsp; It is a great boon to have such an opportunity for getting
+the boys educated, and of course it helps him to earn a living.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the society of the place?&rdquo; asked the Frenchman.</p>
+<p>His hostess laughed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I must admit it has to be looked for with a strong pair of
+field-glasses,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;it is almost as difficult to
+get a good bridge four together as it would have been to get up a tennis
+tournament or a subscription dance in our particular corner of England.&nbsp;
+One has to ignore distances and forget fatigue if one wants to be gregarious
+even on a limited scale.&nbsp; There are one or two officials who are
+our chief social mainstays, but the difficulty is to muster the few
+available souls under the same roof at the same moment.&nbsp; A road
+will be impassable in one quarter, a pony will be lame in another, a
+stress of work will prevent some one else from coming, and another may
+be down with a touch of fever.&nbsp; When my little girl gave a birthday
+party here her only little girl guest had come twelve miles to attend
+it.&nbsp; The Forest officer happened to drop in on us that evening,
+so we felt quite festive.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Frenchman&rsquo;s eyes grew round in wonder.&nbsp; He had once
+thought that the capital city of a Balkan kingdom was the uttermost
+limit of social desolation, viewed from a Parisian standpoint, and there
+at any rate one could get <i>caf&eacute;</i> <i>chantant</i>, tennis,
+picnic parties, an occasional theatre performance by a foreign troupe,
+now and then a travelling circus, not to speak of Court and diplomatic
+functions of a more or less sociable character.&nbsp; Here, it seemed,
+one went a day&rsquo;s journey to reach an evening&rsquo;s entertainment,
+and the chance arrival of a tired official took on the nature of a festivity.&nbsp;
+He looked round again at the rolling stretches of brown hills; before
+he had regarded them merely as the background to this little shut-away
+world, now he saw that they were foreground as well.&nbsp; They were
+everything, there was nothing else.&nbsp; And again his glance travelled
+to the face of his hostess, with its bright, pleasant eyes and smiling
+mouth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you live here with your children,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;here
+in this wilderness?&nbsp; You leave England, you leave everything, for
+this?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His hostess rose and took him over to the far side of the verandah.&nbsp;
+The beginnings of a garden were spread out before them, with young fruit
+trees and flowering shrubs, and bushes of pale pink roses.&nbsp; Exuberant
+tropical growths were interspersed with carefully tended vestiges of
+plants that had evidently been brought from a more temperate climate,
+and had not borne the transition well.&nbsp; Bushes and trees and shrubs
+spread away for some distance, to where the ground rose in a small hillock
+and then fell away abruptly into bare hillside.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In all this garden that you see,&rdquo; said the Englishwoman,
+&ldquo;there is one tree that is sacred.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A tree?&rdquo; said the Frenchman.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A tree that we could not grow in England.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Frenchman followed the direction of her eyes and saw a tall,
+bare pole at the summit of the hillock.&nbsp; At the same moment the
+sun came over the hilltops in a deep, orange glow, and a new light stole
+like magic over the brown landscape.&nbsp; And, as if they had timed
+their arrival to that exact moment of sunburst, three brown-faced boys
+appeared under the straight, bare pole.&nbsp; A cord shivered and flapped,
+and something ran swiftly up into the air, and swung out in the breeze
+that blew across the hills&mdash;a blue flag with red and white crosses.&nbsp;
+The three boys bared their heads and the small girl on the verandah
+steps stood rigidly to attention.&nbsp; Far away down the hill, a young
+man, cantering into view round a corner of the dusty road, removed his
+hat in loyal salutation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is why we live out here,&rdquo; said the Englishwoman
+quietly.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII: THE EVENT OF THE SEASON</h2>
+<p>In the first swelter room of the new Osmanli Baths in Cork Street
+four or five recumbent individuals, in a state of moist nudity and self-respecting
+inertia, were smoking cigarettes or making occasional pretence of reading
+damp newspapers.&nbsp; A glass wall with a glass door shut them off
+from the yet more torrid regions of the further swelter chambers; another
+glass partition disclosed the dimly-lit vault where other patrons of
+the establishment had arrived at the stage of being pounded and kneaded
+and sluiced by Oriental-looking attendants.&nbsp; The splashing and
+trickling of taps, the flip-flap of wet slippers on a wet floor, and
+the low murmur of conversation, filtered through glass doors, made an
+appropriately drowsy accompaniment to the scene.</p>
+<p>A new-comer fluttered into the room, beamed at one of the occupants,
+and settled himself with an air of elaborate languor in a long canvas
+chair.&nbsp; Cornelian Valpy was a fair young man, with perpetual surprise
+impinged on his countenance, and a chin that seemed to have retired
+from competition with the rest of his features.&nbsp; The beam of recognition
+that he had given to his friend or acquaintance subsided into a subdued
+but lingering simper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is the matter?&rdquo; drawled his neighbour lazily, dropping
+the end of a cigarette into a small bowl of water, and helping himself
+from a silver case on the table at his side.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Matter?&rdquo; said Cornelian, opening wide a pair of eyes
+in which unhealthy intelligence seemed to struggle in undetermined battle
+with utter vacuity; &ldquo;why should you suppose that anything is the
+matter?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When you wear a look of idiotic complacency in a Turkish bath,&rdquo;
+said the other, &ldquo;it is the more noticeable from the fact that
+you are wearing nothing else.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Were you at the Shalem House dance last night?&rdquo; asked
+Cornelian, by way of explaining his air of complacent retrospection.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the other, &ldquo;but I feel as if I had been;
+I&rsquo;ve been reading columns about it in the <i>Dawn</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The last event of the season,&rdquo; said Cornelian, &ldquo;and
+quite one of the most amusing and lively functions that there have been.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So the <i>Dawn</i> said; but then, as Shalem practically owns
+and controls that paper, its favourable opinion might be taken for granted.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The whole idea of the Revel was quite original,&rdquo; said
+Cornelian, who was not going to have his personal narrative of the event
+forestalled by anything that a newspaper reporter might have given to
+the public; &ldquo;a certain number of guests went as famous personages
+in the world&rsquo;s history, and each one was accompanied by another
+guest typifying the prevailing characteristic of that personage.&nbsp;
+One man went as Julius C&aelig;sar, for instance, and had a girl typifying
+ambition as his shadow, another went as Louis the Eleventh, and his
+companion personified superstition.&nbsp; Your shadow had to be someone
+of the opposite sex, you see, and every alternate dance throughout the
+evening you danced with your shadow-partner.&nbsp; Quite a clever idea;
+young Graf von Schnatelstein is supposed to have invented it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;New York will be deeply beholden to him,&rdquo; said the other;
+&ldquo;shadow-dances, with all manner of eccentric variations, will
+be the rage there for the next eighteen months.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Some of the costumes were really sumptuous,&rdquo; continued
+Cornelian; &ldquo;the Duchess of Dreyshire was magnificent as Aholibah,
+you never saw so many jewels on one person, only of course she didn&rsquo;t
+look dark enough for the character; she had Billy Carnset for her shadow,
+representing Unspeakable Depravity.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How on earth did he manage that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, a blend of Beardsley and Bakst as far as get-up and costume,
+and of course his own personality counted for a good deal.&nbsp; Quite
+one of the successes of the evening was Leutnant von Gabelroth, as George
+Washington, with Joan Mardle as his shadow, typifying Inconvenient Candour.&nbsp;
+He put her down officially as Truthfulness, but every one had heard
+the other version.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good for the Gabelroth, though he does belong to the invading
+Horde; it&rsquo;s not often that any one scores off Joan.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Another blaze of magnificence was the loud-voiced Bessimer
+woman, as the Goddess Juno, with peacock tails and opals all over her;
+she had Ronnie Storre to represent Green-eyed Jealousy.&nbsp; Talking
+of Ronnie Storre <i>and</i> of jealousy, you will naturally wonder whom
+Mrs. Yeovil went with.&nbsp; I forget what her costume was, but she&rsquo;d
+got that dark-headed youth with her that she&rsquo;s been trotting round
+everywhere the last few days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Cornelian&rsquo;s neighbour kicked him furtively on the shin, and
+frowned in the direction of a dark-haired youth reclining in an adjacent
+chair.&nbsp; The youth in question rose from his seat and stalked into
+the further swelter room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So clever of him to go into the furnace room,&rdquo; said
+the unabashed Cornelian; &ldquo;now if he turns scarlet all over we
+shall never know how much is embarrassment and how much is due to the
+process of being boiled.&nbsp; La Yeovil hasn&rsquo;t done badly by
+the exchange; he&rsquo;s better looking than Ronnie.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see that Pitherby went as Frederick the Great,&rdquo; said
+Cornelian&rsquo;s neighbour, fingering a sheet of the <i>Dawn</i>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t that exactly what one would have expected Pitherby
+to do?&rdquo; said Cornelian.&nbsp; &ldquo;He&rsquo;s so desperately
+anxious to announce to all whom it may concern that he has written a
+life of that hero.&nbsp; He had an uninspiring-looking woman with him,
+supposed to represent Military Genius.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Spirit of Advertisement would have been more appropriate,&rdquo;
+said the other.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The opening scene of the Revel was rather effective,&rdquo;
+continued Cornelian; &ldquo;all the Shadow people reclined in the dimly-lit
+centre of the ballroom in an indistinguishable mass, and the human characters
+marched round the illuminated sides of the room to solemn processional
+music.&nbsp; Every now and then a shadow would detach itself from the
+mass, hail its partner by name, and glide out to join him or her in
+the procession.&nbsp; Then, when the last shadows had found their mates
+and every one was partnered, the lights were turned up in a blaze, the
+orchestra crashed out a whirl of nondescript dance music, and people
+just let themselves go.&nbsp; It was Pandemonium.&nbsp; Afterwards every
+one strutted about for half an hour or so, showing themselves off, and
+then the legitimate programme of dances began.&nbsp; There were some
+rather amusing incidents throughout the evening.&nbsp; One set of lancers
+was danced entirely by the Seven Deadly Sins and their human exemplars;
+of course seven couples were not sufficient to make up the set, so they
+had to bring in an eighth sin, I forget what it was.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The sin of Patriotism would have been rather appropriate,
+considering who were giving the dance,&rdquo; said the other.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; exclaimed Cornelian nervously.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+don&rsquo;t know who may overhear you in a place like this.&nbsp; You&rsquo;ll
+get yourself into trouble.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wasn&rsquo;t there some rather daring new dance of the &lsquo;bunny-hug&rsquo;
+variety?&rdquo; asked the indiscreet one.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The &lsquo;Cubby-Cuddle,&rsquo;&rdquo; said Cornelian; &ldquo;three
+or four adventurous couples danced it towards the end of the evening.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The <i>Dawn</i> says that without being strikingly new it
+was strikingly modern.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The best description I can give of it,&rdquo; said Cornelian,
+&ldquo;is summed up in the comment of the Gr&auml;fin von Tolb when
+she saw it being danced: &lsquo;if they <i>really</i> love each other
+I suppose it doesn&rsquo;t matter.&rsquo;&nbsp; By the way,&rdquo; he
+added with apparent indifference, &ldquo;is there any detailed account
+of my costume in the <i>Dawn</i>?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His companion laughed cynically.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As if you hadn&rsquo;t read everything that the <i>Dawn</i>
+and the other morning papers have to say about the ball hours ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The naked truth should be avoided in a Turkish bath,&rdquo;
+said Cornelian; &ldquo;kindly assume that I&rsquo;ve only had time to
+glance at the weather forecast and the news from China.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, very well,&rdquo; said the other; &ldquo;your costume
+isn&rsquo;t described; you simply come amid a host of others as &lsquo;Mr.
+Cornelian Valpy, resplendent as the Emperor Nero; with him Miss Kate
+Lerra, typifying Insensate Vanity.&rsquo;&nbsp; Many hard things have
+been said of Nero, but his unkindest critics have never accused him
+of resembling you in feature.&nbsp; Until some very clear evidence is
+produced I shall refuse to believe it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Cornelian was proof against these shafts; leaning back gracefully
+in his chair he launched forth into that detailed description of his
+last night&rsquo;s attire which the Dawn had so unaccountably failed
+to supply.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wore a tunic of white Nepaulese silk, with a collar of pearls,
+real pearls.&nbsp; Round my waist I had a girdle of twisted serpents
+in beaten gold, studded all over with amethysts.&nbsp; My sandals were
+of gold, laced with scarlet thread, and I had seven bracelets of gold
+on each arm.&nbsp; Round my head I had a wreath of golden laurel leaves
+set with scarlet berries, and hanging over my left shoulder was a silk
+robe of mulberry purple, broidered with the signs of the zodiac in gold
+and scarlet; I had it made specially for the occasion.&nbsp; At my side
+I had an ivory-sheathed dagger, with a green jade handle, hung in a
+green Cordova leather&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this point of the recital his companion rose softly, flung his
+cigarette end into the little water-bowl, and passed into the further
+swelter room.&nbsp; Cornelian Valpy was left, still clothed in a look
+of ineffable complacency, still engaged, in all probability, in reclothing
+himself in the finery of the previous evening.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVIII: THE DEAD WHO DO NOT UNDERSTAND</h2>
+<p>The pale light of a November afternoon faded rapidly into the dusk
+of a November evening.&nbsp; Far over the countryside housewives put
+up their cottage shutters, lit their lamps, and made the customary remark
+that the days were drawing in.&nbsp; In barn yards and poultry-runs
+the greediest pullets made a final tour of inspection, picking up the
+stray remaining morsels of the evening meal, and then, with much scrambling
+and squawking, sought the places on the roosting-pole that they thought
+should belong to them.&nbsp; Labourers working in yard and field began
+to turn their thoughts homeward or tavernward as the case might be.&nbsp;
+And through the cold squelching slush of a water-logged meadow a weary,
+bedraggled, but unbeaten fox stiffly picked his way, climbed a high
+bramble-grown bank, and flung himself into the sheltering labyrinth
+of a stretching tangle of woods.&nbsp; The pack of fierce-mouthed things
+that had rattled him from copse and gorse-cover, along fallow and plough,
+hedgerow and wooded lane, for nigh on an hour, and had pressed hard
+on his life for the last few minutes, receded suddenly into the background
+of his experiences.&nbsp; The cold, wet meadow, the thick mask of woods,
+and the oncoming dusk had stayed the chase&mdash;and the fox had outstayed
+it.&nbsp; In a short time he would fall mechanically to licking off
+some of the mud that caked on his weary pads; in a shorter time horsemen
+and hounds would have drawn off kennelward and homeward.</p>
+<p>Yeovil rode through the deepening twilight, relying chiefly on his
+horse to find its way in the network of hedge-bordered lanes that presumably
+led to a high road or to some human habitation.&nbsp; He was desperately
+tired after his day&rsquo;s hunting, a legacy of weakness that the fever
+had bequeathed to him, but even though he could scarcely sit upright
+in his saddle his mind dwelt complacently on the day&rsquo;s sport and
+looked forward to the snug cheery comfort that awaited him at his hunting
+box.&nbsp; There was a charm, too, even for a tired man, in the eerie
+stillness of the lone twilight land through which he was passing, a
+grey shadow-hung land which seemed to have been emptied of all things
+that belonged to the daytime, and filled with a lurking, moving life
+of which one knew nothing beyond the sense that it was there.&nbsp;
+There, and very near.&nbsp; If there had been wood-gods and wicked-eyed
+fauns in the sunlit groves and hill sides of old Hellas, surely there
+were watchful, living things of kindred mould in this dusk-hidden wilderness
+of field and hedge and coppice.</p>
+<p>It was Yeovil&rsquo;s third or fourth day with the hounds, without
+taking into account a couple of mornings&rsquo; cub-hunting.&nbsp; Already
+he felt that he had been doing nothing different from this all his life.&nbsp;
+His foreign travels, his illness, his recent weeks in London, they were
+part of a tapestried background that had very slight and distant connection
+with his present existence.&nbsp; Of the future he tried to think with
+greater energy and determination.&nbsp; For this winter, at any rate,
+he would hunt and do a little shooting, entertain a few of his neighbours
+and make friends with any congenial fellow-sportsmen who might be within
+reach.&nbsp; Next year things would be different; he would have had
+time to look round him, to regain something of his aforetime vigour
+of mind and body.&nbsp; Next year, when the hunting season was over,
+he would set about finding out whether there was any nobler game for
+him to take a hand in.&nbsp; He would enter into correspondence with
+old friends who had gone out into the tropics and the backwoods&mdash;he
+would do something.</p>
+<p>So he told himself, but he knew thoroughly well that he had found
+his level.&nbsp; He had ceased to struggle against the fascination of
+his present surroundings.&nbsp; The slow, quiet comfort and interest
+of country life appealed with enervating force to the man whom death
+had half conquered.&nbsp; The pleasures of the chase, well-provided
+for in every detail, and dovetailed in with the assured luxury of a
+well-ordered, well-staffed establishment, were exactly what he wanted
+and exactly what his life down here afforded him.&nbsp; He was experiencing,
+too, that passionate recurring devotion to an old loved scene that comes
+at times to men who have travelled far and willingly up and down the
+world.&nbsp; He was very much at home.&nbsp; The alien standard floating
+over Buckingham Palace, the Crown of Charlemagne on public buildings
+and official documents, the grey ships of war riding in Plymouth Bay
+and Southampton Water with a flag at their stern that older generations
+of Britons had never looked on, these things seemed far away and inconsequent
+amid the hedgerows and woods and fallows of the East Wessex country.&nbsp;
+Horse and hound-craft, harvest, game broods, the planting and felling
+of timber, the rearing and selling of stock, the letting of grasslands,
+the care of fisheries, the up-keep of markets and fairs, they were the
+things that immediately mattered.&nbsp; And Yeovil saw himself, in moments
+of disgust and self-accusation, settling down into this life of rustic
+littleness, concerned over the late nesting of a partridge or the defective
+draining of a loose-box, hugely busy over affairs that a gardener&rsquo;s
+boy might grapple with, ignoring the struggle-cry that went up, low
+and bitter and wistful, from a dethroned dispossessed race, in whose
+glories he had gloried, in whose struggle he lent no hand.&nbsp; In
+what way, he asked himself in such moments, would his life be better
+than the life of that parody of manhood who upholstered his rooms with
+art hangings and rosewood furniture and babbled over the effect?</p>
+<p>The lanes seemed interminable and without aim or object except to
+bisect one another; gates and gaps disclosed nothing in the way of a
+landmark, and the night began to draw down in increasing shades of darkness.&nbsp;
+Presently, however, the tired horse quickened its pace, swung round
+a sharp corner into a broader roadway, and stopped with an air of thankful
+expectancy at the low doorway of a wayside inn.&nbsp; A cheerful glow
+of light streamed from the windows and door, and a brighter glare came
+from the other side of the road, where a large motorcar was being got
+ready for an immediate start.&nbsp; Yeovil tumbled stiffly out of his
+saddle, and in answer to the loud rattle of his hunting crop on the
+open door the innkeeper and two or three hangers-on hurried out to attend
+to the wants of man and beast.&nbsp; Flour and water for the horse and
+something hot for himself were Yeovil&rsquo;s first concern, and then
+he began to clamour for geographical information.&nbsp; He was rather
+dismayed to find that the cumulative opinions of those whom he consulted,
+and of several others who joined unbidden in the discussion, placed
+his destination at nothing nearer than nine miles.&nbsp; Nine miles
+of dark and hilly country road for a tired man on a tired horse assumed
+enormous, far-stretching proportions, and although he dimly remembered
+that he had asked a guest to dinner for that evening he began to wonder
+whether the wayside inn possessed anything endurable in the way of a
+bedroom.&nbsp; The landlord interrupted his desperate speculations with
+a really brilliant effort of suggestion.&nbsp; There was a gentleman
+in the bar, he said, who was going in a motorcar in the direction for
+which Yeovil was bound, and who would no doubt be willing to drop him
+at his destination; the gentleman had also been out with the hounds.&nbsp;
+Yeovil&rsquo;s horse could be stabled at the inn and fetched home by
+a groom the next morning.&nbsp; A hurried embassy to the bar parlour
+resulted in the news that the motorist would be delighted to be of assistance
+to a fellow-sportsman.&nbsp; Yeovil gratefully accepted the chance that
+had so obligingly come his way, and hastened to superintend the housing
+of his horse in its night&rsquo;s quarters.&nbsp; When he had duly seen
+to the tired animal&rsquo;s comfort and foddering he returned to the
+roadway, where a young man in hunting garb and a livened chauffeur were
+standing by the side of the waiting car.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am so very pleased to be of some use to you, Mr. Yeovil,&rdquo;
+said the car-owner, with a polite bow, and Yeovil recognised the young
+Leutnant von Gabelroth, who had been present at the musical afternoon
+at Berkshire Street.&nbsp; He had doubtless seen him at the meet that
+morning, but in his hunting kit he had escaped his observation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I, too, have been out with the hounds,&rdquo; the young man
+continued; &ldquo;I have left my horse at the Crow and Sceptre at Dolford.&nbsp;
+You are living at Black Dene, are you not?&nbsp; I can take you right
+past your door, it is all on my way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yeovil hung back for a moment, overwhelmed with vexation and embarrassment,
+but it was too late to cancel the arrangement he had unwittingly entered
+into, and he was constrained to put himself under obligation to the
+young officer with the best grace he could muster.&nbsp; After all,
+he reflected, he had met him under his own roof as his wife&rsquo;s
+guest.&nbsp; He paid his reckoning to mine host, tipped the stable lad
+who had helped him with his horse, and took his place beside von Gabelroth
+in the car.</p>
+<p>As they glided along the dark roadway and the young German reeled
+off a string of comments on the incidents of the day&rsquo;s sport,
+Yeovil lay back amid his comfortable wraps and weighed the measure of
+his humiliation.&nbsp; It was Cicely&rsquo;s gospel that one should
+know what one wanted in life and take good care that one got what one
+wanted.&nbsp; Could he apply that test of achievement to his own life?&nbsp;
+Was this what he really wanted to be doing, pursuing his uneventful
+way as a country squire, sharing even his sports and pastimes with men
+of the nation that had conquered and enslaved his Fatherland?</p>
+<p>The car slackened its pace somewhat as they went through a small
+hamlet, past a schoolhouse, past a rural police-station with the new
+monogram over its notice-board, past a church with a little tree-grown
+graveyard.&nbsp; There, in a corner, among wild-rose bushes and tall
+yews, lay some of Yeovil&rsquo;s own kinsfolk, who had lived in these
+parts and hunted and found life pleasant in the days that were not so
+very long ago.&nbsp; Whenever he went past that quiet little gathering-place
+of the dead Yeovil was wont to raise his hat in mute affectionate salutation
+to those who were now only memories in his family; to-night he somehow
+omitted the salute and turned his head the other way.&nbsp; It was as
+though the dead of his race saw and wondered.</p>
+<p>Three or four months ago the thing he was doing would have seemed
+an impossibility, now it was actually happening; he was listening to
+the gay, courteous, tactful chatter of his young companion, laughing
+now and then at some joking remark, answering some question of interest,
+learning something of hunting ways and traditions in von Gabelroth&rsquo;s
+own country.&nbsp; And when the car turned in at the gate of the hunting
+lodge and drew up at the steps the laws of hospitality demanded that
+Yeovil should ask his benefactor of the road to come in for a few minutes
+and drink something a little better than the wayside inn had been able
+to supply.&nbsp; The young officer spent the best part of a half hour
+in Yeovil&rsquo;s snuggery, examining and discussing the trophies of
+rifle and collecting gun that covered the walls.&nbsp; He had a good
+knowledge of woodcraft, and the beasts and birds of Siberian forests
+and North African deserts were to him new pages in a familiar book.&nbsp;
+Yeovil found himself discoursing eagerly with his chance guest on the
+European distribution and local variation of such and such a species,
+recounting peculiarities in its habits and incidents of its pursuit
+and capture.&nbsp; If the cold observant eyes of Lady Shalem could have
+rested on the scene she would have hailed it as another root-fibre thrown
+out by the <i>fait</i> <i>accompli</i>.</p>
+<p>Yeovil closed the hall door on his departing visitor, and closed
+his mind on the crowd of angry and accusing thoughts that were waiting
+to intrude themselves.&nbsp; His valet had already got his bath in readiness
+and in a few minutes the tired huntsman was forgetting weariness and
+the consciousness of outside things in the languorous abandonment that
+steam and hot water induce.&nbsp; Brain and limbs seemed to lay themselves
+down in a contented waking sleep, the world that was beyond the bathroom
+walls dropped away into a far unreal distance; only somewhere through
+the steam clouds pierced a hazy consciousness that a dinner, well chosen,
+was being well cooked, and would presently be well served&mdash;and
+right well appreciated.&nbsp; That was the lure to drag the bather away
+from the Nirvana land of warmth and steam.&nbsp; The stimulating after-effect
+of the bath took its due effect, and Yeovil felt that he was now much
+less tired and enormously hungry.&nbsp; A cheery fire burned in his
+dressing-room and a lively black kitten helped him to dress, and incidentally
+helped him to require a new tassel to the cord of his dressing-gown.&nbsp;
+As he finished his toilet and the kitten finished its sixth and most
+notable attack on the tassel a ring was heard at the front door, and
+a moment later a loud, hearty, and unmistakably hungry voice resounded
+in the hall.&nbsp; It belonged to the local doctor, who had also taken
+part in the day&rsquo;s run and had been bidden to enliven the evening
+meal with the entertainment of his inexhaustible store of sporting and
+social reminiscences.&nbsp; He knew the countryside and the countryfolk
+inside out, and he was a living unwritten chronicle of the East Wessex
+hunt.&nbsp; His conversation seemed exactly the right accompaniment
+to the meal; his stories brought glimpses of wet hedgerows, stiff ploughlands,
+leafy spinneys and muddy brooks in among the rich old Worcester and
+Georgian silver of the dinner service, the glow and crackle of the wood
+fire, the pleasant succession of well-cooked dishes and mellow wines.&nbsp;
+The world narrowed itself down again to a warm, drowsy-scented dining-room,
+with a productive hinterland of kitchen and cellar beyond it, and beyond
+that an important outer world of loose box and harness-room and stable-yard;
+further again a dark hushed region where pheasants roosted and owls
+flitted and foxes prowled.</p>
+<p>Yeovil sat and listened to story after story of the men and women
+and horses of the neighbourhood; even the foxes seemed to have a personality,
+some of them, and a personal history.&nbsp; It was a little like Hans
+Andersen, he decided, and a little like the <i>Reminiscences</i> <i>of</i>
+<i>an</i> <i>Irish</i> <i>R</i>.<i>M</i>., and perhaps just a little
+like some of the more probable adventures of Baron Munchausen.&nbsp;
+The newer stories were evidently true to the smallest detail, the earlier
+ones had altered somewhat in repetition, as plants and animals vary
+under domestication.</p>
+<p>And all the time there was one topic that was never touched on.&nbsp;
+Of half the families mentioned it was necessary to add the qualifying
+information that they &ldquo;used to live&rdquo; at such and such a
+place; the countryside knew them no longer.&nbsp; Their properties were
+for sale or had already passed into the hands of strangers.&nbsp; But
+neither man cared to allude to the grinning shadow that sat at the feast
+and sent an icy chill now and again through the cheeriest jest and most
+jovial story.&nbsp; The brisk run with the hounds that day had stirred
+and warmed their pulses; it was an evening for comfortable forgetting.&nbsp;
+Later that night, in the stillness of his bedroom, with the dwindling
+noises of a retiring household dropping off one by one into ordered
+silence, a door shutting here, a fire being raked out there, the thoughts
+that had been held away came crowding in.&nbsp; The body was tired,
+but the brain was not, and Yeovil lay awake with his thoughts for company.&nbsp;
+The world grew suddenly wide again, filled with the significance of
+things that mattered, held by the actions of men that mattered.&nbsp;
+Hunting-box and stable and gun-room dwindled to a mere pin-point in
+the universe, there were other larger, more absorbing things on which
+the mind dwelt.&nbsp; There was the grey cold sea outside Dover and
+Portsmouth and Cork, where the great grey ships of war rocked and swung
+with the tides, where the sailors sang, in doggerel English, that bitter-sounding
+adaptation, &ldquo;Germania rules t&rsquo;e waves,&rdquo; where the
+flag of a World-Power floated for the world to see.&nbsp; And in oven-like
+cities of India there were men who looked out at the white sun-glare,
+the heat-baked dust, the welter of crowded streets, who listened to
+the unceasing chorus of harsh-throated crows, the strident creaking
+of cart-wheels, the buzz and drone of insect swarms and the rattle call
+of the tree lizards; men whose thoughts went hungrily to the cool grey
+skies and wet turf and moist ploughlands of an English hunting country,
+men whose memories listened yearningly to the music of a deep-throated
+hound and the call of a game-bird in the stubble.&nbsp; Yeovil had secured
+for himself the enjoyment of the things for which these men hungered;
+he had known what he wanted in life, slowly and with hesitation, yet
+nevertheless surely, he had arrived at the achievement of his unconfessed
+desires.&nbsp; Here, installed under his own roof-tree, with as good
+horseflesh in his stable as man could desire, with sport lying almost
+at his door, with his wife ready to come down and help him to entertain
+his neighbours, Murrey Yeovil had found the life that he wanted&mdash;and
+was accursed in his own eyes.&nbsp; He argued with himself, and palliated
+and explained, but he knew why he had turned his eyes away that evening
+from the little graveyard under the trees; one cannot explain things
+to the dead.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX: THE LITTLE FOXES</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Take us the foxes, the little foxes, that spoil
+the vines&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>On a warm and sunny May afternoon, some ten months since Yeovil&rsquo;s
+return from his Siberian wanderings and sickness, Cicely sat at a small
+table in the open-air restaurant in Hyde Park, finishing her after-luncheon
+coffee and listening to the meritorious performance of the orchestra.&nbsp;
+Opposite her sat Larry Meadowfield, absorbed for the moment in the slow
+enjoyment of a cigarette, which also was not without its short-lived
+merits.&nbsp; Larry was a well-dressed youngster, who was, in Cicely&rsquo;s
+opinion, distinctly good to look on&mdash;an opinion which the boy himself
+obviously shared.&nbsp; He had the healthy, well-cared-for appearance
+of a country-dweller who has been turned into a town dandy without suffering
+in the process.&nbsp; His blue-black hair, growing very low down on
+a broad forehead, was brushed back in a smoothness that gave his head
+the appearance of a rain-polished sloe; his eyebrows were two dark smudges
+and his large violet-grey eyes expressed the restful good temper of
+an animal whose immediate requirements have been satisfied.&nbsp; The
+lunch had been an excellent one, and it was jolly to feed out of doors
+in the warm spring air&mdash;the only drawback to the arrangement being
+the absence of mirrors.&nbsp; However, if he could not look at himself
+a great many people could look at him.</p>
+<p>Cicely listened to the orchestra as it jerked and strutted through
+a fantastic dance measure, and as she listened she looked appreciatively
+at the boy on the other side of the table, whose soul for the moment
+seemed to be in his cigarette.&nbsp; Her scheme of life, knowing just
+what you wanted and taking good care that you got it, was justifying
+itself by results.&nbsp; Ronnie, grown tiresome with success, had not
+been difficult to replace, and no one in her world had had the satisfaction
+of being able to condole with her on the undesirable experience of a
+long interregnum.&nbsp; To feminine acquaintances with fewer advantages
+of purse and brains and looks she might figure as &ldquo;that Yeovil
+woman,&rdquo; but never had she given them justification to allude to
+her as &ldquo;poor Cicely Yeovil.&rdquo;&nbsp; And Murrey, dear old
+soul, had cooled down, as she had hoped and wished, from his white heat
+of disgust at the things that she had prepared herself to accept philosophically.&nbsp;
+A new chapter of their married life and man-and-woman friendship had
+opened; many a rare gallop they had had together that winter, many a
+cheery dinner gathering and long bridge evening in the cosy hunting-lodge.&nbsp;
+Though he still hated the new London and held himself aloof from most
+of her Town set, yet he had not shown himself rigidly intolerant of
+the sprinkling of Teuton sportsmen who hunted and shot down in his part
+of the country.</p>
+<p>The orchestra finished its clicking and caracoling and was accorded
+a short clatter of applause.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The <i>Danse</i> <i>Macabre</i>,&rdquo; said Cicely to her
+companion; &ldquo;one of Saint-Sa&euml;ns&rsquo; best known pieces.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it?&rdquo; said Larry indifferently; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
+take your word for it.&nbsp; &rsquo;Fraid I don&rsquo;t know much about
+music.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You dear boy, that&rsquo;s just what I like in you,&rdquo;
+said Cicely; &ldquo;you&rsquo;re such a delicious young barbarian.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Am I?&rdquo; said Larry.&nbsp; &ldquo;I dare say.&nbsp; I
+suppose you know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Larry&rsquo;s father had been a brilliantly clever man who had married
+a brilliantly handsome woman; the Fates had not had the least intention
+that Larry should take after both parents.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The fashion of having one&rsquo;s lunch in the open air has
+quite caught on this season,&rdquo; said Cicely; &ldquo;one sees everybody
+here on a fine day.&nbsp; There is Lady Bailquist over there.&nbsp;
+She used to be Lady Shalem you know, before her husband got the earldom&mdash;to
+be more correct, before she got it for him.&nbsp; I suppose she is all
+agog to see the great review.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was in fact precisely the absorbing topic of the forthcoming Boy-Scout
+march-past that was engaging the Countess of Bailquist&rsquo;s earnest
+attention at the moment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is going to be an historical occasion,&rdquo; she was saying
+to Sir Leonard Pitherby (whose services to literature had up to the
+present received only a half-measure of recognition); &ldquo;if it miscarries
+it will be a serious set-back for the <i>fait</i> <i>accompli</i>.&nbsp;
+If it is a success it will be the biggest step forward in the path of
+reconciliation between the two races that has yet been taken.&nbsp;
+It will mean that the younger generation is on our side&mdash;not all,
+of course, but some, that is all we can expect at present, and that
+will be enough to work on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Supposing the Scouts hang back and don&rsquo;t turn up in
+any numbers,&rdquo; said Sir Leonard anxiously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That of course is the danger,&rdquo; said Lady Bailquist quietly;
+&ldquo;probably two-thirds of the available strength will hold back,
+but a third or even a sixth would be enough; it would redeem the parade
+from the calamity of fiasco, and it would be a nucleus to work on for
+the future.&nbsp; That is what we want, a good start, a preliminary
+rally.&nbsp; It is the first step that counts, that is why to-day&rsquo;s
+event is of such importance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course, of course, the first step on the road,&rdquo; assented
+Sir Leonard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can assure you,&rdquo; continued Lady Bailquist, &ldquo;that
+nothing has been left undone to rally the Scouts to the new order of
+things.&nbsp; Special privileges have been showered on them, alone among
+all the cadet corps they have been allowed to retain their organisation,
+a decoration of merit has been instituted for them, a large hostelry
+and gymnasium has been provided for them in Westminster, His Majesty&rsquo;s
+youngest son is to be their Scoutmaster-in-Chief, a great athletic meeting
+is to be held for them each year, with valuable prizes, three or four
+hundred of them are to be taken every summer, free of charge, for a
+holiday in the Bavarian Highlands and the Baltic Seaboard; besides this
+the parent of every scout who obtains the medal for efficiency is to
+be exempted from part of the new war taxation that the people are finding
+so burdensome.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One certainly cannot say that they have not had attractions
+held out to them,&rdquo; said Sir Leonard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is a special effort,&rdquo; said Lady Bailquist; &ldquo;it
+is worth making an effort for.&nbsp; They are going to be the Janissaries
+of the Empire; the younger generation knocking at the doors of progress,
+and thrusting back the bars and bolts of old racial prejudices.&nbsp;
+I tell you, Sir Leonard, it will be an historic moment when the first
+corps of those little khaki-clad boys swings through the gates of the
+Park.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When do they come?&rdquo; asked the baronet, catching something
+of his companion&rsquo;s zeal.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The first detachment is due to arrive at three,&rdquo; said
+Lady Bailquist, referring to a small time-table of the afternoon&rsquo;s
+proceedings; &ldquo;three, punctually, and the others will follow in
+rapid succession.&nbsp; The Emperor and Suite will arrive at two-fifty
+and take up their positions at the saluting base&mdash;over there, where
+the big flag-staff has been set up.&nbsp; The boys will come in by Hyde
+Park Corner, the Marble Arch, and the Albert Gate, according to their
+districts, and form in one big column over there, where the little flags
+are pegged out.&nbsp; Then the young Prince will inspect them and lead
+them past His Majesty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who will be with the Imperial party?&rdquo; asked Sir Leonard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, it is to be an important affair; everything will be done
+to emphasise the significance of the occasion,&rdquo; said Lady Bailquist,
+again consulting her programme.&nbsp; &ldquo;The King of W&uuml;rtemberg,
+and two of the Bavarian royal Princes, an Abyssinian Envoy who is over
+here&mdash;he will lend a touch of picturesque barbarism to the scene&mdash;the
+general commanding the London district and a whole lot of other military
+bigwigs, and the Austrian, Italian and Roumanian military attach&eacute;s.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She reeled off the imposing list of notables with an air of quiet
+satisfaction.&nbsp; Sir Leonard made mental notes of personages to whom
+he might send presentation copies of his new work &ldquo;Frederick-William,
+the Great Elector, a Popular Biography,&rdquo; as a souvenir of to-day&rsquo;s
+auspicious event.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is nearly a quarter to three now,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;let
+us get a good position before the crowd gets thicker.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come along to my car, it is just opposite to the saluting
+base,&rdquo; said her ladyship; &ldquo;I have a police pass that will
+let us through.&nbsp; We&rsquo;ll ask Mrs. Yeovil and her young friend
+to join us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Larry excused himself from joining the party; he had a barbarian&rsquo;s
+reluctance to assisting at an Imperial triumph.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think I&rsquo;ll push off to the swimming-bath,&rdquo; he
+said to Cicely; &ldquo;see you again about tea-time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Cicely walked with Lady Bailquist and the literary baronet towards
+the crowd of spectators, which was steadily growing in dimensions.&nbsp;
+A newsboy ran in front of them displaying a poster with the intelligence
+&ldquo;Essex wickets fall rapidly&rdquo;&mdash;a semblance of county
+cricket still survived under the new order of things.&nbsp; Near the
+saluting base some thirty or forty motorcars were drawn up in line,
+and Cicely and her companions exchanged greetings with many of the occupants.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A lovely day for the review, isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo; cried
+the Gr&auml;fin von Tolb, breaking off her conversation with Herr Rebinok,
+the little Pomeranian banker, who was sitting by her side.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why
+haven&rsquo;t you brought young Mr. Meadowfield?&nbsp; Such a nice boy.&nbsp;
+I wanted him to come and sit in my carriage and talk to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He doesn&rsquo;t talk you know,&rdquo; said Cicely; &ldquo;he&rsquo;s
+only brilliant to look at.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I could have looked at him,&rdquo; said the Gr&auml;fin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;ll be thousands of other boys to look at presently,&rdquo;
+said Cicely, laughing at the old woman&rsquo;s frankness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think there will be thousands?&rdquo; asked the Gr&auml;fin,
+with an anxious lowering of the voice; &ldquo;really, thousands?&nbsp;
+Hundreds, perhaps; there is some uncertainty.&nbsp; Every one is not
+sanguine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hundreds, anyway,&rdquo; said Cicely.</p>
+<p>The Gr&auml;fin turned to the little banker and spoke to him rapidly
+and earnestly in German.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is most important that we should consolidate our position
+in this country; we must coax the younger generation over by degrees,
+we must disarm their hostility.&nbsp; We cannot afford to be always
+on the watch in this quarter; it is a source of weakness, and we cannot
+afford to be weak.&nbsp; This Slav upheaval in south-eastern Europe
+is becoming a serious menace.&nbsp; Have you seen to-day&rsquo;s telegrams
+from Agram?&nbsp; They are bad reading.&nbsp; There is no computing
+the extent of this movement.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is directed against us,&rdquo; said the banker.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Agreed,&rdquo; said the Gr&auml;fin; &ldquo;it is in the nature
+of things that it must be against us.&nbsp; Let us have no illusions.&nbsp;
+Within the next ten years, sooner perhaps, we shall be faced with a
+crisis which will be only a beginning.&nbsp; We shall need all our strength;
+that is why we cannot afford to be weak over here.&nbsp; To-day is an
+important day; I confess I am anxious.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hark!&nbsp; The kettledrums!&rdquo; exclaimed the commanding
+voice of Lady Bailquist.&nbsp; &ldquo;His Majesty is coming.&nbsp; Quick,
+bundle into the car.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The crowd behind the police-kept lines surged expectantly into closer
+formation; spectators hurried up from side-walks and stood craning their
+necks above the shoulders of earlier arrivals.</p>
+<p>Through the archway at Hyde Park Corner came a resplendent cavalcade,
+with a swirl of colour and rhythmic movement and a crash of exultant
+music; life-guards with gleaming helmets, a detachment of W&uuml;rtemberg
+lancers with a flutter of black and yellow pennons, a rich medley of
+staff uniforms, a prancing array of princely horsemen, the Imperial
+Standard, and the King of Prussia, Great Britain, and Ireland, Emperor
+of the West.&nbsp; It was the most imposing display that Londoners had
+seen since the catastrophe.</p>
+<p>Slowly, grandly, with thunder of music and beat of hoofs, the procession
+passed through the crowd, across the sward towards the saluting base,
+slowly the eagle standard, charged with the leopards, lion and harp
+of the conquered kingdoms, rose mast-high on the flag-staff and fluttered
+in the breeze, slowly and with military precision the troops and suite
+took up their position round the central figure of the great pageant.&nbsp;
+Trumpets and kettledrums suddenly ceased their music, and in a moment
+there rose in their stead an eager buzz of comment from the nearest
+spectators.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How well the young Prince looks in his scout uniform.&rdquo;
+. . . &ldquo;The King of W&uuml;rtemberg is a much younger man than
+I thought he was.&rdquo; . . . &ldquo;Is that a Prussian or Bavarian
+uniform, there on the right, the man on a black horse?&rdquo; . . .&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Neither, it&rsquo;s Austrian, the Austrian military attach&eacute;&rdquo;
+. . .&nbsp; &ldquo;That is von Stoppel talking to His Majesty; he organised
+the Boy Scouts in Germany, you know.&rdquo; . . .&nbsp; &ldquo;His Majesty
+is looking very pleased.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;He has reason to look pleased;
+this is a great event in the history of the two countries.&nbsp; It
+marks a new epoch.&rdquo; . . .&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh, do you see the Abyssinian
+Envoy?&nbsp; What a picturesque figure he makes.&nbsp; How well he sits
+his horse.&rdquo; . . . &ldquo;That is the Grand Duke of Baden&rsquo;s
+nephew, talking to the King of W&uuml;rtemberg now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the buzz and chatter of the spectators fell suddenly three sound
+strokes, distant, measured, sinister; the clang of a clock striking
+three.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Three o&rsquo;clock and not a boy scout within sight or hearing!&rdquo;
+exclaimed the loud ringing voice of Joan Mardle; &ldquo;one can usually
+hear their drums and trumpets a couple of miles away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is the traffic to get through,&rdquo; said Sir Leonard
+Pitherby in an equally high-pitched voice; &ldquo;and of course,&rdquo;
+he added vaguely, &ldquo;it takes some time to get the various units
+together.&nbsp; One must give them a few minutes&rsquo; grace.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Lady Bailquist said nothing, but her restless watchful eyes were
+turned first to Hyde Park Corner and then in the direction of the Marble
+Arch, back again to Hyde Park Corner.&nbsp; Only the dark lines of the
+waiting crowd met her view, with the yellow newspaper placards flitting
+in and out, announcing to an indifferent public the fate of Essex wickets.&nbsp;
+As far as her searching eyes could travel the green stretch of tree
+and sward remained unbroken, save by casual loiterers.&nbsp; No small
+brown columns appeared, no drum beat came throbbing up from the distance.&nbsp;
+The little flags pegged out to mark the positions of the awaited scout-corps
+fluttered in meaningless isolation on the empty parade ground.</p>
+<p>His Majesty was talking unconcernedly with one of his officers, the
+foreign attach&eacute;s looked steadily between their chargers&rsquo;
+ears, as though nothing in particular was hanging in the balance, the
+Abyssinian Envoy displayed an untroubled serenity which was probably
+genuine.&nbsp; Elsewhere among the Suite was a perceptible fidget, the
+more obvious because it was elaborately cloaked.&nbsp; Among the privileged
+onlookers drawn up near the saluting point the fidgeting was more unrestrained.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Six minutes past three, and not a sign of them!&rdquo; exclaimed
+Joan Mardle, with the explosive articulation of one who cannot any longer
+hold back a truth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hark!&rdquo; said some one; &ldquo;I hear trumpets!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was an instant concentration of listening, a straining of eyes.</p>
+<p>It was only the toot of a passing motorcar.&nbsp; Even Sir Leonard
+Pitherby, with the eye of faith, could not locate as much as a cloud
+of dust on the Park horizon.</p>
+<p>And now another sound was heard, a sound difficult to define, without
+beginning, without dimension; the growing murmur of a crowd waking to
+a slowly dawning sensation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish the band would strike up an air,&rdquo; said the Gr&auml;fin
+von Tolb fretfully; &ldquo;it is stupid waiting here in silence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Joan fingered her watch, but she made no further remark; she realised
+that no amount of malicious comment could be so dramatically effective
+now as the slow slipping away of the intolerable seconds.</p>
+<p>The murmur from the crowd grew in volume.&nbsp; Some satirical wit
+started whistling an imitation of an advancing fife and drum band; others
+took it up and the air resounded with the shrill music of a phantom
+army on the march.&nbsp; The mock throbbing of drum and squealing of
+fife rose and fell above the packed masses of spectators, but no answering
+echo came from beyond the distant trees.&nbsp; Like mushrooms in the
+night a muster of uniformed police and plain clothes detectives sprang
+into evidence on all sides; whatever happened there must be no disloyal
+demonstration.&nbsp; The whistlers and mockers were pointedly invited
+to keep silence, and one or two addresses were taken.&nbsp; Under the
+trees, well at the back of the crowd, a young man stood watching the
+long stretch of road along which the Scouts should come.&nbsp; Something
+had drawn him there, against his will, to witness the Imperial Triumph,
+to watch the writing of yet another chapter in the history of his country&rsquo;s
+submission to an accepted fact.&nbsp; And now a dull flush crept into
+his grey face; a look that was partly new-born hope and resurrected
+pride, partly remorse and shame, burned in his eyes.&nbsp; Shame, the
+choking, searing shame of self-reproach that cannot be reasoned away,
+was dominant in his heart.&nbsp; <i>He</i> had laid down his arms&mdash;there
+were others who had never hoisted the flag of surrender.&nbsp; He had
+given up the fight and joined the ranks of the hopelessly subservient;
+in thousands of English homes throughout the land there were young hearts
+that had not forgotten, had not compounded, would not yield.</p>
+<p>The younger generation had barred the door.</p>
+<p>And in the pleasant May sunshine the Eagle standard floated and flapped,
+the black and yellow pennons shifted restlessly, Emperor and Princes,
+Generals and guards, sat stiffly in their saddles, and waited.</p>
+<p>And waited. . . .</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHEN WILLIAM CAME***</p>
+<pre>
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