summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/60967-0.txt8787
-rw-r--r--old/60967-0.zipbin170379 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60967-h.zipbin312356 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60967-h/60967-h.htm11493
-rw-r--r--old/60967-h/images/cover.jpgbin126145 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/60967-h/images/i_title.jpgbin28176 -> 0 bytes
9 files changed, 17 insertions, 20280 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a8f969d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #60967 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60967)
diff --git a/old/60967-0.txt b/old/60967-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 42df294..0000000
--- a/old/60967-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,8787 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Change in the Cabinet, by Hilaire Belloc
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: A Change in the Cabinet
-
-Author: Hilaire Belloc
-
-Release Date: December 19, 2019 [EBook #60967]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A CHANGE IN THE CABINET ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Tim Lindell, David E. Brown, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-A CHANGE IN THE CABINET
-
-
-
-
- A CHANGE
- IN THE CABINET
-
- BY
-
- H. BELLOC
-
- “STRIVE, STRIVE, HOWE’ER WE STRIVE
- YOUTH DECLINES AT FIFTY-FIVE.”
-
- OLD SAW
-
- METHUEN & CO.
- 36 ESSEX STREET W.C.
- LONDON
-
-
-
-
-_First Published in 1909_
-
-
-
-
- TO
- MISS ALICE BEARDSLEY
-
-
-
-
-A CHANGE IN THE CABINET
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-Sir--or to speak more correctly, the Right Honourable Sir T. Charles
-Repton, Bart., M.V.O., O.M., Warden of the Court of Dowry, a man past
-middle age but in the height of industry, sat at breakfast in his
-house: a large house overlooking Hyde Park from the North, close to the
-corner of the Edgware Road, and therefore removed by at least a hundred
-yards from the graphic representation which marks the site of the old
-Permanent Gallows that once stood at Tyburn.
-
-I have said that he was Warden of the Court of Dowry, and the reader,
-if she has any acquaintance with parliamentary affairs, will remember
-that at the time of which I speak, the month of March, 1915, that post
-commonly carried with it Cabinet rank. The experienced in political
-matters will certainly induce that he was also in the House of
-Commons. He sat there for Pailton, a borough which had been the last
-to elect him after previous experiences in Merionethshire, Kirkby,
-Bruton, Powkeley and the Wymp division of Dorset, in which last his
-somewhat constrained and cold manner had perhaps led to his defeat.
-
-It was not his first experience of office, but he had never stood so
-high in the Councils of the Nation, nor had his presence in the Cabinet
-ever more weighed with the young and popular Prime Minister (who was
-suffering slightly from his left lung) than at this moment. For though
-Charles Repton did not belong by birth to the group of families from
-which the Prime Minister had sprung, he was of those who, as they
-advance through life, accumulate an increasing number of clients, of
-dependents and of friends who dare not trifle with such friendships.
-
-In figure he was tall and somewhat lean; he was clean-shaven; his
-brilliant white hair was well groomed; his brown eyes were singularly
-piercing, and, in contrast with his head, two thick, very dark
-and strongly arched eyebrows emphasized his expression. He was by
-persuasion at this time of his life a Second Day Wycliffite, and had
-indeed professed his connection with that body since at least his
-fortieth year, before which period in his career he had permanently
-resided in a suburb of Leicester, to which in turn he had removed from
-Newcastle.
-
-By profession he was, or rather had been, a solicitor, in which
-calling he had ever advised those clients who had the wisdom to
-accumulate wealth to leave the investment of it at his discretion,
-nor were they disappointed in the regular receipt of a moderate but
-secure income calculated at a reasonable rate; while to those who (for
-whatever reason) lay under the necessity of borrowing, he was ever
-ready to advance at a somewhat higher rate such sums as he had at his
-disposal.
-
-But this humdrum course of professional life could never satisfy
-abilities of his calibre. Shortly after his entry into political life
-he had undertaken the management of numerous industrial ventures,
-several of which had proved singularly successful, while those which
-had been less fortunate came to grief through the action of others than
-himself: nay it was often shown when the winding-up order came that
-such risks had attracted but little of his spare cash.
-
-He was that morning in March, 1915, eating an egg. He had before him a
-copy of the _Times_, the affairs of which newspaper were among his most
-valued connections. The moments he could spare from its perusal were
-given to the methodical cutting open of envelopes and the glancing at
-their contents,--an exercise which it was his rule most methodically
-to pursue before he permitted his secretary to deal with the answers.
-Indeed some one or two of these missives he put into his pocket to be
-dealt with at his private leisure.
-
-He was alone, for his wife--Maria, Lady Repton--would commonly affect
-to come down after he had left the house; and this, no matter how late
-divisions might have kept him upon the previous evening, he invariably
-did at the hour of half-past nine. I may add that he had no children,
-but could boast no less than five horses in town and sixteen in the
-country, all his own property, and used to drag in the country I know
-not how many vehicles; in London three, each suitable for its own
-function. Of motor cars he kept but one, but that large and in colour
-a very bright sky-blue. As he had no proficiency in riding, he did not
-indulge in that exercise; but he was fond of golf and was acquainted
-with all the technical terms of the game.
-
-To do him justice he was not without means, nay, he was what many would
-call wealthy, and the salary of £5000 to which, amid the enthusiastic
-cheers of the Legislature, the Wardenship of the Court of Dowry had
-recently been raised was of no great consequence to his position.
-
-To another, alas! in the vast and heartless city, such a salary was
-shortly to mean far more,--and GEORGE MULROSS DEMAINE, upon whom I
-will not for the moment linger, would have been even more benefited in
-pocket than in status by the handling of it.
-
-Careless, however, as Sir Charles Repton might be of a fringe of income
-obtainable only while his own Party were in office, it was imagined
-that he was not a little attached to other advantages connected with
-his Wardenship. It is doubtful whether a man of this firm, reticent
-and dominating character could really be attached to such accidents
-of his post as the carrying of a model ship, bareheaded, in the great
-procession upon Empire Day, the wearing upon state occasions of shoes
-which curled up at the toe and were caught back to the ankles by small
-silver chains, or the presence upon these ornaments of several tiny
-bells that jingled as he walked; anachronisms of this kind can have
-produced little but discomfort in one of his stern mould when, upon
-the rare occasions of court functions, he was compelled to adopt the
-official dress. But there was more!
-
-The Wardenship of the Court of Dowry carried with it something regal in
-that great world of affairs in which he moved, and bitter as had been
-the attacks upon his colleagues in the Nationalist Cabinet,--especially
-during the futile attempt to pass the Broadening of the Streets
-Bill--Sir Charles had always been treated with peculiar and exceptional
-respect, though he would never have used methods so underhand as to
-foreclose upon any newspaper with whom he might have a political
-difference or to embarrass by official action any considerable
-advertiser of patent medicines whose manufacture came under the purview
-of his Department.
-
-It would be an exaggeration to say that he had raised one of the minor
-Government posts to the level of the Foreign Office, but, at any rate,
-it had under his reign become almost as prominent as it had been when
-GHERKIN had first raised it to the rank of a principal function in the
-State. It was one of the great spending departments; Repton saw to that.
-
-Sir Charles Repton prepared to leave his house, I say, at half-past
-nine; his mind was intent upon the business of the morning, which
-was a Board meeting of the Van Diemens. It need not yet concern the
-reader, it is enough for her to know (and the knowledge is consonant
-with Repton’s character) that the Company was prepared to develop all
-that North-eastern littoral of the Australian Continent for which it
-had obtained a charter but which no enterprise had as yet succeeded in
-bringing into line with the vast energies of the Empire.
-
-Of the strategical advantages such a position can give, I need not
-speak. Luckily they were in the hands of patriots.
-
-The comparatively small sum of £4,000,000 which by its charter the
-Company was permitted to raise would have been subscribed twenty times
-over in the rush for shares seven years before, and it is common
-knowledge that at a particular moment during which values must surely
-have been inflated, they reached a premium of between 800 and 900 per
-cent. The cool process of reflection which often follows such errors
-had by this time driven them if anything too low, and the original one
-pound share which had twice all but touched £9, had been for now many
-months unsaleable at a nominal price of 16/3.
-
-There exists a sound rule of public administration of this
-country--inaugurated, I believe, by Mr. Gladstone--which forbids a
-Cabinet Minister to hold any public directorship at the same time as
-his official post, and indeed it is this rule which renders it usual
-for a couple of men upon opposite sides of the House to come to an
-arrangement whereby the one shall be Director while his colleague is in
-office, lest important commercial affairs should be neglected through
-the too rigid application of what is in principle so excellent a rule.
-But there had been no necessity for this arrangement in the case of so
-great an Imperial business as the Van Diemens: it touched too nearly
-the major interests of the country for its connection with a Cabinet
-Minister to be remarkable, and all patriotic opinion was sincerely glad
-when, in the preceding January, Sir Charles Repton had consented to
-acquire without direct purchase a few thousand shares and to take an
-active part in raising the fortunes of the scheme.
-
-It was recognised upon all sides that the act was one of statesman-like
-self-sacrifice, and there were perhaps but two papers in London (two
-evening papers of large circulation but of no high standing) which so
-much as alluded to Sir Charles’ labours in this field.
-
-Of these one, the _Moon_, catered especially for that very
-considerable public which will have England mistress of the waves,
-which is interested in the printed results of horse-racing, which had
-formerly triumphantly carried at the polls the demand for protection,
-and which was somewhat embittered by so many years of office during
-which the Nationalist Party had done little more than tax the parts of
-motor cars, foreign unsweetened prunes, moss litter, and such small
-quantities of foreign sulphuric acid as are used in the manufacture of
-beer.
-
-The other, the _Capon_--to give it its entire name--was of a finer
-stamp. All the young enthusiasts read it, and it was enormously bought
-for its Notes on Gardening, its caricatures, its clever headlines, and
-its short, downright little leaders not twenty lines long, printed, by
-a successful innovation, in capitals throughout, and in a red ink that
-showed up finely against the plain black and white of the remainder.
-
-Both these papers had continually and violently attacked the connection
-of one of our few great statesmen with the last of the vast enterprises
-of Empire. The _Capon_, whose editor was a young man with very wild
-eyes and hair like a weeping willow, attacked it on principle. The
-_Moon_--whose proprietor was an intimate friend of Sir Charles’
-own--was more practical, and attacked the connection between Repton and
-the Company with good old personalities worthy of a more virile age.
-
-Well then, at this hour of half-past nine on that March day of 1915,
-Charles Repton rose from his breakfast. He touched the crumbs upon
-his waistcoat so that they fell, and those upon his trousers also. He
-looked severely at the footman in the hall, who quailed a little at
-that glance, he rapidly put on his coat unaided, and asked briefly to
-see the butler.
-
-The butler came.
-
-“I’m out to lunch.”
-
-“Yes, Sir Charles.”
-
-“Tell Parker that if one of my letters is ever left again on the table
-after I have gone, I shall speak to Lady Repton.”
-
-“Yes, Sir Charles.”
-
-“The car is not to be used on any account.”
-
-“No, Sir Charles.”
-
-He turned round abruptly and went down the steps and into the street,
-while one of his large footmen shut the huge door ever so gently behind
-him.
-
-He was a man of such character, who conducted his household so firmly,
-that the man, though now five months in his service, dared exchange no
-jest with the butler who went quietly off to his own part of the house
-again. It was a singular proof of what rigid domestic government can do.
-
-From her room Maria, Lady Repton, when she was quite sure that her
-husband was gone, slunk downstairs. With a cunning that was now a
-trifle threadbare, she discovered from Parker the housekeeper, from the
-secretary, from the butler, by methods which she fondly believed to be
-indirect, what plans her husband had formed for the day. She sighed
-to learn that she might not have the car, for she had designed to go
-and see her dear old friend widow, Mrs. Hulker, formerly of Newcastle,
-now of Ealing, a woman of great culture and refinement and one who gave
-Maria, Lady Repton, nearly all her information upon books and life. Of
-course there was always the Tube and the Underground, but they greatly
-wearied this elderly lady, and it was too far to drive. She sighed a
-little at her husband’s order.
-
-He, meanwhile, was out in Oxford Street, and with the rapidity that
-distinguishes successful men, had decided not to take a motor-bus but
-to walk. The March day was cold and clear and breezy, and he went
-eastward at a happy gait. He did not need to be at his work until close
-upon eleven, and even that he knew to be full early for at least one
-colleague, the stupidest of all the Directors, a certain Bingham, upon
-whose late rising he counted. For the intolerable tedium of arguing
-against a man who invariably took the unintelligent side was one of
-the few things which caused Sir Charles to betray some slight shade of
-impatience.
-
-The day pleased him, as indeed it pleased the greater part of London,
-from its fineness. He walked upon the sunny side of the street, and his
-smile, though restrained and somewhat sadly dignified, was the more
-genial from the influence of the weather. His brain during this brief
-exercise was not concerned, as those ignorant of our great men might
-imagine, with affairs of State, nor even with the choice of investments
-upon which he was in so short a time to determine. He was occupied
-rather in planning (for his power of organisation was famous) how
-exactly he should fit in his engagements for the day.
-
-A Board meeting, especially if there is any chance of long argument
-with a late riser of exceptional stupidity, may last for an indefinite
-time. He gave it an hour and a half.
-
-Then he must lunch, and that hour was earmarked for a certain foreigner
-who could not wholly make up his mind whether to build a certain bridge
-over a certain river for a certain government or no.
-
-By a quarter to three he must be in the House of Commons to answer
-questions, for those which fell to his share came early upon the paper,
-and it was the pride of this exact and efficient man to keep no one
-waiting. Before four he must see the manager of a bank; the matter
-was urgent, he did not wish to write or telephone. By five he must be
-back again in his room in the House of Commons to receive a deputation
-of gentlemen who would arrive from his distant constituency, and who
-proposed with a mixture of insistence and of fear to demand certain
-commercial advantages for their town at the expense of a neighbouring
-borough whose representative but rarely busied himself with the Great
-Council of the Nation.
-
-At six he must order with particular care a dinner upon which (in his
-opinion) the chances of the Saltoon Development largely depended. At
-seven he must dress, at eight he must dine. His guests (many of whom to
-his knowledge would drink to excess) would certainly detain him till
-long after ten. He must be back in the House to vote at eleven; for
-some half-hour or so after eleven he must be present to attend a short
-debate (or what he hoped would prove a short debate) concerning his own
-Department. He would be lucky if he was in bed by twelve.
-
-Let the reader leave him there walking in Oxford Street and turn her
-attention to George Mulross Demaine, or rather, to Mount Popocatapetl.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-It will generally be conceded that an underground river flowing with
-terrific force through a region of perennial fire, must, of its nature,
-form a most insecure foundation for any large body of masonry; and the
-danger of building upon such a bottom will be the more apparent if the
-materials used in the construction of the edifice be insufficiently
-cemented through the business capacity of a contractor indifferent to
-the voice of conscience.
-
-Yet such were the conditions upon the flanks of Mt. Popocatapetl when,
-in the Autumn of 1914, it was determined to erect on such a site the
-Popocatapetl Dam, for the containment of the Popocatapetl reservoir and
-the ultimate irrigation of El Plan.
-
-Mt. Popocatapetl rises in a graceful cone to the height of 22,130
-feet above the level of the sea. Its summit is crowned with eternal
-snows, while round its base, in spite of numerous earthquakes,
-constantly followed by the outburst of vast fountains of boiling water,
-cling a score of towns and villages, some with Spanish, others with
-unpronounceable names. To these the beneficent and lengthy rule of
-Gen. Porfirio Diaz has lent a political security which Nature would
-do well to copy,--has led the inhabitants to seek their treasure upon
-earth, and has bequeathed the inestimable advantage of the great
-Popocatapetl Dam.
-
-I say the “inestimable advantage,” for though the construction of this
-remarkable barrage has wholly cut off the insufficient water supply of
-this region, it has brought into the neighbourhood very considerable
-sums of American money, an active demand for labour, and a line of
-railway at the terminus of which can be purchased the most enlightened
-newspapers of the New World. The simplest journalist,--should
-such a being be possessed of the means to travel in these distant
-regions--might also inform the residents,--should they in turn be
-willing to hear him patiently,--that the irrigation of El Plan, though
-150 miles distant from their now desiccated homes, can not but react to
-their advantage and create a market for their wares.
-
-Mysterious designs of Providence! This mountain (among the noblest
-of volcanic phenomena) was destined to threaten with ruin a great
-English family, to precipitate onto the Treasury bench a young man of
-unassuming manners and of insufficient capacity, to shake half the
-finances of the world, and to determine a peerage for a man to whom
-such ornaments were baubles!
-
-To appreciate by what chain of circumstances Popocatapetl’s hoary head
-might with its nod produce so distant a consequence, it is necessary
-for the reader once again to fix her mind most firmly upon the truth
-that an underground river flowing with terrific force through a region
-of perennial fire, must of its nature form a most insecure foundation
-for any considerable body of masonry, and that the danger of building
-upon such a bottom will be the more apparent if the material used, etc.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the light of this knowledge, which (in common with the majority
-of rational beings) Ole Man Benson possessed, an investment in the
-stocks of a Company whose dividends depended upon the security of such
-an edifice might have seemed to those ill-acquainted with our modern
-Captains of Industry, an unpardonable folly.
-
-It is none the less true that Ole Man Benson carried a heavy load of
-“Popocatapetls,” naked and unashamed.
-
-He did not positively control Popocatapetls. Heaven forbid! But apart
-from a considerable block of which he was the actual owner, no small
-fraction was held by the Durango Investment Company, the majority of
-whose shares being the property of the Texas and Western Equalisation
-Syndicate, gave to Ole Man Benson in his capacity of Chief Equaliser,
-a distant but effective control over the second lot of Popocatapetls
-in question; while the very large investment of which the N.N.O. and
-S.L. Line had made at his command of their reserve funds in the same
-company, gave him in his capacity of Chief Terroriser thereof yet a
-third grip upon the venture.
-
-One way and another Ole Man Benson stood in for Popocatapetls in
-a manner as healthy as it was unmistakable. And strangely enough,
-the fiercer the perennial fires and the louder the roaring of the
-subterranean river, the more steadily did Popocatapetls rise, the more
-sublimely did Wall Street urge their ascension, the more vigorously
-did the American investor (who was alone concerned) buy as he was told
-until, upon a certain day, a great Republican statesman of undoubted
-integrity but of perhaps too high an idealism, was announced to speak
-upon the great national enterprise.
-
-Ole Man Benson loved, trusted and revered this statesman and supported
-him in every way: his name escapes me, but upon his decision the future
-of the undertaking would without question lie; and such was the bond
-between the two men that the politician had not hesitated to receive
-from the capitalist certain rough notes which had been jotted down in
-the office for the supreme verdict which was to be delivered to the
-nation.
-
-It was to be delivered at Washington upon a certain Wednesday (the date
-is memorable) at the unconventional hour of ten, in order that a full
-report of it might reach the foolish and the wise in New York City in
-ample time for its effects to be fully felt upon the markets; and _Ole
-Man Benson_ had given instructions to sell not later than half-past
-three of that same fateful Wednesday.
-
-But what, you cry (if such is your habit), what of all this in
-connection with the ancient houses of this land? With the Cabinet? With
-peerages and the rest?
-
-Tut! Have you never heard how sensitive is the modern world to every
-breath of commercial news, and how all the modern world is one? Well
-then, I must explain:
-
-Some two years before, in London, one GEORGE MULROSS DEMAINE had lain
-languishing for lack of money.
-
-He was of good birth, and doubtless had he possessed a secure
-and flowing fortune, his natural diffidence would have been less
-pronounced, and the strange fatality by which he could hardly place his
-hands and feet in any position without causing some slight accident to
-the furniture, would have passed unnoticed, or would have been put down
-to good nature. But George Mulross was wholly devoid of means.
-
-George Mulross Demaine, like so many of his rank, was related to Mary
-Smith.
-
-Now Mary Smith, her pleasing, energetic person, her lively eyes and
-dear soul, the reader can never fully know unless she has perused or
-rather learned by heart, that entrancing work, “Mr. Clutterbuck’s
-Election,” in which, like a good fairy, she plumps across the scene
-and is perceived to be the friend, the confidant, the cousin, the
-sister-in-law or the aunt of at least three-quarters of what counts in
-England.
-
-She will not feel, I say, unless she has made that work her bible, how
-from St. James’s Place Mary Smith blessed Society with her jolly little
-hands, and indulged in the companionship of characters as varied as the
-Peabody Yid and Victoria Mosel.
-
-What a woman! Her little shooting-box in Scotland! Her place in the
-West Country! The country house which she so rarely visited in the
-Midlands but which she lent in the freest manner! Her vivacity, her
-charm, her go, her scraps of French--her inheritance from her late
-husband, himself an American and Smith, as I need hardly say, by name!
-
-The reader unacquainted with the Work which I refer her to, must
-further have introduced to her at the proper place the notable figure
-of cousin William Bailey, at what an expense of repetition upon my part
-I need hardly say. He also was of the gang; he also had been elected of
-the people: but violent eccentricities now kept him apart from his true
-world. Thus he professed a vast interest in Jews, making them out to
-be the secret masters of England. How far that fanaticism was sincere,
-he could not himself have told you. It diverted him hugely to discover
-mares’ nests of every kind; he was never happier than when he was
-tracking the relationship between governing families or the connection
-of some spotless politician with a spotted financial adventure. There
-was but one excuse for his manias, that he remained, through the most
-ardent pursuit of them, a genial cynic. We shall meet him again.
-
-Mary Smith, then, was related to all of them and they were all related
-to each other, and in their relationship there was friendship also, and
-they governed England and the taxes bore them on.
-
-That the Leader of the Opposition should be Mary Smith’s close friend
-goes without saying; much closer and dearer to her was her other
-cousin, the young and popular Prime Minister, to his friends Dolly, to
-the world a more dignified name, who suffered slightly from his left
-lung. He had attained his high position before his fiftieth year was
-closed. For over four years he had conducted with consummate skill the
-fortunes of the Nationalist Party, and was at that very moment when
-Popocatapetl nursed so sullenly its internal rage, piloting in distant
-Westminster the Broadening of the Streets Bill through an excited
-session of Parliament.
-
-But of all her relatives, near or distant, of all the friends whom she
-called by their Christian name, not the Chancellor of the Exchequer,
-not the First Sea Lord, not the six chief members of the front
-Opposition bench, not the eight or nine disappointed men with corner
-seats, not the score or so of great financiers whom she honoured at
-her board,--not the Secretary of State for the Colonies (a diminished
-post since the Sarawatta business),--not the young and popular Prime
-Minister himself, who suffered slightly from the left lung,--was quite
-so dear to her as that sort of nephew, George Mulross Demaine.
-
-The relationship was distant, and it was less on account of the ties of
-blood than by reason of the strong friendship that had always existed
-between his father and herself that Mary Smith first befriended the lad
-as she had already befriended so many others. For Demaine’s father,
-though what the world would call a failure and even for many years
-separated from his wife, had always exercised a peculiar charm over his
-acquaintance.
-
-Opinion had been sharply divided upon several episodes of his life, so
-sharply that towards the close of it he preferred to live abroad, and
-George’s boyhood had been passed in the most uneasy of experiences, now
-with his father in Ireland, now with his mother in the neighbourhood of
-Constantinople, and occasionally under the roof of Mary Smith during
-her short married life.
-
-She had grown to do for him what she would not do for another--for
-Charlie Fitzgerald for instance,--for he was not a scatterbrain nor
-one to get rid of money with nothing to show for it. He was simply a
-quiet, unostentatious English lad, a little awkward (as we know) with
-his hands and feet but hiding a heart of gold, and destined to inherit
-nothing. He was not yet of age when his mother died, and during the
-first years of his manhood he passed more and more time under the
-roof of this kindly and powerful woman who had determined that the
-misfortunes or faults of his parents should not be visited upon him.
-
-She took him everywhere, she kept him in pocket money and, most
-important of all, two years ago she had arranged his marriage.
-
-The moment was opportune: he was twenty-five, he had lost his father,
-he was penniless, the title of Grinstead into which he would certainly
-come was distant and was unprovided for. He had not chosen, or rather
-had not been given, the opportunity of entering, the army, but
-there had been just enough bungling about that to make him miss the
-university also. He was so unfitted for diplomacy that even William
-Bailey, who was accustomed to recommend for that profession the least
-vivacious of his young friends, shook his head when it was proposed,
-and after a very short experience in Paris he was withdrawn from it.
-
-No profession naturally proposed itself to a man of his talents, and
-he had not the initiative to live as a free lance. His marriage,
-therefore, was one of these providential things which seemed to fit
-almost too exactly into the general scheme of life to be true. He
-met his wife when Mary Smith (after making all her inquiries at the
-Petheringtons’) had caught and branded that heiress: and the wife so
-branded was Sudie Benson, the daughter of so wealthy an American as
-made the traffic of London not infrequently halt for his convenience,
-and who rather more than two years before my story bursts open, had
-seen fit to bring the radiant girl to London.
-
-The two were forcibly introduced--I mean the boy and the girl--they
-understood from the first what their destiny was to be. She could
-find no fault in the society which swam round her and to which such
-a marriage would introduce her activities; he saw no drawback to the
-alliance save one or two mannerisms in his prospective father-in-law,
-which time might modify--or on the other hand, might not.
-
-Ole Man Benson, to give him once more the name by which he was known
-and hated in another sphere, from the first ten thousand[1] which by
-the age of forty-three he had laboriously accumulated in shredded
-codfish, had dealt not with things, as do lesser men, but with figures.
-He had gone boldly forward like a young Napoleon, using, it must be
-remembered, not only the money of others but very often his own as well.
-
-He had been born of Scotch-Irish parents, probably of the name of
-Benson, and certainly married in the First Baptist Church of Cincinnati
-not quite three-quarters of a century ago. He was the youngest child of
-a numerous family, and was baptized or named after the poet Theocritus,
-with a second or middle name of Chepstow, which in his signature he
-commonly reduced to its initial letter.
-
-Theocritus C. Benson, now familiar to the whole Anglo-Saxon race of
-every colour and clime, was of that type always rare but now, though
-rare, conspicuous, which can so organise and direct the acts of others
-as to bring order out of chaos, chaos out of order, and alternately
-accumulate and disperse fortunes hitherto unprecedented in the history
-of the world.
-
-He was accustomed (in the interviews which he was proud to grant to
-the newspapers of England, America and the Colonies) to ascribe his
-great position to unwearied industry and to an abhorrence of all excess
-(notably in the consumption of fermented liquors) and particularly of
-the horrid practice of gambling. His puritan upbringing, which had
-taught him to look upon cards as the Devil’s picture-book, and upon
-racing as akin to the drama in its spiritual blight, was, he would
-constantly assert, the key to all that he had done since he left his
-father’s home. But in this manly self-judgment the Hon. Mr. Benson did
-himself an injustice. These high qualities are to be discovered in many
-million of his fellow-citizens, and he might as well have pointed, as
-sometimes he did point with pride, to the number of his Lodge or to his
-ignorance of foreign languages as the causes of his repeated triumphs.
-
-There was more: To his hatred of hazard and to his stern sense of duty
-and unbending industry, he added something of that daring which has
-made for the greatness of the blood in all its adventures Overseas,
-and for no branch more than for the Scotch-Irish.
-
-He would boldly advance sums in blind confidence of the future, the
-mere total of which would have appalled a lesser man, and he would as
-boldly withdraw them to the ruin of prosperous concerns, where another
-would have been content to let production take its own course. And this
-fine command of cash and of credit which he used as a General uses an
-army, had in it something of personal courage; for towards the latter
-part of his life, when he had come to control a vast private fortune,
-it was imperative that in many a bold conception he himself should
-stand to lose or gain.
-
-At the moment when his only daughter left her happy Belgian convent to
-be presented at the Court of St. James, he was, though at the height of
-his fortunes, a lonely and to some extent an embittered man.
-
-His wife had married another: their only child he had not seen for
-three years, and though he knew that her robust common sense would
-stand against the religious environment of the gentle nuns who had been
-entrusted with her upbringing, yet he could not but feel that she had
-passed the most formative years of her life in an alien air, and under
-influences quite other than those of the Ohio Valley.
-
-He had therefore determined to decline numerous and advantageous offers
-and to be present himself in London during the season which saw her
-introduction to the world, and there, in spite of his unfamiliarity
-with English ways, he soon appreciated the central position of Mary
-Smith whose late husband indeed he had come across a quarter of a
-century before when he was freezing the Topekas off the Pit.
-
-Theocritus C. Benson had seen young Demaine and was contented; he was
-also naturally anxious to come across old Lord Grinstead if possible,
-that he might estimate for himself how long his daughter might have
-to wait for her title. Indeed he would not allow the marriage to take
-place until the old man had been pointed out to him, shrivelled almost
-to nothingness and pulled with extreme caution and deliberation in a
-bath-chair through the private gardens of Bayton House.
-
-Had he known that the figure thus exhibited to him so far from being
-that of the aged peer was but the carcase of a ruined dependant it
-would perhaps have done little to alter his decision, for though Lord
-Grinstead was of gigantic stature, with purple face and thunderous
-voice, yet his habit of gross and excessive drinking gave him a tenure
-of life at least as precarious as that of the enfeebled figure upon
-which the financier had gazed; and what is more, Lord Grinstead, though
-an execrable horseman, had suddenly begun to hunt upon hired mounts
-with a recklessness and tenacity which, if from that cause alone,
-should speedily ensure a violent death.
-
-When all was happily settled, when Demaine had been given away by his
-principal creditor, and Sudie by her upright and handsome old father,
-when the last of the wedding gifts had been exchanged at the usual
-discount and the young couple had gone off to Honiton Castle which had
-been lent them for £2000 during the honeymoon, another aspect of life
-had to be considered.
-
-A point upon which Mary Smith had done her best and failed was the
-settlements--£1500 a year to stand between his child and starvation
-or worse, Theocritus was willing to determine. It was the sum he
-had himself named before the first negotiations were begun; but as
-they proceeded he refused to change it by one penny, and at last the
-discussion was abandoned in despair. All the young people might need
-they should have--she was his only child, they could trust him to be
-more than generous. Capital sums when they were required for anything
-but direct investment, should be always at their disposal, and the half
-or more than the half of his enormous income should be ready to their
-call; but he resolutely retained to himself the right to control the
-management of all save the infinitesimal sum which was to stand between
-Sudie and her husband’s tyranny, or the world’s harshness.
-
-Mary Smith’s veiled threats and open flattery were alike useless. She
-capitulated, told the young woman to earmark her tiny allowance for
-journeys, and gained from Theocritus Chepstow only this:--that he would
-buy a freehold for them, build and furnish it. Theocritus was on like
-a bird; and the lovely little lodge which London now knows as Demaine
-House, with its curious formal gardens, odd Dutch stables and Grecian
-weathercock on the site of the old mews in what is now Benson Street,
-is the proof that he kept his promise.
-
-For a year Ole Man Benson had not only kept his promise in the way of
-building and furnishing for the young people: he had done more. He had
-floated them upon London with all the revenue that could be reserved
-from the new venture upon which he designed to double the colossal sums
-which directly or indirectly stood to his name, and every penny that he
-could spare from his first early purchases of Popocatapetls went into
-the status and future social position of his daughter. Now, after two
-years, Popocatapetl Dam was finished and yet greater things lay before
-them.
-
-Demaine was put into Parliament by a majority comparable only to the
-financial advantages which had secured it. His birth, her voice and its
-timbre, gathered into Demaine House all that so small a Great House
-could hold.
-
-So things had stood to within a week of the March day upon which we
-saw that very different man, Charles Repton, walking into the City of
-London....
-
-But from the name of Charles Repton let me rapidly slew off to the
-sombre pyramid of that peak in the neighbourhood of Darien and recall
-the caprice of Popocatapetl upon which so much was to depend.
-
-It was a Wednesday in that March of 1915 that the Statesman was to
-speak in Washington at ten: (for two years Demaine House had thriven,
-it slept that Tuesday night unconscious of its fate). It was for the
-Wednesday at 3.30 that the order to sell stood in Ole Man Benson’s
-name.... Well ...
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-Late upon that Tuesday night Ole Man Benson boarded the Louis XV.
-Rosewood Express de Luxe as it steamed out of the Chicago Depot of the
-M.N. & C.: he was off to his mountain property in Idaho, and in the
-privacy of his section, Ole Man Benson slept.
-
-Not so the forces of Nature, so often destructive of the schemes of
-pigmy man!
-
-An appalling convulsion altogether exceeding anything heard or dreamt
-of since the beginning of time, totally destroyed the Popocatapetelian
-landscape in the small hours of that same morning; and as, a thousand
-miles to the north, the Louis XV. Rosewood Express de Luxe rolled in a
-terrific manner upon its insufficient rock ballast, the subterranean
-river, the perennial fires and the unscrupulously erected edifice of
-the great dam, shot aloft in a vast confusion and were replaced by a
-chasm some quarter of a mile in breadth and of a depth unfathomable to
-mortal plummets. It was March; March 1915. In Iowa in March it snows.
-The locomotive and two of the cars attached to the Louis XV. Rosewood
-Express de Luxe were buried a little beyond Blucher in a drift of snow
-the height and dimensions of which exceeded the experience of the
-oldest settler in that charming prairie town. _The same storm which had
-caused the misadventure had broken the wires for many miles around._
-
-Ole Man Benson awoke, therefore, to a scene of great discomfort, but
-upon such a date and with a prospect of so considerable an increase
-of fortune awaiting him upon that very day, he was the gayest of the
-company, and in spite of his years he shovelled away with the best of
-them, a-splendid-type-of-Anglo-Saxon-manhood.
-
-By one o’clock that noon the telegraph at last was working, and the
-first messages came through to the little depot; they concerned a riot
-in a local home for paralytics. Next, before two, news was conveyed of
-an outbreak of religious mania in the town of Omaha. It was not till a
-late hour in the evening that Ole Man Benson, waiting anxiously for the
-report of the great speech, heard the earliest tidings of the practical
-joke which Providence--in spite of Gen. Porfirio Diaz’ equable and
-masterly rule--had played him in the distant tropics.
-
-The same rapidity of thought which had enabled Theocritus to accumulate
-his vast fortune enabled him in that moment to perceive that he was
-ruined. Not indeed necessarily for ever,--he had known such things
-before--but at any rate in a manner sufficiently hefty to produce his
-immediate collapse.
-
-When, next morning, he could bring himself to read the papers, the
-disaster appeared before him in its exact proportions and tremendous
-scale.
-
-That speech, that statesman-like speech, had never been delivered--and
-for the best of reasons: Popocatapetl had unbosomed first! In the wild
-fall of prices nothing had done more to ruin the market than the heavy
-selling of agents acting on account of Theocritus C. Benson. There
-were dozens within the roaring walls of the building in Wall Street,
-thousands in the anxious streets without, who saw in the Benson selling
-yet another move of diabolical cunning proceeding from that Napoleonic
-brain. His agents had done their work thoroughly and well. They had
-anticipated his orders with such promptitude that no stock was left
-unsaleable upon their hands, and when, before the end of that black
-day, Popocatapetls were offering at the cost of haulage, they could
-proudly say that every interest of their client’s in the ruined concern
-had been disposed of. And Theocritus C. Benson, henceforward known as
-the Earthquake King, was left with no unsaleable paper upon his hands,
-but on the contrary with a solid cash result equivalent to at least
-three cents on the dollar of his yesterday’s fortune. This it is to be
-faithfully served in the intricacies of modern speculation!
-
-A truce to Ole Man Benson! If I have introduced his wretched
-commercial adventures at such length it is but to explain the
-portentous effect which they had upon the fortunes of one British
-statesman.
-
-Far off in London (Eng.) George Mulross Demaine saw nothing in his
-morning newspaper but the news (to him a serious matter) that Pink Eye
-was scratched for the Grand National. His wife, whom her father had
-shielded from the vulgar atmosphere of commerce, noted indeed the news
-from the Western Hemisphere and was for a passing moment concerned; but
-Ole Man Benson did not telegraph, for there were no flies upon him, nor
-did Ole Man Benson even write, and for the same entomological reason.
-
-Oh! no. Ole Man Benson proceeded to New York, had certain interviews
-with certain people, took certain drugs, went through a certain cure,
-laid as he hoped the foundations of yet another scheme, and not until
-30th of March, a full week after the matter I have described, did
-Theocritus dictate a brief note to his daughter, which I will here
-transcribe:
-
-
- (If not delivered, please return “2909 KANAKA BUILDING
- within three days to NEW YORK CITY
- Theocritus C. Benson.) 30/3/’15
-
-Coming across on Potassic. Depart 4th--probable arrival Plymouth 11th.
-Shall cable.
- (Signed) FATHER”
-
-With true business instinct the great organiser dispatched the cable
-upon the 4th of April, so that his daughter received upon the evening
-of the same day in her London house the reassuring word “eleventh,”
-which her reception of the letter a few days later easily enabled her
-to comprehend; and on 11th of April, sure enough, Ole Man Benson in
-a grave and sober manner embraced his daughter on the landing-stage
-at Plymouth. George Mulross Demaine was also there, standing a little
-behind the affectionate group, clothed in a large green ulster and a
-cap of the same cloth and colour with an enormous peak.
-
-They got into the train together and all the way up to London the
-master of empty millions said nothing.
-
-As they were driving to Demaine House he spoke: “Any o’ your folk to
-supper?” he said.
-
-His daughter with filial gaiety assured him that she had waited his
-orders, to which he replied, “Good girl Sudie.”
-
-During the meal he was as silent as he had been upon the journey, and
-at the end of it he gave his son-in-law to understand that he desired
-to talk business with his daughter and preferred to be alone with her:
-and George Mulross went out, taking his wine with him, for his wife’s
-father drank none, but only Toxine.
-
-The message Ole Man Benson had to deliver to Sudie was simple
-enough: there would, for he could not say how long, be no more money
-forthcoming. He hoped the position might be retrieved; he was
-confident it would be retrieved before the Fall, by Thanksgiving at
-latest. Till then, nit!
-
-Sudie had all her father’s readiness; she pointed out to him at once
-that under the conditions of English politics the total cessation of
-an income the source of which was familiar to her husband’s friends,
-would at once affect her father’s credit in future transactions, and
-clearly showed that no investment could be more to his advantage than
-the placing of sums at her disposal for the proper up-keep of his
-daughter’s position in the society of London.
-
-To this powerful argument Theocritus immediately replied that those who
-looked for hens’ teeth were liable to be stung; that cigars containing
-explosive matter had been offered him too frequently in the past for
-him now to entertain the thought of consuming them; and that when he
-was bulling London he would advise. By which parables he intended to,
-and did, convey to his daughter his fixed conclusion that it was up to
-her to bear futures: and lest she should have failed wholly to seize
-his point, he told her briefly and in the plainest terms that whatever
-rocks were going were wanted--badly--to sling at something with more
-dough in it than Mayfair.
-
-With that their brief discourse was ended.
-
-This little conversation over, Demaine was given to understand that
-he might re-enter the room. He was a little shy in doing so, for
-interviews of this sort usually meant some new gift or subsidy, but it
-was shyness of a pleasant sort and he had little doubt that he should
-hear in a moment the extent or at least the nature of the new bounty
-which his young household was to receive. He was therefore only puzzled
-by the novelty of phrasing when his father-in-law, looking at him in a
-manner rather humorous than severe, remarked:
-
-“Well, I’ve stacked it up with Sudie, and she may stack it up with
-you.” Then in a kinder tone, he added: “You catch?”
-
-“Yes sir,” said George untruthfully.
-
-“Why then, ’nuff’s said,” concluded the Captain of Industry, and very
-thoughtfully he picked his teeth with a long fine silver point which
-he habitually carried in his waistcoat for that purpose of the toilet.
-“It’s no call ter last long,” he muttered half to himself and half to
-the bewildered Demaine; “anyhow the pump’s sucking; and there’s no more
-oil,”--to elucidate which somewhat cryptic phrase Sudie begged her
-husband not to stand gaping there like a booby, but to sit down and
-understand as much of it as he could.
-
-Whereupon in the clearest possible language, punctuated by her father’s
-decisive and approving nods, she translated into older idioms exactly
-what had happened, and exactly what it meant. They were worth just
-£1500 a year between them from that day onwards for--well, till there
-was a change.
-
-It was not tact but nervousness that prevented George at the end of
-this dreadful passage from suggesting that his father-in-law could do
-again what he had done before, that the strain was temporary, and that
-he for his part hoped for the best; but his wife, who was by this time
-fairly well accustomed to follow his thought, was careful to point out
-that whatever the future might do for them, the present was dirt black,
-and the present meant at least two years:
-
-“At least two years?” (to her father).
-
-To which her father very simply and plainly answered her: “Yep.”
-
-There was much of the splendid blood of Theocritus in Sudie; indeed it
-is often observed that the genius of the father will descend to the
-daughter--and _vice versa_. The very next sentence, therefore, with
-which Sudie prodded her disconsolate spouse, was a demand for a list of
-those who might be ready to take Demaine House, to take it at once, to
-take it furnished, to take it high, to take it by the year and not for
-the season, and, when they had taken it, to _pay_.
-
-Demaine immediately suggested the name of such of his acquaintance as
-might most desire to occupy such a position in London, and were also
-least able to do so, but he was careful to add after each name, some
-such remark as “But of course they won’t do,” or “but I don’t think he
-can afford it,”--until his father-in-law in a pardonable lassitude went
-out.
-
-“The best thing you can do,” said his wife with renewed decision when
-they were alone, “is to get up right here and go round to Mary’s.” For
-it was a notable circumstance in Sudie’s relations with Mrs. Smith
-that while that lady gave _her_ her full title, _she_ would invariably
-allude to Mrs. Smith by the more affectionate medium of the Christian
-name.
-
-Demaine assented. He found his father-in-law at the door; they went
-out together into the night, and when he had timidly admitted that he
-was going South towards St. James’s, the financier with rapid decision
-announced that he was going North towards Marylebone,--and they parted.
-
-Mary Smith was not in. It was only eleven and the theatre detained
-her. George waited. He took counsel from several valuable pictures,
-was careful to touch and handle nothing upon her tables (for he knew
-that she detested an accident and with almost-canine-sagacity could
-invariably detect his interference), and stood, not at ease.
-
-She came in at twelve; she brought a party with her, and she insisted
-upon supper. It was one before she could talk to him alone, and she
-talked to him until two.
-
-The first thing she did was to tell him that he could not let his house
-that season and that he must make up his mind to it. The second was to
-discover what balance there was at the bank--and to hear that it was
-pitifully small. The third was to offer him a short loan that would
-carry him over at least a few weeks of necessary expense, and the
-fourth to tell him that, not upon the morrow but upon the day after,
-she would have decided.
-
-Meanwhile he must post a letter for her.
-
-She sat down and wrote at once to William Bailey.
-
-“When you get outside, George,” she said as she gave him the letter,
-“you will see a very large pillar box. It is much larger than most
-pillar boxes; it has two slits in it instead of one. Do you follow me?”
-
-“Yes,” he said humbly.
-
-“You will not put this letter in your pocket, George,” she went on
-firmly and kindly, as certain practitioners do when they propose to
-hypnotise their patients. “You will carry it in front of you like
-this.” She put it into his right hand, crooked his arm, held his wrist
-upright, so that his eyes could not help falling upon the missive. “The
-moment you get outside you will put it in the _right_-hand slit of the
-pillar box, won’t you?”
-
-He said “yes” again, as humbly as before. And as he went out he did all
-that she had asked him, though to make the matter more sure she watched
-for a moment from the window.
-
-When William Bailey received the letter next morning he was in the
-best of moods. For one thing he was going to leave London for three
-weeks,--a prospect that always delighted him. For another he was going
-to do some sea fishing, a sport of which he was passionately fond.
-For a third, an Austrian money-lender and a baron at that, had shot
-himself--it had of course been kept out of the English papers, but he
-had read all the details in one of the anti-semitic rags which are the
-disgrace of Vienna, and his spirits had risen, buoyant at the news.
-Finally, and what was of perhaps most importance for an eccentric and
-middle-aged celibate, the house which he had hired for a month he knew
-exactly suited him. It was the house of Merry, the architect, and stood
-just so far from Parham Town as would give him the isolation he adored,
-yet just so near to Parham Harbour as would put him in touch with the
-sea.
-
-For all these reasons he read Mary Smith’s little note in great gaiety
-of heart, and in a mood in which men of influence are willing to do
-what they can for their kind.
-
-Like many men of wealth and ability whom opportunity has made
-eccentric, William Bailey could not bear to handle the pen. He
-hesitated for some moments between the extreme boredom of writing and
-the tantalising business of the telephone, decided in favour of the
-former, wrote on a form--
-
- “Get Dolly to make room for him.
-
- (Signed) BILL”--
-
-and sent the message out to be telegraphed to his cousin.
-
-Mary Smith, receiving it, received with it a great light.
-
-It was not always easy for her to follow the changes that took place in
-political appointments, but she was certain of _this_, that the present
-administration contained more unfamiliar names than she cared to think
-of, and that there _must_ be room in such a crowd for a man of poor
-George’s standing.
-
-Now from the moment that such thoughts as these entered Mary Smith’s
-head about a man’s appointment, that man was safe: poor George’s future
-was therefore ultimately secure. But there was no time to lose. He
-must get on to the front bench, and he must get there with a salary,
-and the salary must be sufficient, and the promotion must be rapid.
-She remembered that Dolly would be at the Petheringtons’ that evening,
-and she determined to be there too. She hoped and prayed that nothing
-would bring George, though since George was everywhere the chances were
-against her prayer being answered.
-
-For the moment she thought of warning him not to come, then,
-remembering certain indiscretions of his in the past, she thought it
-best to say nothing, but to trust to chance.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-Charles Repton, manifold as were his financial interests, knew nothing
-of Popocatapetls, and cared less.
-
-The manner in which his life was to be influenced by that very distant
-cataclysm was hidden from him; as (for that matter) it would be hidden
-from the reader also had not this book been most boldly published.
-
-Yet another thing the full import of which may escape the reader, is
-the fact that Sir Charles Repton was extremely tender just behind the
-ears; but for this the reader herself alone and not the author is to
-blame, for if the reader had any knowledge of Caryll’s Ganglia she
-would have guessed at twenty things. But no matter: Caryll’s Ganglia
-and their effect upon self-control very much interrupt the chain of
-those absorbing adventures which, if she will continue, the reader will
-presently peruse.
-
-Anyhow, those regions of the head which lie behind either ear were for
-some reason or other very tender, large, sensitive to pressure, and in
-a way abnormal in Sir Charles Repton.
-
-When, therefore, somewhere about the corner of Tottenham Court Road
-(on that March day on which we left him walking to his Board meeting),
-his hat blew off: when he had run after it: when in doing so he had
-ruffled his fine crop of white hair; and when, to have it all set
-right, he had gone into a second-rate barber’s, it may well be imagined
-that he gave the man who served him minute instructions that the head
-rest upon the back of the chair should be made comfortable--and so it
-was. And on to it Sir Charles Repton leant gingerly the head upon whose
-clear action depended the future fortunes of Van Diemens.
-
-The man in brushing his hair with an apparatus of singular power,
-turned the monologue on to the commonplaces of the moment, which
-included the bestiality of the Government and the abhorrent nature
-of the Italian people, of whom at that particular moment in 1915 the
-people of London stood in abject terror.
-
-Whether it was the pressure of the violent rotating brush or some
-looseness in the screw that held the support behind him, with a shock
-and a clang that support slipped, and Sir Charles Repton’s head came
-smartly down, first through nothingness and then on to two iron nuts
-which exactly corresponded to those processes of the skull just
-behind either ear, in which, as I have taken pains to remark, he was
-peculiarly sensitive: for they were largely developed in him and
-nourished it would seem by an unusual supply of blood.
-
-Sharp as was the pain, Charles Repton controlled himself, listened to
-the explanations and apologies of the barber, and submitted himself
-again to the grooming for which he had entered.
-
-When he went out again into the street he had almost forgotten the
-accident. The two places where his head had been struck swelled
-slightly and he touched them now and again, but they soon passed from
-his mind; within ten minutes they were no longer painful; yet was there
-set up in them from that moment, an irritation which was to have no
-inconsiderable consequence.
-
-He went on into the City, ordered one or two things which he had set
-down in his memorandum before starting, looked in at a City Club
-where he knew one or two items of news were awaiting him, and slowly
-betook himself to the offices of the Van Diemens Company. He had
-thoroughly planned out the scheme of that morning’s work; it needed no
-recapitulation in his mind, yet as his habit was, just before opening
-the door of the Board Room, in the few seconds of going up the stairs,
-he briefly presented his scheme of tactics to his own mind.
-
-The Directors must ask the shareholders for fresh capital; a nominal
-million, an increase of 25 per cent. upon the value of the shares at
-par. That was the first point.
-
-The second point was the object for which this levy should nominally
-be demanded. On that also he had made up his mind. Paton had quite
-unconsciously suggested to him the master idea; a little belt of
-untravelled and unknown country (locally known as the “Out and Out”)
-wherein the degraded Kawangas--so Paton had told him, and after all
-Paton had been there--held their orgies in Mutchi-time, alone separated
-Perks’ Bay from the Straits, and the long detour which all traffic must
-now make between the coaling station and the high road to the East,
-could be cut off by a line crossing that region. Paton had assured him
-with immense enthusiasm that such a line would give its possessor the
-strategic key to the gate of everything East of the Bay of Bengal,
-and, what was more important in Sir Charles’ eyes than Paton’s own
-opinion, a vast mass of gentlemen in the suburbs of London and perhaps
-five-sixths of the journalists in Fleet Street, were ready to rally to
-the idea. It had been well preached and well dinned in.
-
-These two points were clear: they must ask for a million and they must
-ask it for the purpose of building a railway that would at last ensure
-the Empire against the nightmare of foreign rivals.
-
-There was a third point. The shareholders would not or could not
-subscribe a million but that was easily turned. They should be asked
-for no more than 200,000,--a shilling a share--in cash down, “the
-remainder to be paid,” etc. etc.
-
-Had not Sir Charles possessed an iron control of his face, the strong
-set smile which he wore as he entered the Board Room would have
-broadened at the recollection of that last detail. On the other hand
-had he not possessed such self-control some movement of annoyance
-might have escaped him to discover present at the table, among his
-other colleagues, the late-rising and impervious Bingham. The sight
-was sufficient to exasperate a man of less balance. The hour had been
-carefully chosen to avoid such an accident, and that accident meant
-perhaps another half-hour or more of close argument and of subtle
-effort.
-
-For his colleague Bingham added to a native idiocy of solid texture and
-formidable dimensions, the experience of extensive travel; and he was
-in particular well acquainted with the district with regard to which
-the Board must that day make its decision. It was certain, therefore,
-that his fellow-Directors would listen to him with peculiar respect,
-not only on account of his stupidity which necessarily commanded a
-certain attention, but also on account of his intimacy with plain
-matters of fact: he had been upon the spot: he was the man who knew.
-
-It was just as Repton had feared. Business that might have been done in
-a quarter of an hour and a decision which contained no more than the
-issue of pieces of paper was turned into a long practical discussion by
-the intolerable ponderance of Bingham, who would wait until every one
-had had his say, and then would bring in some dreadful little technical
-point about a marsh, a rainy season or a fly; he was careful to pepper
-his conversation with local terms a hundred times more remote than the
-Kawanga and Mutchi-time; in every conceivable manner he put his spoke
-into the wheels of business.
-
-So considerable was the effect produced by the redoubtable Bingham at
-that table that, were Cæsarism a common political theory in elderly
-men, the whole conduct of Van Diemens would for the future have been
-put into his hands. Luckily for the Company its forms were not so
-democratic.
-
-Charles Repton waited patiently. When he spoke his point was as simple
-as falling off a log: what was wanted was not a railway in itself, it
-was a new issue of capital. He was profoundly indifferent what label
-should be tied onto that issue, so long as it was a label good enough
-to get the original shareholders to come in. The public would never
-come in as things were: its pusillanimity was increased by the fact
-that the Company had been in existence for now eleven years and had
-hitherto failed to pay a dividend of any kind. After some thought he
-had decided, in company with one or two others upon the Board, that a
-railway through a certain district of the concession, locally known
-as “The Out and Out,” and remarkable for the fact that no white man
-had yet visited it, would be the best attraction he could offer. He
-was prepared to show by the aid of maps upon which should be marked
-all favourable things, that a line driven through this district would
-unite with the world two provinces teeming with inexhaustible wealth,
-of a heavenly climate, and hitherto by the mere accident of the Out
-and Out belt, cut off from the longing embraces of commerce. More;
-he could show that this single line of railway would bestow upon his
-beloved country so vast a strategic superiority over all other nations
-as would ensure her immediate success in any campaign, no matter what
-the quality of the troops she might employ. To this he added the
-attractions of touring in the tropics and the allurements of big game
-for those wealthy gentlemen whom he designed in the new prospectus to
-term Shikaris.
-
-With the new capital subscribed and long before the line was surveyed,
-there was little doubt that the shares which had fallen from over £9 to
-the comparatively low quotation--but oh! not price--of 16/3 (at which
-quotation he had first consented to tender his services to the Company)
-would rise to certainly over £1, perhaps to nearer £2, and what was
-more to the point they would be readily saleable. He was prepared in
-that event to transfer his property in them to others, a course which
-he sincerely hoped his fellow-shareholders would also follow, though of
-course he would not take it upon himself to advise any one of them.
-
-Bingham, like the practical man he was, pinned himself to the railway.
-He _knew_ the Out and Out; not that he’d ever been there,--no white
-man had,--but he had talked to several of the Kawanga in Mutchi-time,
-and he shook his head despondently. There was one continuous line of
-precipice 3000 feet deep; there was a river which was now a stream
-five miles broad, now a marsh and now again dry--, sometimes for years
-on end. There was a dense mass of forest; there was that much more
-difficult thing, a belt of shifting sand dunes; there were nearly 300
-miles without water through these. He was prepared to speak all day
-upon the difficulties of building a railway which none but the least
-intelligent had ever designed to build.
-
-Sir Charles Repton could ride himself on the curb, and more than
-anything else this mastery had given him his present great position;
-but that day he had to exercise his will to the full, and in that
-exercise he felt slight twinges behind the ear where the barber’s rest
-had struck him. It was all he could do to prevent himself from drumming
-on the table or from making those interruptions which only serve as
-fuel to the slow criticisms of the dull.
-
-At last--and heaven knows with what subtlety and patience--he
-conquered. There was a vote (a thing he had wished to avoid), but he
-carried it by two; and it was agreed that the issue of new capital
-should be made, that a General Meeting of the shareholders should
-be called for Tuesday the 2nd of June, and that he, Repton, should
-have the task of laying the scheme before them. The new prospectus,
-which he had already drafted, was passed round and with a very few
-emendations accepted. Then, after as heavy a bit of work as had ever
-been undertaken in the way of persuasion, the principal brain in that
-company was at last free for other things.
-
-It was half-past one. He had just time to meet and to convince yet
-another fool upon another matter: the foreigner acting as agent for his
-Government, on the matter of the bridge: a bridge which the Foreign
-Government might or might not build, and, if they built, might or might
-not order from a firm which Repton had reason to befriend. Repton must
-lunch with that foreigner: he must persuade him to build: he must
-get the order--then he must be in his place in the House in time for
-questions.
-
-The foreigner was as wax in his hands: not as good warm wax,
-adulterated wax, candle wax, but rather as beeswax, very ancient
-and hard. It was a full hour before that wax was pliable, but once
-again the unceasing, managed, strict watchfulness, the set face which
-had always in it something stern but never anything aggressive, the
-balance of judgment, conquered. Down to the smallest detail of that
-conversation Repton was the artist, his host at the lunch was the
-public, accepting and gradually convinced, and the bridge was ordered
-for the Foreign Government, though it was a useless bridge leading
-from nowhere to nowhere, and though it could have been built much more
-solidly and much better by the people of the place than by the English
-firm.
-
-Then Repton went on to the House of Commons, and there, as in every
-duty of the day, the weight of his character told.
-
-The questions were slight, there were not half a dozen that concerned
-his Department, but he answered them all with that curious restraint of
-tone which somehow made it difficult to cross-examine his Department.
-And he faced the House with such a poise and expression that one almost
-wondered, as one looked at him, upon which side he was sitting, or
-whether indeed the mere game of In’s and Out’s entered into his brain
-at all.
-
-He seemed to be quite above the divisions of party. He seemed a sort
-of Ambassador from the permanent officials and to carry into the House
-of Commons an atmosphere at once judicial and experienced which no one
-could resist. When he had first accepted the Wardenship of the Court
-of Dowry it had been wondered that he should take so secondary a post.
-Now, after these four years, it was rather wondered why no one had seen
-till then the possibilities that lay in the position.
-
-After that typical and decisive day, Repton, for more than a month,
-refrained from debate.
-
-He was ever in his seat on those two days in each week when it was his
-business to answer questions: he never let his understrapper appear for
-him; for one full fortnight he was permanently in attendance, watching
-the fortunes before a select committee of a certain Bill, for which the
-public cared nothing but which he knew might change in a very important
-particular the public fortune--but in general he seemed to be in
-retirement. He was planning hard.
-
-A mixture of Imperial sentiment and personal pride urged him to put
-Van Diemens on their legs, and all April, all through the Easter
-Recess, he remained in London working. He worked right on into May; for
-the first week after Parliament met again he was seen but little; one
-thing only troubled him, that at long intervals--sometimes as long as
-ten days, an uneasy twinge behind the ears, the result of that little
-half-forgotten accident, incommoded him. These twinges came a trifle
-more frequently as May advanced. After the last of them he had felt a
-little dazed--no more. And still he worked and worked, holding twenty
-reins in his hands.
-
-Before the end of May the fruit of all this labour began to appear.
-Camptons were reconstructed, arbitration had been forced upon the
-Docks combination in the North just in time to prevent a wholesale
-transference of shipping abroad, and more important than all, perhaps,
-there had begun to crop up in the papers, here, there, and everywhere,
-the mention--and the flattering mention--of Van Diemens, and the
-wealthy were already familiar with the conception of a certain railway
-in the land which was under the Van Diemens charter.
-
-The wealthy, but as yet only the wealthy; it is as fatal to be too
-early as to be too late, and that brain which knew how to drive and
-compel, had also known so well how to restrain, that the shares still
-remained unsaleable with the meaningless quotation of sixteen shillings
-and a few fluctuating pence still attached to them in the market lists.
-
-So Repton stood in the middle of May, 1915, when he became aware that
-an obscure member (obscure at least in the House of Commons--and Repton
-noticed little of, and cared nothing for, the merely luxurious world of
-London), an aristocrat of sorts, one of the _Demaine_,--George Demaine
-it seemed, was being talked about. He was being pushed somehow. Repton
-hardly heeded so commonplace a phenomenon, save perhaps to wonder what
-job was on:--he continued to push Van Diemens.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-
-The Petheringtons’ house, to which Mary Smith drove on the evening of
-12th of April, under the two pretty little electric lights of her car,
-one for either side of her face, was one of a hundred similar London
-houses, a huge brown cube in the middle of Grosvenor Square.
-
-It was no longer called Petherington House; it had once again regained
-its more familiar appellation of No. 89, under which it had been
-famous for the complete lack of entertainment of any sort which had
-distinguished the short session of 1912. Then old Hooker had died, the
-changes in the Cabinet had come, Hooker’s wife had married the Bishop
-and also died immediately, and finally the Petheringtons had taken the
-place, foolishly called it by their own title for a few months, and
-finding it unknown to cabmen and to their friends’ chauffeurs also
-under this appellation, they slowly reverted to the old name.
-
-If hospitality is a fault when pushed to an extreme, the Petheringtons
-exhibited that fault. But so excellent were their arrangements--for
-business will out even in the smallest details of domestic life--that
-no one suffered in the crush, and that it was perfectly easy in the
-time a guest ordinarily allowed himself for the function, to go up the
-stairs and down again, though perhaps too much time was wasted at the
-necessarily narrow entrance where men must seek their hats and coats.
-
-The movement of Society in this particular case was rendered the more
-facile by the emptiness of the hall, from which everything had been
-taken except the Great Stuffed Bear which had been shot by the servant
-of a trapper who had sold it to the correspondent of the furrier
-of Lady Petherington, and which now stood holding a tray, with an
-expression of extreme ferocity, and labelled “The Caucasus, 17th June,
-1910,”--for in those mountains Mr. Petherington--as he then was--had
-travelled.
-
-Mary Smith was not disappointed. Mooning aimlessly about the crowded
-rooms above, in an atmosphere surcharged with mauve Moravian music--the
-loudest of its kind--shuffled the anxious and slightly bowed form of
-Dolly, the young and popular Prime Minister.
-
-A foreigner might have thought him to have few friends, so slowly
-did he proceed and with so curious a gaze from one group to another,
-seeming half stunned by the vigour of the band and fascinated by the
-vigorous contortions of Mr. Arthur Worth who conducted it for all he
-was--I mean with his utmost capacity of gesture and expression. That
-foreigner would have suffered an illusion. The Prime Minister was
-perfectly well known in face and figure to every one in that room, and
-there were few who did not hope for some advantage from his presence,
-but fewer, far fewer still, who attempted to obtain it. I must of
-course except Professor Kahn.
-
-Dolly knew his Mary Smith, and resigned himself to suffer. She had
-not come there that night for nothing. She got up to him within half
-a minute of the view, and found him with peculiar dexterity through a
-maze of wealthy people. She quietly took him away, and sat him in a
-large chair that stood in a remote recess, where the light was subdued;
-she took advantage of a deafening crash in the music to which its
-previous successes were child’s play, and shouted:
-
-“When are you going to have your next move?”
-
-The Prime Minister implored her not to talk shop. Then somewhat
-inconsequently he added, weakening: “Why do you want to know?”
-
-The music was now whining and part of it was taking breath for another
-charge. It was therefore in quite a low but exceedingly business-like
-tone that Mary Smith remarked:
-
-“Because I want you to do something for Dimmy.”
-
-The name suggested to the Prime Minister one of twenty little jobs; he
-thought of a jolly little one in Ireland. But she added: “You know what
-has happened?”
-
-He didn’t.
-
-She told him briefly: Ole Man Benson was broke.
-
-The Prime Minister remembered the explosion of Popocatapetl: he had
-vaguely connected the news with something at the time: now he knew what
-it was. He looked extremely grave. And when Mary went on to tell him
-that Mrs. Demaine had only £1500 he looked graver still.
-
-“There isn’t anything of a big sort going just now, Mary,” he said in
-quite another tone. But he was thinking his clearest. “I don’t know him
-as well as you do,” he added. “Can he _do_ anything?”
-
-“No,” said Mary Smith decidedly, “he can’t. But he’d go well in
-harness.”
-
-The Prime Minister seemed to live more actively as he considered the
-problem. The warm air, the scent of clothes and flowers suited him well.
-
-The trouble with his left lung which had so endeared him to his
-fellow-citizens, he felt far less keenly in the beginning of a warm
-spring than at any other time, and evenings such as this rewarded him
-for the sacrifice he made every winter to his duty and to England. Of
-the four years during which he had held the highest of human offices
-he had spent but one winter on the Riviera, and though it had been
-necessary in one year to forego an Autumn session, such a session had
-not in the other three years delayed the meeting of Parliament beyond
-the end of February. His youth stood him in good stead during this
-ordeal; but there were those (and they were they who loved him most)
-who looked with anxiety upon the frail form and thought, although
-they dared not say, that the years were slipping by and that what a
-man could do with impunity when still upon the right side of fifty,
-would become another matter when his fifty-fifth year was passed....
-There was of course always the hope of opposition and its leisure....
-The Broadening of the Streets Bill had roused a tempest of Party
-passion.... He had already been publicly stoned in the North.... But no
-matter; for the moment the Prime Minister was full of appreciation, and
-for his cousin’s purposes in the kindliest of moods.
-
-Nevertheless he thought (and his cousin read his thoughts) that she was
-asking the impossible. An idea struck him.
-
-“Has Dimmy been called to the Bar?” he asked.
-
-She looked up, puzzled. “I don’t think so.... No, I know he hasn’t. I
-put up a hundred for him in 1908 and he buzzed it. I should certainly
-have heard if he had done anything more before his marriage. Naturally
-_since_ then....”
-
-“Yes, naturally,” said the Prime Minister sympathetically. He mused.
-“He wouldn’t go abroad?” he said, looking round.
-
-“What on earth’s the good of that?” said Mary Smith a little testily.
-
-“Well,” answered the Prime Minister vaguely, as he reviewed certain
-posts in his mind, “... No. There isn’t much in that. Anything that
-could be of any use wants leading up to.” And he plunged into thought
-again.
-
-Then with a gesture that many had noticed in him and had thought a mere
-idle trick but which was really an accompaniment to calculation, he put
-his ten fingers down upon his knees and lifted them slowly one after
-another. When he had so lifted nine (it was the ring finger of his left
-hand) a touch of animation passed over his face, an expression his
-cousin could see even in that subdued light.
-
-“How long does he want it for?” he asked.
-
-Mary Smith was inclined to say “For ever,” but she checked herself; she
-remembered the face and manner of Theocritus C. Benson, she trusted his
-future fortune, and she said:
-
-“I think even a little while would make a difference.”
-
-They were both thinking of the same thing. But the Prime Minister
-understood what perhaps she did not, that there is no such thing as
-autocratic intervention in our public life, that time is required
-for every innovation, and that he who leads must also follow. He was
-reviewing as she spoke the prejudices and the ambitions of perhaps
-twenty men, and the power of each. When he spoke again it was as though
-his decision were final:
-
-“I don’t see how I could do anything for him in the House. He’s hardly
-ever spoken, and when he did he made a fool of himself.”
-
-“Of course,” said Mary sympathetically.
-
-“He’s the only man,” went on Dolly reflectively, “whom I’ve ever seen
-fall right _off_ a bench in the House of Commons....”
-
-“You mean he’s physically awkward?” replied Mary in the tone of a
-woman who knows how to despise such trifles--but she scented danger.
-“I’ve never known Dimmy betray one word that was confided to him,” she
-continued gravely.
-
-“If one were beginning all over again,” said Dolly, as though thinking
-aloud. “But then,” he added, getting up from his chair and making as
-though to walk away,--“_that’s_ impossible,--there’s Repton.”
-
-It has been said that women are inconsequent in their conversation and
-that if they desire to obtain a favour they do so by disconnected hints
-which men cannot follow. It may be so. But perhaps on this very account
-do they succeed. At any rate from the moment that the Prime Minister
-had let drop the phrase “there’s Repton,” Mary Smith’s plan was formed.
-She did not like Sir Charles Repton, largely because he had not known
-her well. She had half forgotten him; she understood now that in some
-way he stood as an obstacle to what she desired for poor George, and
-from that moment she determined that Repton should be thrust into the
-House of Lords. All she said was:
-
-“Yes, I forgot Repton.”
-
-And then she went back into the crowded rooms, pushing the friend of
-her girlhood playfully before her with her forefinger pressed into the
-small of his back, until they reached the open door and entered the
-main rooms.
-
-The music of Mr. Arthur Worth’s band rose, a triumphant tyrant over,
-the howling talk, when, during a sharp momentary and calculated pause
-in the tornado of violins came the loud and unexpected crash of some
-heavy object falling violently in the hall below. Mary Smith moved very
-rapidly and silently downstairs towards the sound.
-
-It was as she expected; George Mulross had come! A little flushed and
-very much annoyed, he had upset the Great Stuffed Bear which stood near
-the door of the house. George was looking at the Prostrate Monster with
-angry defiance, and nothing but his dignity forbade him to attempt
-to raise it. The accident was enough to decide Mary. She dreaded the
-impression Dolly might receive if the poor lad went up now and was
-flurried again. She went up and put her hand on his shoulder as he
-stood there. He jumped round and discovered her.
-
-“Oh Lord!” he said.
-
-“Dimmy,” she commanded firmly, “go out at once. A great deal depends on
-it. Go out at once. Don’t wait!”
-
-He began to say something about his wife and a carriage.
-
-“_Go out at once!_” said Mary Smith.
-
-He tried to say something about his hat and coat.
-
-Some yards before them at the open door the noise of a carriage was
-heard and there were servants waiting. Behind them more servants. But
-Mary Smith knew her world.
-
-It was a choice of evils, and George Mulross Demaine went out into
-the night, hatless and coatless. The policemen were pleased to see
-such familiarity among the great. They doubted not that the gentleman
-was taking the air, but they wondered why he walked so very rapidly
-eastward through Mayfair.
-
-Meanwhile from the carriage the daughter of Theocritus C. Benson came
-out, not without decision, and very soon the rooms of that house were
-filled and even its Moravian music dominated by the acuteness of her
-laugh and the tremendous decision of her tread.
-
-When every one had gone, one hat and coat remained. The footman pawned
-them: they were those of George Mulross Demaine.
-
-He, poor fellow, saw in all this nothing but that eternity of bad luck
-to which he was born. When his wife asked him next day why he had left
-the Petheringtons’ so early, he told some ordinary lie: he had left
-indeed because one wiser than he had told him to leave, but he could
-make neither head nor tail of the whole affair: and his foot hurt him
-where the Bear had crushed it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-
-Easter, as those who survive will know, fell early in 1915--to be
-exact, upon April 4th; Ole Man Benson had returned on the 11th; on the
-12th Mary had seen Dolly; and the week after Ole Man Benson’s return
-to these shores, the week after he had delivered his important and
-somewhat depressing news to the young household, the week after Mary
-and Dolly had conferred at the Petheringtons’--was the week in which
-Parliament met after the Recess, the third week in April.
-
-In that week also there began to crop up here and there unexpectedly,
-beautifully, like the spring flowers, short newspaper notes upon George
-Mulross Demaine.
-
-They were notes of where he had been, whether he had been there or
-not,--at least at first they were notes of that kind. There had always
-been some such notes on him in the papers, but they seemed to be
-getting numerous.
-
-The public would hear that George Mulross loved his great poodle
-dog; next that the pressure of his engagements forbade him to open
-an Enormous Institution for the Cultivation and Study of Virulent
-Diseases, and in connection with this news the Institution was
-described at great length, and the passionate regrets at the absence of
-George Mulross Demaine sounded like a small but perceptible dirge in
-the corners of the daily press.
-
-He was attacked gently but cleverly in a paper upon his own side of
-politics; short biographical notes, only a few among several score,
-gave details of his happy little ways. He was fond of riding, said one
-author who can have had but little intimacy with her subject; he was
-fond of children, said another who had even less. He had “an eye for
-black game,” said a third, whose lack of intimacy included not only
-George himself but certainly black game as well.
-
-Later came anecdotes of his goodness of heart; how he had run over a
-boy in the Park with his motor and had then picked him up; and how he
-had good-humouredly refrained from telling people who he was in the
-railway accident, and had permitted the wounded to be taken to hospital
-before he himself would accept conveyance.
-
-Finally, as the month ended, and as May brought in the London season,
-George Mulross began to find himself uncomfortably prominent. For he
-very sincerely and very heartily hated fame. He could not so much as
-upset a glass of wine or stumble over public stairs without hearing
-his name whispered; and once when he had called at the wrong number,
-the servant, recognising him from some caricature in the papers, had
-mentioned his own name to him with reverence, though the door was the
-door of a house whose occupants he did not know.
-
-Meanwhile the tiny balance at the bank had gone. The overdraft was
-large and at any moment there might come a note which he dreaded. And
-Mary Smith had compelled him to look for a small house in Westminster
-and to make every preparation for leaving Demaine House. He kicked
-feebly, but she insisted: and even Sudie gave way.
-
-“You haven’t enough to keep the house dry,” Mary said. And she
-compelled them both to a sense of business which Theocritus himself
-would have failed to make them feel.
-
-All this business was well advanced when Mary Smith proceeded to the
-next stage of the campaign.
-
-She carefully looked up the nature of the Court of Dowry, and when she
-had learned all that she could learn from her books (it took her half a
-day--though she was a woman of exceptional intelligence and excellent
-education) she set herself to learn all that could be learned from
-living men.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Court of Dowry, in its very survival and still more perhaps in the
-functions to-day attached to it, affords an admirable example of the
-value of fixed institutions in the life of a people.
-
-It was originally instituted to try cases falling within the
-jurisdiction of that Queen Mother of the Middle Ages to whom the poet
-Gray so pathetically alludes in the striking lines
-
- “She-wolf of France with unrelenting fangs
- Tearing the bowels,” etc.
-
-It had cognizance of all Escheats, Novels Tabulate and Malprisions
-Reguardaunt in the County of Ponthieu and the Seniory of Lucq. But when
-active jurisdiction over these continental territories was interrupted
-under King Henry VI., there remained no function for the Court but the
-trial of cases arising in or without foreign ports upon decks subject
-to the Crown of England.
-
-It lingered thus into the beginning of the sixteenth century, at
-which moment it was reduced to a Clerk known as the _Mangeur_, and a
-Warden, each holding what were virtually sinecures (and not highly paid
-sinecures at that) about the Palace.
-
-Henry VIII., whom we cannot call a good but whom surely we may call a
-great man, rudely suppressed the office of Mangeur with a cruel jest
-at the executioner’s expense, and only permitted the Wardenship itself
-to survive on the strict understanding that the salary should be paid
-to himself. The title, however, remained, a minor distinction among
-the numerous baubles of the time, and was, if I may so express it,
-resurrected from obscurity by the great family of Heygate at the moment
-of the Restoration of Charles II.
-
-In their gladness at their recovery of a legitimate sovereign, this
-dominant house (now represented by the Parrells) trapped themselves in
-every accoutrement of joy, and, among other posts, the Wardenship of
-the Court of Dowry was voted in 1661 an annual salary of £2000, for
-which sum held by the same Act as an hereditary right, the head of the
-House of Heygate was content to license the annual holding of the Court
-within the Royal Manor and Liberties of Tooting.
-
-At first this Court sat for one full day in each year--St. Luke’s--but
-later, from 1731, this session was maintained in fiction alone. A crier
-in Westminster Hall, at the opening of every Hilary Term, would rapidly
-read out a list of three fictitious cases which went by default, claim
-seventeen and sixpence, and for ever after hold his peace.
-
-During the eighteenth century the fixed yearly salary of £2000
-hereditarily enjoyed by the Heygate family steadily grew, till, by
-the time of the Reform Bill, it had reached the very considerable sum
-of £15,000, still payable to the Heygates though now all vestige of
-activity in the office had disappeared.
-
-Our grandfathers, in the zeal of that somewhat iconoclastic moment,
-swept away the corrupt figment. The emoluments of the post were
-ruthlessly cut down to the original £2000; its hereditary character
-was, after a violent debate in the House of Lords, destroyed by a
-majority of over fifty votes, determined (as were so many of the great
-changes of that time!) by the voice of Eldon. The Detainer of the
-office (for such was his official title) received in compensation
-a lump sum of half a million only--not twenty years’ purchase--and
-certain apparently unimportant functions were attached to the place
-which from that day forward became an appointment changing with the
-Administration.
-
-Mark here the silent virtue of organic constitutional growth, and how
-a gentry can find it possible to create where demagogues would have
-destroyed.
-
-Point by point and function by function, one marine interest after
-another attached itself to the Court of Dowry as the beautiful
-organisms of the sea attach themselves to the ships that plough its
-waters, until there had grown up round the Court of Dowry by the end
-of the nineteenth century so considerable a mass of precedent and
-custom and, with the vast extension of our maritime commerce, duties so
-manifold and of such moment to the nation, that the office re-emerged
-after its life of six centuries, an organ of capital importance in the
-workings of English Government.
-
-As must be the case in any old and secure State, certain anomalous
-duties were further attached to it: the inspection of patent medicines
-for instance, the giving out of contracts for buoys and rockets,
-and the formal stamping of licences to sell sarsaparilla. Even so
-the wretched and insufficient salary of £2000 remained the sole
-remuneration of the Warden, though the great name of GHERKIN had raised
-it to be among the foremost posts of the Cabinet, and it had since
-seen the brilliancy, the learning and the judgment respectively of
-a Dibley, a Powker and a Hump. By 1912 its strict control over the
-great steamship lines, its supervision of wrecks, derelicts, Hunnage,
-Mixings, and Ports Consequent, made it second only to the Foreign
-Office in the matter of public interest, and, like the Foreign Office,
-largely removed from the wranglings of party.
-
-Some months later the salary was raised, amid the cheers (as I have
-said) of a united House, to £5000 a year, with a further allowance of
-£5000 for the expenses of entertainment and travel, which fall with
-peculiar severity upon this great Department; and in the hands of
-Charles Repton it had risen to be something even more, if that were
-possible, than GHERKIN had made it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-So much did Mary Smith discover: partly in what she already knew,
-partly in her reading. The living voices of men told her further things.
-
-It seemed that in the dingy offices which (by a lovely trait in the
-character of politics!) house this great Department--they stand between
-Parliament Street and New Scotland Yard--a certain Mr. Sorrel had for
-now seven years exercised his marvellous and hidden powers, and while
-all were prepared to admit the genius of Charles Repton, those who best
-knew the workings of a great Government office, spoke almost as though
-Mr. Sorrel were in himself the Court of Dowry.
-
-The quaint customs attaching to the office of Warden, the little
-bells upon the shoes, the bearing of a model ship, bareheaded, upon
-Empire Day (a recent innovation and one awkward only to the bald or
-the blind), though to some they seemed a drawback, to others were but
-an additional attraction, and the ceremony of waggling in backwards
-upon all fours into the presence of the Sovereign at Inauguration, had
-been, with perhaps doubtful wisdom, abolished, to suit the eccentric
-Radicalism of GHERKIN, who refused to take office under any other
-condition.
-
-The Accolade, or Ceremonial Stroke, however, heavily administered with
-a beam of ebony across the back of the Warden Accept, was retained
-and has often afforded a subject for illustration and archæological
-research.
-
-Mary Smith learnt even more. She learnt that while decency forbade any
-saving to be effected on the further £5000 that was an allowance for
-entertainment and travel, yet custom allowed it to be spent in all
-forms of hospitality, and that travel might include such social visits
-as were necessary to the occupant of so high an office. When she learnt
-this she was but the more confirmed in her determination that Charles
-Repton who for the moment encumbered the post of Warden, should accept
-a barony, and that quickly; for she saw the agony of Demaine House
-already begun. Upon a certain morning in the mid-week of May the last
-stage of her beneficent action was ready.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In his study on that same morning, Charles Repton, a little weary but
-with all his action planned and designed, suffered again for a moment
-that slight dull pain behind the ears, where Caryll’s Ganglia are: he
-was dazed. He went out and sought his wife, and she was astonished to
-see as he put to her some simple question on the management of the
-household, a look of innocence in his eyes. It quickly faded. The pain
-also departed, and he returned to his study.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Mary Smith sent a note over to Demaine House.
-
-Mary’s note found George Mulross Demaine risen after a lonely lunch and
-wondering, as he regularly wondered every day, what was going to turn
-up.
-
-His wonderment had bewilderment in it also. Something was going to turn
-up he knew ... people were noticing him so. Only last evening there was
-a savage attack upon him in the _Moon_, saying that he had torn Hares
-to pieces with his own reeking hands, and killed a Carted Stag with a
-blunt knife; while the _Capon_, with more truth, had pointed out the
-beauty of the Sir Joshuas in his house, but had erroneously suggested
-that they were heirlooms in his family.
-
-He was still gazing at the May morning and gloomily considering the
-buds in the formal garden, when Mary’s note was forced upon him by a
-huge Dependant.
-
-A note in the firm hand of Mary Smith was always a pleasant thing to
-get; for a bewildered man it had something in it of salvation.
-
-George Mulross went in a mood lighter than any he had known for many
-weeks, towards his cousin’s house. He found her, of course, alone.
-
-“Dimmy,” she said, lifting his hand gently from the chimneypiece
-where he was moving it aimlessly among several breakable and valuable
-things,--“Dimmy, when did you last ask a question in the House?”
-
-He looked frightened, and said:
-
-“Oh! ages ago.”
-
-“Now look here, Dimmy,” she said smoothly, “I want you to go and ask
-this to-day,”--and she handed him a bit of paper.
-
-“Have you got any money in it?” he asked innocently.
-
-“No, certainly not,” she answered. “You silly ass! What could that have
-to do with it? Read it.”
-
-He read: “_Mr. G. M. Demaine: to ask the Prime Minister whether his
-attention has been called to the fact that the Van Huren Company is not
-registered in London as the law provides, and what steps he proposes to
-take in view of this evasion of a public safeguard?_”
-
-“What on earth have I to do with that?” he asked, looking up at her, a
-little put out and evidently unwilling to take any risks. “What is it
-anyhow?”
-
-“Now look here, Dimmy,” she said, “do be a good fellow: it’s all for
-your good.”
-
-“Well anyhow,” he said, “I can’t get an answer for two days.”
-
-“Yes you can,” she said, “I’ve sent Dolly a little note typewritten,
-and signed it in your name; and you can call it a ‘matter of which you
-have given him private notice.’”
-
-“Oh, you have!” said Demaine, almost moved to energy.
-
-“Yes, I have,” said Mary Smith firmly. “There are a hundred and eight
-questions to-day; it’s half-past three and you’ve time to get down to
-the House comfortably. I’ll take you there.”
-
-She did: and amid the general indifference of most members in a crowded
-House, the amusement of perhaps a couple of dozen, and the red-hot
-silent rage of at least two, G. M. Demaine in a half-audible voice,
-mumbled his query.
-
-The Prime Minister received more than a murmur of applause when he
-answered in his clear and rather high voice that in a matter of such
-importance and in a moment such as this, it was not to the interest of
-the country to give a public reply.
-
-If there was one thing George Mulross Demaine dreaded more than another
-it was to be questioned, and still more to be congratulated, upon
-things he did not understand. Luckily for him a scene of some violence
-connected with the religious differences of the Scotch, prevented the
-immediate opening of the debate at the end of Questions, and he had the
-opportunity to slip away. But to his terror he found the motor waiting
-for him and Mary Smith beckoning him from within; like the fascinated
-bird of the legend he was captured. He hoped that she would drive him
-to some more congenial air. But no, she produced, from a large and
-business-like wallet which she only carried in her most imperious
-moments, two questions to be set down for the day after the morrow.
-
-He took them with a groan and yielded as yield he must to her command
-that he should set them down. They were of no importance, the one was
-to his uncle by a second marriage, the First Civil Lord, to ask him the
-name of a Company that had proved less able than was expected in the
-manufacture of armour plates; the other to his cousin the Chancellor
-of the Exchequer asking if the action of some obscure servant of
-the Treasury in a peaceful Buckinghamshire village had received the
-attention which his recent services seemed to require.
-
-The day and hour came round. George Mulross in a voice perhaps a little
-more assured than that of two days before, said when his turn came:
-“Twenty-nine.”
-
-To his surprise the Chancellor of the Exchequer answered with some
-tartness that he had nothing whatever to add to his predecessor’s
-answer of July 9th ten years before, and added amid general approval,
-that insinuations such as were those contained in the question were
-greatly to be deplored.
-
-A man of excitable temperament had already leapt to his feet to ask a
-supplementary question when he was sharply checked by the Chair and the
-curious incident closed.
-
-Some ten minutes passed and once again, sweating with fear, Demaine
-heard his name called out and said in a voice still audible:
-“Fifty-four.--I mean Forty-five.”
-
-The First Lord of the Admiralty rose solemnly in all the dignity of
-his great white beard, adjusted his spectacles, looked fully at the
-intruder upon his peace, and said with his unmistakable accent, that
-the name of the Company could be dithcovered through the ordinary
-thourceth of information.
-
-So the game continued for ten days. In vain did his friends assure him
-that he was losing position in the House by this perpetual pose of
-the puritan and the sleuth hound. Mary Smith was a woman who must be
-obeyed, and of twenty-three questions which she put into his unwilling
-lips at least one had gone home. And the First Lord of the Admiralty
-in the same dignity of the same white beard and with the same striking
-accent, had admitted the nethethity of thtriking from the litht of
-contractorth the name of the firm of which, until that moment, the
-unhappy George Mulross had never even heard.
-
-He knew, he felt, that he, the most blameless of men, was making
-enemies upon every side. The allusions to his public spirit which were
-now occasionally to be discovered in the Opposition papers, the little
-bitter sentences in those which were upon the contrary subsidised by
-his own party, filled him with an equal dread.
-
-He was in no mood for going further, when upon the top of all this Mary
-Smith quietly insisted that he must make a speech.
-
-It need not be long: she would write it out for him herself. He must
-learn it absolutely by heart and must take the greatest care to
-pronounce the words accurately. She chose a debate in which he could
-talk more or less at large and put before him as gentle, as well
-reasoned, as terse and as broad-minded a piece of wisdom as the House
-might have listened to for many months.
-
-Morning and afternoon, a patient governess, Mary Smith heard him recite
-that speech; but as day succeeded day she slowly determined that it
-wouldn’t do. One slip might be his ruin. Upon the tenth rehearsal he
-still said “very precious” for “meretricious.” He was still unable
-to restrain a sharp forward movement at the words “I will go a step
-further”; and he could never get in its right order the simple phrase:
-“I yield to no one in my admiration for the right honourable gentleman.”
-
-First he would yield to a right honourable gentleman; then no one would
-yield to him; then he would yield to no admiration, and at last she
-gave it up in despair.
-
-A woman of less tenacity would have abandoned her design; not so Mary
-Smith. She discovered with careful art that there was no reason why a
-Warden of the Court of Dowry should speak in the House at all; he might
-hold his post for three years and do no more than answer questions,
-leaving to a subordinate the duty of speaking upon those very rare
-public Bills, which, however distantly, concerned his office.
-
-She had already made him a name; she was determined not to destroy it
-by following up this false scent of training him to public speaking. At
-last, as the month of May was drawing to a close, she determined to put
-him upon the rails.
-
-Dolly and she were agreed. Perhaps Dimmy would need to be persuaded;
-he was naturally modest, and what was more he would very certainly be
-afraid, but still more certainly he wanted money most abominably.
-
-When the day came for him to receive his great illumination she called
-him to her once more, and once more he found her alone. She lunched
-him first, and gave him a wine of which she knew he could drink in
-moderation, for she felt he would need courage; she let him drink his
-coffee, she lit her own tiny cigar, and at last she said:
-
-“Dimmy, what does it take you to live?”
-
-“I don’t know,” said Dimmy with some terror in his eyes.
-
-Mary Smith looked at him a little quizzically. He did not like those
-looks though he was fond of her. It made him feel like an animal.
-
-“Dimmy,” she said, “could you and Sudie manage it on seven thousand a
-year, or say on six thousand?”
-
-Dimmy thought long and painfully. For him there were but two scales of
-income, the poor and the rich. In the days when it was such a bore to
-raise a sovereign, he was poor. For nearly two years with an unlimited
-capital behind him, and about twenty thousand a year for his wife to
-spend, he had considered himself positively and fixedly among the
-rich. He had felt comfortable: he had had elbow room. Six thousand
-pounds puzzled him: it was neither one thing nor the other. A brilliant
-thought struck him.
-
-“Can you tell me, Mary,” he said gently, “some one who has got about
-six thousand? I think I could judge _then_.”
-
-“I can tell you one positively,” said Mary Smith. “Charlie Fitzgerald
-and his wife. Till the old Yid dies they’ve got six thousand exactly.
-I ought to know, considering that I went over every scrap of paper in
-order to make sure of Charlie repaying me.”
-
-“Oh!” said Demaine judicially. “Charlie Fitzgerald and his wife....” He
-thought for a long time. “Well, they’re pretty comfortable,” he said
-suddenly. “Of course they haven’t got a place and grounds; I suppose if
-they had a place and grounds they couldn’t do it.”
-
-“No,” said Mary, “but the house in Westminster is very large when
-you get inside through the narrow part. When are you going into
-Westminster, Dimmy?”
-
-“I don’t know,” said Dimmy hopelessly. “Sudie’s got all muddled about
-it. She saw ‘City of Westminster’ stuck up on one of those khaki
-Dreadnought hats that the street sweepers wear, an’ the man was getting
-horrors into a cart right up by our house, an’ she said that where we
-_were_ was Westminster anyhow. And then when I argued with her she
-shoved me to the window and pointed out his hat. She was quite rough.”
-And George Mulross sighed.
-
-Mary Smith got testy. “Don’t talk rubbish,” she said, “and don’t bother
-me about your wife. Have you looked at anything in Westminster at all?”
-
-“I don’t know,” said Demaine humbly.
-
-“You must know,” said Mary sharply, and with a strong inclination to
-slap him. “Have you looked in Dean’s Yard, for instance?”
-
-“Yes,” said Demaine, slowly reviewing his perambulations of the last
-few days. “Yes, I’ve looked at Dean’s Yard. There’s nothing there....
-All the rest seems to be so slummy, Mary.”
-
-“There are some exceedingly good new houses,” said Mary severely, “and
-everybody’s going there; and the old houses are perfectly delicious.
-Anyhow, Westminster’s the place; and I’ll tell you something else.
-You’ve got to take office!”
-
-George Mulross, worried as he always was when she began drilling him,
-on hearing the word “office” said simply:
-
-“Well I won’t, that’s flat. I don’t believe in it. I’ve seen lots of
-men do that kind of thing. They get to the City and they think they’re
-learning business, and they’re rooked before....”
-
-“I said ‘TAKE office’!” shouted Mary Smith, “TAKE office--get a
-post.... Dolly will give you a post. Now do you understand?”
-
-“What?” said Demaine vaguely.
-
-“Dimmy,” she said more quietly but with great firmness, “look at me.”
-
-He looked at her. It was a muscular strain upon his eyes to keep them
-fixed under her superior will.
-
-“That’s right.... Now listen carefully. The salary of the Wardenship of
-the Court of Dowry is five thousand a year--and ex’s.”
-
-“Yes,” said Demaine.
-
-“When the Wardenship of the Court of Dowry is vacant--if you play up
-worth tuppence, it’s yours for the asking. Do ... you ... understand?”
-
-“I don’t know,” repeated George Demaine.
-
-It was as though he had been told that he had been asleep all these
-years, that his real name was Jones and that he lived in Australia, or
-as though he had discovered himself to be covered with feathers. He was
-utterly at sea. Then he said slowly:
-
-“Repton’s Warden of the Court of Dowry.” He was proud of knowing this,
-for he often blundered about the Cabinet.
-
-“Will you or will you not fix your mind upon what I have said?” said
-Mary Smith.
-
-The full absurdity of it grew increasingly upon Demaine’s imagination.
-“The House would think Dolly was mad,” he remarked with really
-beautiful humility.
-
-“Nonsense!” said Mary Smith in disgust, “the House will know nothing
-about it one way or the other. The House doesn’t meddle with
-government--thank God! You’re popular enough I suppose?”
-
-“Oh yes,” said Demaine.
-
-“And you never speak, do you?”
-
-“No,” said Demaine, “only once three years ago, the time I fell down,
-you know; an’ that was quite short.”
-
-“How many people do you know in the House?” she asked.
-
-“I don’t know,” said Demaine.
-
-“Oh NONSENSE!... I mean how many people would write to you for
-instance, and congratulate you?”
-
-Demaine gave it up. But one could see from his demeanour what she had
-guessed from her own study of the debates and from her great knowledge
-of London: a month ago people just knew that Demaine was in the House
-and that was about all. They knew him now as a man whose name they had
-seen fifty times and who asked questions. A better candidature could
-not be conceived, and his close family connection with so many men on
-both front benches would render the appointment reasonable in all eyes.
-
-All sorts of things were lumbering against each other in George
-Mulross’ brain. He wondered whether one had to know anything, or what
-one had to do, and how the money was paid; and whether income tax was
-deducted at source; and how long the Government would stay in. Then the
-absurdity of it recurred to him.
-
-“Of course there was Pitson,” he murmured, “and everybody laughed and
-said he was a half-wit,--but he was in with everybody, although he was
-a half-wit.”
-
-“So are you,” said Mary.
-
-“Yes, but I don’t laugh and go about as he did.”
-
-“It’s against a man to laugh much,” said Mary, “and really, if it comes
-to going about, even a dog can do that. You’ve only got to go and sniff
-round people.”
-
-The conversation could not profitably be continued. Demaine had been
-introduced to the idea, and that was all Mary desired to do.
-
-She sent him home and invited herself that weekend to a house in which
-she would find Dolly: the Kahns’--but no matter. Dolly was there.
-
-When the Prime Minister saw that dear figure of hers with its promise
-of importunities he groaned in spirit. She brought him up to the
-sticking point during a long walk on Sunday afternoon, and he promised
-her that at least he would sound.
-
-“But I don’t know, Mary,” he said, half trying to retreat, “Repton’s
-not a man to speak unless he chooses, and he’s like a stone wall
-against one unless he also chooses to hear.”
-
-“Take him walking as I’m taking you,” said Mary.
-
-It was Sunday, the 31st of May. The weather had begun to be large and
-open and warm. He thought there was something in what she said.
-
-“Meet him as he comes out of his house to-morrow. Do you know when he
-comes out?”
-
-“Yes,” said the Prime Minister a little shamefacedly, “I do. It’s
-always half-past nine.”
-
-“Well,” said Mary, “I really don’t see what your trouble is.”
-
-“It’s an absurd hour to catch a man, half-past nine--and I should have
-to get up God knows when--besides to-morrow’s a bad day,” said the
-Premier, pressing his lips together when he had spoken. “It’s a bad
-moment. It’s a big week for him. He’s got a dinner on that’s something
-to do with his dam companies to-morrow evening. I know that. And
-then Tuesday he’s got that big Van Diemens meeting in the City. And
-before the end of the week, I know he’s talking at the big Wycliffite
-Conference--I can’t remember the day though. Pottle told me about it.”
-
-They had turned to go home, and Mary Smith for the first hundred yards
-or so was honestly wondering in her mind why men found so difficult
-what women find so easy.
-
-“I’ve told you what to do,” she said. “Catch him by accident outside
-his house as he leaves after breakfast, then he’ll walk with you. Say
-you’re walking. Anything can be said when one’s walking.”
-
-“Are you sure he’ll come with me?” asked the Prime Minister.
-
-“Positive!” said Mary Smith in a very quiet tone.
-
-The air was serene above them, and one lark had found his way so high
-that they could hardly hear him singing. The Prime Minister wished from
-the bottom of his heart that he could live in that field for a week. He
-rose to one despairing rally:
-
-“Mary,” he said, “suppose it rains?”
-
-“Oh Dolly, Dolly, Dolly!” she answered, stopping short and standing in
-front of him. “It’s for all the world as though you were just back from
-school for the last time, and I was a little girl who had been sent for
-on the grand occasion to tea.”
-
-She put both hands on his awkward shoulders to stop him, and she kissed
-him anywhere upon the face.
-
-“It won’t rain, Dolly,” she said, “I’ve seen to that.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-
-Charles Repton had taken no weekends. Charles Repton had sat tight in
-London.
-
-The end of that May did not tempt him to move; he was right on to his
-business, and never had his silent life been more silent or Maria, Lady
-Repton, felt more alone, though she did as she was bid and remained
-immovable in her London house, only seeing, when the leisure was
-afforded her, her few dear friends (none conspicuous), and once or
-twice presiding at a great dinner of her husband’s.
-
-Beyond all his other concerns one chief concern was resolving itself in
-Charles Repton’s head. He was wondering exactly where he stood between
-commerce and politics.
-
-These moments, not of doubt but of a necessity for decision, are the
-tests of interior power. Some half-dozen such moments had marked the
-career of his strict soul: one when he had determined to risk the
-transition from his native town to Newcastle carefully calculating the
-capital of clients and how much could be successfully lent in that
-centre: another, when he had risked the expense of his first election:
-a third when he had decided to take office--and there were others.
-
-Now as May drew to its close, as the discussion on the Budget was
-in full swing and as the eager public notice of Van Diemens was on
-the point of filling the press, he was in some balance as to whether
-the precise proportion of activity which he gave to the House of
-Commons--it was a large proportion--might not be absorbing just too
-much of his energy.
-
-He calculated most exactly--as a man calculates a measurable thing, an
-acreage, or a weight of metal--what the future proportions should be.
-
-He must remain in touch with everything that passed at Westminster; on
-that he was fixed. But he knew that there was a growing criticism of
-his combination of high political idealism with affairs in the City.
-The _Moon_ had said one exceedingly unpleasant thing about the Oil
-Concession in Burmah--it was only a newspaper but he had had to settle
-it. The _Capon_ was paying a little more attention than he liked to his
-position in the House of Commons.
-
-He thought hard, and under the process of his thought his mind somewhat
-cleared. But he had come to no decision when, late in the night of
-Sunday, the 31st of May, he marshalled the papers upon his desk,
-deliberately turned his mind off the problems that had been engaging
-him, and drew up a list of his next engagements.
-
-The next day, Monday the 1st of June, after leaving his house
-punctually at half-past nine, he was to give half the morning to the
-Wardenship. He was to return home at noon. From noon to lunch he must
-see to his accounts. It was doubly important, for it was a Monday and
-it was the first of the month. He would lunch: preferably alone, for he
-would be tired, and he would give Maria to understand that he must be
-undisturbed.
-
-On Tuesday, the 2nd, was the speech to the General Meeting of Van
-Diemens. He glanced at his notes for that speech; they were all in
-excellent sequence, and he felt, so far as men of that stern temper can
-feel it, a little touch of pride when he noted the procession of the
-argument. He saw in his mind’s eye first the conviction and then the
-enthusiasm of the men whom he must convince: the vivid portrayal of the
-Empire’s need of the railway: the ease of building it,--the delivery of
-the great metaphor wherein he compared that thin new line of iron to
-the electrical connection which turns potential and useless electrical
-energy into actual and working force.
-
-He re-read the phrase in which he called it “completing the circuit”;
-he did not doubt at all that the meeting would follow him. Sentence
-after sentence passed before his memory (for he had carefully learned
-the peroration by heart); the name of Nelson shone in one of them, the
-name of Rhodes in another, of Joel in a third, till the great oration
-closed with a vision, brief, succinct (but how vivid!) of the Gate of
-the East and of England’s hand upon it, holding
-
- “... the keys
- Of such teeming destinies”
-
-through them: through them!
-
-It was a great speech.
-
-He turned more carelessly to the already typewritten stuff which he
-must deliver upon the Thursday to the Wycliffite Conference. It would
-do--and it was of importance for the moment. It reminded him a little
-contemptuously of the High Meat Teas in the North of England and of
-his youth, and of that maundering war between Church and Chapel which
-was then of real moment to him, and which now he still had wearily to
-wage,--at least in public.
-
-Whether this little bout of study had been too much for a man who had
-already spent a full month glued to his work, or whatever else was the
-cause, he felt as midnight approached a trifle brain-sick. He leant his
-head upon his hand, and it seemed to him--he hoped it was an illusion
-for the sensation was yet vague--but it _did_ seem to him that the pain
-behind the ears, or at least an oppression there, was beginning. He
-muttered an exclamation so sharp as would have astonished those who had
-never seen him under a strain. Then he went quickly upstairs to the
-drawing-room and found his wife, sitting all alone with her book.
-
-She looked up as he entered, and again she was startled by that strange
-innocence in his eyes. Odd, (but what living!) flashes of thirty, of
-forty years ago pierced her heart. Youth goes down every lane, and
-these two, just after their marriage, just before the first loan he had
-made, had been, for a month or so, young: the memory of it was a jewel
-to her.
-
-He came in at that instant loosened: he was walking ill: he made
-towards her as though he were seeking a refuge, and still that
-persistent innocence shone from his eyes. He sat down beside her,
-breathing uncertainly, groped out and took her hand. He had made no
-such movement since--what year? Since before what first hardening had
-frightened her? How many years, how long a life ago?
-
-The mood was of no long duration. She could have wished it had been
-longer. He slept with a sort of deep lethargy that was not his way, and
-twice in the night she rose to watch him; but with the morning all his
-powers and, alas! all that difference had returned.
-
-She was to see nothing of him while he went through every detail of his
-affairs for the week and the month with his assistant; she was not even
-to be allowed to see something of him at his midday meal; she watched
-him as he went out of the house at the invariable hour to drive to the
-office of the Court of Dowry. And as she watched him with new feelings
-in her, and the breaking of dead crusts, she saw another man accost
-him, the cab turned away, and the two go together, walking, towards
-the Park. She knew the figure though she came so little into the life
-of London, and she recognised, in the sloppy clothes and the stooping
-walk, the Prime Minister.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If you are a member of the governing classes of this great Empire it is
-not an easy thing to approach a house between the Edgware Road and Hyde
-Park from the North, at half-past nine in the morning it is supremely
-difficult if you are making for Westminster.
-
-It presupposes being carted at an impossible hour to some place in the
-North West, and there let loose and making a run for home. And why
-should any man of position be carted to any place in the North West at
-dawn? On the whole the best excuse is Paddington Station. Eton is a
-good place to come from, for the liar comes in at Paddington. It was
-from Eton, therefore, that the Prime Minister came that morning ...
-anyhow he was N.W. of the Park before nine. He walked slowly towards
-the Marble Arch. As he approached Charles Repton’s house he walked
-somewhat more slowly, but he had timed himself well.
-
-The tall straight figure came out and hailed a cab.
-
-The Prime Minister crossed before him, turned round in amiable
-surprise, and said: “My _dear_ Repton!”
-
-And Repton greeted, with somewhat less effusion, the Prime Minister.
-
-“I was walking from Paddington,” said the Prime Minister.
-
-“Have you eaten?” said Sir Charles, as he paid the cabman a shilling
-for nothing.
-
-“Yes, I breakfasted before I started. I was walking down to
-Westminster. Can’t you come with me?”
-
-Sir Charles found it perfectly easy, and the two men walked through the
-Park together towards Hyde Park Corner and Constitution Hill.
-
-To most men the difficulty of the transition from daily converse to
-important transactions is so difficult that they will postpone it
-to the very end of an interview. The Prime Minister was not of that
-kind. They had not got two hundred yards beyond that large arena near
-the Marble Arch wherein every Sunday the Saxon folk thresh out and
-determine for ever the antinomy of predestination and free will--not
-to mention other mysteries of the Christian religion,--when the Prime
-Minister had reminded Charles Repton of the absolute necessity of a new
-man on the Government bench in the House of Lords.
-
-Charles Repton heartily agreed, and for ten minutes gave his reasons.
-He hoped, he said in an iron sort of way, that he was talking sense,
-and that he was not meddling with things not his business. He was
-warmly encouraged to go on, and he minutely described the kind of
-man whom he thought was wanted. They had too many business men as it
-was, and there were too many men fresh from the House of Commons. The
-Government forces in the Upper House had come to be a sort of clique,
-half of them very intelligent, but now and then, especially in big
-debates, out of touch with their colleagues. Could not some man of real
-position, a man with a long established title, wealthy and thoroughly
-well known if only in a small world for some proficiency of his, be got
-to take an interest in the Government programme? A man like Pulborough,
-for instance? If Pulborough had had to earn his living he would have
-been the best bantam breeder alive. And then, look at his talents, why,
-he designed all the new work at Harberry himself, etc. And so forth.
-
-As they were crossing by the Wellington statue, the Prime Minister, in
-the uneasy intervals of dodging the petrol traffic, explained that that
-was not in his mind. He must have some one who had heard everything
-in the Cabinet for the last two years. “Repton,” he said ... (as they
-left the refuge pavement--a taxi-cab all but killed him).... “Repton,
-would you, have you thought of ....” Two gigantic motor-buses swerved
-together and the politicians were separated. The Prime Minister saw the
-Warden far ahead, a successful man, whole upon the further shore. The
-Prime Minister leapt in front of a bicycle, caught the kerb and ended
-his sentence “... a peerage yourself?”
-
-They had come through all the perils of that space and were walking
-quietly down Constitution Hill; Dolly could develop his thought more
-freely, and in the most natural way in the world he put it that they
-could not do without Charles Repton.
-
-He was very careful not to force the position. Charles Repton was
-absolutely essential: they must have him or they must have nobody.
-
-An Egyptian smile, a smile of granite, could be guessed rather than
-seen upon Charles Repton’s firm lips.
-
-“Would you propose that I should be Master of the Horse?” he said.
-
-“No,” said the Prime Minister, smiling very much more easily, “nor
-Manager of the King’s Thoroughbred Stud, either. But I know that
-Abenford is mortally tired of the Household; though what there is to be
-tired of,” he added....
-
-To the Prime Minister’s very great surprise, Charles Repton simply
-replied: “If I went to the Lords, I should go without office.”
-
-At this unexpected solution the Prime Minister was in duty bound to
-propose a hundred reasons against it. He implored Repton to remember
-his great position and the peculiar value that he had for him, the
-Prime Minister. “It’s never more than three men that do the work,
-Repton, whether you’re dealing with ten in committee or half a
-thousand. You know that.”
-
-But Charles Repton was firm. These solid masters of finance are glad
-to think out their world; in a sense nothing comes to them that is
-unexpected when it comes. Their brains may be compared to the great
-new War Office in Whitehall, where a hundred minutely detailed plans
-for the invasion of Germany, France, Russia, Spain, Italy and the
-Baltic States, lie pigeonholed, in perfect order, ready to be put
-into immediate execution at the pronouncement of the stern words
-_Krieg-mobil_.
-
-Long before the simple intrigues of the drawing-rooms had taken shape,
-Charles Repton had swept the whole landscape with his inward eye. He
-knew every fold of the terrain, he had measured every range. He had
-determined that, upon the whole, a peerage was worth his while: now; at
-the very height of his fortune.
-
-To have a permanent place, free from office, with the prestige
-of title, with committees open to him and every official source
-permanently to his hand, was worth his while. It was worth his while
-to go to the House of Lords had it been a matter for his free choice;
-and if he went to the House of Lords he must go a free man. It would do
-more to save Van Diemens than any other step, and that great Company
-was worth twenty places in the Cabinet. Van Diemens was the master of
-this Cabinet and the last.
-
-He had made up his mind then that a peerage was worth his while even
-if it depended entirely on his choice. Now that he could make it a
-favour, it was doubly worth his while. The alternative meant useless
-friction.... Yes, he would take that peerage: but there was one thing
-that he must have quite clear:----
-
-The two men walked together in silence past the Palace; they went
-through the superb new entrance to St. James’s Park, crossed the
-bridge, and turned towards Westminster.
-
-It had been a shock. The relief for the Prime Minister was somewhat too
-great, and the last thing that Repton had to say was awkward; but he
-was accustomed to leap such hedges. He began boldly:
-
-“Do you happen to know what I have set aside for the regular purposes
-of the Party?” he asked.
-
-The Prime Minister shook his head. If there was one thing he detested,
-it was the kitchen side of politics.
-
-“Well, I’ll tell you,” said Repton. “I’ve put exactly the same sum
-aside every year for fifteen years, whether we’ve been in office or out
-of it. Not a large sum, only five hundred pounds. Pottle will tell you.”
-
-The Premier made such a movement with his head as showed that he did
-not care.
-
-“Only five hundred pounds but exactly five hundred pounds,” continued
-Repton firmly. “Now Pottle must understand quite clearly that that
-subscription will neither be increased nor diminished.” He spoke as men
-speak in a shop, and in a shop of which they have the whip hand.
-
-“That’s between you and Pottle,” said the Prime Minister in the tone of
-one who doesn’t want to go on with the subject.
-
-“Yes,” said Repton, looking straight in front of him, “it _has_ got to
-be understood quite clearly. I’ve made it a standing order. Pottle’s
-never pestered me, but he _can_ pester like the deuce.... And I’ve
-absolutely made up my mind.”
-
-“Of course, of course,” said the Prime Minister. “I think it’s wise,”
-he went on,--“It isn’t my business, but I do think it wise to keep in
-touch with the Central Office. But it’s between you and Pottle.”
-
-There was another long silence as they went down Great George Street.
-
-“That’s all,” said Repton, opposite the Pugin fountain. The two men
-walked on. The statues of great men long dead looked down upon them;
-those statues were unused to such conversations. One of the statues
-must have thought Charles Repton a tactless fellow, but Charles
-Repton had calculated everything, even to his chances of life and to
-the number of active years that probably lay before him. And nothing
-would have more offended or disturbed him than any ambiguity upon the
-business side of the transaction.
-
-They parted, one for the Court of Dowry, the other for Downing Street,
-and the affair was settled.
-
- * * * * *
-
-That afternoon the Prime Minister asked Demaine to come and have a
-cup of tea. He said he would rather it was in his own room; he took
-Demaine’s arm and led him round.
-
-“Have you anything on to-night, Dimmy?” he said.
-
-Dimmy thought. “I don’t know,” he answered after a long examination of
-possible engagements.
-
-“Well, you’ve got to be here for the division anyhow.”
-
-“Oh yes,” said Dimmy. His high record of divisions was the sheet anchor
-of his soul: he had sat up all night sixteen times.
-
-“Well,” said the Prime Minister hesitating, as though after all he
-didn’t want to drink a cup of tea, “you might see me then ... no, come
-along now.”
-
-And as they drank their tea he told his companion that there was to be
-a change in the Cabinet.
-
-“Now,” he said, “I want to leave you perfectly free.” He seemed to be
-suffering a little as he said it, but he went on tenaciously: “I want
-to leave you perfectly free; ... but of course you know your name has
-been put before me?”
-
-“I don’t know,” began Demaine.
-
-The Prime Minister stopped him with his hand. “Well, anyhow it _has_.”
-He paused and thought. “I can’t tell how it would suit you, but I think
-I can tell how you would suit it. Now on _that_ point I’m satisfied,
-Dimmy. You know the kind of work it is?”
-
-But Demaine didn’t know.
-
-“Well,” said the Prime Minister, leaning back easily and joining his
-hands, “it’s like all those things: you’ve got your staff ... in one
-way the work’s cut and dried. It’s very varied work. No man can be
-expected to grasp it all round. But,” (leaning forward) “like all these
-things, it wants a sort of general point of view, you understand me?”
-
-Dimmy did not dare to shake his head.
-
-“It wants a sort of ...” the Prime Minister swept his hand over the
-table--“a sort of what I may call a--well, a--a _common sense_,
-especially about sudden things. You have to decide sometimes.... But
-you’ll soon get into it,” he added in a tone of relief. “You’ll have
-Sorrel with you all the first few days; he’s exceedingly easy to get on
-with; he’s been there for years--that is, of course, if you take it.”
-
-“Yes,” said Demaine in a whirl, “yes, if I take it I shall have Sorrel.”
-
-“Then of course,” went on the Prime Minister rapidly, “it’s the kind
-of place which you can make anything of. It can count enormously; it
-counted enormously under Gherkin until he died. And Repton of course
-has made quite a splash in it.”
-
-Demaine shuddered slightly.
-
-“But there’s no necessity,” continued the other quickly, “it’s really
-better without a splash. It’s a plodding sort of attention that’s
-wanted,” he ended wearily; then with an afterthought he added: “Why
-not go to Sorrel now?”
-
-“Couldn’t you give me a note?” asked Demaine nervously.
-
-“Oh nonsense,” answered his cousin, upon whom the strain was beginning
-to tell. “Just go up and see him in his office. He’s the mildest of
-men.”
-
-“All right,” said Demaine sighing. He finished his tea and went
-out,--and as he left the Prime Minister called after him: “Don’t forget
-to find me after the division to-night. Then I can tell you if anything
-is settled.”
-
-Demaine walked undeterminedly towards the Dowry Offices behind Scotland
-Yard; his heart failed him; he did not go in. He stood aimlessly in
-Whitehall, staring at the traffic; his knees were not quite straight
-and his mouth was half open.
-
-Past him, as he so stood, strode, full of vigour and of will, the
-fixed form of Sir Charles Repton, walking towards Trafalgar Square.
-The younger man followed him with his eyes and felt in his heart what
-a gulf there was between them. He was by no means of those who dare,
-and the thought of office appalled him. Then suddenly he remembered the
-salary. His legs straightened beneath him and he forced himself up the
-stairs to where he might ask to see Mr. Sorrel.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-Sir Charles Repton strode up Whitehall. His day’s work had been heavy,
-in the hours since that morning conversation, and he was suffering.
-
-It was no spiritual suffering which affected that strong character:
-his life was fixed; the decision he had taken was final. Nay, every
-circumstance surrounding that decision delighted him. The peerage had
-been offered at precisely the right moment; he himself could have
-chosen no better. It was the moment when he particularly desired to
-be at once more powerful, if that could be, and yet free; more fixed
-in his political tenure, yet more at large to catch the hand of
-opportunity. For all his strategy was centred upon the Company which he
-was determined to save.
-
-That from which he now suffered was physical; he suffered that pain at
-the back of the head: it had a novel intensity about it; it was not
-exactly a headache, it was a sort of weight, an oppression, and as he
-went on northward the pressure got worse and more concentrated just
-behind either ear.
-
-He would not relax his pace. He saw a taxi which had just discharged
-a fare at Cox’s Bank; in spite of the trouble in his head which was
-rapidly increasing, he was clear enough to note that the little flag
-was up, that the man was free and was about to go away. He signalled to
-him and got in, and gave the address of his house, bidding him call at
-the Club on his way.
-
-He remembered, though the bother was getting worse, that there was a
-big dinner that evening; he tried to remember the names, then quite
-suddenly a stab of pain behind the right ear almost made him cry out.
-But Repton was indomitable and he stifled the cry. Hardly had he so
-conquered himself when he felt another similar violent agony behind
-the left ear: a man less master of himself would have fainted. It was
-over in a moment, but he was white and actually uncertain of his steps
-when he got out at the Club and went up to the porter’s box to ask for
-letters and messages. There were none.
-
-“Are you certain there are none?” he asked in a weak voice.
-
-That query was so unusual from the man that the porter looked up
-surprised.
-
-“Don’t look at me as though I was stuffed,” said Sir Charles sharply,
-“don’t you know what your place is worth?”
-
-The man grumbled a little.
-
-With the most unworthy ferocity, but perhaps the pain must excuse him,
-Sir Charles bent his head in to the little window in the glass and
-hissed: “This kind of thing has happened before. Just you bally well
-sort the papers in front of you and make sure.”
-
-His hands were trembling with constricted rage the porter ran through
-the bundle, and found a card.
-
-“What did I tell you, you b----y snipe!” darted the now uncontrollable
-Baronet. Then recovering himself he said with no shame but in a little
-confusion: “I’ve had enough of this.” He looked at the card: it was an
-advertisement inviting him to spend a week for eleven guineas in lovely
-Lucerne, and there was a picture of the Rigi Kulm. He tore the card up
-savagely, threw it into the waste-paper basket, hurriedly went down the
-steps of his Club, bolted into the taxi and slammed the door behind him.
-
-The driver had let the engine stop. Sir Charles sat tapping either
-foot, his eyes alight, and his hands working nervously. The man was
-working the barrel organ in front of the machine; the piston started
-once or twice vigorously, then died down again. Sir Charles got out.
-
-“If you can’t make your damn kettle go,” he said,--then he suddenly
-smiled. “What a good-natured face you have,” he remarked with an abrupt
-transition of tone. “It’s a brutal thing for men like me with enormous
-incomes to bully people who have to be out in all weathers, though I
-must say you taxi-men are a privileged lot! You’ve always got a herd
-of poor fellows round you, running messages for you and what not. You
-know,” he went on still more familiarly, “if you didn’t look so jolly
-good-natured I wouldn’t get into the cab again: but I will now. I will
-now,” he nodded reassuringly to show there was no ill-feeling, and he
-climbed again into the taxi, which at last started off upon its journey.
-
-Sir Charles, within that vehicle, preserved for some moments the
-expression of strong silence which was at least one-half of his
-fortune. Suddenly that expression broke down; something tickled him
-hugely. Such a merry look came into his eyes as had perhaps not visited
-them since he was a child--if then. It occurred to him to look out of
-the window. The fact that the window was up in no way incommoded him.
-He butted his head through it and then very cautiously drew it in again.
-
-“That’s dangerous,” he muttered, “might have cut myself.”
-
-The driver of the taxi heard nothing. Sir Charles looked through the
-star of broken glass for a moment, then cautiously lowered the sash. He
-put his head out again, smiling almost to the point of laughter, and
-asked the driver whether he had noticed the absurd pomposity of the
-two sentries and the policemen outside Marlborough House. The taxi man
-simply said “Yes sir,” and went on driving.
-
-For a few minutes Sir Charles was silent, ruminating and smiling
-within. Then he put his head out again.
-
-“Yes, but did you?” he asked.
-
-And just at that point the traffic was stopped to allow a cross current
-from another street to pass.
-
-“What a fool a man can make of himself,” said Sir Charles suddenly
-to nobody, communing half aloud with his own soul. “It’s an amazing
-thing! I can’t conceive why I should put my head out of a window like
-that to tell him the way.... I suppose I was telling him the way ...
-but my head is so bad!... What a fool a man can make of himself!” The
-sternness of his expression returned. He remembered that the taxi-man
-knew his address and he bethought him how to escape from humiliation.
-When they had driven up to his house he would pretend it was the wrong
-number and drive somewhere else.
-
-Yet again his mood changed and he burst into an explosion of laughter
-as he remembered the sentries. Then the name over a shop which recalled
-to him certain mortgages tickled his fancy. He almost stopped the taxi
-to get out and have a bout of fun with the proprietors of that shop but
-he was going swiftly through the streets and he preferred his ease.
-
-Long before they reached the Marble Arch he had forgotten all about
-his intention of secrecy. Nay, he had forgotten about his dinner; he
-only knew he was going home. And when he got out he saw upon the little
-machine the notice “1/10.”
-
-“The register marks one and tenpence,” he said slowly and gravely
-to the driver, upon whose honest and happy face the tendency to
-astonishment was hardly controlled. “Now I don’t think these machines
-are infallible--far from it--but it isn’t worth my while, you
-understand, to argue it. So there’s one and tenpence.” He laboriously
-counted out the money. “Wait a moment,” he said, “give me back three
-coppers.”
-
-The man hesitated.
-
-“Give me back three coppers,” snapped Sir Charles testily, “I want to
-get rid of a thruppeny-bit,” and he handed over the offensive coin.
-
-“Now wait a minute, wait a minute,” he added, “don’t be in a hurry. I
-always give a tip to taxi drivers--I really don’t know why,” he said
-with a sudden change of expression, “there’s no particular favour, and
-they earn lots of money. But one’s got to--I suppose if one didn’t,”
-he continued in a ruminative tone, “they’d mark one in some way, same
-way they do the boxes in hotels, and your watch, me boy, when you pawn
-it,” he ended with an explosion of mirth, digging the man sharply in
-the ribs. “Eh?” He pulled out two pence, added another penny, and then
-another, took out a sixpence, put it back again, finally put the three
-pence into the man’s hand, and went up to his door.
-
-The taxi-man as he was driving off nodded familiarly to a policeman,
-and, by drawing up all one side of his face while he left the other in
-repose, gave it to be understood that he had grave doubts of the mental
-balance of the gentleman whom he had just conveyed to his residence.
-
-Alas, for simple men! The policeman strode up to him, rated him
-soundly, asked what he meant by it, and in general gave him to
-understand that he was dealing with no ordinary household. And the
-taxi-man, who was but recently landed from the sea, went off pondering,
-as far as the congested traffic would allow him, upon the mysteries of
-London.
-
-The policeman solemnly returned to his duty, which was that of guarding
-the residence of so great a citizen, and Sir Charles, putting his hat
-upon the table in the hall, went past the two servants upon whose
-presence in that vestibule he insisted, and walked majestically up the
-staircase, as though the last half-hour had not been.
-
-But he felt during this progress unaccountable desires. Before he was
-half-way up they were too strong for him. He stopped, leaned over the
-bannisters, looked at the two well-trained domestics who stood like
-statues below him, and said: “Henry!”
-
-Henry, with a perfect turn of the head, answered, “Yes, Sir Charles?”
-
-“William!”
-
-William, with a precisely similar change of attitude, said, “Yes, Sir
-Charles?”
-
-“What does it feel like to stand like that when another man, who simply
-happens to be richer than you, is going by?”
-
-The well-trained domestics made no reply.
-
-“Are you dumb?” he shouted angrily. “What’s it feel like, I say?...
-Blasted fools!” he muttered, when he had endured for a few seconds
-their continued silence. He went on up the stairs, saying half to
-himself and half to them: “Catch _me_ doing it. Why, there’s more money
-in a whelk stall!”
-
-He found his wife reading. She put down her book and asked him timidly
-what had been going on in the House.
-
-His only answer was to put his hand to his head and say that he was
-suffering.
-
-And so he was, for the pain, though less violent, had returned. She
-suggested, though very hesitatingly, that he should lie down. He made
-no reply. He put his hand before his eyes and waited with set teeth
-until the first violence of the pang had passed, and then said to her
-gently: “I beg your pardon, dear, what did you say?”
-
-It was nearly twenty years since she had heard that tone from him. She
-was frightened.
-
-“Did you ask what was going on in the House?” he sighed. “Well, I can
-tell you.” He put his hands on the chimneypiece and looked down at
-the fender. “There’s going on there,” he said decidedly, “as crass,
-imbecile and hypocritical a piece of futility as God permits: as
-Almighty God permits!”
-
-“Oh Charles!” she cried, “Charles! Is there any trouble?”
-
-“No,” he said, looking round at her with mild surprise, “just the
-usual thing. Nobody has the slightest idea what they’re talking about,
-and nobody cares.”
-
-“Charles!” she said, feeling the gravity of the moment, for he was
-evidently suffering in some mysterious way. “Have you left it all right
-in your room? Haven’t you any appointments or anything?”
-
-“I never thought of that,” he answered. His eyes had in them an
-expression quite childlike and he said suddenly: “One can still see
-what you were like when I married you, Maria. Turn your face round a
-little.”
-
-She did so, with her face full of colour.
-
-“Yes,” he said, “they keep their profiles best. You can remember them
-by their profiles.”
-
-“Charles darling,” said Lady Repton getting up, her white hair shining
-against the flush of her forehead. “Let me look after you.” She had not
-used such a tone nor dreamed of such an endearment for many many years.
-
-“I don’t mind, old girl,” he said, “I don’t mind,” and the innocence of
-his eyes continued. Then as though something else were battling within
-him he began abruptly: “Maria, have you got a full list of the people
-who are coming to-night? I thought not. I’m sorry to have to speak of
-it again, I told you when we first came to town, and I’ve told you
-fifty times since, that I can do nothing without such a list.”
-
-“But I’ve got it,” she said, in great suffering, “I’ve got it,
-Charles.”
-
-His eyes changed again. “You’ve got what?”
-
-“The list of the people who are coming, Charles.”
-
-“Oh ... I didn’t understand. The list of the people who are coming,” he
-repeated slowly. “Well, show it to me in a moment.” He moved towards
-the door.
-
-“I’ll come with you,” she said.
-
-For the first time since her husband had decided to enter Parliament
-and had entered it, twenty years before, while their child was still
-alive, Lady Repton had to take a decision of importance. She decided in
-favour of the dinner. It was too late to change it, and she must trust
-to chance, but evidently some terrible thing had befallen the Warden of
-the Court of Dowry.
-
-As he was dressing she heard him now and then humming a chance tune
-(a thing which in his normal self he would no more have dreamed of
-doing than of walking the streets without his hat) and now and then
-commenting upon the character and attributes of the opera singer
-whom he had last heard sing it. She heard him launch out into a long
-monologue, describing the exact career of the new soprano at Covent
-Garden, the name of her father and her mother, the name of the Russian
-Grand Duke, the name of a wealthy English lady who had asked her (and
-him) to supper, and then, oh horror! the name of an English statesman.
-There was a burst of laughter which Lady Repton could hardly bear: and
-then a silence.
-
-When they met again and their guests had begun to come he seemed right
-enough, except that now and then he would say things which every one
-in the room knew well enough to be true, but which were by no means
-suitable to the occasion.
-
-It was thought eccentric in him, especially by those who knew him best,
-that he should comment somewhat upon what man was paired off with what
-woman in the procession, and it was thought exceedingly coarse by his
-partner that he should explain a strong itching upon his right ankle to
-be due, not to a flea, for his man was most careful, but to some little
-skin trouble.
-
-The noise of talking during the dinner covered any other indiscretions,
-and when the men were alone with him over the wine, he sat gloomily
-enough, evidently changed but guilty of nothing more exceptional than a
-complete ignorance of where the wine came from or what it was.
-
-There were the beginnings of a quarrel with a pompous and little-known
-fellow-member of his own Party who attempted to talk learnedly on wine.
-Repton had begun, “What on earth d’you know about wine? Why, your old
-father wouldn’t allow you swipes when you went to fetch the supper
-beer!” He had begun thus, I say, to recall the humble origins of the
-politician, when he added: “But there, what’s the good of quarreling?
-You’re all the same herd,”--his evident illness excused him. He
-led them back to the women, a gloomy troupe; they began to leave
-uncommonly early.
-
-The one who lingered last was a very honest man, stupid,
-straightforward and rich. He was fond of Charles Repton, simply because
-Repton had once done him a very cheap good turn in the matter of a
-legal dispute; he had stopped a lawsuit. And this man ever, since--it
-was now five years ago,--was ready to serve that household. His name, I
-should add, was Withers, and he was a Commoner; he sat for Ashington.
-He had not only this loyal feeling for Charles Repton, which he was
-perhaps the only man in London to feel; he had also a simple admiration
-for him, for his career, for his speeches, for his power of introducing
-impromptu such words as “well,” and “now” and “I will beg the House to
-observe” into his careful arguments. Lady Repton trusted him, and she
-was glad to see him remaining alone after the others had left. Charles
-Repton was sitting at the end of the room, staring at nothingness.
-
-Withers whispered to Lady Repton a rapid query as to what had happened.
-She could tell him nothing, but her eyes filled with tears.
-
-“Wouldn’t it be better,” said Withers hurriedly, in a low tone, “if I
-got him back to vote to-night? There’ll be three divisions at eleven.
-There’s bound to be a scandal if he doesn’t turn up.”
-
-“Yes--no--very well,” said Lady Repton. “I don’t understand it. I don’t
-understand anything.” She almost broke down.
-
-“Repton,” said Withers, “won’t you come along with me? It’s half-past
-ten, there’ll be three divisions.”
-
-Repton startled them both nearly out of their skins. “Divisions?” he
-shrieked, jumping up. “Go down and maunder past those green boxes in
-a great stifling pack for nothing at all? Not if I know it! Why I can
-guess you the majority from here. And if there wasn’t any majority
-I should blasted well like to know the difference it would make!
-Divisions! Oh chase me!” And he snorted and sat down again.
-
-Withers did not know whether to stay or to go, but before he could
-reply Charles Repton in the most ordinary of tones went on: “I can’t
-understand a man like you, Withers, putting up with it. You’re rich,
-you’re a gentleman born, which I’m not; you’d be just as big a man in
-Buckinghamshire, especially nowadays when the county’s crawling with
-Jews, if you were out of the House. You’d be infinitely freer. You know
-perfectly well the country’ll stagger along without the silly tom-fool
-business or with it, and that neither it nor anything else can prevent
-the smash. Why don’t you go and live your life of a squire like a
-sensible chap? And make one prayer that you may die before the whole
-bag of tricks comes to an end?”
-
-“Come along, Charles,” said Withers smoothly, “do come along.”
-
-“Not I!” said Repton, “I’m going to bed. I’m tired, and my head hurts
-me!” And he went out like a boor.
-
-“Lady Repton,” said Withers very gently when he had gone, “what has
-Charles got to do to-morrow?”
-
-“He never tells me,” said the wretched lady. “I suppose he will go into
-the City as usual.”
-
-“It’s very unwise,” said Withers, “and yet I don’t know after all. It
-might help him to be in harness, and you’ll have him out of the house
-while you’re making your plans. I’ll do what I can, Lady Repton, I’ll
-do what I can. Isn’t to-morrow the meeting of the Van Diemens Company?”
-
-“I can’t tell,” said Lady Repton despairingly. She was impatient to
-be seeing to her husband. She had grown terrified during the last few
-hours when he was out of her sight.
-
-“Yes, it is,” said Withers. “Oh that’ll be all right. It’ll do him all
-the good in the world: I’m sure it will. Good-night.”
-
-He came back again. He remembered something: “Of course,” he said a
-little awkwardly, “ I don’t know anything about these things, but I
-read in the paper that he was down to speak at the big Wycliffite
-meeting. Don’t let him go there, Lady Repton, until you’re quite
-certain, will you?”
-
-“Oh no,” she said with the terrified look coming back again upon her
-face.
-
-“It’s not like business,” said Withers. “There’d be excitement, you
-know. Good-night.” And he went out.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Those of Charles Repton’s guests who were Members of the House of
-Commons had returned to it. One or two of them had hinted that things
-were a little queer with Repton, but Withers when he got back just in
-time for the divisions, found no rumours as yet, and was profoundly
-grateful. One man only who had been present at the dinner, took him
-aside in the Lobby and asked him whether Charles Repton had had any
-trouble.
-
-Withers laughed the question away, and explained that he had known
-Repton for many years and that now and then he did give way to these
-silly fits of temper. It was digestion, he said; perhaps the guest had
-noticed there were no onions.
-
-The House had something better to gossip about, for after the divisions
-Demaine was seen going arm in arm with the Prime Minister into his room
-for a moment. There had been plenty of talk of Demaine lately: that
-visit increased it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Certain members more curious or fussy than the rest scoured the
-journalists in the lobbies: they had news.
-
-It was all settled. The paragraphs had been sent round to the papers.
-The Lobby correspondents had each of them quite special and peculiar
-means of knowing that Certain Changes were expected in the Cabinet in
-the near future; that the House of Lords was to be strengthened by the
-addition of talents which were universally respected; several names had
-been mentioned for the vacancy; perhaps Mr. Demaine, with his special
-training and the experience drawn from his travels would, on the
-whole, form the most popular appointment.
-
-Thus had the announcement been given in its vaguest form by the Prime
-Minister’s secretary; two or three favoured journals had been permitted
-to say without doubt that Charles Repton had resigned; the exact title
-under which he would accept a peerage was suggested, and Demaine was
-put down in black and white as being certainly his successor.
-
-All this Demaine was told meanwhile that evening in the Prime
-Minister’s room.
-
-His interview with Sorrel had been exceedingly satisfactory, and
-never in his life, not in the moments when he could spend most of his
-father-in-law’s money, had Demaine experienced so complete a respect
-and so eager a service. He felt himself already Warden, and what was
-better, he felt himself perfectly capable of the Wardenship. His mood
-rose and rose. He forgot Sudie; he had not even told her when he would
-be home. He shook his cousin’s hand as warmly as might a provincial,
-and went out by the entry under Big Ben, to calm down the exuberance of
-his joy with breaths of the fresh night air along the Embankment. It
-was nearly twelve o’clock.
-
-So ended for George Mulross Demaine that Monday, June 1st, 1915.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-
-When Sir Charles Repton woke upon the Tuesday morning he felt better
-than he had felt at any moment since the loss of his youth. There
-seemed something easy in the air about him, and within his mind a lack
-of business and friction which he did not account for at the time, but
-which perhaps in a vague manner he may have ascribed to the purity of
-the air and the beauty of the day.
-
-The sun was streaming into his windows from over the Park. It was
-already warm, and as he dressed and shaved himself he allowed his
-thoughts to wander with an unaccustomed freedom over the simple
-things of life. He noted the colour of the trees; he was glad to see
-the happiness of the passers-by in the streets below; he felt an
-unaccountable sympathy with the human race, and he was even touched
-with contempt as he gazed at the long procession of wealthy houses
-which marked the line of Park Lane.
-
-At breakfast he ate heartily, though he was alone; he looked at the
-small batch of letters which awaited him, and when he opened his
-newspaper he positively laughed at the opinions expressed in the
-leading article. He nearly broke into another laugh as he read the news
-from America, and then--with a gesture which horrified the two solemn
-servants who had watched the unaccountable change in their master’s
-manner, he tore the paper rapidly into four pieces and threw it on the
-floor. Having done this he jumped up gaily, nodded to the menials, said
-“You didn’t expect that,” walked briskly out, took his hat and coat
-and with no conscious purpose but as habit moved him jumped into a
-motor-bus going East.
-
-The conductor, who had a respect for Sir Charles Repton’s clothes, and
-especially for his spats, and who seemed to recognise his face, asked
-him gently how much he desired to spend upon a ticket: to which he
-answered in a breezy manner, “Penny of course. Never pay more than a
-penny; then if the beastly thing breaks down you’re not out of pocket
-... ’sides which,” he went on as though talking to himself, “if they
-forget about you you can have tuppence-worth or thruppence-worth for
-the same money!” And he chuckled.
-
-The conductor looked at him first in terror, then smiled responsively
-and went forward to deal with less fortunate people, while Sir Charles
-hummed gently to himself,--a little out of tune but none the less
-cheerfully on that account--an air of ribald associations.
-
-The top of the bus was pretty full, and a workman who had occasion to
-travel in the same direction as his betters saw fit to sit down in
-the one empty place beside the Baronet. It would have been difficult
-to decide upon what occupation this honest man had most recently
-been engaged: but there had certainly entered into it oil, wet clay,
-probably soot, and considerable masses of oxidised copper. It was not
-remarkable, therefore, that, beside such a companion, especially as
-that companion was a large man, Sir Charles should have found himself
-considerably incommoded. What _was_ remarkable was the manner in which
-the Baronet expressed his annoyance. He turned round upon the workman
-with an irritated frown and said:
-
-“I can’t make out why they allow people like you on omnibuses!”
-
-“Yer carn’t wort?” said the breadwinner in a threatening voice.
-
-“I say I · can’t · make · out,” answered Sir Charles, carefully picking
-out each word--“I · can’t · make · out · why · they · allow · people ·
-like · you on omnibuses,--dirty _brutes_ like you, I should say. Why
-the devil....”
-
-At this moment the workman seized Sir Charles by the collar. Sir
-Charles, though an older man, was by no means weak; his tall body was
-well-knit and active, and he felt unaccountably brawny that morning; he
-got the thumb and forefinger of his left hand like a pitchfork under
-his opponent’s chin, and there began what promised to be a very pretty
-scuffle. Everybody on the top of the bus got up, a woman tittered, and
-a large consequential fellow who attempted to interfere received a
-violent backhander from the huge left hand of the Operative, the wrist
-of which was firmly grasped by the right of the Politician and was
-struggling in the air.
-
-The bus stopped, a crowd gathered, the workman, as is customary with
-hard-working people, was easily appeased; Sir Charles, a good deal
-ruffled, got off the bus, and pressing two shillings into the hand of a
-policeman who was preparing to take notes, said loudly:
-
-“That’s all right! You can’t do anything against _me_, and of course I
-can prevent the thing getting into the papers; but it’s always better
-to give a policeman money,--safe rule!”
-
-With that he wormed his way through the increasing mob and disappeared
-into a taxi, the driver of which, with singular sagacity, drove off
-rapidly without asking for any direction. When he was well out of it,
-Repton put his head out of the window and addressed the driver in the
-following remarkable words:
-
-“I don’t really know where you’d better go: of course if you go to my
-Club I could change there” (his collar was torn off him and his hat was
-badly battered) “but on the whole you’d better take me to Guy’s--No
-you hadn’t, go to the Club. Stop at a Boy Messenger’s on your way.”
-
-“What Club, sir?” asked the driver with the deference due to a man at
-once wealthy and mad.
-
-“You won’t know it,” said Sir Charles kindly and still craning in a
-constrained manner out of the window. “By the way, why don’t they have
-a speaking-tube or something from inside to you people? It’s awkward
-turning one’s head outside like a snake. You won’t know it, but I’ll
-shout to you when we get to the bottom of St. James’s Street.”
-
-The driver, now convinced that he had to do with something quite out
-of the ordinary, touched his cap in a manner almost military, and fled
-through the streets of London. At a Boy Messenger’s office Sir Charles
-sent home for clothes and for a change, got to his Club, informed the
-astonished porter that it was a very fine day, that he had just had a
-fight on the top of a bus, that by God the Johnnie didn’t know who he
-was tackling! He, Sir Charles, was no longer a young man, but he would
-have shown him what an upper cut was if he could have got a free swing!
-He proceeded to illustrate the nature of this fence--then suddenly
-asked for his letters, and for a dressing-room.
-
-After this, which had all been acted in the most rapid and violent
-manner, he ran up the steps, stood for a few moments with his hands
-in his pockets gazing at the telegrams, and forgetful that he had no
-collar on, that his coat was torn, that there was blood upon his hands,
-and that half of his waistcoat was wide open with two buttons missing.
-He found the telegrams of some interest; he did not notice the glances
-directed towards him by those who passed in and out of the building,
-nor the act of a page who in passing the porter’s box tapped his
-forehead twice with his forefinger.
-
-He stood for a moment in thought, then it suddenly occurred to him that
-it would have been a wiser thing to have gone straight home. He got
-another taxi and drove to his house. There, after a brief scene with
-the footman in which he rehearsed all that he had already given them at
-the Club, he ordered his clothes to be put out for him, and took a very
-comfortable bath.
-
-Luckily for him he found lying upon his table when he came down, a note
-which he had left there the night before with regard to the Van Diemens
-meeting.
-
-“Forgot that,” he said, a little seriously. “Good thing I found it.”
-
-He picked it up, folded it once or twice, unfolded it, re-read it
-perhaps three times, and while he was so employed heard the grave voice
-of his secretary begging him to go into town in the motor.
-
-Repton did not for the moment see any connection between his recent
-adventures and this request, but he was all compliance, and nodding
-cheerfully he waited for the machine to come round. When it had come he
-looked at it closely for a moment, confided to the chauffeur that he
-intensely disliked its colour, but that it was a bargain and he wasn’t
-going to spend any money on changing it, because he meant to sell it
-to some fool at the end of the season--got in, and was driven to the
-Cannon Street Hotel.
-
-He was a little late. The platform was already occupied and his empty
-chair was waiting for him.
-
-At his entry there was some applause, such as would naturally greet
-the man who was known to be the Directing Brain of all that interest.
-None noticed a change in him. His clothes were perhaps a little less
-spick and span: it was unusual to see him stretch his arms two or three
-times before he sat down, and those who knew him best, in his immediate
-neighbourhood upon the platform, were astonished to see him smile and
-nod familiarly to several of the less important Directors; but on the
-whole he behaved himself in a fairly consecutive manner, and if he did
-whisper to a colleague upon his right that he looked as though he had
-been drinking a little too much overnight, the unaccustomed jest was
-allowed to pass without comment.
-
-When the moment came for him to speak, he jumped up, perhaps a little
-too briskly, faced his audience with less than his usual solemnity,
-nay, with something very like a grin, and struck the first note of his
-great speech in a manner which they had hitherto never heard from his
-lips.
-
-It was certainly calculated to compel their attention if not their
-conviction, for the very first words which he shouted into the body of
-the hall, were these:
-
-“_WHAT ARE WE HERE FOR?_”
-
-After that rhetorical question, delivered in a roar that would have
-filled the largest railway station in London, he repeated it in a
-somewhat lower tone, clenched his fists, struck them squarely on the
-table, and answered as though he were delivering a final judgment:
-
-“_MONEY!...._
-
-Ladies and gentlemen,” he went on, raising his right hand and wagging
-his forefinger at them--“we are here for money! And don’t you forget
-it!”
-
-He blew a great breath, watched them quizzically a moment and then
-continued:
-
-“What _most_ of you _most_ lack is the power of thinking clearly. I can
-see it in your faces. I can see it in the way you sit. And people who
-can’t think clearly don’t make _money_. No one can think clearly who
-hasn’t got a good grip of his first principles and doesn’t know first
-of all what he wants before he tries to get it. Well, I repeat it, and
-I challenge any one to deny it: what we want is _money_! Let us make
-that quite clear. Let us anchor ourselves to that ... and when we once
-have that thoroughly fixed in our minds we can go on to the matter of
-how we are to get it.”
-
-“Now ladies and gentlemen,” he proceeded in a more conversational
-manner, rubbing his hands together, and smiling at them with excessive
-freedom, “let us first of all take stock. Sitting here before me and
-round me here upon this platform (he waved his right arm in a large
-gesture) are four million pounds of Van Diemens stock. Four million
-pounds, ladies and gentlemen! But wait a moment. At what price was
-that stock bought? I am not asking at what price _I_ bought,”--here
-he looked to the left and the right, sweeping the hundreds of faces
-before him--“I am not asking at what price _I_ bought: my position
-differs from yours, my hearties; I’m in the middle of things and my
-official position obtains me even more knowledge than I should gather
-with my own very excellent powers of observation: I’ve spent a whole
-lifetime in watching markets, and I have never cared a _dump_--I
-repeat, ladies and gentlemen, a DUMP, for anything except the profit. I
-have never listened to any talk about the ‘development of a country’ or
-‘possibilities’ or ‘the future,’ or any kid of that sort. I’ve bought
-paper and sold paper ... and I’ve done uncommonly well out of it.”
-
-He paused a moment, more for breath than for anything else, for he
-had been speaking very rapidly; and in the terrified silence round
-him Bingham was heard muttering as though in reply to some whispered
-question: “You leave him _alone_! It may be unconventional, but....”
-
-“The question is, ladies and gentlemen, at what price have you bought
-... on the average? Many of you are country parsons, many of you ladies
-with far more money than you have knowledge what to do with it. Not
-a few of you stock-brokers--an exceptionally inexperienced class of
-men--you are a fair average lot of British investors, and I ask _at
-what price did you buy?_” He looked at them fixedly for a few moments,
-then pulling out a scrap of paper he read it briefly:
-
-“‘From figures that have been laid before me I find that the average
-price at which the present shareholders bought was eight pounds sixteen
-shillings and a few pence,’” and then added “We’ll call it eight
-pounds. Always be on the Conservative side.”
-
-At this remark, which was supposed to contain a political jest, two
-old ladies in the second row tittered, but finding themselves alone,
-stopped tittering.
-
-“I say take it at eight pounds. Well, that four million of stock stands
-for thirty-two million pounds. _Thirty-two million pounds!_” he said
-with a rising voice--“THIRTY-TWO MILLION POUNDS!” he roared,--banging
-the table with his fist and leaning forward with a determined jowl....
-“And what’s left of it? _Nothing!_”
-
-There was another dead silence at the end of this striking phrase, and
-Bingham was again heard to mutter: “You leave him _alone_; he knows
-what he’s at!” A certain uneasy shuffling of feet behind him caused
-Repton to turn his head snappishly, then he looked round again and
-resumed his great oration.
-
-“I say _nothing_.... Oh! I know there are some of you stupid enough
-to think that you have still got sixteen and thruppence a share.
-That was the quotation in the paper this morning. Eugh!” he sniffed
-sardonically, “You try and _sell_ at that and you’ll soon find what
-you’ve got! No! you haven’t even got that sixteen and thruppence. You
-haven’t got two shillings in the pound for what you put in. You’ve got
-nothing! nothing! nothing!! Put that in your pipes and smoke it....”
-
-“And so, gentlemen,” he added, leaning his body backwards and putting
-his thumbs into his waistcoat, “the business before us is how to get
-out of this hole. There are perhaps some of you,” he went on, frowning
-intellectually, “there are perhaps some of you who imagine that the
-Government is going to buy. Well, I’m a member of the Government and I
-can tell you they are _not_.”
-
-At this appalling remark the elements of revolution upon the platform
-all but exploded, but the solid weight of Bingham was still there, and
-if I may hint at a phrase with which the reader is already familiar,
-he suggested that Sir Charles knew what he was about and should be let
-_alone_.
-
-“Even if they did buy,” Repton went on seriously and argumentatively,
-“they could hardly buy at more than par. I’m the last man,” he
-continued rapidly “to jaw about public opinion or things of that sort.
-The real reason why they won’t buy is the Irish. But even if they did
-buy they could hardly give more than par. And what’s par?” he said with
-great disdain. “No, that cock won’t fight!... Mind you, I’m not saying
-you couldn’t have got the Government to buy a little time ago. I think
-you could. But you can’t now.”
-
-“I don’t think there’s a single man on either front bench--” this was
-said meditatively and tapping off the fingers of one hand with the
-forefinger of the other--“who’s personally interested, and I don’t
-_think_ there’s any direct connection since Cooke died between the
-Cabinet and any one who is--except me. No, that’s not the way out. What
-you’ve got to do, ladies and gentlemen, is to throw a sprat to catch a
-whale.”
-
-“A sprat,” he meditatively repeated, “to catch a whale: a great Whale
-full o’ blubber! ... an’ how are you going to do that?”
-
-“Now listen”--his tone had become very earnest and he was leaning
-forward, bent and fixed and holding them with his fine strong eyes,
-“listen, there are three steps. You’ve got first of all to show the
-public that you _believe_ in the future of the Company; next you’ve
-got to decide upon a dodge to show that: something that’ll make every
-one think that you the shareholders do really believe in that future.
-What’s the third step? Why up goes the price--real price--money
-offered--_then you can sell_. That’s my opinion,” he concluded,
-clapping his hands together and laying them upon the table before him:
-and he let it sink in.
-
-“Now you’ll notice,” he went on, “in the prospectus you have received,
-some talk of a railway. We’re asking money from you to build a railway.
-Now why are we doing that? Please follow me carefully.”
-
-The hundreds of heads bent forward and the intelligences they contained
-were prepared to follow him carefully. He was a great man.
-
-“We have asked you to build a railway,” he pronounced, leaving a little
-space of time between each word, “because a railway still catches
-on. I don’t know why, but it _does_. Mines don’t. You might discover
-ore all over the place and they wouldn’t go: I’ve got two men of
-my own, engineers, _experts_, who’ll discover ore anywhere; they’d
-discover tons before three o’clock this afternoon and you might swear
-your dying oath to them, but the public wouldn’t believe you. As for
-agriculture,--Piff! And as for climate, Boo! But _railways_ still work.”
-
-“Very well. You raise your capital for your railway. What that railway
-may be imagined to do is set out in full before you and I won’t go into
-it. But I will ask you especially to note the passage in which it is
-described as giving a strategical supremacy to the Empire. You know
-what the Empire is. You _may_ know, some o’ you, what strategy is.
-Looks as if there were a fleecy general or two among you! But that’s
-as may be--just note the phrase. It’s safety! That’s what it is! No
-odds. No blighter to run any risk of having to fight any one anywhere!
-Grand!”... “I _think_ also,” he mused, “something could be done with
-the tourist side ... there are falls and mountains and things ... but
-no matter: the point is the railway.”
-
-He drank from a glass of water on the table, turned round angrily and
-said: “Good lord what water! It’s bad enough to have to drink water
-in public for a show, but it needn’t be tepid! If the place wasn’t
-so public I’d spit it out again!” Then facing the audience again:
-“However.... About that railway. First understand clearly, ladies
-and gentlemen, _that railway is not going to be built_! There is no
-intention of building it. There is no intention of surveying it.”
-
-Two or three voices rose in protest at the back of the hall. Sir
-Charles leaned forward and put out his hand appealingly:--
-
-“One moment, one moment pray! Hear me out! I don’t mean that _no_ one
-will build it. That’s not our funeral. I mean that _we_ won’t. The
-‘Company’ may, whatever that means. But you and I--the people who have
-got into this hole--_we_ won’t. It won’t be _our_ money. Seize that!
-Get a hold of that! It’s the key to the whole business.”
-
-Little gasps and one profound sigh, but no interruptions followed this
-explanation, and Sir Charles with perfect coolness continued:
-
-“What we want is five shillings a share--only five shillings a share.
-Five shillings where most of you have already given a hundred and
-sixty! Five shillings a share ... four million shares ... that’s a
-million. And mind you, only a nominal million. We don’t want your two
-half-crowns; bless you no. All we want in cash is a shilling. For the
-rest, you’ll see in a moment. Well, there you are then, a shilling, a
-miserable shilling. Now just see what that shilling will do!”
-
-“In the first place it’ll give publicity and plenty of it. Breath
-of public life, publicity! Breath o’ finance too! We’ll have that
-railway marked in a dotted line on the maps: all the maps: school
-maps: office maps. We’ll have leaders on it and speeches on it. And
-good hearty attacks on it. And th-e-n....” He lowered his voice to a
-very confidential wheedle,--“the price’ll begin to creep up--Oh ... o
-... oh! the _real_ price, my beloved fellow-shareholders, the price
-at which one can really _sell_, the price at which one can handle the
-_stuff_.”
-
-He gave a great breath of satisfaction. “Now d’ye see? It’ll go to
-forty shillings right off, it ought to go to forty-five, it may go
-to sixty!... And then,” he said briskly, suddenly changing his tone,
-“then, my hearties, you blasted well sell out: you unload ... you dump
-’em. Plenty more fools where your lot came from. I won’t advise,--sell
-out just when you see fit. Every man for himself, and every woman
-too,” he said, bowing politely to the two old ladies in the second
-row,--“and the devil take the hindmost. But you’ll all have something,
-you’ll none of you lose it all as it looked like last week. Most of
-you’ll lose on your first price: late comers least: a few o’ ye’ll make
-if you bought under two pounds. Anyhow _I_ shall.... There! if that
-isn’t finance I don’t know what is!”
-
-And with a large happy, final, satisfactory and conclusive smile, the
-Builder of Empire, to the astonishment of every one, looked at his
-watch, called upon his Creator as a witness to the lateness of the
-hour, and suddenly went out.
-
-It would be delicious to describe what happened in the vast body of
-that hall when the Chief had left it: how the shareholders made a noise
-like angry bees swarming; how a curate who had done no man any harm was
-squashed against a wall and broke two ribs; how five or six excited
-and almost tearful men surrounded the reporters and fought for their
-notebooks; how Bingham continued to reiterate that Charles Repton knew
-what he was at; and how a certain quiet little man with a bronzed face
-and very humorous eyes, slunk out and got rid of his block of shares
-within the hour, to a young hearty Colonial gentleman who was wealthy
-and had come to London to learn the business ways of our City.[2]
-
-But I must follow Sir Charles in his rapid drive to the House of
-Commons. I must mention his unconventional remark to the policeman to
-the effect that he hoped that old fool Pottle hadn’t come in yet; and
-his taking his place on the front bench just after prayers with a look
-so merry and free that it illumined the faces opposite like a sun.
-
-The questions to which he had to reply came somewhat late on the paper,
-and he caused not a little scandal by suggesting in a low tone such
-answers to his colleagues for _their_ questions as seemed to him at
-once humorous and apposite.
-
-The aged Home Secretary especially afforded him fine sport, and when a
-question was asked with regard to the new Admiralty docks at Bosham,
-he went to the length of chucking a cocked-hat note to the principal
-contractor who sat solemnly upon the benches behind him, nodding
-cheerfully over his shoulder and whispering loudly: “It’s all up!”
-
-All this boded ill for what might happen when his own turn came; and
-indeed the scene that followed was of a kind entirely novel in the long
-history of the House of Commons.
-
-It was a simple question; Question 63. Not ten minutes of question-time
-were left when it was asked. It was put by a gentle little man who had
-put it down for the sake of a friend who lived on the South Coast, and
-it was simply to ask the right honourable Baronet, the Warden of the
-Court of Dowry, whether his attention had been called to the presence
-upon the Royal Sovereign shoals of a wreck which endangered navigation,
-and what he intended to do in the matter.
-
-Charles Repton jumped up like a bird; he jovially and rapidly read the
-typewritten answer which his permanent officials had given him--to the
-effect that he had nothing to add to the reply given three years before
-with regard to the same wreck, which was then, they were careful to
-point out, far more dangerous than at the present day.
-
-But when he had finished reading the official reply, he looked up
-genially at his interlocutor and said:
-
-“We don’t want to interfere with that wreck: it’s full of gin!”
-
-An angry fanatic hearing the word “gin” rose at once and put the
-supplementary question: “May I ask whether that gin was destined for
-the unfortunate natives of the Lagos Hinterland?”
-
-“Yes,” said the Warden of the Court of Dowry politely, “Yes sir, you
-may: but they will never get it. However, several thousand tons of gin
-I am glad to say have gone out to the negroes of our colonies since
-the ship was lost, to the no small advantage,” he added, “of my friend
-Mr. Garey; whom, by the way,” he continued with conversational ease,
-“we all hope to see in this House shortly, for old Southwick who’s up
-against him hasn’t got a dog’s chance, and you probably know that we
-are forcing Pipps to resign. Bound to be an election!”
-
-He sat down. It was a quarter to four and the House was saved. But
-though the decorum of that great assembly prevented one word from
-being uttered as to what had passed, the Lobbies were full of it, and
-when the first division was taken men who ordinarily filed past the
-Treasury bench avoided it, while from distant and dark corners where
-one cannot be observed, long and intent looks were darted at the happy
-Warden of the Court of Dowry.
-
-He sat there gay and quite unconscious of the effect he had produced,
-passed with his Party into the Lobbies for the division, greeting with
-familiar joy men who appeared rather anxious to avoid his eye, and
-making, I regret to say, such unseemly jests upon the Party system as
-had never been heard within those walls before.
-
-The young Prime Minister, though suffering so considerably from the
-left lung, was never at a loss where tact, and especially tact combined
-with rapid action, was necessary. A horrified servant called him from
-his room and described what was passing. He did not stop to ask why
-or how the thing had happened. He came in rapidly through the door
-behind the Speaker’s chair, and beckoned to Sir Charles Repton who was
-at that moment occupied in drawing a large caricature of the Leader
-of the Opposition, with his hands deep into the pocket of an amiable
-farmer-like gentleman in top-boots and whiskers, who made a presentable
-image of John Bull.
-
-Charles Repton got up at once and went out to his Chief. “What d’you
-think of this?” he said, showing his picture.
-
-The young Prime Minister smiled as death would smile. “It’s very good,
-it’s very good,” he said hurriedly. “Have it coloured ... colour it
-yourself. Oh, do what you like with it.... Come with me. Come into my
-room, do. No, I’ll tell you what, I want to speak to you. Let’s get out
-into the air.”
-
-He walked his subordinate away rapidly arm in arm across Parliament
-Square towards St. James’s Park, talking about a thousand things and
-never giving Repton time for a word. Then he said suddenly: “What I
-really want to say to you, Repton, is ...” He abruptly broke off. “Is
-Lady Repton at home?”
-
-“Yes,” said Repton a little puzzled, “or she will be by this time. I
-make her show me her plan for the afternoon at lunch, and she’s got to
-suit me, or there’s a row.”
-
-“Well now,” said the Prime Minister, “will you do me a great favour?”
-He put his hand on Repton’s shoulder and looked candidly into his eyes.
-
-“Certainly my dear fellow,” answered the Warden of the Court of Dowry
-in the utmost good humour. “After all my position depends upon you, and
-a good deal of my income depends upon my position. It isn’t likely I
-should put your back up, even if I didn’t like you, which is far from
-being the case, though I must say I don’t think you’re a man of very
-exceptional talent. I think you owe most of your position to birth.”
-
-“Yes, yes,” said the Prime Minister hurriedly, “I understand. Now what
-I want you to do is this: jump into the first thing you see and _go
-straight home_. You will see why when you get there. It’s absolutely
-urgent. Will you?”
-
-“Certainly,” said Repton more puzzled than ever. “All you politicians
-are such liars that I make a point of believing the exact opposite
-of what you say: but if you tell me it’s of any service to you, it
-certainly does _me_ no harm.” And whistling gaily he walked off towards
-a cab that was meandering across the Parade.
-
-When the Prime Minster had seen him well off he went as rapidly as
-dignity would allow into Downing Street, took the telephone from his
-secretary and in an agony of apprehension lest he should be too late,
-at last heard Lady Repton’s voice. He told her that her husband was
-the victim of a most distressing malady; she would understand it when
-she saw him. He implored her to save so valuable a man for the country
-by managing in some way or other to confine him to the house until he
-should be medically examined.
-
-It was a great relief to the young fellow to have got this duty done.
-His fifty-four years seemed to weigh less upon him: for the ten minutes
-between leaving the House and seeing Repton off he had been on a grill:
-there was still ridicule to be faced, but he had a sentiment of having
-achieved his end and of having just saved as difficult a situation as
-ever the chief of a State had had to meet.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was an anxious moment, but many moments are necessarily anxious
-in the life of a man who holds in his hands the destinies of Great
-Britain, and the young and popular Prime Minister had the stuff in
-him to stand worse scenes than that, but he was exhausted and he was
-slightly troubled. The full consequences of the dreadful affair had not
-yet shaped themselves in his mind.
-
-He walked back to his room in the House of Commons, ruminating during
-those few steps upon the developments that might arise from Repton’s
-terrible accident, and beginning to plan how he should arrange matters
-with Demaine. It would want caution, for Demaine was slow to understand
-... but then there was a corresponding advantage to that, for like all
-slow men, Dimmy could hold his tongue.... In fact he couldn’t help it.
-
-The Prime Minister was pleased to think that he had that second
-string to his bow, and that opinion had been sufficiently prepared
-for the change. Repton would be certified of course, the sooner the
-better,--that would prevent any necessity for a peerage. Demaine’s
-taking the place would seem more natural, and those gadflies, the
-_Moon_ and the _Capon_, would not fall into a fever about the
-appointment.... Perhaps after all the Repton business would be an
-advantage in the long run!
-
-The more he thought of his choice of Demaine the more pleased he was,
-and he had almost persuaded himself that the appointment was due to
-some extreme cunning upon his own part, when, coming round from his
-room into the Lobbies, he casually asked a colleague where Demaine was
-at the moment.
-
-The colleague didn’t know. “I have my back turned to the benches behind
-us you know,” he explained elaborately.
-
-The Prime Minister cast upon him a look of contempt, and asked the
-doorkeeper whether he had seen Mr. Demaine.
-
-“G. M. Demaine,” said the doorkeeper solemnly, running his finger down
-a list.
-
-The Prime Minister was almost moved to reprove him, but dignity forbade.
-
-“Not in the House!” said the man curtly, addressing as an equal the
-chief power in England; for his post was secure, the Prime Minister’s
-precarious.
-
-“You mean not on the benches: I can see that for myself!” said the
-Prime Minister sharply.
-
-“I mean he hasn’t passed this door, sir,” said the official with quiet
-dignity, and Dolly went off considerably nettled, and looked into the
-tea-room and the libraries, and even wasted a little time in going
-round by the smoking-room. The policemen in the central hall had
-not seen Demaine, nay, a constituent with an exceedingly long black
-moustache and fierce eyes had been waiting by appointment with Demaine
-for two hours, and Demaine had not been found. The Prime Minister
-condescended so much as to speak to this man, and the man, not knowing
-whom he might be addressing, told him plainly that “if Mr. Demaine
-interpreted his duties in this fashion, he couldn’t answer for his
-seat, that was all!”
-
-The Prime Minister further condescended to go out of the House in the
-ordinary way, and the policeman who guarded the ordinary portal had not
-seen Mr. Demaine.
-
-It was really very awkward and exasperating, though it was only a
-detail. He must see Demaine that afternoon: it was imperative. But
-it was also important that he should see him as soon as possible. He
-wanted to keep him out of the way till he was coached.
-
-There is nothing in this happy English life of ours more soothing to
-the brain in moments of anxiety, than the perusal of any one of those
-great Organs of Opinion which are the characteristic of our people and
-the envy of Europe, and of these it must be admitted none stand on
-quite the same intellectual and moral plane as the best two or three
-of our London evening papers. One of these the Prime Minister had
-always found particularly soothing. He bought it of the newsman at the
-corner of Parliament Square and opened it as he walked along at leisure
-towards Downing Street.
-
-There was one corner of this sheet which was always a recreation to
-Dolly in the few moments he could spare from the House: it was the
-corner in which prizes were offered for the best pun, on condition of
-course that nothing coarse or personally offensive should be sent in
-by the competitors. To this he had turned an indifferent eye, when for
-the second time that day he received a shock which was almost like a
-blow in the face....
-
-There, in great letters, with a flamboyance surely unworthy of a paper
-that professed to support his own Party, was the headline:
-
- “DISAPPEARANCE OF A MINISTER ELECT.”
-
-And his forebodings did not deceive him.... It was ... it was ... the
-permanently unlucky Demaine!
-
-He cursed the crass imbecility by which such a thing could have got
-into the papers at all. He strode to his house and to his room,
-crumpled the paper which he was still holding, unfolded it, and then
-read the news again. There were but a few lines of it: Demaine had
-disappeared, and the full detective power of London was attempting to
-solve the mystery of his disappearance.
-
-What madness to let such things get out!
-
-Why, twenty things might have happened! He might simply have stopped in
-the house of a friend and not bothered to tell his wife that he was not
-coming home; he might simply have fallen ill and have been taken to a
-hospital or to a hotel. What a piece of idiocy to put it into the Press
-at all!
-
-Much as he hated the exercise, he rang to be put through to Demaine
-House, and heard from Sudie herself, whom he knew but distantly, that
-her fears had done all.
-
-She had sat up for George till nearly five o’clock in the morning;
-underrating perhaps her husband’s talents, and notably his ability to
-find his way home, she thought it possible he had fallen a victim to
-an unscrupulous taxi driver or that any one of a thousand other fates
-might have befallen him.
-
-With too little comprehension of the social forces that build up
-the society of the Mother Land, Sudie had communicated at once with
-Scotland Yard, and on learning that her husband had last been seen
-leaving the House of Commons and walking towards the river, she had
-taken the unpardonable step of sending messages to all the evening
-papers in the hope that such publicity would advance the solution of
-the mystery.
-
-It was perfectly damnable! As though the cares of his office were not
-enough, the Prime Minister found himself upon this Tuesday afternoon
-with a doubtful and anxious division awaiting him in the evening, with
-one of his Ministers gone mad, and his successor the subject at the
-best of a vulgar mystery, and at the worst of a hopeless disappearance.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-
-The phrase “intoxicated with pleasure,” too common in our literature,
-would most inexactly describe the condition of George Mulross Demaine
-as he left the Prime Minister’s room upon that Monday midnight.
-
-In the first place he was not and never had been intoxicated, and even
-when he exceeded (as in youth he frequently had) in the matter of wine,
-spirits, liqueurs and fancy liquids, the effect of such excess had
-rather been atrophy than intoxication. Nor had he ever felt what poets
-finely call the “sting of joy.”
-
-But he was pleased: he was very pleased. Thoughts that in another more
-volatile and less substantial brain might have crowded, appeared slowly
-separated one from another and in a solemn procession. They comforted
-rather than exhilarated him.
-
-First of all there was the £5000 a year: that was something.
-
-He ruminated on that about as far as Cleopatra’s Needle; there, as he
-leant upon the parapet of the Embankment and looked down into the
-water, a second thought rose upon the horizon of his mind: the £5000 a
-year would be his, not Sudie’s.
-
-In the first stage of this nightly ramble he had barged into two men:
-one a poor man who had made the accident the excuse for the delivery
-of money; the second a rich one who cursed him abominably, but George
-was in too equable a mood to mind. Now, as he left Cleopatra’s Needle
-behind him and strolled still farther eastward, ruminating upon the
-fact that the £5000 a year would be his and not Sudie’s, he had the
-misfortune to cannon against yet a third, to whom he apologised: but it
-was a post, not a man.
-
-He looked at it with those slow, sensible eyes of his for perhaps
-thirty seconds, and saw in large red letters under the electric light
-“Motors to the right of this post.”
-
-He repeated the phrase mechanically as was often his wont upon reading
-anything, and it set up a new train of thought. Post.... The post
-offered him was not permanent ... but he considered the careers of his
-friends and he could remember none, neither Ted nor Johnny nor old
-Bill Curliss, nor Fittleworth nor Glegg, who from the moment they had
-received such promotion had not gone forward.
-
-It always meant something, even when one was out of office, and then
-who knows? One might be in office again. A Party may be in office
-twice running! Stranger things had happened. And then, even if they
-went out of office, Ole Man Benson would have brought something off by
-that time.
-
-Look at it how he would, heaven was smiling on him, and he in return,
-and as though in gratitude, smiled at the gaunt front of Blackfriars
-Station, opposite which he had now arrived.
-
-Between him and it there lay the street, and he was naturally too
-cautious to attempt to cross until he had gazed carefully to the front
-and right. But at midnight there is no pressure of traffic in the City
-of London, and when he had allowed a belated dray and a steam roller
-to pass him at their leisure he hurriedly crossed over with a vague
-intention of taking the train.
-
-Like many men of the governing classes, whose mental activities are
-naturally divorced from the petty details of London life, and who are
-independent of that daily round which makes the less fortunate only
-too familiar with our means of communication, George Mulross Demaine
-was not quite certain where the Underground went to, nor what part
-of London precisely it served. But he had been taught from childhood
-that it was circular in form, and that round it like Old Ocean[3] in a
-perpetual race, went along streams of trains. Enter it where you would,
-and you might leave it somewhere upon its periphery.
-
-He knew that St. James’s Park Station was at his very door. He asked
-for and obtained a ticket with that promptitude which distinguishes the
-service of our premier Metropolitan line, left the change for sixpence
-by an oversight on the ledge of the ticket window, and then, as Fate
-would have it, turned to the left-hand stairs.
-
-The official whose duty it was to examine and to cut designs upon the
-tickets presented to him by the public, was that evening (under the
-guidance of Fate) most negligent.
-
-He should surely have seen that he was dealing with an Obvious
-Gentleman and should gently have directed him to the opposing platform.
-As it was he did no more than half puncture the cardboard without so
-much as glancing at it, and George Mulross Demaine (in whom now yet
-another pleasing thought had arisen--that there were such things as
-Cabinet pensions--) sauntered down on to the platform.
-
-A train roared in; he stumbled into it just in time to save his coat
-from the shutting of the gate, and sat contentedly until he should hear
-the conductor shout “St. James’s Park!” But this cue word which would
-have aroused him to action, he was destined not to hear.
-
-The Mansion House went by, and Cannon Street, but yet another pleasing
-thought having arisen in his mind he noted them not.
-
-A shout of “Monument” startled him, for he had heard in a general way
-of the Monument, and it was nowhere near his home. When he came to Mark
-Lane he was seriously alarmed, and at the cry of Aldgate East, his mind
-was made up. He got out.
-
-He asked with the utmost courtesy of the man who took the tickets what
-he should do to get to St. James’s Park, and the man who took the
-tickets replied with less courtesy but with great rapidity that he had
-better turn sharp to the right and that on his right again he would
-find Aldgate Station, whence there was still a service of trains, late
-as was the hour.
-
-Alas, for the various locutions of various ranks in our society! he did
-turn sharp to the right; he went right round the corner into Middlesex
-Street, and to the right again into Wentworth Street, but not a station
-could be seen. The summer night was of a glimmering sort of darkness.
-It was hot, and many of the local families were still seated upon their
-steps, speaking to each other in a dialect of the Lithuanian Ghetto
-which George Mulross erroneously took for an accent native to the
-London poor.
-
-He stepped up to one and asked whether he were yet near the station.
-The voluble reply “Shriska beth haumelshee! Chragso! Yeh!” illumined
-him not at all, and as he moved off uncertainly up the street, a roar
-of harsh laughter tended to upset his nerves.
-
-He could not bear this raking fire: he turned, most imprudently, up
-a narrow court which was in total darkness; and, then at first to his
-surprise but almost immediately afterwards to his grave chagrin, he
-felt a voluminous and exceedingly foul cotton sheet drawn sharply round
-his throat, twisted, the slack of it thrown over his head, and one end
-crammed into his mouth for a gag; almost at the same moment his wrists
-were jerked behind him, a rope whose hardness must have been due to
-tar was hitched round them with surely excessive violence, putting him
-to grievous pain, his feet were lifted from under him, he felt several
-hands grasping his head and shoulders at random, a couple of them
-seizing his ankles; he was reversed, and in the attitude described at
-the Home Office as “The Frogs’ March” he felt himself carried for some
-few yards, and at last reversed again and placed face upwards upon a
-narrow and hard surface.
-
-Through the filthy cotton which still enveloped his face, the
-disgusting stains of which were dimly apparent to him, he saw the
-glimmer of a light, and he heard round him language the accent and many
-of the words of which were so unfamiliar to him that he could make
-nothing of it. He was incommoded beyond words.
-
-Whatever his defects, George Mulross Demaine was not lacking in
-physical courage; he begged them in a mumble through the gag that
-covered his mouth, to let him go. There was no direct reply, but only
-a good deal of whispering, which so far as he could make it out--and
-much of it was foreign--related to his person rather than to his
-request.
-
-An attempt to move betrayed the fact that some heavy body was seated
-upon his shins; another attempt to raise the upper half of his body was
-met by so sharp a reminder upon the side of his head that he thought it
-better for the moment to lie still.
-
-What followed was an examination of his clothes and their contents,
-which showed his new neighbours to be unacquainted with the sartorial
-habits of the wealthy. The two slits in his cape were taken for pockets
-and their emptiness provoked among other comments the shrill curse of
-a woman. His trouser pockets, wherein it was fondly hoped that metal
-might lie hid, and wherein he would rather have died than have put
-anything, similarly drew blank, and to their disgust, of the two little
-lines on the waistcoat one was a sham and the other contained nothing
-but a spare stud. However, this contained a small precious stone, and
-was the immediate object of a pretty severe scuffle.
-
-He was next reversed yet a third time without dignity, and in a manner
-the violence of which was most wounding: but in his tail pocket was
-nothing but a large new silk handkerchief which went (apparently by
-custom, for there was no discussion) to the captain of the tribe.
-
-Purse there was none, a thing that bewildered them; not even a
-portmonnaie, until, to their mingled astonishment and joy, some one
-acuter than the rest discovered in a mass of seals at his watch chain,
-a little globular receptacle which opened with a spring, and revealed
-no less than four sovereigns.
-
-It was a poor haul, but the clothes remained. Not for long. They were
-all removed, and that not with roughness but, he was glad to note,
-tenderly: less perhaps from the respect they bore him than from a
-consideration of the value of the cloth. The precise manoeuvre
-whereby the difficulty of the ankles and the wrists was eliminated,
-I leave to those of my readers who are better acquainted with such
-problems than I. There are several well-known methods, I understand,
-whereby a man may have his trousers and his coat removed and yet his
-hands and feet preserved in custody.
-
-His boots (they were astonished to note) were elastic-sided. They were
-under the impression that among the wealthy buttoned boots alone were
-tolerated at the evening meal and thenceforward until such hours as the
-wealthy seek repose. But they were good mess boots, and take it all in
-all, his clothing, every single article of which was soon folded and
-put into its bundle, made the best part of their booty.
-
-Then there was a considerable movement of feet, a murmur of voices
-purposely low; there seemed to be one person left, agile and rapid in
-movement ... perhaps two: at any rate after these or this one had held
-him for some thirty seconds, during which he had the sense and prudence
-to lie still, there was a sharp sliding of feet, the quick but almost
-noiseless shutting of a door, and he found that he was free.
-
-His first act was to disembarrass himself of his stinking head-gear,
-but his captors had laid their trap with science, and it was precisely
-this which was destined to give them the leisure for their escape. The
-sheet was tied to his head by a series of small hard knots which took
-him, between them, quite a quarter of an hour to undo.
-
-At last he was free. He tore the filthy thing from his head and the
-bunch of it from his mouth with the same gesture, overcame a strong
-desire to vomit, and looked round him.
-
-He found himself seated upon a sort of narrow bench attached by iron
-clamps to the wall of a small and exceedingly noisome room, which even
-at that moment he had the wit to think that he would certainly have
-dealt with by the local inspector when he should have assumed what he
-had heard called the reins of office.
-
-But for the moment other considerations occupied him to the exclusion
-of the condition of the room. A dirty paraffin lamp with no shade stood
-on the rickety table; the one window was blinded by a large old wooden
-shutter barred down against it; on the cracked, distempered walls,
-stained with a generation of grease and smoke, hung a paper upon which
-a few figures had been scrawled roughly in pencil, and most of them
-scratched out again, and here and there the same pencil or others had
-inscribed the surface of the plaster with sentiments and illustrations
-most uncongenial to his breeding.
-
-The next thing that met his eye was a peculiarly repulsive pair of
-breeches, an old green-black torn overcoat, and a pair of workmen’s
-boots, cracked, grey with weather, laceless and apparently as stiff as
-wood. He had no choice: his first business was to find aid. He must put
-these on, break his way out of this den as best he could, and summon
-the Police.
-
-He had never had his feet in such things as those boots before; it was
-like shuffling in boxes. He hated to feel the clammy grease of the
-trousers and coat against his skin.
-
-He left the lamp burning and made for the door. To his astonishment
-the latch was open. To his further astonishment it gave into an open
-passage like a tunnel, with no door but a plain arch opening into the
-court beyond. He shuffled out. He was glad that it was not yet day.
-Fortunately it was not cold.
-
-He turned, he knew not whither, following the streets aimlessly, but
-more or less in one direction, until he saw in a blotted silhouette
-against the darkness of the walls, the glad and familiar form of a
-policeman. It was like coming home! It was like making a known harbour
-light after three days of lost reckonings and a gale.
-
-He went up to the man and began in that pleasant but not condescending
-tone in which he had ever addressed members of the force:
-
-“Policeman, can you tell me....”
-
-He got no further. The agile though weighty custodian of order, with
-the low and determined remark, “I know yer!” had seized him by the
-shoulders, whirled him round and away, so that he fell, bruised and a
-little dazed, against the steps of a house.
-
-George was angered. He had already risen with some remark on his
-lips about taking a number when he saw his antagonist make a sharp
-gesture--there was a shrill whistle, immediately afterwards an
-answering whistle from perhaps a hundred yards away, and George Mulross
-Demaine,--blame him if you will,--kicked off the impossible boots, and
-ran for it.
-
-They let him run, and it is not for us to criticise. He left their
-district at any rate.
-
-He had run for but a few moments in his absurd and horrible greatcoat
-and on his naked feet, until he saw down the end of an alley a great
-gate, a light to one side of it, and beyond it an empty space of
-glimmering nightly sky. Ignorant of where he was or what he did, but
-determined upon safety, he looked round and to his horror saw the form
-of yet another policeman pacing slowly towards the place where he was
-crouching.
-
-That determined him. With an agility that none of his acquaintances,
-not even his wife, would have believed to be in him, he slunk quite
-close to earth in the shadow of the great gate and entered the open
-space beyond.
-
-Such a space he had never seen. Under the very faint light which was
-now beginning to show over the east of heaven, he guessed that he was
-upon the river, for he saw masts against the sky and that peculiar pale
-glint of water which, even at night, may be distinguished between the
-hulls of ships. All he sought was shadow, and the great wharves of the
-docks--for he had blundered into the docks--give ample opportunity.
-
-He heard a measured step pacing slowly towards him. He crept along the
-edge of the quay into a sort of narrow lane that lay between a row of
-high barrels and the bulwarks of a big steamship which just showed
-above the stone. He flattened himself against the high barrels which,
-had he been better acquainted with the details of commerce, he would
-have known to contain fishbone manure.
-
-The measured tread came nearer; it passed, it reached a certain point
-in the distance, it turned and passed again. It reached yet another
-extreme of its beat, turned and re-passed.... And all the while the
-light was growing: and as it grew the nervous agony of George Mulross
-grew with it, but more rapidly.
-
-He could now just see the figure of the watchman near the gate, he
-could distinguish part of the nearer rigging; in half an hour he would
-be visible to whatever eyes were watching for vagabonds. He knew what
-that meant; further humiliation, perhaps further dangers. There was not
-a gentleman for miles,--and with that thought the heart of this most
-unfortunate of gentlemen beat slow.
-
-The reader has been sufficiently told that Mr. Demaine, however solid
-the quality of his brain, was not a man of rapid decision. But agony
-and peril are sharp spurs, and as the conception of a gentleman floated
-through his mind he suddenly remembered that ships had captains.
-
-Upon their exact functions he was hazy; he would know it better no
-doubt when he had undertaken his functions in the Court of Dowry (the
-blessed thought warmed him for a moment even in that dreadful dawn!);
-anyhow, the word “captain” meant something ... it wasn’t like a captain
-in the army of course ... but then there were captains and captains
-... of course the Royal Navy was superior to the Merchant Service ...
-but it was all the same kind of thing--only upper and lower, like
-a barrister and a solicitor.... For instance there was the Naval
-Reserve.... And he remembered a captain upon an Atlantic liner who was
-a splendid great fellow, and he was sure could tell any one at once.
-And the captain of Billy’s schooner was better than that because he
-understood about motor engines.
-
-He had just come to the point of remembering that on the P. and O.
-it was rather a grand thing to dine with the captain, when his mind
-arrived at its conclusion. He would slip over the side of the big ship,
-and when the proper time came he would reveal himself to the captain
-for what he was. The captain would show him every courtesy, he would
-give him a change of clothes, ready-made but decent, he would know
-where there was a telephone, he would have authority to speak to the
-watchman and the rest, he would send for a taxi, and George’s troubles
-would be over....
-
-George prepared to slip over the side.
-
-Now to slip over the side in a book is one thing, but to do it on a
-real ship is another. The bulwarks were high and greasy and salt and
-slimy. Demaine was weakened by a night of terrors, and he came down
-on the hard iron deck of the tramp with a noise resembling distant
-thunder, and in a manner that hurt him very much indeed.
-
-It was a new misadventure and one that had to be repaired. He heard
-voices and bolted for a large coil of rope which lay beneath the shadow
-of the turtle-deck. Here the stench, though somewhat different in
-quality from that of the fishbone manure, was not less noisome, and
-carried with it a reminiscence of Channel passages which weakened the
-very soul within George Mulross Demaine. But the sensation was soon
-swamped in one much more poignant; this was aroused in him by the
-approach of two inharmonious voices, one of which was borne towards him
-perpetually clamouring:
-
-“Yes ah deed!”
-
-While the other repeated as a sort of antiphon:
-
-“Noa ee diddun, tha silly fule!”
-
-When this dialogue was exhausted the first voice in a lower and much
-more determined tone hissed: “Ah’ll ave im aowt!” and a large stave
-which might, for all Demaine knew, be a marlingspike or some other
-horrid instrument, began rummaging behind the coil of rope.
-
-“T’ould man sez ef ah doan catch next ’un ee’ll skin me live!”
-
-To this the second voice reiterated his certitude that his companion
-was a silly fool, and that he had had stowaways upon the brain since he
-was last made responsible for the presence of one of these supercargoes
-upon the _Lily_.
-
-The voices moved away and Demaine, while he breathed somewhat more
-freely, was back again in his former doubt and terror.
-
-It grew to be broad day; he heard the rattling of chains; the presence
-of men upon every hand made him but the more determined to remain
-in his hiding-place until he could approach the Captain in some
-more convenient manner than through the medium of the unfeeling and
-ill-educated North Countrymen who seemed to compose the crew.
-
-He felt the great ship swinging, he could see the patch of cloud in
-the sky of which he had a glimpse, turning as she turned, he felt the
-slight throb of her engines; she was passing down the dock, she was out
-of the gate--she was almost in the river, when, to his horror ... the
-coil of rope which had been his bulwark against an unfeeling world,
-_began slowly to uncoil at the top_, with the motion of some great and
-wicked snake that was making for its harmless prey.
-
-Had George Mulross attained that acquaintance with seafaring terms
-which is proper to an administrator of this sea-girt isle (and
-especially to a Warden of the Court of Dowry), he would have known that
-the rapidly disappearing coil before him was being used as a warping
-rope, and he would have connected the steady clank of the donkey engine
-which accompanied its disappearance with the absorption of fathom after
-fathom of what had been kindly shelter. But even had he known these
-things it is doubtful whether they would have interested him at the
-moment.
-
-He crouched lower and lower as the coil diminished, occupying the
-smallest space compatible with keeping his legs tucked away behind
-what was left of the cable: but the Gods were deaf that morning to all
-prayers. The last eighteen inches of the coil’s height were reached and
-still the pitiless donkey engine clanked, and still the lengths went
-slithering away, until at last his back appeared above the element it
-lived in,--the unmistakable back of a human being, clothed in a ragged
-green-black coat.
-
-To the trained and piercing eye of sailor-men the object was
-unmistakable, and like two cats upon one mouse his acquaintances of
-an hour before pounced upon his trembling form: the sceptical one now
-converted and protesting that he had been convinced from the first of
-the stowaway’s presence, the other in cruel triumph dragging him along
-the deck and threatening him with such consequences as not even the
-peculiar idiom of the North Country could completely veil.
-
-With such energy as remained to him, George sprang up at the first
-opportunity they gave him. He had the sense not to run upon those
-crowded and confined decks. The button torn off his coat-collar in the
-scramble showed his bare neck and chest. Masses of grime, tar and dust
-streaked his face; his hair was most untidy, and his bootless feet were
-caked in mud.
-
-“I want to see the captain,” he said between his gasps.
-
-“Tha wants...!” began his irate captor,--then plain words failed him,
-and he took refuge in a few oaths. The other said more quietly:
-
-“Tha’lt see im, ladd; ow! tha’lt see im,”--and he nodded twice gravely
-in a manner which George would have found reassuring had he not already
-begun to suspect that the lower classes were capable of sarcasm.
-
-“Tha’lt see im!” he suddenly repeated with the utmost ferocity; and
-catching Demaine sharply by the back of the neck he ran him in to the
-semi-darkness under the bridge where, as luck would have it, the first
-officer in a somewhat surly mood was going down off duty.
-
-I should over-weight these pages were I so much as to attempt the
-language of the first officer when he cast eyes upon the unfortunate
-figure before him. A stowaway! It was the second time it had happened
-in three months.
-
-One stammering attempt to make himself heard so dreadfully increased
-the power of this man’s passion that George perforce was silent. The
-first officer’s rage rose into a sort of typhoon, and had the law or
-even the custom of the sea permitted him to do one quarter of that with
-which he threatened the poor vagabond, a British ship would certainly
-be no fit place to live in. As a matter of fact when his tirade was
-over he confined himself to a general curse upon the town of London and
-its inhabitants, to a particular one directed with menace against the
-able seaman who had captured the stowaway, and at last, with directions
-that he should be shown to the captain when the ship was in the fairway
-and the anxious business of getting her out was over.
-
-For some little time, therefore, Demaine still stood a butt for the
-occasional but half-exhausted ribaldry of his two guardians, and not
-until the waterman’s boat had dropped away from alongside and the
-warping rope had splashed into the slime of the Thames, not until the
-donkey engine had clanked once more and got it aboard, horrible with
-all the horrors of that water, and not until the engine was going
-fairly and the _Lily_ dropping swiftly down the tide, was the captain
-ready to sit in judgment.
-
-Captain Higgins was a man who had made method and self-control the
-hinges of success in life. _His_ Caryll’s Ganglia were all right!
-
-Accuracy in accounts, faithfulness to employers, and strict discipline
-aboard, were, as he was proud of repeating, his motto. And when he
-heard that yet another stowaway had claimed the hospitality of the
-_Lily_, he betrayed no unusual perturbation but sat down at his little
-desk, and ordered the prisoner to be brought in.
-
-George, somewhat hurriedly introduced by both arms between his now
-silent captors, perceived sitting at that table a sight very different
-from that which he had expected. He saw a very small, thin man with a
-little pointed red beard and the eyes of a weasel, wearing a well-used
-and somewhat dirty peaked cap, upon the front of which was embroidered
-a coat of arms long indistinguishable, and surrounded by a scroll of
-tawdry and threadbare gold braid.
-
-This was the individual upon whom Demaine’s hopes of speedy restoration
-depended. He was determined not to speak first, though he was certain
-that the superior education of the officer would pierce through his
-involuntary disguise.
-
-Captain Higgins pulled out a large, official-looking paper divided into
-certain mysterious compartments, each headed with a printed rubric, and
-said briefly, without looking up and with his pen ready to write:
-
-“Name?”
-
-“Demaine,” said George, with all the dignity he could summon....
-“But----”
-
-“Silence!” commanded Captain Higgins sharply, still without looking up
-from the paper on which he scratched rapidly and in an official manner:
-“Mane.” “First name,” he chanted musingly, his pen suspended to write
-further.
-
-“George Mulross,” enunciated that individual, and “George Ross” went
-down onto the sheet.
-
-He began once more by clearing his throat, but though he had not yet
-said a word, Captain Higgins looked up with such an expression in his
-small and unpleasing eyes as would brook no nonsense.
-
-“George Ross Mane,” said he, speaking through his nose. “You have been
-discovered on my ship, the _Lily_, one thousand three hundred and
-twenty tons burthen, London rating, bound from London to Portland with
-agricultural and general cargo.”
-
-Captain Higgins loved these formalities.
-
-“I have no jew-risdiction in the matter....” And here
-he began speaking by rote out of a dirty little book
-in which were laid down the elements of his trade:
-“Of-breach-of-contract-tort-replevin-stave-jury-or-execution-major-and-
-minor-nor-authority-to-act-savin’-always-and-exceptin’-in-such-way-as-
-and-whereby-discipline-accoutrement-good
-order-_and_-the-fear-of-the-Lord-proper-to-the-navigatin’-of-this-ship-
-from-her-departure-to-her-port-of-destination-is-concerned-_wherefore_-
-you-shall-be-fed-in-such-manner-as-shall-keep-you-livin’-until-the-next-
-port-or-ports-whereat-this-good-ship-may-touch-and-there-delivered-to-
-the-Sheriff-or-his-officers-or-other-justices-of-our-Sovereign-Lord-the-
-King-and-of-his-peace: Take-away-the-prisoner! Gawd-save-the-King.”
-
-This sentence, which was delivered in one breath and with the rapidity
-of an expert, became towards its close a torrent of syllables ending up
-sharp upon the word “King” as upon a bell, and followed by a stinging
-silence.
-
-“I demand,” shouted George in an uncontrolled voice over his shoulder
-as they dragged him away.
-
-“Put him in irons!” cried Captain Higgins as loudly as was consistent
-with order, discipline and self-control. “Put the ---- in irons!”
-And after this natural exhibition of feeling (which in his heart he
-regretted) the navigator returned to the bridge, relieved the second
-officer there present, and continued to take his ship down the fairway.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In a little cubical space with iron sheeting above, below and all
-round, and a dirty porthole still streaked with the salt of the sea,
-the prospective Warden of the Court of Dowry sat upon the floor in a
-despondent mood.
-
-There was already a slight swell upon the vessel; his dungeon was
-far forward and he felt it to the full. They had brought him some
-detestable mess or other in a battered pannikin at noon. He had sent it
-away untasted. Whither they were taking him, what would be his fate,
-had formed for too many hours the subject of his speculations.
-
-The movement of the ship was beginning to drive even these gloomy
-considerations from his mind. He had already discovered two things:
-first that the term “irons” was a purely conventional one; and
-signified no more than that his harsh treatment might be made
-indefinitely severe. Secondly, that he was permitted to communicate
-with an extraordinarily lop-sided boy of some fifteen years who acted
-as general drudge in the ship and was deputed to bring him his food
-from the galley. He was about to discover a third feature in his new
-life.
-
-A person evidently containing mixed the blood of the Caucasian and of
-the Negroid races approached him in his confinement and ordered him in
-broken English to follow up on deck.
-
-The sea air revived him somewhat, but George was far from well when the
-half-breed, kicking towards him a lump of something which reminded poor
-Demaine of a diseased brick, a bucket of dirty water and a large and
-peculiarly evil mop, bade him scrub.
-
-But George’s first attempts at this new trade were such that his
-overseer after looking at him first in astonishment and then in anger,
-assured him that any lack of good-will would necessarily be followed by
-some form of physical compulsion, the which, so far as his victim could
-gather from the torrent of broken English, would probably consist in a
-larruping with the rope’s end.
-
-Doggedly and despairingly the poor fellow scrubbed away. He scrubbed
-perhaps too hard; at any rate he produced a patch of surpassing
-brilliance though of exiguous dimensions; and as the result of his
-efforts turned faint and ill with something worse than sea-sickness.
-He rose from his knees and tottered to his legs, and began aimlessly
-swabbing the odd patch of cleanliness with which he had diversified the
-beastly decks of the _Lily_.
-
-But the friend and brother (if I may so term the Eurafrican) could bear
-no more, and seizing the unstable landsman by the arm he thrust him,
-stumbling, down the stairway, and locked him again into his cell.
-
-The exhaustion of nature had caused the unfortunate politician to fall
-into a troubled doze, when he was aroused by a gentle kick, and saw
-before him the boy, the battered pannikin, a piece of bread which had
-unfortunately dropped upon the deck aft of the funnel on its way, and,
-within the tin, a peculiarly loathsome liquid compound upon which, like
-the magic island of Delos, floated at large a considerable glob of fat.
-
-“I don’t want it,” said George feebly, “take it away.”
-
-To his surprise--if surprise is not too strong a word for the faint
-emotions that still stirred him, the boy began, as the conventional
-term goes, to look ugly.
-
-“Na yer dahn’t!” he said, “yer dahn’t gemme inter trouble, yer brute!
-Yer gort them two Newcastle men inter trouble, and the myte seyes yer
-nearly gort im. And yer gort Blacky inter trouble; yer dahn’t ger _me_!
-Yer gottereatit!”
-
-“I can’t!” again said George feebly.
-
-“Yer gottereatit!” repeated the boy, with that dogged assumption of
-authority which so ill fits the young. “By Gawd, if yer get cookie
-inter trouble, I’ll ave the next watch dahn an’ they’ll skin yer.”
-
-“Throw it away,” said George, “there’s a good boy. Throw it
-overboard. I’ll make it all right in the long run,” he added, nodding
-encouragingly.
-
-The boy looked doubtful. “I dursent,” he said sullenly. “Sides which,
-ow’ll yer myke it all roight?”
-
-“Never you mind,” whispered George mysteriously. “You leave me the
-bread--I might try that ... the clean part,” he added after a sudden
-wave of nausea--“but chuck the rest, there’s a good lad. I can’t bear
-it.” His whisper almost rose to a little scream.... “I can’t bear to
-look at it.”
-
-The boy still continued to eye him doubtfully and contemptuously.
-
-“Yer cawn’t myke it all roight!” he said, but he bethought him that if
-the wretched prisoner could not eat he should catch it from the cook
-just the same, and that his own interest lay in the disposal of the
-garbage. He drank a good swill of it himself--he was not over-fed on
-the _Lily_,--went up on deck for a moment,--and George could hear the
-splash as the horror went overboard.
-
-In a moment the boy had returned.
-
-“Yer ought ter be griteful,” he said, “I’ve sived yer a lickin.”
-
-“Thank you,” said George warmly, with his mouth full. He had found
-himself able to munch the bread, and it did him good.
-
-The boy lingered; he took the same interest in the stowaway that he
-might have taken in an animal at the Zoological Gardens, and the
-episode broke the monotony of his fourth voyage.
-
-“Yer’ll ketch it at Parham!” he said in a cheery tone.
-
-George did not understand. “Why Parham?” he asked weakly.
-
-“Coz that’s where they’ll land yer. That’s where they’ll put yer
-shore. They’ll ave the cops there roight on the quay wytin for yer,
-and they’ll put yer ahverboard in the little dinghy, they wull: they
-wahn’t thrah yer bundle arter ye, anforwhoy? acause yer arn’t got none.
-But they’ll send one of th’ orficers and ee’ll and yer ahver ter th’
-cops, and ee’ll sye: ‘ee’s been very vilent’--that’s what ee’ll sye;
-that’s what they said wiv the larst un; and they clapped th’ darbies on
-_im_ ... saw em meself,” continued the boy most untruthfully. Then not
-knowing his man and going a step too far, he continued: “Ee was ung, ee
-was: ung in Lewes Gaol,” he ended, to give the story point and finish.
-
-The poor pedantry of maps does not weigh upon the governing classes of
-this country, and Demaine might have had some difficulty in answering
-in an examination exactly where Parham lay, but he knew that it was
-on the south coast, he knew one reached it easily in an hour or two
-from London, because he had gone to golf there. He knew that there was
-a good motor track between the harbour and Highcliff, and altogether
-Parham sounded to him like an echo from now forgotten, dearer, and long
-dead days. He affected indifference.
-
-“Well,” he said, “it’s all the same to me.”
-
-“Ah,” said the boy, not ready to relinquish the delicious morsel, “sah
-yer sye! Ut wahn’t be th’ syme tomorrermornin’.”
-
-“Do you mean,” said George, with--what might seem in such a man
-impossible--a touch of cunning lent him by adversity, “Do you mean that
-this old tub can make Parham in twenty-four hours?”
-
-“I dunno bout arhs,” said the boy surlily, “an’ she’s norr a tub
-either” (for they have a curious loyalty to their temporary homes),
-“but it’s a dy’s run. Any fool knahs that,” he added courteously.
-
-George dared not betray the hope that was rising in his heart. Luckily
-for him the boy volunteered his next information.
-
-“We’re orf Long Nahse now,” he said, “but I dunno bout th’ toide
-outsoide.”
-
-“No?” said George, merely desiring to prolong this all-important
-conversation.
-
-“Nah: I dahn’t, I tell yer!” said the boy defiantly, “nor there’s norr
-many does. I’ll lye yer dahn’t yerself.”
-
-At this stage of the conversation and just as an awkward pause
-interrupted it, a new terror struck the boy.
-
-“Oh chise me!” he said, “look at yer tin!”
-
-“What’s the matter?” asked George as he peered into the empty tin.
-
-“It’s gorn empty,” whimpered the boy.
-
-“Well,” said George, his spirits already improved by the news of
-Parham, “what of it?”
-
-“Whoy,” said the unhappy scullion, “Whoy, yer cuddenever empty that
-tin--they’ll foind me aht!” he said, and began to sniffle. “Wort are
-yer to empty it wiv, yer fool? Yer eyn’t got a spoon!”
-
-“Say I licked it,” said George with attempted humour.
-
-“They’d blieve ut of yer,” said the boy viciously, “ye’re nothin but a
-woilbeast! Gettin us all inter trouble!” He sniffled. “Ye’re a curse
-on th’ ship, that’s wort you are, an I blieve she’ll founder. I blieve
-she’ll stroike in th’ noight and go to Ell. _You_’ll be drahwnded,
-anyow!” he viciously added as he restrained his tears in prospect of
-the wrath to come.
-
-But the thought of safety which the mention of Parham had brought
-revived George, and he bore no ill-will. “Look here,” he said, “I’ll
-swab it out with my bread and they’ll think I cleaned it up, but it’s
-on condition that you chuck the bread overboard,” he added.
-
-The boy accepted the pact and was comforted. It was a cheap act of
-kindness, but he hoped it might stand him in good stead a few hours
-later.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The June night fell gradually upon the sea, the slight swell dropped to
-something almost imperceptible. Through his miserable porthole George
-could see great sheets of moonlight playing upon the easy surface, and
-there was no noise but the regular thud of the engine.
-
-He fell into a profound sleep.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-
-As George Mulross Demaine drifted down river in his cell that Tuesday
-afternoon the 2nd of June, Dolly sat blankly in Downing Street with the
-waters of despair at his lips.
-
-Evil breeds evil.
-
-As he considered the gloomy prospect, new aspects of it rose before
-him. Not only was he privately between these two fires, the sudden
-madness of the outgoing Warden, the disappearance of his successor,
-but the retirement of Charles Repton had been publicly announced and
-Dimmy’s nomination had appeared alongside with it in the morning
-papers. The double news was all over England.
-
-Yet another torturing thought suggested itself. How and when should he
-fill the vacancy? What was he to do?
-
-Repton was impossible. His disaster was not in the papers, thank God,
-and could not be, under the decent rules which govern our press. But
-it was already the chief tittle-tattle of every house that counted
-in London. There could be no interregnum with Repton still nominally
-filling the place. He might wait as long as he dared, give it to a
-third man, and then have Demaine turn up smiling and hungry: and if
-that happened the Prime Minister would earn what he dreaded most on
-earth, the enmity of those who had been his friends; perhaps a breach
-with Mary Smith herself.
-
-He was not fit to do more than survey the misfortune of the moment: he
-was still in his perplexity, when he heard the bell ringing in the next
-room, and was told that he himself was personally and urgently wanted
-upon the telephone.
-
-He put up his hand but the secretary would take no denial; it was
-something absolutely personal. Who was it from? It was from Lady Repton.
-
-If it can be said of any wealthy and powerful man that he ever betrays
-in his features or gait a purely mental anxiety, then that might be
-said in some degree of the unfortunate Prime Minister at that moment.
-He suffered so acutely that his left lung, the sense of which never
-wholly left him, seemed to oppress him with actual physical pain.
-
-He took the telephone, dreading what he might hear.
-
-It was a trifle less of a blow than he had expected. All he heard was
-the agitated voice of Lady Repton assuring him that she had waited as
-long as possible before troubling him, but that she was now really
-anxious, because Charles had not come home. Had he gone in a taxi or a
-hansom, or how? It was more than half an hour since the Prime Minister
-had telephoned her, and Charles was always _so_ regular.
-
-It was perhaps weariness or perhaps a sense that he could do nothing
-which made the Prime Minister merely answer that he was sure to come in
-a moment.
-
-“Repton has been very busy to-day,” he said, “and has had a great deal
-on his mind. He has become a little unhinged: that is the whole truth,
-Lady Repton: nothing more. But I think he should be carefully nursed.
-Pray do not be anxious.”
-
-The words faltered a little, for he himself was more than anxious.
-Heaven only knew what Repton might not be capable of, until they had
-got him safe behind the four walls of his home.... And after that the
-doctors.
-
-He stopped the conversation a little rudely, by taking advantage of a
-long pause to ring off. While he was in the act of doing so a servant
-asked him in the most natural manner in the world whether he would not
-see Sir Charles Repton who was waiting below.
-
-I grieve to record that the young and popular Prime Minister gave vent
-to the exclamation “Good God!” For a moment he thought of refusing to
-see him; then he heard coming up through the distances of the official
-house a cheery voice saying:
-
-“Yes, it’s all very well for you, you’re a butler with a regular place;
-when the Government goes out you don’t. You’re a sort of permanent
-official. But we...!”
-
-“Show him up,” said the Prime Minister in a qualm, “show him up at
-once. _At once!_” he repeated, losing all dignity in his haste, and
-tempted to push the solemn form of the domestic who stalked upon his
-mission of doom as majestically as though he were about to announce a
-foreign Ambassador, or to give notice.
-
-In a moment Charles Repton had entered.
-
-He had bought, during his brief odyssey, a gigantic Easter Lily in a
-Bond Street shop which sells such ornaments. This blossom flourished in
-the lapel of his coat and pervaded the whole room with its perfume.
-
-“My dear fellow,” he shouted, running up to the horrified Prime
-Minister and taking him by both hands, “My dear fellow! Come, no pride;
-you know as well as I do it’s all bunkum. Why, I could buy and sell you
-any day of the week. It’s true,” he mused, “there’s birth of course,
-but it’s a fair bargain. Birth gives you your place and brains give me
-mine. Do you mind smoking?”
-
-“Yes,” said the Prime Minister, after which he said, “No,--I don’t know
-... I don’t care. Why didn’t you go home?”
-
-“I didn’t go home,” said Sir Charles solemnly, and thinking what the
-reason was ... “didn’t ... go ... home, because--Oh, I know, because I
-wanted to talk to you about that peerage.”
-
-“For God’s sake don’t talk so loud,” said Dolly with real venom in his
-voice.
-
-“All right then I won’t,” shouted Sir Charles, “though I really don’t
-see what there is to be ashamed of. You’re going to give me a peerage
-and I’m going to take one. You know as well as I do that you didn’t
-think I’d take one and I wasn’t quite sure myself. Mind you, it’s
-free,” he added coarsely, “gratis, _and_ for nothing.”
-
-“My dear fellow,” said the unhappy Premier,--
-
-“Oh yes, I know, that’s the double-ruff dodge. You won’t ask for
-anything, but old Pottle will. And then when I come to you and complain
-you will say you know nothing about it. Of course I shan’t pay! It’ll
-be no good asking me; but what I want is not to be _pestered_.”
-
-The Prime Minister almost forced him down into the chair from which he
-had risen, and said again:
-
-“Do talk lower, Repton. Do remember for a moment where you are. No,
-certainly you shan’t be bothered.”
-
-“What else was there?” continued Sir Charles genially, interrogating
-the ceiling and twiddling his thumbs. “There was something, I know,” he
-continued, looking sideways at the carpet.
-
-He got up, walking slowly towards the door, and still murmuring:
-“There was something else, I know.” He touched his forehead with his
-hand, stood still a moment as if attempting to remember, then shook
-his head and said: “No, it’s no use. It was something to do with some
-concession or other, but I’m not fit for business to-day.”
-
-“Repton,” said Dolly in a tone which he rarely used and had never found
-ineffectual, “don’t say anything as you go out, don’t say anything to
-anybody. Do get into a cab and go straight home. You promised me you
-would.”
-
-“I’ll keep my promise,” said Sir Charles with fine candour, “I always
-do. See if I don’t. Look here, to please you I’ll make him drive across
-the Parade here under your windows. There!”
-
-And he was true to his word. He did indeed dig the servant in the
-ribs as that functionary handed him his hat, his malacca cane and his
-gloves, he also wished to see if the butler could wrestle, and he
-winked a great wink at one of the footmen, but he said no word. He
-jumped into the cab that was waiting for him, and told the driver to go
-round by Delahaye Street onto the Parade.
-
-The Prime Minister was cautiously watching from a window to make sure
-that the new incubus upon his life was on its way to incarceration,
-when he found himself only too effectually assured: for he saw, leaning
-out of a hansom which was going at a great pace towards the Mall, a
-distant figure waving its hat wildly and calling in tones that could be
-heard over the whole space of the Parade:
-
-“I’m keeping my word, Dolly, I’m keeping my word!”
-
-So went Sir Charles Repton homeward, and a settled darkness gathered
-and fell upon the Premier’s heart.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Sir Charles did keep his word.
-
-He drove straight to his house, enlivening the way by occasional whoops
-and shouting bits of secret information very valuable to investors,
-to sundry acquaintances whom he recognised upon the way. At one point
-(it was during a block at the top of St. James’s Street) he insisted
-on getting out for a moment, seizing by the hand the dignified Lord
-String who had advised the highest personages in matters of finance,
-and telling him with a comical grin that if he had bought Meccas that
-day on behalf of the Great he had been most imprudent, for there was
-an Arab rising and the big viaduct was cut--the first misfortune that
-hitherto prosperous line had suffered.
-
-Near the Marble Arch a change came over him. He felt a sudden and
-violent pain behind the ears, and clapped his hands to the place. He
-did more: when the spasm was over he put up the little door and told
-the cabby; he made him a confidant; he told him the pain had been very
-severe.
-
-The driver, who was not sympathetic, replied in an unsuitable manner,
-and they were in the midst of a violent quarrel when two or three
-minutes later the cabman, who was handicapped by having to conduct his
-vehicle through heavy traffic, drove up to the house.
-
-Lady Repton was waiting near the door; she sent out no servant, she
-came out to the cab herself, silenced the rising vocabulary of the
-driver with a most unexpected piece of gold, and tripped up again into
-the house.
-
-Sir Charles was philosophising aloud upon the gold band round his
-umbrella, letting his domestics thoroughly understand the precise
-advantages and disadvantages of such an ornament, when she took him by
-the arm quite gently and began leading him upstairs.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Meanwhile in Downing Street an indispensable secretary of the name of
-Edward was hearing what he had to do.
-
-Edward had been at King’s, for his father had sent him there. From the
-Treasury which he adorned he had been assumed by the Prime Minister,
-his father’s chief college friend, and given the position of private
-secretary; admirably did he fill its functions.
-
-He was a silent Welshman, descended from a short line of small squires,
-and he comprehended, in a manner not wholly natural to a man under
-thirty, the frailties of the human heart. The instructions he received
-from his chief, however, were of the simplest possible type, and called
-for the moment upon none of his exceptional powers.
-
-There was to be no writing and no telephoning: he was to call upon
-Bowker, because Bowker had the largest specialist experience of nervous
-diseases in London, and therefore in the world.
-
-He was to come as from the Reptons, and to give an appointment at
-Repton’s house, telling the doctor that he should there find Sir
-Anthony Poole. He was to go at once to Sir Anthony Poole, whose general
-reputation stood higher than any other medical man’s, to approach him
-as from the Reptons, to give him a similar appointment and to inform
-him that he would meet there Dr. Bowker. He was to tell them the whole
-sad truth, and beg for a certificate. The unfortunate gentleman could
-then be given the advantages of a complete rest cure.
-
-He was next to go to Lady Repton’s at once, and ask her leave to call
-upon Dr. Bowker and Sir Anthony Poole. She would give it: the Prime
-Minister had no doubt of that. He was to suggest to her the hour he
-had already named to those eminent men. That very evening Sir Charles
-would be certified a lunatic, and one load at least would be off the
-Premier’s mind; and a load off his mind, remember, was a load off
-his lung, and consequently an extension of lease granted to a life
-invaluable to the State.
-
-Within three-quarters of an hour Edward Evans had done all these
-things. He had even cut matters so fine that the physicians were to
-call at seven, and Lady Repton would telephone the result--she dared
-trust no other agency.
-
-So far as a man in acute anxiety can be satisfied, the young and
-popular Prime Minister was satisfied, but his left lung was at least
-one-half of his being as he went back again on his weary round to the
-House of Commons, and the other half of his being was fixed upon a
-contemplation of his fifty-fifth year.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At the door of Sir Charles Repton’s house was drawn up an exceedingly
-neat brougham, and Dr. Bowker had entered.
-
-A few moments later there walked up to it the tall strong frame of
-a man a trifle over-dressed but redeeming such extravagances by a
-splendidly strong old face, and he was Sir Anthony Poole.
-
-Two things dominated the conceptions of Sir Anthony: the first the
-antiquity of his family, which was considerable; the second a healthy
-contempt for the vagaries of the modern physical science.
-
-He was himself as learned in his profession as any man would care to
-be, but his common sense, he flattered himself, was far superior to
-his learning,--and he flattered himself with justice. He was a devout
-Christian of some Anglican persuasion; his family numbered thirteen
-sons and one daughter. His income was enormous. I should add that a
-knowledge of the world had taught him what real value lay behind men
-like Sir Charles Repton, who had stood the strain of public life and
-had found it possible to do such great service to their country.
-
-The mind of Dr. Bowker was dominated also by two considerations: the
-first a permanent irritation against the survival of those social
-forms which permitted men an advantage purely hereditary; the second
-a conviction, or rather a certitude, drawn from clear thinking, that
-organisation and method could deal with the cloudy blunders of mere
-general knowledge as a machine can deal with dead matter, or as an army
-can deal with civilians.
-
-Dr. Bowker’s birth was reputable and sound; his father had been a
-doctor before him in a country town, and an earnest preacher in the
-local chapel; his grandfather a sturdy miner, his great-grandfather a
-turnkey in Nottingham Gaol.
-
-He was therefore of the middle rank of society; but after all, his
-social gospel such as it was weighed upon him less than his scientific
-creed. He did not _think_: he _knew_. What he did not know he did
-not pretend to know. For the rest he was always a little nervous and
-awkward in society, and preferred the communion of his books and an
-occasional spin upon a bicycle to the conversation of the rich.
-
-I should add that he revered Sir Charles Repton not only as all men
-of the world must revere a great statesman who has found it possible
-for many years of the strain of public life to be of service to his
-country, but also as a man of inestimable value in proving that the
-solid Nonconformist stock could do in administration, when it chose to
-enter that sphere, what it had so triumphantly shown it could do in
-commerce.
-
-The two men were shown into an enormous room on the ground floor where
-it was the custom of Sir Charles (in happier days!) to receive those
-whom he feared or would inveigle. Lady Repton at once joined them.
-
-She was agitated; it was even distressing to watch her agitation. She
-described to them the violent pain which her husband had suffered
-twice, first the yesterday evening just before dinner, next at this
-moment on driving up to his house in a cab. She described as best
-she could the situation of these spasms of suffering, and she more
-than hinted that she connected with them a novel and very astonishing
-demeanour on her husband’s part which (here she almost broke down)
-she hoped would justify them in ordering him if necessary with their
-_fullest_ authority, to take a rest cure. She warned them that she had
-told him nothing; she had always heard it was wise in such cases. He
-thought they had come merely as advisers upon the pains he had felt
-behind the ear, but a few words of his conversation would be enough to
-convince them of that much graver matter.
-
-She left them for a moment together, and went to prepare her husband.
-She was a woman of heroic endurance. Her father had been in his time
-a God-fearing man, and had accumulated a small competence in the jute
-line.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Dr. Bowker, let it be remembered, was a specialist in nervous diseases.
-Sir Anthony Poole, let it also be remembered, was not, but he was
-something infinitely better in his own estimation: he was a man who
-had attended more distinguished people and with greater success than
-any other physician in London. Dr. Bowker’s word as a specialist could
-not be doubted. Sir Anthony Poole had only to express an opinion upon a
-man’s health in any particular and that opinion became positive gospel
-to all who heard it.
-
-The medical judgment of no two men given concurrently could carry
-greater weight. By an accident not infrequent in all professions, these
-two great men, though their rivalry was not strictly in the same field,
-each undervalued the scientific aptitude of the other. Each would have
-gone to the stake for the corporate value of that small ring to which
-both belonged, but neither would admit the claim of the other to a
-special if undefined precedence.
-
-On the rare occasions when they met, however, they observed all the
-courtesies of life, and on this occasion in the large ground-floor room
-of Sir Charles Repton’s house, they sat, when Lady Repton had gone out,
-exchanging platitudes of a very attenuated, refined sort, in a tone
-worthy of their correct grooming and distinguished appearance. By a
-singular inadvertence they were summoned together.
-
-“Sir Anthony,” said Dr. Bowker, bowing, smiling and making a motion
-with his hand towards the door.
-
-“Dr. Bowker,” said Sir Anthony, copying the courteous inclination,
-and thus it was that Sir Anthony Poole had precedence, and first
-interrogated Sir Charles Repton alone.
-
-The conversation was brief. When Sir Charles had answered the first
-questions very simply, that he had two or three times in the last
-twenty-four hours felt shooting pains behind the ear, he began to speak
-in an animated way upon a number of things, and described a humorous
-incident he had recently witnessed in the Strand with a vigour highly
-suspicious to so experienced a physician as Sir Anthony Poole.
-
-Sir Anthony asked him what he ate and drank, received very commonplace
-answers, and was twice assured by the Baronet, whose wife had used that
-simple method to deceive him, that he had not for weeks felt any return
-of his old complaint, and that he only regretted that Lady Repton
-should have put Sir Anthony to the trouble of calling. He understood
-also that Dr. Bowker had been sent for.
-
-“Yes,” said Sir Anthony a little uneasily. “I really imagined that the
-matter would be rather worse than it seems to be. You know it is our
-custom sometimes to call in another....”
-
-“Yes I know,” said Repton, with a slight smile, “it’s a pity you
-called in old Bowker. I know he’s very good at nerves or aches or
-something, but he’s such an intolerable old stick. The fact is, Sir
-Anthony,” he said, fixing that eminent scientist with a keen look and
-slightly lowering his voice, “the fact is, Dr. Bowker _isn’t quite a
-gentleman_.”
-
-“You’re a little severe,” said Sir Anthony, smiling, “you’re a little
-severe, Sir Charles!”
-
-“Mind you,” added Repton, “I don’t say anything against him in his
-professional capacity.”
-
-“Certainly not,” said Sir Anthony.
-
-“But there are cases when a man’s manners do make a
-difference,--especially in your profession.”
-
-Sir Anthony beamed. “Well, Sir Charles,” he said, “I’m very glad to
-hear it’s no worse,”--and as Sir Anthony went out he muttered to
-himself: “No more mad than I am; but he mustn’t go talking like that
-about other people.” And the physician chuckled heartily.
-
-Dr. Bowker’s introduction to, and private stay with, the patient was
-briefer even than had been Sir Anthony’s. He chose for his gambit the
-remark: “Sir Anthony Poole has just seen you I believe, Sir Charles?”
-
-“Yes he has,” answered Charles Repton in a pleasant and genial tone,
-“yes he has, Dr. Bowker, though why,” he added, with a happy laugh, “I
-can’t conceive. After all, if I wanted a doctor for any reason I should
-naturally send to a specialist.”
-
-When Sir Charles had answered the next few questions very simply, that
-he had two or three times in the last twenty-four hours felt shooting
-pains behind the ear, he then reverted to his praise of the specialist.
-
-
-“If I had any nervous trouble, for instance, Dr. Bowker, I should send
-for you. If I had trouble with my tibia, I should send for Felton.”
-
-Dr. Bowker nodded the most vigorous approval. It was evident that Sir
-Charles Repton’s considerable if superficial learning was standing him
-in good stead.
-
-“If I had trouble with my aural ducts I should send for Durand, or,”
-he continued, in the tone of one who continues to illustrate a little
-pompously, “if my greater lymphatics were giving me trouble, Pigge is
-the first name that would suggest itself.”
-
-Dr. Bowker’s enthusiasm knew no bounds. “You are quite right, Sir
-Charles,” he said, “you are quite right.” He almost took the Baronet’s
-hand in the warmth of his agreement. “If more men--I will not say of
-your distinction and position, but if more people--er--of what I may
-call the--er--directing brain of the nation, were of your opinion, it
-would be a good day for Medicine.”
-
-“Now a man like Poole,” went on Charles Repton nonchalantly, “what does
-he know, what _can_ he know, about any particular trouble? And mind
-you, an educated man always knows in more or less general terms what
-his particular trouble is. Why Poole--well....” Here Sir Charles ended
-with a pitying little smile.
-
-“At any rate,” said Dr. Bowker, bursting with assent, “I understand
-the old trouble has not returned. And if it had, as you very well said,
-it would be Felton’s job rather than mine. Of course it has a nervous
-aspect; everything has, but every specialist has his own field.”
-
-And Dr. Bowker went out, communing with himself and deciding that
-the foolish anxiety of wives might be an excellent thing for the
-profession, but was hardly fair upon the purses of their husbands.
-
-“Well, Sir Anthony?” said Dr. Bowker as he entered the ground-floor
-room.
-
-“Well, Dr. Bowker?” said Sir Anthony with a responsive smile.
-
-“I really don’t see why they sent for us,” said Dr. Bowker.
-
-“I thoroughly agree,” said Sir Anthony Poole.
-
-“There’s nothing more to be done, I think?” said Dr. Bowker.
-
-“Nothing,” said Sir Anthony Poole.
-
-“Shall we speak to Lady Repton?” said Dr. Bowker.
-
-“We’ll write her,” said Sir Anthony Poole.
-
-They took leave of Lady Repton in a solemn and sympathetic manner,
-assuring her that it was better to give their impression in writing,
-and that she should receive it in the course of that evening. And
-having so fulfilled their mission, these two eminent men went off
-together with a better feeling between them than either would have
-thought possible an hour before.
-
-“He is a singularly intelligent man,” said Sir Anthony Poole as they
-parted at the door of Dr. Bowker’s Club, “a singularly intelligent
-man. Of course one would have expected it from his position, but I did
-not know until to-day how really remarkably intelligent and cultivated
-he was.”
-
-“I thoroughly agree with you,” said Dr. Bowker, taking his leave, “he
-is what I call....” He sought a moment for a word.... “He is what I
-call a really cultivated and intelligent man.”
-
-That evening Lady Repton received a short but perfectly clear opinion
-signed by both these first-class authorities, that her husband was in
-the full possession of his faculties, and that it would be the height
-of imprudence to set down any extravagance of temper or momentary zeal
-upon any particular question to mental derangement or to connect it
-with a slight accidental headache.
-
-Lady Repton in her grievous anxiety (for at the very moment she
-read the message she heard Sir Charles talking to a policeman out
-of a window, and telling him that it was ridiculous to try and look
-dignified in such a uniform), Lady Repton I say, at her wits’ end for
-advice, was bold enough to ring up the Prime Minister whom she hardly
-knew, and to tell him all: There was no chance of a certificate; what,
-oh what should she do?
-
-The Prime Minister was not sympathetic. He did not desire further
-acquaintance with the lady.
-
-The Premier’s cup was full. His Warden of the Court of Dowry had
-resigned: the new Warden was appointed. The Warden who had resigned
-had gone mad; the Warden whom he had appointed had fled. At least--at
-least he might have been spared the madman! But no, he was not granted
-even this! the madman was still loose over London like a roaring lion,
-capable of doing infinite things within the next twenty-four hours.
-What was a peerage to a madman? What was a Wardenship of the Court of
-Dowry to a man who was not? The crumb of comfort that would have been
-afforded him by locking up the wretched lunatic who was the root of
-half his troubles was snatched from him.
-
-It was enough to make a man cut his throat.
-
-So ended that dreadful Tuesday in Downing Street, and all night long
-between his fits of tortured and horror-stricken sleep wherein his left
-lung and his fifty-fifth year were the baleful demons of his dreams,
-the young and popular Prime Minister would wake in a cold sweat and
-imagine some new horror proceeding from Repton let loose.
-
-The summer night is short. Wednesday most gloriously dawned, and after
-two hours of attempted slumber under the newly risen light, the Prime
-Minister arose, a haggard man.
-
-The lines on either side of the young Prime Minister’s mouth had grown
-heavier during the suffering of the night.
-
-Had he been married and had his wife felt for him that affection which
-his character would surely have called forth she would have been
-anxious to observe the change. But such is the strain of political
-life and such the ambitions it arouses, that his suffering passed
-unnoticed with the majority, and with the rest was a subject for secret
-congratulation.
-
-He was down very early. Before he had eaten he went rapidly and
-nervously into his secretary’s room and said:
-
-“Any news, Edward?”
-
-“Yes,” said his secretary, looking if possible more nervous than his
-chief, “I’m sorry to say there is. The _Herald_ is advertising an
-interview with Repton.”
-
-“The _Herald_!” said the Prime Minister between his set teeth.
-
-“Yes, the _Herald_,” answered the secretary, “it really doesn’t much
-matter,” he continued wearily, (he had been up most of the night) “if
-it wasn’t the _Herald_ it would be somebody else.”
-
-“We must pot ’em as they come,” answered the Premier grimly, “and the
-_Herald_ won’t publish that interview at any rate.”
-
-“Yes, let them publish it,” said the secretary.... “I’ll write it if
-you like.”
-
-“That’s what I mean,” said the Prime Minister. “I mean they won’t
-publish what people think they will.”
-
-“No,” said Evans, “they won’t.... He’s been shouting out of a window,”
-the secretary went on by way of news.
-
-The Prime Minister groaned.
-
-“What has he been shouting?” he breathed hoarsely.
-
-“Oh just insults, nothing important, but the police have complained.
-And late last night he pointed out Betswick, who was a little buffy,
-stumbling down the pavement--sitting down, some say--. He shouted from
-his window to a lot of people in the street that it was Betswick.
-And now Betswick is afraid of going to open the Nurses’ Home this
-afternoon.... It’s a damned shame!” ended the secretary, exploding.
-“What the devil are you to do with a man ... it’s like--it’s like--it’s
-like an anarchist with little packets of dynamite.”
-
-“Have you looked at the papers yet, Edward?” asked the Prime Minister.
-
-“Some of ’em,” answered his secretary gloomily.
-
-“Nothing in the _Times_?”
-
-“Oh no,” said Edward, “nothing in any of the eleven London papers on
-the official list.”
-
-“Do you think the others count?”
-
-“Well,” answered the secretary thoughtfully, “there are the two evening
-papers that have been making such a fuss about the Concessions in
-Burmah.”
-
-“Edward,” said the Prime Minister, “it’s a desperate remedy, but take
-the paper you have here, write out a note and get them to lunch. Not
-with me--with you. They’ll come.”
-
-“Lunch is no good,” said Edward.
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“Evening papers go to press in the morning.”
-
-“Do they indeed?” said the Prime Minister, with the first lively glance
-he had delivered since the beginning of this terrible debacle. “That’s
-really worth knowing! I never knew that.” He gazed into space, then
-suddenly waking up he said: “Why then, Edward, there’s no time to lose!
-Go and see them at once. Go and see them yourself, Edward.”
-
-“It isn’t much good,” said Edward. “I know one of them, and the other’s
-dotty.”
-
-“Never mind,” said the Prime Minister, “never mind. Do it somehow. Kill
-’em if you must,” he added jocosely, and his secretary went.
-
-The Premier left his secretary’s room and mournfully approached his
-breakfast.
-
-Upon his table a time-honoured device constructed of brass and wood was
-designed to hold the newspaper while the tenant of that historic house
-might be at meals. Upon this was propped up, open at the leading page,
-a copy of the _Times_. The leaders were discreet. He found no word from
-beginning to end, save a little note in small type to the effect that
-Sir Charles Repton would be unable to speak at the great Wycliffite
-Congress, he was confined to the house with influenza; a similar note
-he was assured had appeared in all the eleven newspapers upon the
-official list, and through them would be distributed to the provincial
-press; the only thing left to the discretion of their editorial
-departments being the disease from which the distinguished patient
-might be suffering, which appeared in one as phlebitis, in another as
-tracheotomy, and in a third as a severe cold.
-
-Of Demaine not a word.
-
-Dolly thanked Heaven for the discipline which makes the Press of London
-the most powerful instrument of Government in the world.
-
-His thanks were premature; and the gentle, somewhat mournful atheism
-which was his only creed received excellent support when he saw among
-certain items of news which were laid upon his table every morning,
-two cuttings from foreign papers which told at great length and in
-the plainest details the whole story of the dreadful episode in the
-City, and connected it in so many words with the scandalous scene in
-the House of Commons. He could only comfort himself by reflecting that
-news which leaked out abroad was rarely if ever permitted to enter the
-Island. He reflected that time is a remedy for all evils, and he made
-ready for the duties of the day.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Meanwhile his secretary, Edward,--to give him his full title, Teddy
-Evans--had come to the first of the two offices which it was his
-business to visit. It was not yet nine o’clock and there was still time
-to cut on the machine.
-
-At the Treasury Evans had written regularly for a large evening
-paper,--he knew his way about such an organism. He betrayed no undue
-haste, well knowing the subtle delight the menials would have before
-such a display of retarding his every effort, and when the fat man, Mr.
-Cerberus, who keeps the door of the _Capon_ offices, had pushed to him
-a dirty scrap of paper on which he was to write his name and business,
-he quietly asked for an envelope as well. It was given him with some
-grumbling.
-
-He wrote his message: “If you have begun machining, stop. I’ve been
-sent up here urgently.--E. E.”
-
-He closed it, gummed it down, and waited. He had not ten seconds to
-wait. A young man who looked and was underfed, a gaunt tall young man
-with hair as long and as dank as the waving weeds of the sea, received
-him with immense solemnity. It was not often that affairs of State came
-his way. One such had come earlier in that very year. It had been the
-occasion of his lunching with the exalted individual who now sat before
-him, and he had never forgotten it.
-
-“Mr. Evans,” he said rather pompously, lifting his left hand and fixing
-two large burning, feverish eyes upon the secretary, “this place is the
-confessional. Anything you say shall be sacred ... absolutely sacred!”
-
-But Evans was cheery enough.
-
-“It’s nothing of any importance,” he said, “but, well, I’m a great
-friend of the Reptons.”
-
-“I know,” said the editor sympathetically, which was odd, for Evans
-only just knew the Reptons’ address from having to write them letters,
-and the Reptons only just knew the look of Evans’ face from having once
-had to ask him to a dinner of an official sort.
-
-“Well,” went on Evans unblushingly (how valuable are men of
-this kind!), “I am a great friend, especially of dear old Lady
-Repton--through my mother,” he added in an explanatory tone, “but I
-won’t go into that. The point is this: the whole family are really
-dreadfully concerned.”
-
-“I know, I know,” said the editor of the _Capon_, still most
-sympathetic, and most grave.
-
-“Well,” said Evans with affected ill-ease, “the fact is we don’t want
-anything said about it at all--nothing. That’s the simplest way, after
-all. It’s a great trouble. You really would do me a personal service,
-and they would be so grateful.”
-
-“By all means,” said the editor of the _Capon_. He turned to a
-speaking-tube upon his right and was about to pull out the whistle,
-when a violent blast blew that instrument at the end of its chain into
-his face. The editor expressed disgust, and when this expression was
-over, asked for the statement. The statement was brought.
-
-“They’re waiting for the machine, sir.”
-
-The editor ran his blue pencil down the list, made a little X against
-one item, and said: “Bring me a proof of that, will you?”
-
-A slip of proof came up: it was to the effect that Sir Charles Repton
-was to speak at the Wycliffite Congress and from his candid and
-vigorous action of the day before, both in the House and outside it, it
-was hoped that his address would act as a clarion call in the present
-crisis of religion. (“And it would!” thought Edward, all goose-flesh at
-the thought).
-
-“There’s no harm in that,” he said. Then with sudden thought: “What’s
-the leader about?”
-
-“The Concessions,” said the editor of the _Capon_, smiling.
-
-“Well,” said Evans, “we don’t agree about that, do we?” And he smiled
-back.
-
-“Shall I leave general orders about Repton items during the day?” said
-the editor.
-
-“Why yes,” said Evans, and then remembering his little subterfuge he
-added: “Don’t print anything unless it’s directly from the family. You
-understand me?”
-
-“I understand,” said the editor. “Riggles, the sub-editor will be in
-charge after this. I’m going home.”
-
-He wrote in a large hand upon a large sheet of paper: “No Repton items,
-not even Press Agency, except from the house itself. F. D.”--for his
-name was Francis Davis. “Take that to Mr. Riggles,” he said to the
-devil, and the two men went out together.
-
-Well knowing that Davis’ house lay in the extreme of the suburbs,
-and that he himself was going into the heart of Fleet Street, Evans
-offered to give his companion a lift. To his disgust it was accepted,
-and he was constrained to drive the editor of the _Capon_ to St.
-Paul’s Station; it lost him ten minutes, and those ten minutes were
-nearly fatal. For when he had got back at full speed to the offices of
-the _Moon_, the paper had gone to press. The machines were shaking
-and thundering away in the basement, and mile after mile of diffused
-culture was pouring out in a cataract to feed the divine thirst for
-knowledge.
-
-It seemed too late, but Evans went boldly through it all the same.
-The editor was gone, but to the sub-editor he sent in his card and
-wrote upon it “From the Prime Minister.” It was a time needing heroic
-measures.
-
-He asked to see an advance copy. The leader was Repton--Repton--Repton,
-nothing but Repton.... Repton had given away the wickedness of modern
-finance; Repton for purposes of his own was prepared to expose the
-mockery of our politics; Repton would tell them the truth about the
-Concessions; they had a promise of an interview with Repton. What
-motives might have caused Repton to act as he had done they could not
-determine. It was sufficient for them that Repton, etc....
-
-The leader had a title, and the title of the leader was Repton. It had
-coined a new word: the word was “to Reptonise,” upon the model of “to
-peptonise.” The _Moon_ threatened to reptonise the whole of our public
-life.
-
-Evans spent about thirty seconds looking at the floor.
-
-“Can they stop the machines, Mr. Price?” he asked, for Price was the
-sub-editor’s name.
-
-“Yes,” said the sub-editor, “Why?”
-
-Evans walked to the window and looked out into the City street and
-said without showing his face:
-
-“Mr. Price, your proprietor is a very valued member of our party.”
-
-At the word “proprietor,” Mr. Price changed colour. Yet Evans had not
-meant the proprietor of Mr. Price, he had merely meant the proprietor
-of the _Moon_.
-
-“Mr. Price, I will tell you all” (and he told him more than all!).
-“Your proprietor left for Canada during the Easter Recess; he was taken
-ill in Montreal; he is on his way back, and he will be home next week.”
-
-Mr. Price nodded and at the same time inwardly admired the omniscience
-of the Government.
-
-“Now, Mr. Price,” continued Edward, still gazing at the street
-opposite, “there is the promise of a peerage. These things are hardly
-ever mentioned, and I tell it to you quite frankly. If that leader
-appears,”--turning round sharply--“the peerage will not be conferred,
-and your proprietor shall be told that that leader was the cause of it.”
-
-“But, Mr. Evans,” began the sub-editor blankly.
-
-Evans was suddenly determined. It was astonishing to see the change in
-the man. His conduct and attitude would have seemed remarkable to the
-most indifferent observer: to one who knew that the proprietor of the
-_Moon_ had never been, until that moment, within five hundred miles of
-a peerage, it would have seemed amazing.
-
-“Mr. Price,” said Evans rapidly and very clearly, “you are in a cleft
-stick. If you don’t print your present issue, if you must delay it, it
-will cost your proprietor a heavy sum directly and indirectly. I know
-that. But if you _do_ print it will cost him no money, but....”
-
-Mr. Price thought of the little home at Peckham; of the three young
-Prices, of Mrs. Price and of sundry affections that grow up in the most
-arid and most unexpected soils: he was in an agony as to which course
-would least destroy him: he made one last appeal:
-
-“May I have it in writing?”
-
-“Certainly not!” said Evans.
-
-“Very well, Mr. Evans,” said the sub-editor humbly, “I’ll stop the
-machines,” and with a heavy heart he rang the bell.
-
-Thus it was that the _Moon_ came out an hour later than usual, and
-that the leader dealt at so singular a moment with the pestilent
-vices of the King of Bohemia, and with his gross maladministration of
-Spitzbergen which it summoned to the bar of European opinion.
-
-Those who have wondered why Edward, without previous training so soon
-after this incident was made a partner of the great bank he now adorns,
-would wonder less if they had been present at that interview.
-
-The press was safe.
-
-That the agencies were safe went of course without saying. Block A
-(as a group of eight papers owned by one man is familiarly called by
-permanent officials) had been squared, the day before. Block B, another
-group of six owned by a friend of his, was for private reasons unable
-to publish news of this kind. The _Evening German_ wouldn’t dare, and
-the _Bird of Freedom_ wouldn’t know. The _Press_ was safe so far as
-Repton was concerned.
-
-But what about Demaine?
-
-The _Herald_ had been informed pretty sharply that it was compelled for
-unavoidable reasons to postpone its interview with Sir Charles Repton.
-The very paragraph had been written out by Edward, and the _Herald_ had
-swallowed the pill.
-
-But what about Demaine?
-
-_That_ had got ahead of them, and there was nothing to do but to wait
-until Demaine should be found. The very moment that he was found they
-could act and an explanation should be given that would soon cause the
-mystery to be forgotten. But a silence still surrounded that unlucky
-name.
-
-Nothing had been heard in the Lobbies, nothing from Scotland Yard.
-Finally, and more important, Mary Smith herself could tell Dolly
-nothing, and if _she_ could not, certainly no one else in London could.
-
-She was really fond of her cousin, and for his sake she comforted, and,
-what was more important, restrained the imprudent Sudie.
-
-As for Ole Man Benson, beyond a natural regret that such an asset as a
-son-in-law in the Cabinet was still held over as a contingent and that
-he could not for the moment close upon the option, he took the matter
-in a calm and philosophical spirit.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-
-“Oh Liberty!” says the Bulgarian poet Machinchose in a fine apostrophe,
-too little known in this country. “Oh Liberty,” etc.
-
-Never had George Mulross Demaine known the sweets of that word in the
-days when he enjoyed its privilege to the full. Now, as the brilliant
-dawn of that Wednesday awakened him upon the deep he learned the beauty
-of Freedom.
-
-Its meaning saturated his very being as he woke in his miserable cell,
-refreshed but very weak, and saw shafts of the happy morning sun coming
-level with the dancing of the sea, and making a rhythmic change of
-unreal network in the oval patch of light that was cast by the porthole
-against the filthy rust of the walls.
-
-He felt mechanically for his watch and found nothing but bare skin;
-then (such a teacher is adversity!) he to whom induction was grossly
-unfamiliar, began to induce away like any child of Nature.
-
-The sunlight was level, for the image of the porthole upon the wall was
-but little lower than the porthole itself:--therefore the sun had but
-just risen.
-
-It was June, therefore if the sun had but just risen the hour was very
-early: how early he certainly could not have answered if you had asked
-him a week ago, but adversity, that admirable schoolmistress, was
-developing the mind of George Mulross as the blossom of a narcissus
-develops under the first airs of Spring, and he was capable of
-remembering a sunrise after the ball at the Buteleys’, and another
-after a big supper at Granges’. He was in bed before half-past five on
-each occasion. It must therefore be between four and five o’clock.
-
-The term “solstice” was unfamiliar to this expectant member of the
-British Executive, but he seemed to remember that somewhere about this
-time of year the nights were at their shortest.
-
-He was full of a new pride as he made these discoveries. Then two
-things struck him at once: the first that he was ravenously hungry, the
-second that all motion of the ship had ceased. He heard no sound of any
-kind except the gentle lapping of the tiny waves alongside, for it was
-calm except for the little breeze of morning.
-
-He attempted with his new-found powers to pass the time in further
-induction, to guess by the position of the light how the ship lay, but
-as he had forgotten at which end of a ship the anchor is let go, and as
-he had no notion of the tide in the English Channel, nor even whether
-tides ran for six hours or twelve (he was sure it was one of the two),
-and as, in general, he was grossly ignorant of the data upon which
-such an induction should proceed, the effort soon fatigued him. He was
-content to prop himself up against the wall and crave for food.
-
-He heard a step outside, he struck the door with his fist. To his
-delight a key turned in it, and the doubtful visage of the boy once
-more appeared. Early as was the hour, and divine the weather, the boy
-was still gloomy.
-
-“Gettin’ us inter more trouble, orl on us, yer dirty skunk!” was his
-greeting.
-
-“I’m sure I’m very sorry,” said George. “I only knocked because I’m so
-terribly hungry. Can’t you get me something to eat?”
-
-“Yus,” said the boy thoughtfully, “I dahn’t think! Yer’d myke me chuck
-it. Yer’s particler as a orspital nuss,” he added, with a recollection
-of a brazen woman in gaudy uniform whom a kind lady had thrust upon his
-mother’s humble home just before he had gone aboard.
-
-Demaine was in acute necessity. “Look here,” he said, “get me some
-bread.”
-
-“Whaffor?” asked the boy.
-
-Demaine nodded mysteriously, and once again was his gaoler torn between
-a desire for some ultimate gain and the certitude that no present gain
-was obtainable.
-
-He was a London lad, with all the advantages that London birth implies,
-and it had already occurred to him that Demaine’s accent, manner and
-cuticle differed in a strange way from those of your stock stowaway.
-He had been impressed in the matter of the food; he was more impressed
-by certain little turns of language which he associated with those
-hateful, but, as he had been told, wealthy people, who came down and
-did good amid his mother’s neighbours in the East End; and when he
-had thought it well over and tamed his prisoner further by one more
-well-chosen epithet, he went off and came back with a hunk of bread.
-
-“Yer lucky,” he said as he returned, “thet yer on a short trip.
-Otherwyes t’d uv been biscuit....” Then he added, “and gryte wurms in
-ut!”
-
-George did not reply. He bit into the bread in ecstasy, and his eyes,
-which his acquaintances in London commonly discovered to be lifeless,
-positively gleamed upon this summer morning.
-
-“They gotter communicyte wiv the orfferities fust,” said the boy
-pompously.
-
-“Yes?” said George with his mouth full.
-
-“Ho! yus, it is!” sneered the boy, who thought there was something of
-the toff in this use of the simply affirmative. “An’ after that they’ll
-land yer, and yer’ll ave the darbies on afore breakfast-toime.” He
-added nothing this time about hanging. The details of the moment were
-too absorbing.
-
-“How do you mean ‘communicate’?” asked George carelessly and all ears.
-
-“Woy, wiv a flag, that’s ow,” said the boy.
-
-Demaine had often been told of the long and complicated messages which
-little pieces of bunting could convey, and he had himself presented to
-a country school a whole series of flags which, in a certain order,
-signified that England expected every man to do his duty. But he could
-not conceive how so complete a message as the presence and desired
-arrest of an unfortunate stowaway could be conveyed to the authorities
-ashore by any such simple means, unless indeed the presence of
-stowaways was so common an occurrence that a code signal was used for
-the purpose of disembarking that cargo.
-
-The boy illumined him.
-
-“They got th’ flag up,” he said, “syin’ ‘Send a baht,’ and when they
-sees it they’ll run up one theirselves--then’s yer toime.”
-
-But the boy’s information, as is common with the official statements of
-inferiors, was grossly erroneous.
-
-A voice came bawling down from above, ordering him to tumble up with
-the prisoner.
-
-Tumble up George did; that is, he crawled up the steep and noisome
-ladder, and as he put his head out into the glorious air, thought that
-never was such contrast between heaven and hell. He drank the air and
-put his shoulders back to it, to the risk of the green-black coat.
-
-George Mulross was one of those few men who have never written verse,
-but he was capable that moment if not of the execution at least of the
-sentiment which the more classical of my readers are weary of in Prom.
-Vinc. Chor. A. 1-19, Oh the god-like air! The depth and the expanse of
-sky!
-
-The fatherly sky was all light, the sun was climbing, and a vivid
-belt of England lay, still asleep, green and in repose under that
-beneficence; and in the midst of it, set all round with fields, lay a
-lovely little town. It was Parham.
-
-Demaine had once or twice noted how strangely glad the houses of men
-seem from off the sea, but as he was familiar rather with Calais and
-Dover, with Ostend, Folkestone and Boulogne than with other ports, and
-as he had more often approached them in winter weather than in the
-London season, there was something miraculously new to him in this
-vision which had been the delight of his forefathers: England from the
-summer sea.
-
-The clear spirit bubbling within him encountered another and muddier
-but forceful current as his eyes fell upon the first officer.
-
-That individual surveyed him with hatred but did not deign to throw
-him a word. He bade the lad stand by George in a particular place upon
-the deck till he should be sent for; he next threatened several of the
-boy’s vital organs if his prisoner were not properly kept in view, and
-having pronounced these threats, lurched away.
-
-“Th’ old man’ll want yer soon, ter fill in is sheet,” said the lad
-by way of making conversation. “Myebe ee’ll ave ye larrupped, myebe
-ee wahn’t. Ee didn’t the larst un,” he put in as an afterthought,
-as though it were the custom to larrup some seven stowaways out of
-eight by way of parting, and to make capricious exception of certain
-favourites.
-
-“Yer’ll ave to tyke thut sheet wiv yer; leastwyes whoever’s in charge
-of the baht’ll ave ter, an thye gives ut to th’ cops, and th’ cops
-shahs ut to the beak. As to do ut, to ave everyin roight and reglar.
-Otherwyes they cudden put yer awye--and they’re bahnd ter do that: not
-arf!”
-
-But Demaine was not heeding the discomforting comment of his warder. He
-was balancing in his mind the poor chances of the morning, and as he
-balanced them they seemed blacker with every moment.
-
-The shore was perhaps half a mile away: the hour say five, perhaps
-half-past. By six, or half-past six at the latest, the earliest people
-in Parham would be astir.
-
-The fixed inveterate hope of the governing class that a gentleman can
-always get out of a hole, had dwindled within him to that dying spark
-to which it dwindles during invasions and at the hour of death.
-
-He did not trust his accent, he did not trust his skin, he did not
-trust his parentage, he did not trust his wealth--alas, his former
-wealth!--to speak more accurately, his wife’s former wealth,--to speak
-still more accurately, the former wealth of his wife’s father.
-
-He trusted nothing but blind chance, his muscles and flight.
-
-He hated the vision which was in immediate prospect of the little
-weasel-faced captain with his pointed red beard, reciting by rote
-yet another string of idiotic sentences from a manual; he hated the
-vision of the next step, the men in blue, with their violence and their
-closing of his mouth by brutal means. Whether he could convince a
-magistrate he did not pause to inquire. The way was too long--it was a
-dark corridor leading to Doom.
-
-He heard a second voice calling the boy to the accompaniment of oaths
-quite novel and individual and in a high voice that he had not yet
-heard, and he thought that his hour had come.
-
-But the boy’s reply undeceived him.
-
-“Oi dursn’t!” he yelled down the decks, “Oi gotter look arter th’
-Skunk.”
-
-Apparently, thought George bitterly, he already had a fixed traditional
-name aboard the _Lily_, like Blacky and the Old Man.
-
-The cook, for it was he, emerged from the galley aft, stood in the
-brilliant sunlight and delivered rapid blasphemy with tremendous
-velocity and unerring aim.
-
-The boy whimpered and was irresolute.
-
-If the threats of the mate had been less practical, those of the cook
-might have had less effect, but between the prospect of the excision of
-his liver and of a series of hearty buffets and mighty kicks endways,
-what reasonable youth would hesitate in a civilisation such as ours?
-
-The boy faltered visibly, and turning upon the Skunk informed him once
-again that he was always gettin’ people inter trouble. Nay, more, he
-threatened to pay out the innocent cause of his despair for the divided
-duty in which he found himself.
-
-The cook re-emerged; he had fixed on a new belt of ammunition and began
-firing in a manner if possible more direct and devastating and quite as
-rapid, as that which had distinguished the first volley. And the boy,
-who was, after all, more directly the servant of the cook than of any
-one else on board, wavered and broke. With a clear statement of the
-consequences should Demaine move an inch from the spot, and a promise
-to return before a man could spit to leeward, the boy dashed off to
-the galley, and for perhaps five seconds, perhaps ten, the prospective
-Warden of the Court of Dowry was free.
-
-The movement of the human mind, says Marcus Aurelius (imitative in this
-sentence, as in most of his egregious writings), resembles that of a
-serpent.
-
-There are serpents and serpents. Minds of Demaine’s type move commonly
-with the motion of a gorged python but just roused from sleep; but
-even the python will, under compulsion, dart,--and, in those five
-seconds, not reason but an animal instinct drove the politician’s soul.
-
-He was up, on to the bale, over the bulwark and down ten feet into the
-sea, before he had even had time to formulate a plan. He could swim,
-and that was enough for him.
-
-The splash made by Demaine’s considerable form as it displaced in an
-amount equal to his weight the waters of the English Channel, came to
-the ears of the Watch, who was leaning comfortably over the farther
-railing at the other end of the vessel, looking out to seaward and
-ruminating upon a small debt which he had left behind him in the parish
-of Wapping. With no loss of dignity the Watch shuffled forward to see
-whether aught was displaced. The splash had been a loud one, but it
-might have been something thrown from the galley.
-
-He first of all looked carefully over the starboard bow to seaward.
-There was no foam upon the water: everything was still. It occurred to
-him to cross the deck; he did so in a leisurely manner and thought he
-noted far down the side, and already drifting astern with the tide, a
-rapidly disappearing ring of foam. He was a stupid man (though I say
-it that shouldn’t, for he came from Bosham, noble and fateful Mistress
-of the Sea), and he looked at the ring of foam in a fascinated manner,
-considering what could have caused it, until he was roused to life and
-to his duties by the thunder of the first officer who from the bridge
-demanded of him in perfectly unmistakable language what he had done to
-the Skunk.
-
-The sense of innocence was so strong in the honest seafaring soul that
-he replied by a simple stare which almost gave the first officer a fit,
-and in the midst of the language that followed, the boy, positively
-pale with fear, came tearing from the galley and found, not his charge,
-but the Bosham man gazing like a stuck pig at his superior above, and
-at the world in general.
-
-The reappearance of the boy was a welcome relief to the chief officer’s
-lungs and intelligence; it added fuel to his flame. He very nearly
-leapt down from the bridge in his paroxysms of wrath, and heaven only
-knows what he would have done to the wretched lad whom he would render
-responsible for the misadventure had he not at that moment caught sight
-of a little speck upon the sunlit water far astern: it was the head of
-George Mulross Demaine, battling with fate.
-
-The prospective Warden of the Court of Dowry could swim fairly well.
-It had been his practice to swim in a tank. He had swum now and then
-near shore, but he had no conception of the amount of salt water that
-can get into a man’s mouth in a really long push over a sea however
-slightly broken, especially if one enters that sea in a sort of bundle,
-without taking a proper header. Moreover, the phenomenon of the tide
-astonished him; he had imagined in his innocence that the sea also was
-a kind of tank and that he had a dead course of it for the shore, the
-nearest point of which lay just eastward of the harbour mouth.
-
-As it was, England seemed to be flitting by at a terrible rate, and
-the _Lily_, when he turned upon his back and floated for a moment to
-observe her, had all the appearance of a ship proceeding at full speed
-up Channel, so rapidly did he drift away.
-
-He swam too hurriedly and he exhausted himself, for his mind was full
-of terrors: they might fire upon him--he did not know what dreadful
-arsenal the _Lily_ might not contain!
-
-He remembered having noticed upon the cross-Channel steamers
-exceedingly bright little brass guns, the purpose and use of which had
-often troubled him. Now he knew!--and he hoped against hope that no
-such instrument of death swivelled upon the poop of the _Lily_.
-
-He dreaded every moment to catch the sharp spit of flame against the
-sunlight, a curl of smoke, the scream of the light shell, the ricochet,
-the boom that would come later sullenly upon the air, and all the rest
-that he had read of:--the first shot to find the range: the dreadful
-second that would sink him.
-
-He was relieved, as minute after minute passed, and no such experiment
-in marine ballistics was tried. There was faintly borne to his ears
-as he was swept down the ceaseless stream of Ocean, a little clamour
-which, on the spot itself, was a roaring babel; he saw a group of men
-wrestling with the davits, but the davits were stiff, and boat-drill
-was not in the programme of the _Lily_. Indeed of all the crew but two
-had ever handled such a contrivance as a davit before, and of these one
-was an Italian.
-
-Another man than Captain Higgins would have been profoundly grateful
-to see the stowaway drown; not so that conscientious servant of the
-Firm. The stowaway received such food and lodging as had kept him
-living until such time as he could be handed over to the Sheriff or
-his officers or any other servants or justices of our lord the King,
-who were competent to deal with breach of contract, tort, replevin and
-demurrer. The stowaway was responsible to the Law, and Captain Higgins
-was responsible for the stowaway; therefore must a boat be lowered. And
-because there was something grander in swinging out the davits in full
-view of a British town and harbour than in chucking the dinghy into the
-water, swing out the davits he would,--and he lost ten minutes over
-it--ten precious minutes during which the tide had carried the little
-speck that was the head of George Mulross Demaine almost beyond the
-power of his spyglass.
-
-Captain Higgins capitulated; he left the davits as they were--one stuck
-fast, the other painfully screwed half round, a deplorable spectacle
-for the town of Parham, and one shameful to the reputation of the
-sailor-men aboard the _Lily_, and he ordered the little dinghy out over
-the side.
-
-They unlashed her and let her down. Two men tumbled into her, the
-second officer took command, and they rowed away down tide with all the
-vigour that Captain Higgins’ awful discipline could inspire, directed
-in their course by his repeated injunctions and proceeding at a pace
-that must surely at last overhaul the fugitive.
-
-When Demaine heard the beat of the oars and again floated to look
-backwards, he estimated the distance between himself and the shore and
-gave himself up for lost. Now indeed there could be no doubt of the
-rope’s end! He could not disappear like a whale for any appreciable
-time beneath the surface; the tales he had read (and believed) of
-heroes in the Napoleonic and other wars, who themselves, single-handed
-and in the water, had fought a whole ship’s crew with success, he
-now dismissed as idle fables. There was nothing left for him but,
-somewhat doggedly, to continue the overhand stroke, for now that he
-was discovered there was no point in the slower breast stroke that had
-helped to conceal him. They were making (as they said in the days of
-the Clippers) perhaps three feet to his one, but freedom is dear to the
-human heart, and he pegged away.
-
-The Shining Goddesses of the Sea loved him more than they loved the
-odious denizens of the _Lily_; they set the tide in shore, and the Sea
-Lady, the Silver-Footed One, led the little waves along in his favour.
-
-He had come to a belt of water where the tide set inward very rapidly,
-along a gulley or deep of the shore water. It was a godsend to him, for
-his pursuers were still in the outer tide. He was now not a quarter
-of a mile from the water-mark, and still going strong, with perhaps
-two hundred yards between the boat and him; he could not feel their
-hot breath upon his neck, but he could hear the rhythmic yell of the
-officer astern, criticising the moral characters of his crew with a
-regular emphatic cadence that followed the stroke of the oars ... when
-his cold, numbed right foot struck something; then his left struck
-sand: ... It was England! And the English statesman, like Antæus, was
-glad and was refreshed.
-
-He stumbled along out of it--the water on the shelving sand was here
-not three feet deep. He stumbled and raced along through the splashing
-water. It fell to his knees, to his shins, to his ankles, and he was on
-dry land!
-
-A very pretty problem for the amateur tactician learned in the matter
-of landing-parties, was here presented. The dinghy must ground far out:
-she could not be abandoned; it was an even race, and his pursuers would
-be one man short from the necessity of leaving some one in a boat which
-had grounded too far out for beaching.
-
-Some such combination occurred in a confused way to Demaine, but
-he had no time for following it up. He did what he had done more
-than once in the last unhappy days--he ran. His numbed feet suffered
-agonies upon the shingle above the sand, but he ran straight inland,
-he crossed a rough road, went stumbling over a salted field, and made
-for a wind-driven and scraggy spinney that lay some half a mile inland,
-defying the sea winds. As he approached that spinney he saw two men
-from the boat just coming full tilt over the ridge of the sea road; as
-he plunged into it they were in the midst of the field beyond.
-
-The undergrowth in the spinney was thick, but Demaine had the sense to
-double, and he crept cautiously but rapidly along, separating the thick
-branches as noiselessly as he could, and bearing heroically with the
-innumerable brambles that tore his flesh. He halted a moment to look
-through a somewhat thinner place towards the field, and there, to his
-considerable astonishment, he perceived the two sailor-men dawdling
-along in amicable converse and apparently taking their time, as though
-they were out upon a holiday rather than in the pursuit of a criminal.
-
-It dawned upon George that there was a reason for this: the second
-officer could not leave the boat. The boat and the sea were hidden by
-the ridge of the sea road, and the longer the time the hearty fellows
-could spend ashore, the greater their relief from labour and their
-enjoyment of a pleasant day. He saw them sauntering towards the
-spinney; they took sticks and beat it in a sort of aimless, perfunctory
-manner, poking into the brushwood half-heartedly here and there, as
-though Demaine had been a hare whom they desired to start from its
-form. They wandered off along the edge of the wood in a direction
-opposite to his own, and paused a moment to light their pipes upon
-their way.
-
-It was a peaceful scene: but a moment would come when that scene could
-not be prolonged, and when their activity must be renewed. Demaine,
-therefore, pushed through the brushwood, still going as noiselessly as
-he could, and came out to the landward side of it upon a disused lawn.
-
-The grass was brown and rank and trampled. It had not been mown that
-season. An old sun-dial stood in the midst of it; a wall bounded it
-upon two sides, and there was the beginning of a gravel path. He
-followed that path between two rows of rusty laurels, and round a sharp
-turn came upon the house to which this derelict domain belonged. He
-came upon it suddenly.
-
-It stood low and had been masked from him by a belt of trees. He saw
-a little back door, and,--fatal as had such reasoning been in his
-immediate past,--he reasoned once more: that where there was a house
-with servants’ offices, there would be a difference of social rank,
-there would be education, there would be understanding, and he must
-certainly come into his own.
-
-His bleeding feet, the soaked rags that clung upon him, his hair
-hanging in absurd straight lines clogged with salt, would, could he
-have seen them in a looking-glass, have given him pause. But the
-exhaustion of these terrible hours was now upon him; the heat of the
-sun was increasing,--he was under an absolute necessity for food and
-repose.
-
-He boldly opened the door and went in.
-
-He found himself in a little room of which this door was evidently the
-private communication with the garden; it was a room that lifted his
-heart.
-
-To begin with, it was lined everywhere with books, and though he
-himself had read perhaps but eighteen volumes in the whole course of
-his early manhood, yet a room lined with books justly suggested to
-him cultivation, leisure, and a certain amount of wealth. A volume
-was lying with its flyleaf open upon the table. He saw pasted in it
-a book-plate in the modern style, made out in the name of Carolus
-Merry Armiger. Mr. Armiger, it seemed, was his unsuspecting host. Mr.
-Armiger’s literary occupations did not interest George Mulross; such as
-they were he gathered them to have some connection with the Ten Lost
-Tribes.
-
-Manuscripts were lying upon the table, manuscripts consisting of long
-double lists of names with a date between them. The Jewish Encyclopedia
-was ranged in awful solemnity before these manuscripts; the Court
-Guides, reference books and almanacs of London, Berlin, New York,
-Frankfort, Paris, Rome and Vienna, were laid ready to hand, and sundry
-slips detailing the family origins and marital connections of most
-European statesmen, including of course our own, completed the work
-upon which the chief resident of the house appeared to be engaged.
-
-Forgetting the deplorable condition in which he was, a big scarecrow
-reeking and dripping salt water from sodden black rags that clung to
-his nakedness, George Mulross sank into a large easy-chair and breathed
-a sigh of profound content.
-
-They might look as long as they chose, he thought they would look for
-him in vain! His pursuers did not know who he was nor that he had come
-back into his own rank of life again and had certainly found, though
-they were as yet unknown to him, equals who would as certainly befriend
-and protect him.
-
-He pictured the scene to himself:--the owner of the house enters--he is
-wearing spectacles, he is a busy literary man, a professor perhaps--who
-could tell?--a learned Rabbi! The papers and the books upon the table
-seemed to concern the Hebrew race. At any rate, a literary man--a solid
-literary man. He would come in, preoccupied, as is the manner of his
-tribe, he would look fussily for something that he had mislaid upon the
-table, his eyes would light upon the form of George Mulross Demaine. At
-first sight he would be surprised. A man partially naked, glistening in
-the salt of the sea, his hair falling in absurd straight wisps clotted
-with damp, his face a mixture of grime and white patches where the
-water had washed it, his nails a dense black, his bare feet bleeding,
-would stand before him. But this strange figure would speak a word, and
-all would be well. He would say:
-
-“Sir, my name is Demaine. You are perhaps acquainted with that name. I
-beg you to listen to me and I will briefly tell you,” etc. etc.
-
-The literary man would be profoundly and increasingly interested as the
-narrative proceeded, and at its close a warm bath and refreshment of
-the best would be provided, a certain deference even would appear in
-his host’s manner when he had fully gathered that he was speaking to a
-Cabinet Minister, and from that moment the unhappy business would be no
-more than an exciting memory.
-
-As George Mulross so mused he rose from his chair and was horrified to
-note that there stood in the hollow of it little pools of salt water,
-that the back was dripping wet, and that where his feet had reposed
-upon the Axminster carpet damp patches recalling the discovery of the
-Man Friday, the marks of human feet, were clearly apparent.
-
-Even as he noted these things and appreciated that they would
-constitute some handicap to his explanation, he heard voices outside
-the door.
-
-Alas, they were not the voices of the governing classes, they were
-not the voices of refinement and leisured ease. Oh! no. They were the
-voices of two domestics engaged in altercation, the one male, the
-other female; and the latter, after affirming that it was none of her
-partner’s business, evidently approached the door of the room in which
-he was.
-
-For a moment his heart stopped beating. He heard her hand upon the
-outer handle of the door; by what form of address could he melt that
-uncultivated heart? Those bitter hours of his just passed had filled
-him with a mixture of terror and hatred for such English men and women
-as work for their living. He had always regarded them as of another
-species: he beheld them now in the aspect of unreasoning wolves.
-
-By the grace of heaven the door was locked. He heard a female
-expletive, extreme in tone though mild in phrase, directed towards the
-domestic habits of her master, especially with regard to the privacy
-of his study, and he next heard her steps moving away. She was coming
-round by the garden; there was not a moment to lose ... and there was
-not a cranny in which to hide.
-
-I have expatiated on the effect of misery and of terror upon George’s
-brain: I have but here to add that for two seconds he was a veritable
-Napoleon in his survey of terrain. He grasped in a flash that if he
-retreated by the garden door he was full in the line of the enemy’s
-advance without an alternative route towards any base; and with such an
-inspiration as decided Jena, he made for the chimney.
-
-The eccentricities of the master of the house (for he was obviously
-eccentric) appeared to include a passion for old-fashioned fireplaces;
-at any rate there was no register nor any other devilish device for
-impeding the progress of the human form, and George, with a dexterity
-remarkable in one of his bulk, hoisted himself into the space
-immediately above the grate. There the chimney narrowed rapidly to a
-small flue, and he must perforce support himself by the really painful
-method of pressing with his feet against the one wall, and with his
-cramped shoulders against the other, lying in the attitude of a man
-curled up in bed upon his right side,--but in no such comfort, for
-where the bed should be was air.
-
-He had not gained his lair a moment too soon. He could discover from
-it the hearth-rug, a small strip of the carpet, and the legs of sundry
-tables and chairs, when he heard the garden door open, and other
-legs,--human legs--natty, and their extremities alone visible, passed
-among the legs of the inanimate things. The head which owned them
-far above continued, as the legs and feet bore it round the room, to
-criticise the habits of its master. It dusted, it went to the farther
-side of the apartment, the feet disappeared. They reappeared suddenly
-within his line of vision and stopped dead, while the invisible head
-remarked in a tone of curiosity:
-
-“Whatever’s that!”
-
-She was looking at the imprint of the feet. Next he heard her patting
-the damp arm-chair, and exclaiming that she never!
-
-The strain upon George Mulross Demaine was increasing, but had it been
-tenfold as severe he dared not descend. A slight involuntary movement
-due to an effort to ease his shoulder off a point of brick produced a
-fall of soot which most unpleasantly covered his face.
-
-He could hear a startled exclamation from the wench, her decision that
-she didn’t understand the house at all, and her sudden exit.
-
-Hardly had she shut the garden door behind her when a key was heard
-turning in the lock in the other door opening into the house, and the
-Expected Stranger, the Unknown Host, entered. The moment of George’s
-salvation was at hand.
-
-Two very large flat boots slowly tramped into the narrow region he
-could survey: above each nine inches of creased grey trouser leg could
-be seen; the boots, the trouser legs, did not approach the arm-chair;
-they took little notice apparently of things about them. Their owner
-grunted his satisfaction that none of his papers had been removed by
-the maid to whom he applied a most indiscreet epithet; he grunted
-further satisfaction that she had laid his fire and not lit it.
-Apparently it was among his other eccentricities to have a fire upon a
-June morning simply because the room was cold, and to let it die down
-before noon.
-
-The Unknown came close to the grate. George heard large hands fumbling
-upon the mantelpiece, the unmistakable rattle of a match-box; next
-an arm midway to the shoulder, and at its extremity a hand bearing
-a lighted match appeared, and the Stranger Host thoughtfully lit the
-Newspaper upon which the fire was laid.
-
-The dense and acrid smoke produced by our Great Organs of Opinion when
-they are put to this domestic purpose rose up and enveloped the unhappy
-George. It was the limit! And with one cry and with one roar, as
-Macaulay finely says of another crisis, the prospective Warden of the
-Court of Dowry slid down into the grate, ruining the careful structure
-of coal and wood, and stood in the presence of--he could scarcely
-believe his eyes--William Bailey!
-
-That tall, bewhiskered, genial oligarch expressed no marked
-astonishment. It is, alas! a characteristic of the eccentric that,
-just as he sees the world all wrong where it is normal, so, before the
-abnormal he is incapable of expressing reasonable emotion. All he said
-was, in a mild tone of voice:
-
-“Well! well! well!”
-
-To which Demaine answered, with the solemnity the occasion demanded:
-
-“William, don’t you know me?”
-
-“Yes, I know you,” said William Bailey thoughtfully, “Dimmy, by God!...
-Dimmy, d’you know that you present a most extraordinary spectacle?”
-
-“You needn’t tell me that,” said Dimmy bitterly, drawing his hand
-across his mouth and displaying two red lips which appeared in the
-midst of his features like those of a comedy negro. “The point is what
-can you do for me?”
-
-“My dear Dimmy,” said William Bailey, his interest increasing as the
-situation grew upon him, “I am delighted to hear that phrase! I haven’t
-heard it since I gave up politics! I haven’t heard it since they tried
-to make me an Under Secretary,--only it used to be worded a little
-differently. Old schoolfellows of mine whom I had thrashed with a
-cricket stump in years gone by used to come up washing their hands and
-saying, ‘What can I do for you?’ Now for once in my life some one has
-asked me what _I_ can do for _him_. Sweet Dimmy, all I have is at your
-disposal. Would you like to borrow some money, or would you prefer to
-wash?”
-
-“I wish you’d chuck that sort of thing,” said Demaine, angrily and with
-insufficient respect for a senior. “It isn’t London and I’m not out for
-jokes. I’m in trouble.”
-
-“In trouble?” said William Bailey, asking the question sympathetically.
-“Oh don’t say that! Dirty, maybe, and very funnily dressed, but not, I
-hope, in trouble?”
-
-“Damn it!” said the other, “what are you in this house?”
-
-“What I am out of it,” said William Bailey cheerfully, “a harmless
-eccentric with a small property, several bees in my bonnet (the present
-one an anti-Semitic bee), and a great lover of my friends, Dimmy,
-especially men of my own blood. Now then, what do you want?”
-
-“Do you own this house, or do you not?” demanded Dimmy.
-
-“Why,” said William Bailey, “it is very good of you to ask. I am what
-the law calls a lessor or lessee, or perhaps I am a bailee of the
-house. The house itself belongs to Merry. You know Merry, the architect
-who builds his father’s houses?”
-
-“The books have got ‘Armiger’ in them,” said Dimmy suspiciously.
-
-“That’s a title,” replied William Bailey, “not an English title,” he
-continued hurriedly, “it was given him by the Pope.”
-
-“Anyhow, you’re master here?” said Demaine anxiously.
-
-“Oh yes,” said Bailey, “I’ve been master here since the end of the
-first week. At first there was some doubt whether it was Elise or the
-groom or Parrett, the housekeeper, who was master. But I won, Dimmy,”
-he said, rubbing his hands contentedly, “I brought down my servant
-Zachary and between us we won. They’re as tame as pheasants now.”
-
-“Very well then,” said Demaine, “you’ve got to do two things. You’ve
-got to cleanse me and to clothe me and to hide me during the next few
-hours if the necessity arises.”
-
-“I don’t know why you shouldn’t cleanse yourself,” said William Bailey
-thoughtfully. “You’ve never learned a trade, Dimmy, and you were never
-handy or quick at things, but you’re a grown man, and there’s lots of
-hot water and soap and stuff in the bathroom; there was a beastly thing
-called a loofah that Merry had left there, but I’ve burned it.”
-
-“Don’t be a fool, Bill!” pleaded Demaine, “there isn’t time, really
-there isn’t. Then tell me, what clothes have you?”
-
-“Mine are too narrow in the shoulders for you,” said William Bailey,
-thinking, “Zachary is altogether too thin. You’re big, Dimmy, not to
-say fat. The trousers wouldn’t meet and the coat wouldn’t go on. But I
-can put you to bed and send for clothes. What d’you mean about hiding?
-I can see you have some reasons for privacy; in fact if you _hadn’t_,
-getting up that chimney would be a schoolboy sort of thing to do at
-your age. Have you been bathing without a licence, and some one stolen
-your clothes? Or have they been having a jolly rag at the Buteleys’?
-They’re close by.”
-
-“I’ll tell you when I’ve washed,” said Demaine wearily, “only now do
-let me slip up to the bathroom like a good fellow. Good God, I’m tired!”
-
-William Bailey opened the door and peered cautiously into the corridor,
-listened for footsteps and heard none, and then, after locking the door
-of the study behind him, as was his ridiculous habit, he popped up a
-narrow pair of stairs, with Dimmy, whose old nature had sufficiently
-returned to cause him to stumble, following at his heels.
-
-They were not quite out of the range of the front door when there came
-a violent pull at the bell, and Elise went forward to open it.
-
-William Bailey pushed his guest and cousin into the bathroom and went
-down to meet two policemen who stood with awful solemnity, clothed
-in suspicion and in power, at his threshold. From the depths of his
-sanctuary and through the crack of the half-open window, Demaine heard
-a conversation that did not please him.
-
-“Very sorry to have to ask you sir,” a deep bass was saying, “we’re
-bound to do it.”
-
-“We’re bound to do it,” echoed a tenor.
-
-Demaine did not hear his cousin’s reply.
-
-“Are you sure he’s been on the premises, sir?” came from the first
-policeman, whom I will call “_Basso Profondo_.”
-
-“Positive,” answered William Bailey’s voice, cheerful and loud.
-“Positive!”
-
-“Did you see him with your own eyes, sir?” this from the second
-policeman, whom I will call “_Tenore Stridente_.”
-
-“Certainly I did, or I wouldn’t be telling you this,” came again from
-William Bailey a little testily.
-
-“Well now, sir, we’ve suspicions that he’s on the place still.”
-
-“You’re wrong there,” said William Bailey, “he ran off down the Parham
-road when he heard my dog bark.”
-
-“We didn’t meet any one on the Parham road, sir:” it was the voice of
-the Tenore policeman who spoke, evidently a less ingenuous man than the
-Basso.
-
-“I can’t help that,” said William Bailey. “You’re welcome to look over
-the house.”
-
-They thanked him and walked in like an army.
-
-“It is for your own good, sir,” said the first policeman, in his deep
-bass.
-
-“Besides which it’s our duty,” said the second policeman in his _tenore
-stridente_.
-
-“Of course,” said William Bailey, “of course, and I hope that while one
-of you is doing the good, the other will look after the duty. It’s the
-kind of thing people like me are very fond of doing, hiding stowaways.
-I’ve hidden bushels of them.”
-
-The tenor was indifferent to his sarcasm, the bass was touched.
-
-“You know very well, sir,” he said, “what the criminal classes are, or
-rather you gentlemen don’t know. Why, he’d cut the women’s throats in
-the night and make off with the valuables.”
-
-“Would he cut mine?” asked William Bailey as he followed them from room
-to room.
-
-“He’s capable of it,” said the bass, nodding mysteriously. “He’s not an
-ordinary stowaway,” he continued, lowering his voice almost to a gruff
-whisper, “_he’s well known to the police_. He’s _Stappy_, that’s what
-he is, STAPPY THE CLINKER! He’s done this trick before, getting aboard
-a vessel and pretending he’s a vagabun; the Chief knows all about him!
-He did a man in last Monday night in London!”
-
-To the unhappy man in the bathroom there returned with vivid horror the
-recollection of Lewes Gaol; but so long as William Bailey’s wits did
-not fail him he knew that more than even chances were in his favour.
-His mood changed suddenly, however, when the police, who had been
-perambulating the small rooms near his retreat, suddenly rattled the
-door of his bathroom and said:
-
-“What’s in here?”
-
-“I do beg of you to take care, gentlemen,” said William Bailey angrily,
-“that’s the bathroom, and if you want to know, my niece is inside.”
-
-“Oh I beg your pardon,” said the bass, “I’m sure.” He had the sense not
-to doubt the master of the house in a matter directly concerning his
-own interest. But the tenor added:
-
-“We must make a note of it, sir.”
-
-“By all means,” said William Bailey, “by all means. Her name is
-Rebecca.”
-
-George Mulross Demaine, in the delight of the very warm water, was
-soothed to hear them tramping heavily down the stairs once more.
-
-They examined every room and cranny of the place until they came to the
-study door.
-
-“It’s my study,” said William Bailey apologetically, “I always keep it
-locked.”
-
-He unlocked it and they entered. Their trained eyes could see nothing
-unusual in the aspect of the room until the tenor inadvertently
-putting his hand upon the back of the arm-chair discovered it to be
-both wet and to the taste salt. He had found a clue! In a voice of
-excitement unworthy of his office, the intelligent officer shouted:
-
-“We’ve got ’im sir, we’ve got ’im! He’s been here! Look--sea water.
-We’ve got ’im!” He looked round wildly as though expecting to see the
-runaway appear suddenly in mid-air between the floor and the ceiling.
-
-“It is certainly most disconcerting,” said William Bailey in evident
-alarm. “But wait a minute. Perhaps he came in here from the garden to
-see what he could get, found the door locked on the outside and made
-out through the garden again; that would explain everything.”
-
-“No it wouldn’t sir,” said the bass respectfully, “it wouldn’t explain
-_that_!” And his mind, which, if slower than his colleague’s, was prone
-to sound conclusions, pointed his hand to the wreck of the fire, to the
-heaps of soot that lay upon it, and the disturbance of the fender.
-
-“He’s gone up the chimney, that’s what he’s done,” said the tenor.
-
-“That’s what he’s done,” said the bass, putting the matter in his own
-way, “he’s gone up the chimney.”
-
-William Bailey put his head in and looked up the flue, the top of which
-was a little square of blue June sunlight above. “I don’t see him,”
-said he.
-
-The constables, one after the other, solemnly performed the same feat.
-
-“A man couldn’t get up that,” said Bailey stoutly.
-
-“Ah, _Stappy_ could,” said the bass in a tone of one who talks of
-an old acquaintance, “Stappy could get out of anywhere, or through
-anything! He’s a wonderful man, sir!”
-
-Suddenly the tenor solved the whole business.
-
-“He’s on the roof!” he said.
-
-Nothing would suit them but ladders must be brought, and they must
-climb upon the slates, while William Bailey, consoling himself with the
-thought that the property was not his, took the opportunity of dashing
-up to the bathroom and banging at the door.
-
-“Dimmy, Dimmy!” he whispered loudly, “Dimmy, get out.”
-
-“I’m all wet,” said Dimmy.
-
-“You’re used to that,” said Bailey unfeelingly. “Dry your feet. Never
-mind the rest. Quick!” He threw a dressing-gown in, and Dimmy, as clean
-as Sunday morning, emerged.
-
-“Are your feet quite dry, Dimmy?”
-
-“Yes,” said that great Commoner, still a trifle ruffled.
-
-“Well then, let me think.... Go in there.”
-
-He pushed Demaine into a little writing-room that gave out of the
-corridor.
-
-“Now then, go to that little table and sit perfectly
-tight. Do as I tell you and you are saved.
-Depart-by-but-one-iota-from-my-specific-instructions-and though you’ll
-ultimately be redeemed by your powerful relatives from the ignominy of
-incarceration, you cannot fail to become a laughing-stock before your
-fellow-citizens! Do you take me, Dimmy?”
-
-Dimmy, who like the rest of the family was never quite certain whether
-William Bailey’s final outbreak into downright lunacy might not take
-place at any moment, suddenly sat where he was bid, and his cousin
-returned within thirty seconds bearing a woman’s walking-cloak and
-a respectable bonnet which, I regret to say, were those of Parrett
-herself. Bailey huddled the cloak upon the younger man, banged the
-bonnet upon his head, tied the ribbons under his chin, disposed his
-person with the back to the door, in the attitude of one writing a
-note, and said:
-
-“Dimmy, could you talk in a high voice?”
-
-“No, I can’t!” said Dimmy.
-
-“Try. Say ‘Oh don’t, I’m busy.’”
-
-“I can’t!” said Dimmy again.
-
-“Great heavens! is there no limit to the things you can’t do?” said
-William Bailey testily. “Try.”
-
-At a vast sacrifice of that self-respect which was his chiefest
-treasure, Dimmy uttered the grotesque words in a faint falsetto.
-
-“Excellent!” said William Bailey. “Now when you hear the word
-‘Rebecca’ that’s your cue. Say it again.”
-
-The second step is easier than the first, and Dimmy this time replied
-at once, the falsetto quite just: “Oh don’t, I’m busy.” And William
-Bailey was satisfied.
-
-By this time the policemen could be heard scrambling down from the
-roof; they had found nothing, which, seeing that the roof was in shape
-exactly pyramidical, was not wonderful.
-
-“Well, he’s gone, sir,” said the bass a little relieved.
-
-“We must see the bathroom before we leave, though,” added the tenor
-fixedly.
-
-“By all means,” said William Bailey, “if it’s empty,” he added with a
-decent reserve.
-
-They went upstairs and on their way he opened the writing-room door,
-and said:
-
-“Oh, there she is. Rebecca!”
-
-“Oh don’t worry me, I’m busy,” boomed in a manly voice from the seated
-figure.
-
-“Sorry I’m sure sir,” said the tenor, who was now sincerely apologetic.
-“We have no desire to disturb the lady, but it was our duty.”
-
-“Of course,” said William Bailey hurriedly, “of course,” and he shut
-the door, mentally renewing his profound faith in the imbecility of
-political life.
-
-The active and intelligent officers of the law gazed mechanically round
-the bathroom; they were too modest to examine a certain damp heap of
-black cloth that was flung huddled into a corner. They went out with
-every assurance that they would not have disturbed Mr. Bailey for
-a moment had they not been compelled by that sense of duty to their
-country to which they had already so frequently alluded.
-
-William Bailey accompanied them to the gate, in the fixed desire to see
-them off the place, and with a heartfelt silent prayer that Parrett
-would not go into the writing-room until he had returned.
-
-As they reached the gate the bass, who remembered the necessity for
-subscriptions to local clubs, charities and balls, and especially to
-the Policemen’s balls, charities and clubs, said once more that he
-hoped Mr. Bailey understood they had only done their duty.
-
-“Of course,” he added, “we know Mr. Merry very well, and we take it
-you’re a friend of his.”
-
-“Yes sir,” said the tenor more severely, “and we know who you are. We
-know everybody in the place, sir. It’s our business. We know what they
-do, where they come from and where they go to. They can’t escape us.”
-
-With this cheerful assurance the bass and the tenor both slightly
-saluted, and the gate shut behind them.
-
-Outside the gate a little crowd consisting of the two sailor-men,
-a dingy officer of the mercantile marine, three young boys, a
-draggle-tailed village girl, and a spaniel, awaited the return of the
-police, and when it was known that they had drawn blank, this little
-crowd paradoxically enough gave cry. Each was now as certain that he
-had seen the fugitive in some one of a hundred opposing and impossible
-directions as he had formerly been determined that the refugee was
-still concealed in Mr. Merry’s house.
-
-William Bailey hurried back: he went straight to the writing-room. He
-thanked heaven that no one had disturbed Rebecca. Without an apology
-he rapidly untied the ribbons of the bonnet, hoicked off the cloak and
-was bearing them back to Parrett’s room when he heard the voice of that
-admirable female raised in hot remonstrance against the misdeeds of a
-domestic.
-
-In tactics as in strategy there is a disposition known as the
-offensive-defensive. William Bailey was familiar with it. He adopted
-it now, and in a voice that silenced every other sort, he roared his
-complaint that the servants perpetually left their clothes hanging
-about at random right and left all over the house.
-
-“Whose is this?” he demanded, pointing to the cloak and bonnet where he
-had flung them sprawling on a chair.
-
-“It’s mine, sir,” said Parrett with considerable dignity.
-
-“Oh it is, is it?” said Bailey a little mollified. “I’m sorry, Parrett.
-If I’d known it was yours I’d have spoken to you privately.”
-
-“I never left them there, sir!” said Parrett all aruffle with
-indignation.
-
-“I never said you did, I never said you did. It’s none of my business.
-I don’t care who left them there; but I will have this house _orderly_
-or I will not have it at _all_,” with which enigmatical sentence for
-the further discipline of Merry’s impossible household, he went back to
-Demaine in his dressing-gown and brought him through the corridor to
-the study.
-
-“Now my dear fellow,” he said, “are you cold?”
-
-“Yes,” said Dimmy.
-
-“Are you hungry?”
-
-“Yes,” said Dimmy.
-
-“Are you thirsty?”
-
-“I am very tired,” said Dimmy.
-
-“Very well then, you shall eat and drink. I will try and light the
-fire.”
-
-He did so and the room, which was already warm with the June sun,
-became like an oven. As he rose from his chair Demaine said in some
-anxiety: “For heavens’ sake don’t send for the servants!”
-
-“I’m not going to,” said William Bailey simply. He went to a cupboard
-and brought out some ham, a loaf and a bottle of wine.
-
-Demaine ate and drank. When he had eaten and drunk he could hardly
-support himself for fatigue.
-
-William Bailey took him to his own room and told him to sleep there.
-“I’ve established,” he said, in a genial tone, “so healthy a reign of
-terror in this house that you certainly will not be disturbed if you
-sleep in my bed. I will see about the clothes.”
-
-And thus, after so many and so great adventures, George Mulross Demaine
-slept once again between sheets, in a bed well aired, in a room with
-reasonable pictures upon the walls, and reasonable books upon the
-table, with blankets, with curtains, with pillows, with mahogany
-tallboys, with three kinds of looking-glasses, with an eider-down
-quilt, with a deep carpet, with a silver reading lamp, soothed by a
-complete cleanliness, and, in a word, amid all that the governing
-classes have very properly secured for themselves during their short
-pilgrimage through the wilderness of this world.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-
-All through that hot noon and down the beginning of the sun’s decline,
-George Mulross slept heavily; he slept as in a death, in Parham.
-
-He slept in the house of Carolus Merry Armiger, under the shield and
-tutelage of William Bailey, eccentric, and with God’s benediction upon
-him. His troubles were at an end.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Meanwhile in London, the young and popular Prime Minister had received
-his secretary’s report. The _Moon_ and the _Capon_ were squared.
-
-How squared he was not busy to inquire. Gold and silver he had
-none--for those purposes at least--that would not be in the best
-traditions of our public life: but they _were_ squared: Edward assured
-him they were squared, and there was an end of it.
-
-There was more even than Edward’s assurance, though that was as solid
-as marble; there were two early copies of the papers themselves which
-had been ordered and brought to him. The leader of the one dealt with
-those eternal Concessions in Burma, and he smiled. There was not a
-word about Repton. The leader of the other was on Fiddlededee, and the
-Prime Minister experienced an immense relief.
-
-But there was still Demaine,--or rather, there was still no Demaine.
-And there was still Repton, mad--mad--mad!
-
-Between Dolly and the awful unstable equilibrium of the modern world,
-between him and a cosmic explosion, was nothing but the four walls
-round Repton, Lady Repton who bored him, and the sagacity of Edward. It
-was a quarter to three, a time when meaner men must wend them to the
-House of Commons. He also wended. He was the shepherd and he must look
-after his sheep.
-
-That august assembly was astonished to perceive the Premier positively
-present upon the front bench during the process of that appeal to the
-Almighty which precedes the business of the day. But _that_ did not get
-into the papers:--there is a limit!
-
-As he knelt there he knew that a man whom he could not disobey was
-about to ask a question of which he had given private notice. He feared
-it much, he more feared those supplementary questions which are so
-useless to the scheme of our polity but which buzz like unnecessary
-midges round the cooking of the national food. And when prayers were
-over and questions begun, not an inquiry as to an Admiralty contract,
-not a simple demand for information from the Home Secretary as to the
-incarceration of a beggar or the torture of some insignificant pauper,
-but put his heart into his mouth.
-
-Mr. Maloney’s long cross-examination on the matter of the postmistress
-at Crosshaurigh gave him a little breathing space. They couldn’t bring
-Repton or Demaine in on that! But there was an ominous question about a
-wreck, and who should answer it? He had indeed arranged that the answer
-should proceed from the Treasury, but the clouds were lowering.
-
-The question came as mild as milk: it was concerned with the wreck
-which still banged and battered about on the Sovereign Shoals; it had
-been put down days before, and the chief legal adviser of the Crown
-rose solemnly to reply.
-
-“My right honourable friend has asked me to answer this question. He
-has no further information beyond that which he has already furnished
-to the honourable gentleman, but every inquiry is being made and papers
-will shortly be laid upon the table of the House.”
-
-The fanatic rose, the inevitable fanatic, towering from the benches,
-and thundered his supplementary demand: What had been done with the
-gin? He was told to give notice of the question.
-
-For three dreadful seconds the Prime Minister feared some consequence.
-His fears were well grounded. A gentleman rose and spoke from the
-darkness under the gallery and desired to know why the _Warden of the
-Court of Dowry_ was not present to deal with matters concerning his
-Department? He would have been reproved by the Chair had not the young
-and popular Prime Minister taken it upon himself to rise and reply.
-
-“It is the first time,” he said, “and I hope it will be the last, that
-I have heard the illness of a colleague made the excuse for such an
-interruption.”
-
-From the benches behind him those who knew the truth applauded and
-those who did not applauded more loudly still.
-
-With what genius had he not saved the situation! And the questions
-meandered on, and all was well, save for that last dreadful query of
-which he had had private notice.
-
-It was put at the end of question-time, not, oddly enough, by the
-member who most coveted the apparently vacant Wardenship, nor even by
-any relative of that member, nay, not even by a friend: a member surely
-innocent of all personal motives put that question. He desired to know,
-whether rumours appearing in the papers upon the Wardenship of the
-Court of Dowry were well founded, whether the Wardenship of the Court
-of Dowry were not for the moment vacant, and if so what steps were
-being taken to fill that vacancy.
-
-The reply was curt and sufficient: “The honourable member must not
-believe everything he reads in the newspapers.”
-
-It is not often that wit of a lightning kind falls zigzag and
-blasts the efforts of anarchy in the National Council. Wit is very
-properly excluded from the exercise of legislative power; but when it
-appears--when there is good reason for its appearance--its success is
-overwhelming: and by the action of this one brilliant phrase, perhaps
-the most dangerous crisis through which the Constitution has passed
-since the flight of James II. was triumphantly passed.
-
-Question-time was over. The young and popular Prime Minister, now
-wholly oblivious of his left lung, answered one or two minor questions,
-gave assurances as to the order of business, and left the House a
-happier man than he had entered it. He went straight to Downing Street.
-When he got to his room Edward was there awaiting him.
-
-“They’ve got Demaine,” he said.
-
-The luck had turned!
-
-For half a minute Dolly couldn’t speak: then he gasped:
-
-“Where?”
-
-“I don’t know,” said Edward. “I don’t think anybody knows. There was a
-telephone message sent to the Press everywhere.”
-
-A thousand horrid thoughts! Found dead? Found wandering and imbecile?
-Found----? He was faster bound than ever--and that just in the hour
-when he must act and decide. He said again:
-
-“Where did it come from?”
-
-“I couldn’t find out.”
-
-“Edward,” said the Premier faintly, as he sat down and fell to pieces,
-“you know how to do these things.... Puff!-- ... Do go like ... a good
-fellow--find out ... quietly ... ch ... _where_ it came from.”
-
-Edward went into the next room and called up 009 Central. He was given
-1009, kept his temper and repeated his call. A Being replied to him in
-an angry woman’s voice and begged him not to shout into the receiver.
-
-He asked for the clerk in charge and waited ten minutes. Nothing
-happened.
-
-The Prime Minister in his room was not at ease. His mood was if
-anything burdened by the delivery of an express message which ran:
-“They’ve found Dimmy. M. S.” The writing was the writing of Mary Smith.
-He asked the messenger with some indifference to find out who had sent
-the message and where it had come from.
-
-Meanwhile, in the absence of Edward, he went into an outer room and
-begged them to call up Mrs. Smith’s house. When he returned there was a
-telegram from Charing Cross upon his table which ran:
-
-“George found.”
-
-There was no signature. He waited patiently for the return of Edward or
-the messenger or of something--hang it all, _something_!
-
-The little buzzer on his table buzzed gently and the telephone
-whispered into his ear that “Mrs. Demaine wished him to know that Mr.
-Demaine was found.” He had already asked “Where is he?” when he was cut
-off.
-
-He had received so much information and no more when Edward returned
-with the information that the news had come in from Trunk Seven.
-
-“What is Trunk Seven?” said the Prime Minister.
-
-“I don’t know,” said Edward.
-
-They sat together for a moment in silence. The Premier, as befitted his
-office, was a man of resource. Outside Westminster Bridge Underground
-Station men of insufficient capital but of economic ambition deal in
-the retail commerce of news. It occurred to the Prime Minister to
-reassure himself from their posters, and from a room that gave upon
-Westminster Bridge Road, his excellent eyesight--for it was among his
-points that his eyesight at fifty-four was still strong--perused the
-placards opposite.
-
-They were clear enough.
-
- “LOST MINISTER FOUND”
-
-said the most decent.
-
- “DEMAINE RESULT”
-
-said the _Capon_, which appeared to have forgotten its good manners.
-
-It ought not to be difficult to get the _Capon_ without loss of
-dignity. He returned to his room and in about five minutes the _Capon_
-was brought to him.
-
-Under the heading “Stop Press News,” he saw “Demaine Result,” and
-then underneath, more courteously: “Mr. Demaine has been heard of.” It
-was printed in faint wobbly type in a big blank space--and there was
-nothing more.
-
-Edward, entering at that moment, told him that the exact point from
-which the message had been sent could not be discovered until Brighton
-had cleared.
-
-“Oh!” said the Prime Minister.
-
-He was going to call up Mary Smith, but Edward assured him that nothing
-more than an inept half-wit maid would answer the demand--he had tried
-it.
-
-Dolly sat on in patience and wondered where Demaine had been
-discovered. The matter was of some moment. Without the least doubt he
-would have to make up his mind as to the succession of the office that
-very afternoon, and it was already close on five.
-
-Demaine might be discovered suffering from a loss of memory (though
-what he had to remember Dolly couldn’t conceive); he might have been
-discovered in the hands of the police. He might have been discovered
-attempting for some unknown reason to fly the country. Till the Premier
-knew more he could not act.
-
-For a good half-hour he persuaded himself that it was better to wait.
-Then he went out and motored to Mary’s.
-
-And Mary of course was not at home.
-
-He went on to Demaine House, and found there nothing but a man making a
-very careful inventory of all the pictures, all the furniture and all
-the glass. He came back to his room, and at last the mystery was solved.
-
-All good things come to an end, as do all delays and all vexations,
-and life itself. By a method less expeditious than some of those
-which modern civilisation has put at our disposal, the full truth was
-revealed to him.
-
-George Mulross Demaine was at that moment (it was six o’clock) upon
-that afternoon of Wednesday, the 3rd of June, ... drinking brandy and
-soda in great quantities and refusing tea, at the Liverpool Street
-Hotel. A courteous message from the Manager thereof was the source of
-the information, and Edward--Edward who never failed--had been the
-first to receive it.
-
-The message had gone up and down London a good deal before it had got
-to the House of Commons; at Demaine House the Manager had been told to
-try Mary Smith’s number, and at Mary Smith’s the half-wit having almost
-had her head blown off by Edward’s repeated violence, very sensibly
-suggested that the Manager should telephone direct to the House of
-Commons and give a body peace.
-
-An instant demand (said Edward) that Demaine should himself come to
-the instrument, had been followed by a very long pause, after which he
-was told that the gentleman had gone off in a four-wheeler with a lame
-horse, and had left the bill unpaid.
-
-There was nothing to do but to wait.
-
-Half-past six struck, and the quarter. Their fears were renewed when,
-just upon seven, a figure strangely but neatly clothed was shown into
-the room, by a servant who displayed such an exact proportion between
-censure and respect as would have puzzled the most wearisome of modern
-dramatists to depict.[4]
-
-It was Demaine!
-
-His clothes were indeed extraordinary. You could not say they fitted,
-and you could not say they did not fit. The trousers and the coat and
-the waistcoat were made of one cloth, a quiet yellow. The lines of the
-shoulders, the arms, the legs, the very stomach, were right lines: they
-were lines proceeding from point to point; they were lines taking the
-shortest route from point to point. They were straight: they were plumb
-straight. The creases upon the trousers were not those adumbrations
-of creases which the most vulgar of the smart permit to hint at the
-newness of their raiment: they were solid ridges resembling the roofs
-of new barns or the keels of racing ships. The lapels of the coat did
-not sit well upon it; rather they were glued to it. The waistcoat did
-not fit, it stuck. And above this strange accoutrement shone, with more
-fitness than Edward and Dolly could have imagined, the simple face of
-George Mulross Demaine.
-
-His hair--oh horror!--was oiled; one might have sworn that his face was
-oiled as well.
-
-The colour of his skin resembled cedarwood save on the nose, where it
-resembled old oak. If ever a man was fit, that man was George Mulross,
-but if ever a man was changed, George Mulross was also that man.
-
-“Sit down,” said the Prime Minister delightedly. “Oh my dear George,
-sit down!”
-
-“I can’t,” said George, using that phrase perhaps for the twentieth
-time during the last forty-eight hours. “They’re ready-made,” he
-explained, blushing (as Homer beautifully puts it of Andromache)
-through his tan. “I didn’t sit down in the train and I didn’t sit down
-in the cab.”
-
-“Where have you been, George?” asked the Prime Minister.
-
-“I’ve had an adventure,” said George modestly.
-
-“But hang it all, where have you _been_?”
-
-“I’ve been to sea,” said George.
-
-“Oh-h-h-h-h-h!” said the Prime Minister.
-
-“Beastly luck, isn’t it?” said George simply.
-
-“It’s worse than that,” said Edward grimly.
-
-“Why?” asked George with something like fright upon his honest if
-oleaginous face.
-
-“Well, never mind,” said Dolly. “It must have been pretty tough. Were
-you blown out to sea?”
-
-George Mulross Demaine’s only reply was to feel inside his coat for
-the place where pockets are often constructed for the well-to-do, but
-where no pocket seemed to exist. He made five or six good digs for
-it, but it was not there. He looked up huntedly and said: “Wait a
-minute.” He put his hand into his waistcoat. There again there was no
-receptacle, but that which should have held his watch--and even the
-young idealism of the Prime Minister permitted him to wonder why no
-watch was there. Then George did what I hope no member of the governing
-class has ever done before--he felt in his trousers pocket, and thence
-he pulled out a bit of paper.
-
-“Yes,” he said, concealing the writing from them, “You’re quite
-right. I _was_ blown out to sea. I had a”--(here he peered closely
-at the paper and apparently could not make out a word.) “Oh yes,”
-he said, “a terrible time.” His diction was singularly monotonous.
-“I-thought-I-should-never-have-survived-that-terrible-night.
-A-foreign-ship-passed-me-but-the-scoundrels-left-me-to-my-fate.
-I-was-nearly-dead-when-under-the-first-rays-of-morning-I-saw-the-
-British-flag-and-my-heart-leaped-within-me.”
-
-Edward, though not usually impetuous, bereft him of the document, and
-as he did so the Prime Minister saw the square firm characters.
-
-“Good lord!” shouted the Premier, “It’s Bill!”
-
-And it _was_ the writing of William Bailey.
-
-“William’s been very good to me, if you mean that,” said Demaine
-reproachfully.
-
-The Prime Minister burst into the first hearty laugh he had enjoyed in
-fifteen years. After all, men like Bailey were of some use in the world!
-
-In spite of Dimmy’s obvious choler, with the tears of laughter in
-his eyes, and interrupted by little screams of merriment, the Prime
-Minister completed the reading.
-
-“‘I bit my arm, I sucked the blood, I cried “A sail! a sail!”; and in
-less time than it takes to read this, hearty English hands were tugging
-at the oars.’ (“Oh Edward, Edward!” gasped the exhausted man, and when
-he had recovered his breath continued:) ‘With the tenderness almost of
-a woman he lifted ...’ (“Who lifted you?” he asked between his shrieks
-and wagging his forefinger to George Demaine. “Oh George, who lifted
-you?”) ... ‘He lifted me on board the good ship _Lily_, and when I told
-him of the treacherous action of the foreigners, muttered “Scoundrel”
-between his teeth. But a man has naught to fear when the brave hearts
-of his countrymen are his shield. They landed me at Lowestoft, pressing
-into my hands their petty savings, and left me with three hearty cheers
-that did me almost as much good as to feel my feet once more upon
-British soil.’”
-
-The Prime Minister laid his head upon the table, wagged it gently from
-side to side, uttered a series of incongruous sounds, and very nearly
-broke down.
-
-George Mulross Demaine was exceedingly angry.
-
-“It may seem very funny to you,” he began, “but----”
-
-“Don’t, George!” said the Premier, going off again, “Don’t!”
-
-But George was boiling. “How would you like it----” he began
-shouting.... When the door opened and there was announced with extreme
-solemnity Mr. Pickle, Mr. Hogge, Mr. Gracechurch, Mr. Fuell, Mr. Nydd,
-Sir John Clegg, Lord Cuthbertson, and last but by no means least, Mr.
-Howll....
-
-One would have said that nothing had happened. There were three doors
-to the room--as is proper to every room in which farces are played.
-
-Through one of these Edward very gently led the stiff but still burning
-George.
-
-Through the second appeared an official gentleman commonly present at
-interviews of this kind.
-
-Through the third the deputation had entered; and the young and
-popular Prime Minister, all sympathy, all heart, all ears, all teeth,
-all intelligence, heard such an indictment of the maladministration
-of Spitzbergen by the infamous King of Bohemia as he had perhaps not
-listened to more than thirty-eight times during the course of the last
-two years.
-
-Edward took George by the arm through room after room, down a corridor,
-into a hall, then as though by magic an excellent motor appeared.
-
-They got in, Edward still making himself perfectly charming, Dimmy in a
-constrained attitude stretched tangentially to the edge of the seat,
-and the motor drove them for a very great number of miles, during which
-journey Edward learned all the main story; the robbery, the refuge
-aboard-ship, the escape, and the fortunate discovery of William Bailey.
-
-George was given to understand with that method and insistence most
-proper to his character that _that_ story had better be forgotten
-and that only what he had been given to read,--and only the gist of
-that,--might very well be published to his wife and to the world....
-
-It was an understood matter. George did now and then like to row and
-fish; a friend had asked him to run down to Port Victoria--it was only
-an hour; the friend hadn’t turned up. George only meant to go out for a
-minute, put up the sprits’l like a fool, got blown right away in front
-of a so’wester into the Swin; then the wind going round a point-o’-two
-got blown, begad, right over the Gunfleet. High tide luckily, and the
-rest naturally followed.
-
-These nautical experiences filled George with doubts.
-
-“There wasn’t any so’wester,” he said with bovine criticism.
-
-“You silly ass,” said Edward, “who notices a thing like that in London?”
-
-“You’d notice it at sea,” said George with profound conviction.
-
-“Anyhow, unless you want a good story against you to the end of your
-life, you’ve got to be outside for thirty-six hours, and you’ve got to
-land a dam long way off from Parham,--I can tell you that!” said Edward
-firmly.
-
-And George agreed.
-
-They dined together at Richmond, which suburban town they had reached
-by Edward’s directions, and George, replete after so much suffering,
-became most genial. He betrayed in his conversation the fact that Sudie
-might or might not know the truth; he had not dared to communicate
-with her. William Bailey had done so after getting his new clothes,
-but there had been no one at home. There was only a man in, making an
-inventory, and the footman thought the message had something to do with
-him. What Sudie might have heard from others he didn’t know.
-
-“Where did the telephone message come from?” asked Edward who
-remembered the torturing anxiety of his Chief upon that point which now
-seemed so futile.
-
-“I don’t know,” George bleated, if I may use so disrespectful a term of
-a man with £100 a week. “I really don’t know. He hired a motor, I know
-that, and he drove it himself.”
-
-“Oh he did, did he? Where did he drive it to?”
-
-“To a station,” said George lucidly.
-
-“A long way off?” asked Edward.
-
-“Oh dear!” said George, “Don’t ask me. Right away over all sorts of
-places.”
-
-“Now, Demaine, listen,” said Evans, concentrating “Could you see the
-sea?”
-
-“No,” said George with a shudder.
-
-“Could you see the river,--anything?”
-
-“No,” said George. “We got there at three, and William telephoned from
-the station.”
-
-“But damn it all!” cried Edward, “what was the name of the station?”
-
-“I don’t know,” said George, “I didn’t notice.”
-
-Edward tried another approach. “Were there houses round it?”
-
-“Oh yes, lots,” said George, “lots--and they had laurels, and there was
-a lot of gas lamp-posts, and there was a tramway--oh it was a beastly
-place!”
-
-Then Evans understood and Kent, the Garden of England, was in his mind:
-Kent and one of its deeply bosomed towns, Chislehurst haply or St. Mary
-Cray. “But why did you go to Liverpool Street when you got in at Cannon
-Street?” he said.
-
-“How did you know I got in at Cannon Street?” asked George with
-wide-open eyes like a child who sees the secretly marked card come out
-of the pack.
-
-“Never mind. Why did you go to Liverpool Street?”
-
-“William told me to,” answered George simply.
-
-“You’ll make a good front benchman,” said Edward half to himself. “Do
-you know why he told you to go to Liverpool Street?”
-
-“No,” said George, “I don’t.... I don’t know.”
-
-“Well,” said Edward, as though conveying a profound secret, “if ever
-you happen to be at Lowestoft, that’s the way you get in to London.”
-
-“Oh, is it?” said George blankly.
-
-“Where did he buy your clothes?” asked Edward suddenly, “what shop?”
-
-“Oh, in Parham somewhere,” said George, “I don’t know where. I put ’em
-on before I started of course. I couldn’t stay in a dressing-gown.”
-
-A thought occurred to Edward. He pulled back the collar of Demaine’s
-coat, and saw marked upon a tape, “Harrington Brothers, Parham.”
-Without so much as asking his leave he cut the label.
-
-“What’s on the shirt?” he asked laconically.
-
-George opened his waistcoat and looked. “Six sixty-six,” he said.
-
-“It is the mark of the beast,” said Edward.
-
-“Who do you mean?” said George, bewildered. “William Bailey lent it to
-me.”
-
-“If you’d told me that,” said Edward, “I wouldn’t have asked you what
-the mark was; and what’s more, if you had told me the mark I could
-have told you the owner. Good lord!” he muttered, “what other man in
-England!... Had he hauled his Jewish Encyclopedia down there?” he
-suddenly turned round to ask.
-
-“Yes,” said George eagerly, “how did you know?”
-
-“Oh nothing,” said Edward, “only I know he is fond of it. Did you eat
-ham?”
-
-“Yes,” said George thinking closely, “I did. Yes, I remember
-distinctly, I did.”
-
-The expression of Edward was completely satisfied.
-
-The time had come for their return. George, whose carelessness about
-money had received very distinct and very severe shocks in the last few
-months--nay, in the last few days--insisted upon paying, and Edward,
-who knew more than was good for him, allowed him to pay: and further
-advised him to spend the morrow, Thursday, in bed. “At any rate,” he
-concluded, “not where the sharks can get at you. Wait till Dolly sends,
-and that’ll be Friday, I know.”
-
-They drove back to Demaine House, and Sudie, having heard the news from
-half London, was left to deal with the truant as she saw fit.
-
-As for Edward, he was back late at night in Downing Street where
-bread-and-butter called him. But he found his chief with the mood of
-that happy afternoon long past, for, one encumbrance well discharged,
-the other did but the more gravely harass him, and the memory of
-Repton, of Repton doing he knew not what,--perhaps at that very moment
-wrecking any one of twenty political arrangements--tortured him beyond
-bearing.
-
-But as the Premier had justly thought that afternoon, the tide had
-turned; and when the tide turns in the fairway of a harbour, though it
-turns here and there with eddies and with doubt, at last it sets full,
-and so it was now with the fortunes of our beloved land and of its
-twentyfold beloved Cabinet.
-
-Repton was at that very moment restored to his right mind--his Caryll’s
-Ganglia were restored to their normal function--and would never tell
-the truth again.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-
-All night Sir Charles Repton had tossed in an uneasy slumber; all night
-his faithful wife Maria had sat up watching him. She dared not trust a
-trained nurse; she dared not trust a single member of the household,
-for he muttered as he slept strange things concerning the governance of
-England, and stranger things concerning his own financial schemes.
-
-At one moment, it was about half-past four in the morning,--much at the
-time when Demaine, seventy miles away, upon the bosom of the ocean, had
-woken to see the sun--his predecessor in the Wardenship of the Court
-of Dowry (and still the titular holder of that office) had started
-suddenly up in bed, and violently denounced a man with an Austrian name
-as having cheated him by obtaining prior information upon the Budget.
-He asked rapidly in his mania why Consols had gone up in the first week
-of April, and would not be pacified until his wife, with the tact that
-is born of affection, had assumed the rôle of the unpleasing foreigner
-and had confessed all. Then and then only was he pacified and fell into
-the first true sleep he had enjoyed for twenty-four hours. He slept
-until eleven, and she, brave woman that she was, snatched some little
-sleep at his side, but only upon the edge of sleep as it were, waking
-at any moment to shield him from the consequences of his disease.
-
-When he woke she herself made it her duty to go downstairs and fetch
-him his breakfast, but though his repose had recruited his body, his
-dear mind was still unhinged.
-
-He would have it that the Royal Family when they invested in some
-concern were not registered under their true names, and he began a long
-wild rambling harangue about the death duties and some new story about
-yet another outlandish name, and the insufficiency of the taxes for
-which it was responsible. The whole thing was described in a manner so
-clear and sensible as added to the horror of the contrast between his
-sanity and that other dreadful mood.
-
-By noon, still lying in his bed, he was contrasting to her wearied ear
-the cost of the Tubes in London as against those in Paris, and making
-jokes about “boring through the London clay.” He went on to ask why a
-friend of his had drawn his salary as a Minister for some little time
-after his death, and suddenly went off at a tangent upon the noble
-self-sacrifice of Lord Axton in exiling himself to a tropic clime,
-threatening that unfortunate peer with certain bankruptcy and possible
-imprisonment unless a report upon the Bitsu Marsh were favourable. Then
-for a blessed half-hour he was silent.
-
-At the end of it he called for a pen and paper, and wrote a number of
-short notes. Luckily he gave them to her to be posted; she read but a
-few, and with trembling hands she burned them all, even the stamps,
-though she knew how particular he had been in the old days on that
-detail.
-
-He dressed and came down. She persuaded him--oh how lovingly,--to
-sit in his favourite room overlooking the Park. She forgot that it
-overlooked the crowded throng, and from close upon one until late in
-the afternoon this devoted angel clung to him while he poured out
-meaningless denunciations of all his world, up hill and down dale,
-relieved from time to time (a relief to him but not to her) by a sudden
-throwing up of the window, and an address to the passers-by.
-
-He warned more than one omnibus as it passed, of an approaching combine
-between the various lines, and urged the shareholders to buy while yet
-there was time. At one awful moment he had begun excitedly to point out
-the figure of a Bishop upon the opposite pavement and to begin a full
-biography of that hierarch, when she thought it her duty to slam down
-the window and to bear the weight of his anger rather than permit the
-scene.
-
-Small knots of people gathered outside the house, but the police had
-been warned and they were easily dispersed, with no necessity for
-violence beyond the loss of a tooth or two on the part of the crowd.
-
-As though her task were not enough, the house was full of the noise of
-bells, message after message calling for news and for information, but
-she had already given orders to the secretary to write out whatever
-commonplace messages might occur to him, and he faithfully performed
-his duty.
-
-In her confusion she could see no issue but to try yet another night’s
-sleep, and when he carried his hand to his head as he now and then
-did, when the touch of pain stung him, she comforted herself with this
-assurance, that a paroxysm of such violence could not long endure.
-
-I say a paroxysm of such violence, though there was nothing violent in
-the man’s demeanour: the horror lay in the cold contrast between the
-pleasant easy tone in which the things were said and the things that
-were said in that pleasant easy tone, while the violence was no more
-than the violence of contrast between his absurd affirmations and the
-quiet current of the national life.
-
-The printing of one-tenth of those simple, easily delivered words might
-have ruined the country. We owe it to Lady Repton--and I trust it will
-never be forgotten--that no syllable of them all was printed, and that
-the greater part of them were not even heard by any other ear than her
-own.
-
-She had persuaded him to an early dinner; she had even put it at the
-amazing hour of half-past seven. She had ordered such food as she knew
-he best loved, and the wine that soothed him most--which happened to
-be a Norman champagne. She was particular to request a full service of
-attendance, for her experience told her that in such surroundings he
-was ever at his best.
-
-Another attack of pain in the head seized him and passed. She sat
-doggedly, and endured. This admirable wife after her day-long watch was
-exhausted and heart-sick. She saw no issue anywhere. She sat by her
-husband’s side, starting nervously at the least sound from below, and
-listening to his impossible commentaries upon contemporary life, his
-hair-raising stories of his friends, his colleagues and even of her own
-religious pastors, and his bouts of self-revelations, or rather let
-us hope, of diseased imaginings, when there was put into her hand an
-express letter.
-
-The superscription was peculiar; it ran:
-
- To the Rt. Hon.
- To the
- The Lady C. Repton, M.V.O.
-
-She opened it in wonderment. Its contents were far simpler than its
-exterior: they ran as follows:
-
- “MADAM,--Your husband’s case noted as per enclosed cutting. I know
- what is wrong with him and I can cure him. My price is five hundred
- dollars ($500.00) one hundred pounds (£100). The operation is
- warranted not to take more than ten minutes of his valuable time.
-
- “Will call upon you when you are through tea and he is quite rested,
- somewheres round eight o’clock.
-
- “Yrs. etc., SCIPIO KNICKERBOCKER”
-
-
-Caught in the fold of this short note was a newspaper paragraph and a
-card printed in gold letters upon imitation ivory:
-
- DR. SCIPIO KNICKERBOCKER, M.D.
- 415 Tenth St.
- London, Ont.
-
- And the Savoy Hotel.
-
-Had she been alone she would have prayed for guidance.
-
-Eight o’clock, of all hours! And what was “Ont.”?
-
-Drowning women catch at straws. Under no other conceivable
-circumstances would Lady Repton have caught at such a wretched straw
-as this. But the faculty had deserted her, she had no remedy; she saw,
-she knew, everybody knew, that her husband was mad; she divined from
-twenty indications and especially from the suddenness of the pain, that
-the madness was some simple case of mechanical pressure. And suppose
-this man really knew how to cure him? She dared not ask her husband to
-put yet earlier the hour of his meal, at which he had already grumbled;
-beside which, it was too late. The incomprehensible Scipio would arrive.
-
-She was still in an agony of doubt when she accompanied her husband
-(who as he went down the stairs and entered the dining-room was
-chatting gaily upon the amours of a prominent member of the Opposition)
-and as their lonely meal proceeded in the presence of those great
-over-dressed mutes, their servants, to all her other anxieties was
-added her irresolution upon the prime question, whether she should or
-should not accept the desperate aid of an utterly unknown man, perhaps
-an adventurer.
-
-Just as Sir Charles had finished his soup, and with it his amusing
-little story about the Baronetcy which though it had been paid for by
-the son and heir (who was solvent) came out after all in the Birthday
-List as a Knighthood,--just as he had finished his soup I say, he gave
-a loud cry and put both hands to his head just behind the ears.
-
-“Crickey how it hurts, William!” he remarked to the butler.
-
-“Yes, Sir Charles,” said the butler in the tone of a hierarch at his
-devotions.
-
-“It’s gone now,” said the Baronet, with a sigh of relief, “but it
-_does_ hurt when it comes! What’s the fish?” and he continued his meal.
-
-He drank a great gulp of wine and was better.... “It’s dry,” he said
-doubtfully, “it’s too dry ... but there are advantages to _that_. You
-know why they make wine dry, William?”
-
-“Yes, Sir Charles.”
-
-“Oh! you do, do you? You’re getting too smart. You couldn’t tell me,
-I’ll bet brazils!”
-
-“No, Sir Charles.”
-
-“Why,” said Repton with a merry wink, “it’s to save your mouth next
-morning!” Then up went his hands to his head again and he groaned.
-
-“Is your head hurting you again, darling?” said Lady Repton when she
-saw the gesture repeated.
-
-“Yes, damnably,” said Sir Charles in a loud tone. “It’s hurting just
-under both ears, just where Sambo gave ... ah! that’s better ... (a
-gasp) ... gave the Tomtit that nasty one in the big fight I went to see
-last week--the night I telephoned home to say that I was kept at the
-House,” he added by way of explanation.
-
-The servants stood around like posts, and Lady Repton endured her agony.
-
-“I think what I should have enjoyed most,” mused Sir Charles after this
-revelation, “would have been to run across old Prout just as I came out
-of that Club. Not that he knows anything about such things, but still,
-it was a pretty lousy place. Besides which, the people I was with! It
-would have been fun to see old Prout sit up. Shouldn’t wonder if he’d
-refused to let me speak at the Parson’s Show after that; and in _that_
-case,” ended Sir Charles significantly tapping his trousers pocket,
-“there’d be an end to the wherewith!” He nodded genially to his wife.
-“There’d be a drying up of the needful! Wouldn’t there, William?” he
-suddenly demanded of the gorgeous domestic, who was at that moment
-pouring him out some wine.
-
-“Yes, Sir Charles,” said the hireling in a tone of the deepest respect.
-
-“That’s what keeps ’em going, my dear,” he said, “and here’s to you,”
-he added, lifting his glass. “Are you put out about something?” he
-said, with real kindness in his voice.
-
-“It’s nothing, it’s nothing,” said that really Christian woman, nearly
-bursting into tears.
-
-“I’m really very sorry if I’ve hurt your feelings in any way, my dear,”
-said Charles Repton.
-
-No symptom of his malady was more distressing than this unmanly
-softness, it was so utterly different from his daily habit.
-
-“I’d never dream of wounding her ladyship intentionally; would I,
-William?” he asked again.
-
-“No, Sir Charles,” said William.
-
-“I think we’d better go upstairs, dear,” said the unfortunate lady. “Oh
-dear!” she sighed as a sudden peal rang through the house, and then
-subsiding, she said: “Oh it’s only a bell!”
-
-“Her ladyship’s nervous to-night, William,” said Repton as one man
-should to another.
-
-“Yes, Sir Charles,” repeated William in a grave monotone.
-
-A card was brought in upon a salver of enormous dimensions and of
-remarkable if hideous workmanship.
-
-Lady Repton recognised the name.
-
-“I must go out a moment. I’ll be back in a moment, Charles.” She looked
-at him with a world of anxiety and affection, and left him chatting
-gaily to the servant.
-
-Scipio Knickerbocker stood without.
-
-Any doubts upon the matter were settled not only by his appearance but
-by his first phrase which ran in a singular intonation:
-
-“Lady _C._ Repton? I am Scipio Knickerbocker, M.D. (Phillipsville),
-Ma’am,”--and he bowed. He was an exceedingly small man; he wore very
-long hair beautifully parted in the middle; his jaw was so square,
-deep and thrust forward as to be a positive malformation, but to
-convey at the same time an impression of indomitable will, not to
-say mulish obstinacy. His arms and legs were evidently too thin for
-health, and the development of his chest was deplorable. He was dressed
-in exceedingly good grey cloth, but his collar, oddly enough, was of
-celluloid. His buttoned boots were of patent leather, his tie had been
-tied once and for ever, and sewed into the shape it bore. He carried in
-his left hand an ominous little black leather bag.
-
-“Come into this room,” said Lady Repton hurriedly. She took him into
-a small room next to the dining-room, and communicating with it by a
-little door; she switched on the electric light and stood while she
-asked him breathlessly what credentials he had.
-
-“Ma’am,” said the physician in a metallic staccato, “I hev no
-credentials. What I propose to-night will be my sole credential.”
-
-In the silence before her reply, Sir Charles’ merry monologue,
-occasionally broken by the grave assent of the butler, could be heard
-in the next room.
-
-“What do you say you can do?” she asked.
-
-“Ma’am, let me first tell _you_ right now what the Senator’s gotten
-wrawng with him. In nineteen fourteen, month of September, I could not
-hev told you; but in nineteen fourteen, month of October, I could: fur
-your distinguished British physicist _and_ biologist, Henry Upton, then
-pro-mulgated his eppoch-making discovery. You hev hurd tell of Caryll’s
-Ganglia?”
-
-“No,” said Lady Repton nervously, and in a quavering voice, “I have
-not.”
-
-“Ma’am,” said the Imperial authority with perfect composure, “I hev
-them here.”
-
-He dived into his bag and produced a little card on which was perfectly
-indicated the back of the human head, only with the skin and hair
-removed; two lumps on either side of the neck of this diagram bore in
-large red letters, “Caryll’s Ganglia,” and two white lines leading from
-them bore in smaller type, “Caryll’s Ducts.”
-
-This card he gravely put into her hands. She looked at it with some
-disgust: it reminded her of visits to the butchers’ during the
-impecuniosity of her early married life.
-
-When, as the Son of Empire fondly imagined, his hostess had thoroughly
-grasped the main lines of cerebral anatomy, he suddenly thrust his hand
-into the bag again and pulled out a little pamphlet, which, as it is
-carefully printed at the end of this book and as the reader will most
-certainly skip it, I shall not inflict upon her in this place.
-
-It was a reproduction, in portable form, of the great lecture delivered
-in the January of that year at the Royal Institute. It set forth the
-late Henry Upton’s discovery that Caryll’s Ganglia were the seat of
-self-restraint and due caution in the Human Brain.
-
-The poor woman was too bewildered to make head or tail of it, and
-whether the reader give herself the pains to peruse it or no is
-indifferent, for its contents in no way affect this powerful and moving
-tale.
-
-“Madame,” he said when she lifted her eyes from it and as he fondly
-imagined had mastered its details,--“you do not perhaps see the
-con-nection.”
-
-Her face assured him that she did not.
-
-“Neither,” he added grandiloquently, “did the world, until I perceived
-that if indeed such functions attached to Caryll’s Ganglia, why
-the least obstruction of their ducts would condemn the sufferer to
-occasional violent pain accompanied by such inability to refrain
-from expression as must ruin his career and ultimately make a wreck
-of his bodily frame. Madame, cases of such obstruction I hev found
-to hev occurred in the ducts. Madame, _I_ discovered by what slight
-touch of the lancet the tiny _im_pediment could be instantly removed.
-Madame,” he continued, “the Caryll’s ducts in Sir Charles’ head are
-ob-structed, hence the recurrent pain and the lamentable attack of
-VERACITITIS from which he in-dub-it-ab-ly suffers.”
-
-“Velossy what?” gasped Lady Repton.
-
-“_Veracititis_, Ma’am. The phrase is my own; for it is I who have
-identified the relation between the ganglia and the distressing
-symptoms you have observed. He stands before you, _he_ does. Madame, it
-is already enshrined in the proofs of the Columbia Encyclopedia”--he
-dived once more into his bag and handed her yet another paper--“as
-_Veracititis Knickerbockeriensis_. In Ontario since Washington’s
-Birthday, we hev hed three cases; I was called over privately a month
-ago for a most distressing case, luckily suppressed--never hurd of,
-Madame, outside the family. I hev operated with success. Ma’am, I can
-operate with success upon your husband.”
-
-At this moment a loud scream of pain from the next room, followed by a
-gasp of relief and the expletive “Great Cæsar’s Ghost!” almost decided
-Sir Charles’ faithful spouse. Another scream that proved the spasms to
-be increasing in violence quite decided her. She hurriedly re-entered
-the dining-room, found Sir Charles white with the severity of the
-suffering, and took him gently by the hand.
-
-“Darling,” she said, “I have a practitioner who can relieve this. He is
-waiting for you.”
-
-“Oh,” sighed Sir Charles, as the pain left him, “I’m glad to hear it,
-profoundly glad. They’re all such scoundrels, Maria, ... but if he’s a
-surgeon and can cut something out, I’ll trust him.”
-
-“It won’t be as bad as that,” said Maria, tenderly helping the Baronet
-out through the small door towards the inner room.
-
-Hardly had he set his eyes on the little doctor when he burst into a
-hearty laugh.
-
-“What a ridiculous little ass, Maria!” he said at the top of his voice.
-“Good lord, what a little rat!”
-
-If proof were wanted of the truth of Scipio’s contention, his demeanour
-at this painful moment was sufficient. It was plainly evident to Lady
-Repton’s not insufficient dose of intellect that no man would have
-stood firm who had not seen the ghastly disease in its worst forms
-before.
-
-“Well,” said Sir Charles, “so you’re going to cut me up, are you?”
-
-“Oh! _My_ no!” said Scipio. “Lady Repton would never hev permitted
-a serious operation without your full con-currence. My proposition,
-Senator, is nawthing but two slight pricks in the neighbourhood of the
-pain. Ye’ll hardly feel it, but it’ll change ye,” added the determined
-Knickerbocker with a suspicion of a smile upon his bony jaws.
-
-“What with?” said Sir Charles a little nervously. (“Ouch!” by way of
-digression as there was a stab of pain.) “Yes, anything, s’long as you
-can do it quickly.”
-
-“It don’t take but a moment,” said Scipio. “But there’d better be some
-one hold your hands. There’s no pain worth accountin’.”
-
-“Might we re-quest the Senator to be seated?” he politely suggested to
-the lady.
-
-Sir Charles as politely commented: “I’m not a Senator, you skimpy
-little fool! Good lord, Maria, where do people like that come from?”
-
-And as he chatted thus, Scipio passed one firm hard skeleton hand over
-the top of that great brain, and with the other, even as Sir Charles,
-with his chin bent upon his chest, was occupied in explaining to Maria
-the physical deficiencies of his medical attendant, he put the edge of
-the lancet in the precise position behind the ear which his science had
-discovered.
-
-“It’s his beastly Yankee accent, if it isn’t that beastlier thing, the
-Australian,” the great Imperialist was in the act of saying when the
-lancet struck suddenly and was as suddenly withdrawn.
-
-“You’re quite right, monkey,” said Sir Charles in a weaker voice, “it’s
-only a prick, and I think”--his voice still sinking,--“that it’s only
-due to your great position in the medical world that I should express
-my heartfelt thanks for your courteous services. It is men like you,
-sir, who mean to suffering humanity....” Sir Charles suddenly stopped.
-His voice grew a little louder. “Did you say he was a Yankee or an
-Australian, Maria? Australians have the Cockney ‘a’; a filthy thing it
-is, too!”
-
-The skeleton hand was poised again upon Sir Charles’ head; he felt
-his chin pressed down upon his chest; there was another sharp little
-stroke, this time behind his left ear, and with a deep sigh he seemed
-to sink into himself.
-
-Scipio quietly touched the delicate point of his instrument with
-antiseptic wool, put it back into its case and watched his patient with
-a professional eye.
-
-The man was dazed. He gripped his wife’s hand until he almost caused
-her pain, and they could hear him mutter disconnected words:
-
-“The highest possible appreciation.... My public position alone ...
-sufficient reward ... in its way a link between ... provinces ... our
-great Empire ... daughter ... daughter ... daughter....” Then almost
-inaudibly “... nations.”
-
-For perhaps five minutes the Great Statesman was silent, and his
-breathing was so regular that he might have been asleep.
-
-“Will he go to sleep, doctor?” whispered Lady Repton.
-
-Scipio Knickerbocker shook his head. “He’ll be less rattled every
-minute, Ma’am,” was his pronouncement, and once again he proved his
-science by the justice of his prognostication.
-
-Sir Charles stood up, a little groggy, leant one hand on the back of a
-chair, took a deep breath, stood up more strongly, and said at last in
-a voice still weak but quite clear:--
-
-“Thank you sir. How can I thank you? I seem to remember”--he passed his
-hand over his forehead--“I seem to remember some one telling me that
-you were born,--though I assure you it is impossible for us in England
-to distinguish it,--in one of our Britains Overseas. Sir, an action
-such as that which you have just done--a good deed if I may call it
-so,” he went on more loudly, seizing Scipio’s right hand between both
-of his, “is a cement of Empire! I will never forget it, never! Will you
-excuse me a moment sir, while I speak to Lady Repton?”
-
-With his best and most winning smile Sir Charles asked this question of
-Scipio, who for the tenth or eleventh time that evening, bowed with a
-kink in the fourteenth vertebra.
-
-He drew his wife into the hall.
-
-“I suppose he wants payment on the spot, doesn’t he, Maria? These
-specialists usually do.”
-
-“Yes dear,” said Lady Repton, her old awe returning with his changed
-mood. “Yes dear, I’m afraid he does ... he ... in fact, I’m afraid I
-promised it him.”
-
-“How much?” said Sir Charles sternly.
-
-“Well dear, it doesn’t matter, does it? I’ll pay.”
-
-“But it does matter. It matters a great deal, Maria. It all comes out
-of _my_ pocket in the long run. How much did he stipulate for?”
-
-“A hundred pounds,” said Lady Repton.
-
-“Oh come,” said Sir Charles, greatly relieved. “A hundred! That’s a
-good lot. How often will he come for that?”
-
-“He won’t want to come again, dear,” said Lady Repton.
-
-“What!” said Sir Charles, “a hundred pounds for that?”
-
-“My dear--if you knew the difference!” said Lady Repton.
-
-“Yes, yes, I know,” he said impatiently, “the pain’s gone. It can’t be
-helped, and of course ninety’s a broken sum. He’d have taken fifty,
-Maria. I ought to have seen to this myself,” he added.
-
-And so, the matter settled, he returned.
-
-“You’ll allow me to leave you one moment with her ladyship,” he said in
-his most winning manner. Then suddenly, “_Good_-night,” and with a warm
-grasp of the hand Sir Charles left them.
-
-Lady Repton was moved beyond words. She put into the young man’s hand a
-packet of notes which she had carefully prepared. “It is nothing,” she
-said, “it is nothing for what you have done, but oh, doctor, will it
-last?”
-
-“It’ll last for ever--at least,” he corrected himself hurriedly,
-“they’ve all lasted so fur, and it’s more’n a year since I did the
-first. It isn’t the _kind_ er thing that comes on again. ’Tain’t a
-growth.” He was almost going to say what it was, when he remembered
-that he held the monopoly. Then, lest he should stay too long in
-that house where he was, after all, but a paid instrument, he very
-courteously bade her good-night, and as he went home, carrying
-his little bag, Scipio reflected that he liked Maria, Lady Repton,
-better than he did her husband. But he remembered that operations for
-Veracititis were, of their nature, causes for grievous disillusion.
-
-He put the matter from his mind and took a cab back to his hotel and to
-bed.
-
-Thus was Sir Charles Repton cured of Veracititis, late upon Wednesday
-night, the 3rd of June, 1915, and he slept his old sleep.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-
-It was Friday morning, the 5th of June, 1915, and the young and popular
-Prime Minister was busied in the Inaugural Ceremony of the Wardenship
-of the Court of Dowry.
-
-Repton or no Repton, the place must be filled. Demaine was back and
-Demaine must be there on the front bench before there was an explosion.
-
-The Inaugural Ceremony which introduces a Statesman to the Wardenship
-of the Court of Dowry, technically called “L’Acceptance,” in strict
-constitutional practice requires the presence of at least three
-persons, the outgoing Warden (technically the Dischargee), the incoming
-Warden (technically the Discoverer) and the Sovereign; but since
-GHERKIN had, in spite of his eccentric Radicalism, raised the office
-to its present position, the outgoing Warden could be represented by
-proxy, though such a substitution was rarely made since it eliminated
-the quaint custom of the “Braise”--one hundred pounds one hundred
-shillings one hundred pence, and a new brass farthing specially minted
-for the occasion, the whole in a silver-gilt case, and handed over to
-the outgoer, to be regarded with historic respect and some one of its
-coins to be kept as an heirloom.[5]
-
-But Dolly, as he considered the situation on the Friday morning, Friday
-the 5th of June, 1915, could see no way out of it; he must simply tell
-Lady Repton briefly, and best by telephone, that she must not dream of
-her husband’s appearing at Court, even with a keeper, and that it would
-be necessary for the Repton household to forego the hundred sovereigns,
-the hundred shillings, the hundred pence and the new brass farthing
-specially minted for the occasion (the whole in a silver-gilt case),
-rather than have a scandal.
-
-It was Friday, and he was glad to remember it, a Private Members’ Day.
-There were no questions. There was all Saturday and Sunday before
-him. He would arrange for the Inauguration the very next week. He was
-already advised that the officials had been permitted by the highest
-authority, in view of Demaine’s recent privations when he was blown
-out to sea in the little boat, treacherously abandoned by the foreign
-vessel and rescued by the willing hands, etc., to omit the final
-accolade with the ebony cudgel which had now for so many generations
-formed the last and most picturesque feature of the ritual.
-
-He took up his telephone and asked the next room to put him on to
-the Reptons. He held the receiver while a servant told him that his
-message should be immediately communicated, and then in a few seconds,
-heard, to his great astonishment, not the tremulous tones of Maria, but
-the masterly voice of Sir Charles, as incisive and direct as of old,
-saying, “What is it?” in the tone of a man who must come at once to
-business and has many things to do.
-
-“Oh!” cried Dolly into the machine, quite taken aback. “That’s you,
-Repton, is it?”
-
-“Yes, of course,” came the answer shortly. “Well?”
-
-“Oh nothing. Are you feeling better?”
-
-“I don’t know what you mean.” This in restrained, quite unmistakable
-tones. “My headache’s gone, if that’s what you mean.”
-
-“Ye-es,” said the Prime Minister, wondering what on earth to say.
-“Yes.... Oh it’s gone, has it?”
-
-“Yes it has; I’ve told you that already.” Then after a pause, “Look
-here, I’m really very busy. I’ve got three men here about that absurd
-concession. You gave me a free hand, and I can’t wait. Hope I’m not
-rude. It’s really very kind to ask after my health. You’ll be in the
-House at twelve?” And the telephone suddenly rang off.
-
-Dolly was in a stupor; he did what he always did, when things perplexed
-him: he sent for Edward.
-
-“Edward,” he said, “that cracked Dissenter has got three men in his
-house and is talking about the oil concession to them! Oh lord!”
-
-The Prime Minister was evidently frightened and troubled, but he did
-not seem less frightened and more troubled than the occasion warranted.
-He couldn’t make Repton out: there seemed to be another change.
-
-Edward answered simply: “Why that makes three more who know,--that’s
-all.”
-
-“Do get a taxi,” said the Prime Minister, “and see what you can do.”
-And he waited anxiously till Edward returned.
-
-“Well?” said Dolly as he entered.
-
-“Well!” said Edward. “He wasn’t very polite, but--but--are you quite
-sure that you weren’t worried when you saw him on Tuesday?”
-
-“Worried,” said Dolly, “I should think I was!”
-
-“Well that’s what I mean,” said Edward a little uneasily. “Didn’t you
-... didn’t you perhaps exaggerate a little?”
-
-“_Exaggerate!_” said Dolly, jumping up with all his youthful vigour,
-and looking for the moment less than forty-eight in his excitement,
-“Why man alive, he was wearing a huge great Easter Lily in his
-buttonhole, and he tried to wrestle with the butler in the hall!”
-
-“Yes, but you know,” said Edward, “there’s gaiety in everybody, and it
-comes out now and----”
-
-“Oh gaiety be blasted!” interrupted Dolly. “The man was raving!”
-
-“Well, they wouldn’t certify him anyhow,” said Edward, “and he’s
-not raving _now_! He’s as sane as a waxen image, and as sharp as an
-unexpected pin. I’m glad _I’m_ not doing business with him to-day.”
-
-“Look here,” protested the Prime Minister. “If he wasn’t off, why
-did he stay at home like a prisoner all Wednesday, with Lady Repton
-preventing any one seeing him? And what was he doing all yesterday,
-Thursday? Why didn’t he come down to the House, eh, if he wasn’t off?”
-
-“I didn’t say he wasn’t ill,” said Edward blandly. “I only said there
-might have been some exaggeration.”
-
-“Oh very well,” ended the Prime Minister wearily, “oh very well!”
-
-Edward came to a swift decision and telephoned first to the _Moon_ then
-to the _Capon_ privately that “it was all right about Repton; there’d
-been a mistake.” His chief went out on the duties of the day.
-
-Yet _another_ change of plan! More bother! He would have to go through
-with the peerage now! He went gloomily down to the House of Commons and
-learned that Charles Repton was already in his place, stiff, groomed
-and regular upon the Treasury bench.
-
-Dolly came in nervously and shook hands with him.
-
-Sir Charles took his hand rather coldly; he did not see why a couple
-of days’ headache which no one had heard about should be made the
-excuse for so much public affection. It emphasised the thing. And he
-sat through the first hour of the debate looking as if he would have
-been just as well pleased to be made less fuss about. “Anyhow,” he
-thought to himself by way of consolation, “I shall be rid of it next
-week,” and his mind turned in an equable fashion to his taking his seat
-in the Upper House and to what his first business there might be.
-
-As he was so thinking George Mulross Demaine came in quietly by one of
-the side doors. As he entered there was a little subdued cheering from
-those who remembered the announcement of his approaching appointment.
-It flurried him a little. He sat down and tried to forget it, while the
-debate maundered on.
-
-In the Lobbies Repton continued to suffer somewhat from occasional
-congratulations on his return to health. He did not easily understand
-them, and he was a trifle gruff in his replies. He was going into the
-library for a little peace when a messenger put a note into his hand;
-it was from the Duke of Battersea.
-
-“More fuss!” he thought, but he went immediately with his stiff,
-upright gait to where that great Financier was waiting for him, and he
-greeted him warmly enough.
-
-The Duke, like the business man he was, was very brief and to the
-point. He congratulated Charles Repton not (thank heaven!) on having
-got rid of the slight headache which seemed to have filled the thoughts
-of too many people, but upon the great accession the Upper House was
-to receive, and then the Duke having said so much went on to what he
-really had to say, his pronunciation marred only by that slight lisp
-which ill-natured reports so constantly exaggerated. Sir Charles Repton
-(he said) would remember the very disgraceful case of the editor of the
-_Islington Hebdomadal Review_?
-
-Charles Repton tried to remember, but could not.
-
-Well, it wath the cathe of the man who had very properly got twenty
-yearth of the betht for thaying that he could reveal how old
-Ballymulrock had got his peerage ... a dithgratheful cathe! There wath
-blackmail behind it!
-
-Yes, Charles Repton could remember now, and he smiled a grim smile as
-he considered the peculiar ineptitude of that particular convict. Why
-old Ballymulrock was the seventh in the title, he had nothing a year,
-he was a doddering old bachelor of eighty-seven, he had got it by a
-fluke from a half-nephew, and it was only an Irish elective peerage at
-that! The convict had pleaded a misprint! What a fool! Yes, Sir Charles
-Repton could remember the case. What about it? “I’m not going to take
-any action to save him,” he said sharply, “if that’s what you want: he
-deserved all he got! If you want some one get Birdwhistlethorpe; Isaacs
-that was: he knows North London.”
-
-“Noh, noh, noh,” said the aged Duke of Battersea in alarm, “you
-mithunderthand me!” And he went on to tell the outgoing Warden that
-they were determined to bring this sort of thing before the House of
-Lords in a Resolution. Would he move?
-
-“I don’t see what I’ve got to do with it,” said Repton shortly.
-
-The Duke smiled as he had smiled years ago, when he produced Lord
-Benthorpe’s paper and brought that now forgotten personage to heel. Had
-Sir Charles seen what the _Moon_ had been saying that very day?
-
-No, Sir Charles hadn’t. He supposed it was about the oil concessions.
-He paid no attention to the _Moon_. But Edward’s telephone to the
-_Moon_ and the _Capon_ had borne dreadful fruit. Each editor had
-thought to have regained his freedom.
-
-The Duke of Battersea’s smile grew more portentous; he discovered a
-cutting in the inner pocket of a coat which somehow or other always
-looked greasy upon him, and as Sir Charles read it, his face darkened.
-
-“It’s pretty scandalous,” he said as he laid it down. For the leader
-in the _Moon_ gave it to be understood in no very roundabout way that
-there had been a deal over Repton’s peerage.
-
-“The _Capon’th_ worth, _far_ worth!” insinuated the Duke of Battersea.
-
-“Is it?” said Sir Charles, “indeed!”
-
-“Yeth, indeed yeth,” said the aged Duke, putting the paper forward as
-though over a counter; and Sir Charles Repton could not forbear to
-read it. It certainly _was_ worse; it simply said point blank that the
-Burmah Oil Concession was the price of Repton’s promotion to the Upper
-House. And the passage ended with these words:
-
- “We have no desire to add to a domestic affliction which no friend
- of the Government regrets more sincerely than we do ourselves, and
- we are willing to believe that the unfortunate gentleman, who we
- fear can never again take his old place in public life, was himself
- quite innocent of any such dealing; but ambitions other than his own
- may have been concerned in this matter, and the giving of permanent
- legislative power to a man who now notoriously can no longer take
- part in active public life, does but add to the scandal.”
-
-That decided him! He would nip off that headache legend at once, and
-sharply!
-
-“Yes,” he said, “I’ll move as soon as you like, and the sooner the
-better.” He did not say it as though he was granting a favour; and it
-was easy to see that the Duke was a little afraid of him:--
-
-After a pause during which the two men rose to part, the old gentleman
-suggested that Methlinghamhurst should speak after him.
-
-“Messlingham _who_?” said Repton, puzzled. The name was unfamiliar to
-him.
-
-“No, not Methlinghamhurtht! _Meth_linghamhurtht,” said the Duke of
-Battersea, rather too loud. “_Meth_linghamhurtht!”
-
-Sir Charles shook his head, still puzzled. “I daresay he’s all right,”
-he said all starch.
-
-“_You_ know,” said the Duke of Battersea, craning forward in a
-confidential way, “Clutterbuck that wath.”
-
-“Oh! Clutterbuck! Yes, I remember. Well? Can he speak?”
-
-“Not very well,” hesitated the Duke of Battersea, “but you know he
-wanted....”
-
-“I really don’t care,” said Sir Charles moving away. “Anyhow I’ll do
-it.”
-
-The Duke was profuse in his thanks.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Charles Repton returned to the House of Commons. Another message!
-
-“The Prime Minister begged to see Sir Charles Repton:” really there was
-no end to the number of people wanting to see him that day! Charles
-Repton went towards Dolly’s room with such muscles showing upon his
-face as would have made any one afraid to say another word about
-the headache,--but it was not of the headache, at least not of that
-directly, that Dolly had to speak.
-
-“Repton,” he said apologetically and in some dread, “I’m afraid I made
-arrangements for a proxy next week--I mean for L’Acceptance you know.”
-
-“Oh you did!” said Sir Charles, really nettled. “You might have asked
-me first I think!”
-
-“Well, you see,” began his unfortunate chief,--
-
-“As a fact I don’t see,” said Repton drily, “but I suppose you’ve put
-it right. I’ve written to say I should be there.”
-
-“Oh yes, certainly, certainly,” said Dolly hurriedly, “I’ve changed
-it.” As a fact he’d done nothing of the kind and was wondering what he
-should say to the proxy. “Certainly!”
-
-“All right,” said Charles Repton moving towards the door. “That’s all,
-I suppose?”
-
-“Yes, that’s all,” said Dolly, with perhaps a hundred more things to
-say. “I’ll see that you get notice of the exact hour.”
-
-“Of course,” said Charles Repton briefly, and he shut the door quietly
-but firmly behind him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The inaugural ceremony, though shorn for some years of the backward
-entrance which was its most picturesque feature, and now (though not
-as a precedent) of the accost with the ebony cudgel, was impressive
-enough. The silver-gilt case with the Three Hundred and One specially
-minted Coins had been put into Charles Repton’s Seisin by the Symbol
-of the Flask of Palm Oil, and was already on its way to his house; the
-tinkling shoes had been rapidly put on and off, and Demaine had sworn
-fealty for sergeanty in Ponthieu and the Seniory of Lucq, and all the
-embroglio was done.
-
-Lord Repton (for he was content with that simple title--in the Manor
-of Giggleswick) was present for the first time upon the red benches,
-awaiting the moment for the debate upon the Resolution in which he was
-to open and move.
-
-In the House of Commons George Mulross Demaine, who for the last
-few days had been coaching steadily in the duties of his post, and
-especially in the really difficult technicalities of replying to
-questions, was reading his notes for the last time in the comfortable
-room assigned to his office, and repeating to himself in a low tone the
-words he had so carefully committed to memory. Edward was with him to
-give him courage; and he needed such companionship.
-
-At last he was summoned.
-
-The House was very full for question-time, for it was known or
-suspected that something of importance would take place that day. The
-full nature of the crisis had been understood by very few, but the
-disappearance of Demaine and his return, his terrible adventures in the
-fishing-boat, his night at sea, the dastardly action of the foreign
-crew, and the heroic succour which had ultimately reached him were
-public property.
-
-The silent and little known young member whose disappearance from the
-benches under the gallery would never have been noticed, was half a
-hero already in the popular mind, and had become particularly dear to
-his colleagues during the anxious moments when he was believed to be
-lost, and when the press of London had worked that mystery for all it
-was worth.
-
-The House of Commons knows a _Man_.
-
-There was, therefore, loud and hearty cheering, which, according to the
-beautiful tradition of our public life, was confined to no one part of
-the assembly, when, that happy Friday, George Mulross entered rapidly
-from behind the Speaker’s chair, stumbled over the outstretched foot of
-the Admiralty, his second uncle by marriage, and took his seat for the
-first time among his new colleagues upon the Treasury Bench.
-
-The Prime Minister accompanied him. Congratulations suitable to the
-occasion were to be seen in the gestures of those in his immediate
-neighbourhood, and he himself wore the blest but sickly smile of a man
-who is about to be hanged but who is possessed of a fixed faith in a
-happy eternity.
-
-Only one question was set down to him; he had read it and re-read it;
-he had read and re-read the typewritten answer which Mr. Sorrel had
-furnished him and which he had now got by heart beyond, he hoped,
-the possibility of error. The questioner had chivalrously offered
-to withdraw his query in deference to the fatigues and anxieties
-through which the new Warden of the Court of Dowry had so recently
-passed, but the Prime Minister, though appreciative of that offer,
-rather determined that his dear young relative should win his spurs;
-and trivial as the subject was, Question No. 31 was by far the most
-important upon the paper for most of those present.
-
-It concerned (of course) the wreck which still banged about, the sport
-of wind and wave, upon the Royal Sovereign Shoals. This aching tooth
-of Empire had cropped up again in yet another aspect. The Member for
-Harrowell, a landowner upon that coast, wanted to know whether it was
-not a fact that large planks studded, he was ashamed to say, with long
-rusty nails, had not drifted shorewards from the wreck and grievously
-scratched such persons as were indulging in mixed bathing just off the
-popular and rapidly rising seaside resort which lay a little east by
-north of the wretched derelict.
-
-Question No. 29 was answered, Question 30 was answered. Demaine’s
-ordeal had come.
-
-He heard a low mumbling noise some distance down the benches which he
-would never have taken to be the single word “Thirty-one” had not his
-mother’s half-sister’s husband the Chancellor of the Exchequer given
-him a sharp dig in the ribs with his elbow and jolted him onto his
-feet. His hands shook like a motor car at rest as he began his reply.
-
-“I have nothing to tell my right honourable gentleman--I mean my
-honourable gentleman....” Here there was a pause, painful to all
-present with the exception of one ribald fellow who cackled twice and
-then was silent.... “I have nothing to add,” George Mulross began again
-with a lump in his throat, “in reply to my honourable friend--to
-what my predecessor said in reply to a similar” (another pause) ...
-“Oh,--_question_--upon the tenth of this month.”
-
-He had read all of it out now, anyhow, and he sat down, a trifle
-unsteadily, feeling for the seat.
-
-“Arre we to onderrstand,” boomed the voice of the inevitable fanatic,
-“that the carrgo of GIN is yet aboorrd...?”
-
-“Hey! what?” said Demaine over his shoulder, with a startled air.
-
-“Get up and ask for notice,” whispered a colleague very hurriedly. “Get
-up and say ‘I must ask for notice of that question.’ Say ‘I must ask
-for notice of that question.’ Get up quick.”
-
-Demaine got up, took hold of the box, turned his back upon the
-questioner and looking full at the harmless and startled Opposition
-said, not without menace:
-
-“I must ask for a notice of that question”--and sat down.
-
-There were a few more sympathetic cheers and all was well. The Warden
-of the Court of Dowry was launched upon his great career.
-
-Meanwhile, beyond the Central Hall, Lord Repton of Giggleswick was
-rising for the first time among his Peers.
-
-That House also was full and was prepared to give the spare towering
-figure and the stoical face a sympathetic hearing, for the recognition
-of a man who had served his country so faithfully and so well and who
-had recently suffered a temporary malady of so distressing a nature was
-universal and sincere.
-
-The House of Lords knows a _Man_.
-
-Lord Repton, even as plain Sir Charles, had always been an admirable
-parliamentary speaker: not only quick at debate but with a grave and
-lucid delivery which, coupled with his intimate grasp of detail and the
-sense of balanced judgment behind his tone, made his one of the most
-effective voices in our public life.
-
-It would be difficult to say by what art he contrived to give in that
-large assembly the impression of speaking as quietly as though he were
-in a private room, and yet so managed that every word of his--every
-syllable,--was heard in every corner of the House.
-
-In the Peeresses’ Gallery women in mauve, heliotrope, eau-de-nil,
-crapaud mort, and magenta, made a brilliant scheme of colour.
-
-The Lords, who upon occasions of privilege are by custom robed, gave to
-the splendid place the deeper tone of red plush and white pelts with
-small black tails which is otherwise reserved for such great occasions
-of state as the Opening of Parliament, the Coronation, an Impeachment
-or a Replevin at Large; at the bar a crowd of Commoners pressed, many
-of whom recognised in the faces before them those of brothers, fathers,
-first cousins, debtors, creditors and clients in business. It was
-an animated and an impressive scene, and the audience, large as it
-was, would doubtless have been larger but for an unfortunate blunder
-by which the Eton and Harrow match and a particularly interesting
-rehearsal of the Mizraim dance were both fixed for that very afternoon.
-
-As it was, the two hundred or more Peers present were finely
-representative of all that is best and worst in the national life.
-The aged Duke of Battersea had made a point not only of coming but
-of speaking upon such an occasion; the Bishops had turned up in full
-force, and the Colonial Peers, now happily added to the ancient House,
-were remarkable not only for their strict attention to this historic
-business, but for their somewhat constrained attitudes: not one was
-absent from his seat.
-
-The report of a speech, however excellent, is but a dull reflection of
-the original, as all may judge who consider the contrast between the
-entrancing rhetoric which daily holds spellbound the House of Commons
-and the plain prose appearing in the morning papers.
-
-It would ill repay the reader for the courtesy and charm she has shown
-throughout the perusal of these pages, were I to inflict upon her a
-mere verbatim transcript of Lord Repton’s famous harangue. But the
-gist of it well merits record here, not only because it did much to
-kill a poisonous spirit which had till then been growing in English
-journalism--but also because it was in itself a typical and splendid
-monument of the things that build up the soul of a great man.
-
-He began in the simplest manner with a review of what had determined
-some of them to bring forward this Resolution. It needed no reiteration
-upon his part, and indeed the matter was so painful that the mere
-recalling of it must be made as brief as possible.
-
-“It has been suggested that places in that House are acquired by
-process of purchase.
-
-“There, in plain English, is the accusation.”
-
-He would remark in passing that the cowards and slanderers--he did
-not hesitate to use strong language--(and even the sanctity of the
-precincts could not check a murmur of approval), the cowards and
-slanderers who brought forward that general accusation, dared not make
-it particular.
-
-“In one case,” he said, turning gravely to the place where he expected
-to see but was disappointed not to see the very aged frame of Lord
-Ballymulrock, “in one case which referred to a peer whose health I am
-distressed to say has made it impossible for him to be present upon
-this occasion” (a protest from an exceedingly old man who sat folded up
-on high--it was Bally himself!), “in one case a direct accusation has
-been made.... Melords, you know the issue. An appeal still lies, and it
-is not for me to deal with a matter which is _sub judice_; but apart
-from that case, these anonymous hacks who have for so long corrupted or
-attempted to corrupt the public mind in respect to this House, confine
-themselves to generalities upon which the law can take no hold.”
-
-It was upon this very account that the general resolution of which
-he had spoken had been framed, and he would pass at once from the
-unsavoury recollection of such acts, to that part of his argument which
-he thought would have most weight with his fellow-subjects.
-
-“This House, including the more recent creations, the Colonial Peers,
-and the ex-officio additions with which a recent--and in my opinion a
-beneficent reform--has recruited it, still numbers less than fifteen
-hundred men. Of these the ex-officio members, the lords spiritual”
-(and he bowed to the Bishop of Shoreham, who was deaf) “the elected
-members from the Britains Overseas (among whom I am glad to see present
-the Nerbuddah Yah) between them account for no less than forty-two.
-Two hundred and eighty” (he quoted from a paper in his hand) “are
-imbeciles, minors or permanent invalids; somewhat over fifty are for
-one reason or another incapacitated from attendance at their debates;
-ten are in gaol.”
-
-“Now, Melords,” he continued, “of the eleven hundred remaining--they
-are roughly eleven hundred,--what do we find? We find”--emphatically
-striking his right-hand fist into his left-hand palm,--“we find no
-less than five hundred and twelve to be the sons of their fathers--or
-in some other way direct heirs: ninety-eight to have succeeded to their
-titles from collaterals of the first or of the second degree; sixteen
-to have succeeded in some more distant manner; eleven to owe their
-position to the revival of ancient tenures; the claims of six to have
-been recently proved through the female line; and one by Warranty and
-Novel Disseizin. What remains?”
-
-He looked round the eager assembly before him with an attitude of the
-head dignified but wonderfully impressive.
-
-“Melords, I ask again, what remains? _Less than four hundred men_, the
-representatives of all the chief energies of our national life. We
-have here the great champions of industry, the great admirals of our
-fleets, the great generals of our armies--and I am happy to include
-the Salvation Army, (the head of that great organisation lifted his
-biretta)--men who have distinguished themselves in every conceivable
-path of public life, who have loyally served their country and many of
-whom after such service are still honourably poor.”
-
-At this phrase which was evidently the approach to his peroration, many
-Peers who had hitherto been sitting with their knees apart, crossed one
-leg over the other; some few who, on the contrary, had had their legs
-crossed, uncrossed them and reposed both feet upon the floor; more than
-one took the opportunity to recline his head upon his right hand, and
-the most venerable member of the bench of Bishops coughed in a manner
-that would have wrung a heart of stone.
-
-When these slight interruptions were over, Lord Repton of Giggleswick
-found it possible to proceed. He showed by a strict process of inquiry
-how those to whom the abominable suggestion might conceivably apply,
-could not by any stretch of the imagination amount to eighty in number.
-
-“Less than eighty men, Melords, in an assembly of fifteen hundred!
-Hardly five per cent.--hardly, if I may use a bold metaphor, thirteen
-pence in the pound! It is by this proportion alone, even did these
-detestable falsehoods contain--which they do not--a grain of truth,
-that our whole body is forsooth to be judged! But, Melords, who are
-these eighty men, if I do not insult them by permitting my argument to
-approach their names?
-
-“I will not cite my own case; my public career is open for any man to
-examine, and I think I know the temper of my own people too well to
-delay upon that score. But there are around me others perhaps (I know
-not) more sensitive, or less experienced in the petty villainies of the
-world, than am I, who may have thought themselves especially marked out.
-
-“I ask, against which of them could such an accusation be levelled by
-name, without the certitude of such a result in any Court of Justice as
-would silence the mouth of the libeller for many years? Is it, Melords,
-the man to whom we owe the great reservoir at Sing Yan? Is it that
-world-famous Englishman who by his organising ability, his untiring
-industry and his knowledge of men, has built up the United Sausage
-Company’s emporiums throughout the length and breadth of the land?
-
-“I might extend the list indefinitely: Melords, to no one of these, to
-no one member of this House I venture to say, can words of this kind be
-addressed without their falsity being apparent almost without need for
-proof.
-
-“I repeat in the words of Burke, ‘No, no, no, a thousand times no.’ I
-am not ashamed to recall the glorious phrase with which these walls
-echoed to the voice of Ephraim ten years ago: ‘Give me such principles
-as these and I will trample them into the dust beneath my feet!’”
-
-Having said so much, Lord Repton sat down, and it is a tribute to the
-fire and the conviction of the man that a young heiress of African
-Origin but recently married, who had been listening intently from the
-Peeresses’ Gallery throughout the latter part of the speech, gave a low
-moan and fainted clean away.
-
-Her young form was borne down to the buttery by a strong posse of
-attendants where the air from the Terrace soon revived her. I mention
-the incident only as a signal proof of the oratorical powers that had
-illumined Repton’s great career.
-
-After such an effort Lord Methlinghamhurst necessarily somewhat palled,
-especially as an imperfection in his diction, failing eyesight and a
-certain loss of memory compelled him to make long and uncomfortable
-pauses over the large printed slip which he held in his hand, but
-it was over at last, and the Duke of Battersea rose amid the evident
-interest of such as remained to hear him, no less than five of whom
-were concerned with himself in the Anapootra Ruby Mines.
-
-The great financier did well to interpose upon such an occasion. His
-lisp, with which the House was now familiar, was the only impediment to
-a sincere and vigorous piece of English. There was not a word which the
-most exuberant would presume to add, nor one which the most fastidious
-would dare to erase.
-
-The proceedings had occupied something close upon three-quarters of
-an hour, and the Senate, unused to such delays, was impatient to pass
-to the vote, when, to the universal horror of that hall, Ballymulrock
-tottered to his feet. There was almost a stampede. Luckily the Aged Man
-was as brief as he was inaudible. It was a couple of squeaks, several
-mutters, and a collapse. They proceeded to put the question.
-
-The Peers flocked back again to their places in great numbers; others
-stood ready for the Lobbies--but there was no need.
-
-It was one of those rare moments when many hundreds of hearts, to quote
-a wild and lovely poem, beat as one; and with a silent unanimity which
-eye-witnesses declare to have formed the most impressive sight since
-the first great review of Specials upon Salisbury Plain, the Resolution
-was adopted.
-
-Thus was destroyed, let us hope for ever, what was rapidly growing to
-be a formidable legend and one that would have undermined the security
-of the State and the honour of our public life in the eyes of rival
-nations.
-
-It was not the least of the services which Charles Repton had rendered
-to the State, and as we raise our grateful hats to Providence for the
-recovery that made his action possible, let us not forget the genius of
-the Young Canadian Doctor who was the author of that miraculous moment
-in a story of a thousand years.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Private Members’ time was ended. The House sat on upon the
-Broadening of the Streets Bill, the intense unpopularity of which
-rendered it especially urgent.
-
-When the House of Commons rose, near midnight, Dolly and Dimmy went
-out together by the door of the private rooms into the cool air and
-there in the courtyard were the glowing lamps of Mary’s motor car. She
-beckoned them and they got in.
-
-“You got to come to supper to-night,” she said mysteriously. “They’ll
-all be there.”
-
-Dimmy was agreeable. Dolly tried to plead something but she shut him
-up, and after them in single file raced through London half a dozen
-taxis and cars and broughams all making in a stream for St. James’s.
-
-It made such a supper-party as Mary Smith alone in London could gather!
-
-Her sister-in-law, with the Leader of the Opposition, and his
-brother; his right-hand man who had been Chancellor in the last
-administration; his nephew, the Postmaster General; Dolly himself;
-Dolly’s brother-in-law, the Secretary for India; his little nephew’s
-wife’s cousin at the Board of Trade, and his stepmother’s brother at
-the Admiralty, sat down,--and so did Dimmy, who was there without his
-wife, and also, I regret to say, without a stud, or rather without the
-head of a stud, in his shirt; for somehow it had broken off.
-
-But the reader will have but an imperfect picture of that jolly table
-if she imagines that it was a mere family party.
-
-Our public life is a larger thing than that! Of the five members of the
-two front benches who were not connected by marriage, two were present:
-the Minister for Education who could draw such screamingly funny things
-on blotting-paper, and Beagle, back two days before from Berlin, who
-could imitate a motor car with his mouth better than any man in Europe.
-And there also, by a sort of licence, was the Duke of Battersea,
-brought by Charlie Fitzgerald and his wife.
-
-They had already sat down when William Bailey, whom no one had invited,
-came ponderously and good-humouredly in, affected to stare at the Duke,
-and made a place for himself as far as possible from that controller
-of hemispheres, who was in his usual chair on Mary Smith’s right hand,
-with bulbous baggy eyes for none but her.
-
-William Bailey smiled all that evening and smiled especially at
-Dimmy--but he remained very silent; when, a little before two, they
-began to make a move, he had not said a dozen words--and Dimmy was
-exceedingly grateful.
-
-Nay, his friendship extended further: he saw Demaine as they all got up
-from table nervously stuffing a corner of the cloth in mistake for his
-handkerchief into his trousers pocket.
-
-“Look out, Dimmy!” he said.
-
-Dimmy jumped, and the tablecloth jumped with him, and then a crash--a
-great crash of broken glass, and the falling of candles.
-
-Mary Smith was very nearly annoyed, but on such an occasion she forgave
-him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-North of the Park, for now two hours, Lord Repton of Giggleswick had
-slept an easy sleep.
-
-
-
-
-ON THE PSEUDOLOGICAL FUNCTIONS OF CARYLL’S GANGLIA
-
-A PAMPHLET
-
-_Which the reader need not read. It is quite as easy to understand the
-book without it._
-
- Extract from a lecture delivered, for a grossly insufficient fee, by
- a professor of great popular reputation at the Royal Institution on
- January 26th, 1915:--
-
-“The _Review of Comparative Biology_ in its October issue contained a
-short and modest paper over the name of Henry Upton which is destined
-to influence modern thought more profoundly than anything that has
-appeared since _Lux Mundi_ or the _Origin of Species_. Henry Upton has
-been taken from us. Or, to use a phrase consecrated by his own reverent
-quotation of it, he has ‘Passed beyond the Veil,’ he has crossed the
-bar; but short as the time is since this brief essay was given to the
-world, his name is already famous.
-
-“You will have heard the echoes of passionate discussions upon his
-famous theory; it is my business this afternoon to put before you in
-clear and popular language that you can easily understand, what that
-theory was; and when I have done so I make no doubt that you will see
-why it has been thought so transcendently important.
-
-“Briefly, Henry Upton declared himself finally convinced that between
-Man and the Simius Gabiensis there existed a differentiation so marked
-as to destroy all possibility of any recent common origin for the two
-species.
-
-“When I add that Simius Gabiensis is but the technical name for the
-Ringtailed Baboon of our childhood you will at once appreciate what a
-revolution such a pronouncement must work if it can be sustained: and
-it has been sustained!
-
-“It is common knowledge and will be familiar to the youngest child in
-this room that the Ringtailed Baboon is the highest of the Anthropoids,
-and the one nearest approaching the majesty of the Human Species--Homo
-Sapiens; and if between him and ourselves the link of affinity prove
-far removed, it seems indeed as though the whole edifice of modern
-biology and of modern thought itself will fall to the ground.
-
-“The superficial differences to be discovered between a cleanly and
-well-bred gentleman and the Ringtailed Baboon are common property: the
-beard in the Anthropoid is not so clearly defined as in the allied
-organism of Man, but covers the whole face; the superciliary arch
-is more prominent, the diaphragm tessarated and refulgent, while the
-Cardiac Aneries are at once paler and less vasculate in form: the
-rings upon the tail are of course peculiar to the Simian, and almost
-universally absent in the human species, while the speech of the latter
-is far more complex and articulate than that of the former.
-
-“But I need not detain this cultured audience with considerations
-quite unworthy of physical science. All the weight of real evidence
-pointed to the close relationship between the two types, and it was a
-commonplace of the classroom that in all fundamentals the two animals
-betrayed an ancestor less remote than that of the dog and the wolf.
-Now, since Henry Upton’s work appeared, we are certain that that
-ancestor is more remote than the ancestor of the hippopotamus and the
-Jersey cow, and probably more remote than that of the mongoose and the
-Great Auk.
-
-“In every text-book we read (and we believed the statement) that
-between a really poor man and the highest specimens of our race lay a
-gulf wider than that which separated the former from the Ringtailed
-Baboon and even from the Gorilla and the Barbary Ape. To-day all that
-is gone!
-
-“Now let me turn to the evidence. Briefly, again, Henry Upton proved
-that CARYLL’S GANGLIA were not, as had been imagined, unimportant or
-useless organs, but were organically necessary to the full conduct of
-man.
-
-“It had of course been known since Caryll first described and mapped
-these ganglia, that they were present in Man and absent in all other
-animals. But they were not unique in this, and the obscure part which
-they seemed to play in our economy attracted little attention from
-the student. Suddenly these humble agglutinations of organic matter
-were lifted into the blaze of fame by an Englishman whose name will
-not perish so long as our civilisation endures. For Henry Upton showed
-that in these ganglia lay the capital distinction between man and his
-congener; if I, myself, for instance, differ in any way from ‘Pongo’ in
-Regent’s Park, it is to Caryll’s Ganglia, under Providence, that I owe
-the privilege.
-
-“Henry Upton was not the man to proceed upon _a priori_ reasoning,
-or to state as a conclusion what was still a bare hypothesis. He had
-suspected the truth ten years before committing it to print: they were
-ten years of anxiety, nay, of agony, during which a bolder or less
-scrupulous man might snatch from him the merit of prior discovery; but
-he felt it was his duty to Science to continue the vast labour and the
-patient research, until he could speak once and for all.
-
-“Upton tabulated in all the enormous number of 57,752 recorded
-experiments. He first noted the comparative sizes of the ganglia, in
-children and adults, in women and in men, showing them to be larger
-in men than in women, and in children rudimentary before the seventh
-year. He next proved that in certain professions, notably in those of
-the money-lender, the solicitor and the politician, hypertrophy of the
-ganglia was to be discovered. The conclusions to which this pointed
-will soon be evident. His theory already began to take shape. Luckily
-for English science, this great man was possessed of private means. He
-organised a staff of enthusiastic young workers who occupied themselves
-in treading upon the toes of people in omnibuses, sitting upon top
-hats, asking direct questions of slight acquaintances concerning their
-financial affairs, and coughing violently and with long, uninterrupted
-spasms at the most exciting moments of melodramatic plays. The result
-was in each case tabulated, and in over 5·08 per cent. of the cases it
-was possible with care to discover the position of the ganglia in those
-who responded to the stimuli. Without a single exception the importance
-of the ganglia varied directly with the self-restraint exercised
-against such stimuli. Those who struck out, swore, or in any other way
-betrayed immediate violence, were found to possess small and sometimes
-partially atrophied C. G’s. Those who protested sullenly or confined
-themselves to angry glances were normal; those who contained themselves
-as though nothing had happened, invariably possessed ganglia of a
-large and peculiarly healthy type, while those who actually expressed
-enjoyment and begged for a repetition of the performance had ganglia of
-so astonishing a size as to cause protuberances on either side of the
-head, for Caryll’s Ganglia lie (as most of you probably know) a little
-south-east and by east of the Aural Cavity.
-
-“It might by this time have seemed sufficiently proved that Caryll’s
-Ganglia were the seat of all that restraint and balance upon
-which human society depends; but Upton was not satisfied until he
-had clinched the process of proof by a negative experiment upon
-animals:--And here let me point out in passing that had certain
-well-meaning fanatics their own way, this great revelation would never
-have been made. The horse, the pig, the common house-fly, the bee, the
-dog and the wild goose, to give but a few examples, were severally
-tested, and in each case it was discovered that a clout, a fillip, or
-any other simple stimulus was at once responded to. In no case was a
-trace of Caryll’s Ganglia to be found.
-
-“You all know the end!
-
-“The essay was printed, Upton’s name had already flown to the utmost
-corners of the globe, when he read in some obscure narrative of travel
-that the little armadillo that can sleep without a pillow, though
-possessing no ganglia, was capable of the same balance and restraint
-as man, could control himself under all but the most violent stimuli,
-conceal his most poignant necessities, and smile in the presence of
-death.
-
-“Upton was a Scientist of the Scientists. One single exception and he
-would retract from his position. He sailed for the Amazon, interviewed
-the armadillo, but at the first pin he thrust into the fleshy portion
-of the animal’s steaks, a little below the armoured belt, it belied the
-false report by turning savagely round and biting off his head. His
-remains were reverently brought home to London. He lies in Westminster
-Abbey, the last and perhaps the greatest of martyrs to scientific
-truth.
-
-“If Henry Upton’s immortal achievement seems for a moment to have
-broken down the very keystone in the arch of social progress, and to
-have made null the whole structure of biological truth; if it leaves
-Man no longer propped up by a knowledge of cousinship and brotherhood
-with the beasts of the field, but all alone, an exile upon earth,
-nevertheless we must take courage. The Bishop of Shoreham has told us
-(Etc., etc., etc.).”
-
-
-
-
- _Printed by_
- MORRISON & GIBB LIMITED
- _Edinburgh_
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-
-[1] Dollars, not pounds.
-
-[2] He did.
-
-[3] [Greek: ... mega sthenos Ôkeanoio
- Antyga par pymatên sakeos pyka poiêtoio.]
-
-
-[4] I refer to Mr. Bulge, and I refer to him both as an actor and as an
-author. Amen.
-
-[5] There are two such farthings in the Heygate family to-day.
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
-
-
- Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
-
- Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
-
- Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
-
- Archaic or alternate spelling that may have been in use at the time of
- publication has been retained.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's A Change in the Cabinet, by Hilaire Belloc
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A CHANGE IN THE CABINET ***
-
-***** This file should be named 60967-0.txt or 60967-0.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/6/0/9/6/60967/
-
-Produced by Tim Lindell, David E. Brown, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/60967-0.zip b/old/60967-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 2f43632..0000000
--- a/old/60967-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60967-h.zip b/old/60967-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 9c3d73d..0000000
--- a/old/60967-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60967-h/60967-h.htm b/old/60967-h/60967-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index 723bf0e..0000000
--- a/old/60967-h/60967-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,11493 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
- <title>
- The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Change in the Cabinet, by Hilaire Belloc.
- </title>
-<link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
-
- <style type="text/css">
-
-body {
- margin-left: 10%;
- margin-right: 10%;
-}
-
- h1,h2 {
- text-align: center;
- clear: both;
-}
-
-p {
- margin-top: .51em;
- text-align: justify;
- margin-bottom: .49em;
-}
-
-div.chapter {page-break-before: always;}
-h2.nobreak {page-break-before: avoid;}
-
-div.titlepage {text-align: center; page-break-before: always; page-break-after: always;}
-div.titlepage p {text-align: center; font-weight: bold; line-height: 1.5; margin-top: 2em;}
-
-hr {
- width: 33%;
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 2em;
- margin-left: 33.5%;
- margin-right: 33.5%;
- clear: both;
-}
-
-hr.chap {width: 65%; margin-left: 17.5%; margin-right: 17.5%;}
-hr.tb {width: 45%; margin-left: 27.5%; margin-right: 27.5%;}
-
-.ph1 {text-align: center; font-size: xx-large; font-weight: bold;}
-.ph2 {text-align: center; font-size: large; font-weight: bold;}
-
-table {
- margin-left: auto;
- margin-right: auto;
-}
-
-
- .tdc {text-align: center;}
-
-.pagenum {
- position: absolute;
- left: 92%;
- font-size: smaller;
- text-align: right;
-}
-
-p.drop-cap {
- text-indent: -0.2em;
-}
-p.drop-cap2 {
- text-indent: -0.5em;
-}
-p.drop-cap:first-letter, p.drop-cap2:first-letter
-{
- float: left;
- margin: 0.15em 0.1em 0em 0em;
- font-size: 250%;
- line-height:0.55em;
- text-indent: 0em;
-}
-@media handheld
-{
- p.drop-cap, p.drop-cap2 {
- text-indent: 0em;
- }
- p.drop-cap:first-letter, p.drop-cap2:first-letter
- {
- float: none;
- margin: 0;
- font-size: 100%;
- }
-}
-
-
-.blockquot {
- margin-left: 20%;
- margin-right: 20%;
-}
-
-
-.center {text-align: center;}
-
-.right {text-align: right;}
-
-.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
-
-
-
-.hangingindent { text-indent: -1.5em; margin-left: 1.5em; }
-
-.figcenter {
- margin: auto;
- text-align: center;
-}
-
-.xxxlarge {font-size: 200%;}
-
-.xlarge {font-size: 125%;}
-
-.gap {margin-left: 18em;}
-.gap5 {margin-left: 8em;}
-.gap2 {margin-left: 4em;}
-
-.gap4 {margin-right: 5em;}
-.gapright {margin-right: 8em;}
-
-.footnote {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 0.9em;}
-
-.footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right;}
-
-.fnanchor {
- vertical-align: super;
- font-size: .8em;
- text-decoration:
- none;
-}
-
-.poetry-container {text-align: center;}
-.poetry {display: inline-block; text-align: left;}
-.poetry .verse {text-indent: -2.5em; padding-left: 3em;}
-
-.poetry .versefirst {text-indent: -2.5em; padding-left: 2.5em;}
-.poetry .indent2 {text-indent: 3em;}
-
-.transnote {background-color: #E6E6FA;
- color: black;
- font-size:smaller;
- padding:0.5em;
- margin-bottom:5em;
- font-family:sans-serif, serif; }
- </style>
- </head>
-<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Change in the Cabinet, by Hilaire Belloc
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: A Change in the Cabinet
-
-Author: Hilaire Belloc
-
-Release Date: December 19, 2019 [EBook #60967]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A CHANGE IN THE CABINET ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Tim Lindell, David E. Brown, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<h1>A CHANGE IN THE CABINET</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_title.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<p><span class="xxxlarge">A CHANGE<br />
-IN THE CABINET</span></p>
-
-<p>BY<br />
-<span class="xlarge">H. BELLOC</span></p>
-
-<p><small>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &#8220;STRIVE, STRIVE, HOWE&#8217;ER WE STRIVE<br />
-YOUTH DECLINES AT FIFTY-FIVE.&#8221;</small><br />
-
-<span class="gap"><span class="smcap">Old Saw</span></span></p>
-
-<p>METHUEN &amp; CO.<br />
-36 ESSEX STREET W.C.<br />
-LONDON</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="center"><i>First Published in 1909</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<p class="center">
-<small>TO</small><br />
-MISS ALICE BEARDSLEY</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span>
-
-
-
-<p class="ph1">A CHANGE IN THE<br />
-CABINET</p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">SIR&mdash;or to speak more correctly, the Right Honourable
-Sir T. Charles Repton, Bart., M.V.O., O.M.,
-Warden of the Court of Dowry, a man past middle
-age but in the height of industry, sat at breakfast in
-his house: a large house overlooking Hyde Park from
-the North, close to the corner of the Edgware Road,
-and therefore removed by at least a hundred yards
-from the graphic representation which marks the
-site of the old Permanent Gallows that once stood
-at Tyburn.</p>
-
-<p>I have said that he was Warden of the Court of
-Dowry, and the reader, if she has any acquaintance
-with parliamentary affairs, will remember that at the
-time of which I speak, the month of March, 1915,
-that post commonly carried with it Cabinet rank.
-The experienced in political matters will certainly
-induce that he was also in the House of Commons.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
-He sat there for Pailton, a borough which had been
-the last to elect him after previous experiences in
-Merionethshire, Kirkby, Bruton, Powkeley and the
-Wymp division of Dorset, in which last his somewhat
-constrained and cold manner had perhaps led
-to his defeat.</p>
-
-<p>It was not his first experience of office, but he
-had never stood so high in the Councils of the
-Nation, nor had his presence in the Cabinet ever
-more weighed with the young and popular Prime
-Minister (who was suffering slightly from his left
-lung) than at this moment. For though Charles
-Repton did not belong by birth to the group of
-families from which the Prime Minister had sprung,
-he was of those who, as they advance through life,
-accumulate an increasing number of clients, of dependents
-and of friends who dare not trifle with such
-friendships.</p>
-
-<p>In figure he was tall and somewhat lean; he was
-clean-shaven; his brilliant white hair was well
-groomed; his brown eyes were singularly piercing,
-and, in contrast with his head, two thick, very dark
-and strongly arched eyebrows emphasized his
-expression. He was by persuasion at this time of
-his life a Second Day Wycliffite, and had indeed
-professed his connection with that body since at least
-his fortieth year, before which period in his career he
-had permanently resided in a suburb of Leicester, to
-which in turn he had removed from Newcastle.</p>
-
-<p>By profession he was, or rather had been, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-solicitor, in which calling he had ever advised those
-clients who had the wisdom to accumulate wealth
-to leave the investment of it at his discretion,
-nor were they disappointed in the regular receipt
-of a moderate but secure income calculated at a
-reasonable rate; while to those who (for whatever
-reason) lay under the necessity of borrowing, he was
-ever ready to advance at a somewhat higher rate
-such sums as he had at his disposal.</p>
-
-<p>But this humdrum course of professional life could
-never satisfy abilities of his calibre. Shortly after
-his entry into political life he had undertaken the
-management of numerous industrial ventures, several
-of which had proved singularly successful, while
-those which had been less fortunate came to grief
-through the action of others than himself: nay it was
-often shown when the winding-up order came that
-such risks had attracted but little of his spare cash.</p>
-
-<p>He was that morning in March, 1915, eating an
-egg. He had before him a copy of the <i>Times</i>, the
-affairs of which newspaper were among his most
-valued connections. The moments he could spare
-from its perusal were given to the methodical cutting
-open of envelopes and the glancing at their contents,&mdash;an
-exercise which it was his rule most methodically
-to pursue before he permitted his secretary to deal
-with the answers. Indeed some one or two of these
-missives he put into his pocket to be dealt with at
-his private leisure.</p>
-
-<p>He was alone, for his wife&mdash;Maria, Lady Repton&mdash;would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-commonly affect to come down after he had
-left the house; and this, no matter how late divisions
-might have kept him upon the previous evening, he
-invariably did at the hour of half-past nine. I may
-add that he had no children, but could boast no less
-than five horses in town and sixteen in the country,
-all his own property, and used to drag in the country
-I know not how many vehicles; in London three,
-each suitable for its own function. Of motor cars he
-kept but one, but that large and in colour a very
-bright sky-blue. As he had no proficiency in riding,
-he did not indulge in that exercise; but he was fond
-of golf and was acquainted with all the technical
-terms of the game.</p>
-
-<p>To do him justice he was not without means, nay,
-he was what many would call wealthy, and the salary
-of 5000 to which, amid the enthusiastic cheers of
-the Legislature, the Wardenship of the Court of
-Dowry had recently been raised was of no great
-consequence to his position.</p>
-
-<p>To another, alas! in the vast and heartless city,
-such a salary was shortly to mean far more,&mdash;and
-<span class="smcap">George Mulross Demaine</span>, upon whom I will not
-for the moment linger, would have been even more
-benefited in pocket than in status by the handling
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>Careless, however, as Sir Charles Repton might be
-of a fringe of income obtainable only while his own
-Party were in office, it was imagined that he was not
-a little attached to other advantages connected with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-his Wardenship. It is doubtful whether a man of
-this firm, reticent and dominating character could
-really be attached to such accidents of his post as the
-carrying of a model ship, bareheaded, in the great
-procession upon Empire Day, the wearing upon
-state occasions of shoes which curled up at the
-toe and were caught back to the ankles by small
-silver chains, or the presence upon these ornaments
-of several tiny bells that jingled as he walked;
-anachronisms of this kind can have produced little
-but discomfort in one of his stern mould when,
-upon the rare occasions of court functions, he was
-compelled to adopt the official dress. But there
-was more!</p>
-
-<p>The Wardenship of the Court of Dowry carried
-with it something regal in that great world of affairs
-in which he moved, and bitter as had been the
-attacks upon his colleagues in the Nationalist
-Cabinet,&mdash;especially during the futile attempt to
-pass the Broadening of the Streets Bill&mdash;Sir Charles
-had always been treated with peculiar and exceptional
-respect, though he would never have used
-methods so underhand as to foreclose upon any
-newspaper with whom he might have a political
-difference or to embarrass by official action any
-considerable advertiser of patent medicines whose
-manufacture came under the purview of his Department.</p>
-
-<p>It would be an exaggeration to say that he had
-raised one of the minor Government posts to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-level of the Foreign Office, but, at any rate, it had
-under his reign become almost as prominent as it
-had been when GHERKIN had first raised it to the
-rank of a principal function in the State. It was one
-of the great spending departments; Repton saw to
-that.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Charles Repton prepared to leave his house,
-I say, at half-past nine; his mind was intent upon
-the business of the morning, which was a Board
-meeting of the Van Diemens. It need not yet
-concern the reader, it is enough for her to know (and
-the knowledge is consonant with Repton&#8217;s character)
-that the Company was prepared to develop all that
-North-eastern littoral of the Australian Continent
-for which it had obtained a charter but which no
-enterprise had as yet succeeded in bringing into line
-with the vast energies of the Empire.</p>
-
-<p>Of the strategical advantages such a position can
-give, I need not speak. Luckily they were in the
-hands of patriots.</p>
-
-<p>The comparatively small sum of 4,000,000 which
-by its charter the Company was permitted to raise
-would have been subscribed twenty times over in
-the rush for shares seven years before, and it is
-common knowledge that at a particular moment
-during which values must surely have been inflated,
-they reached a premium of between 800 and 900
-per cent. The cool process of reflection which
-often follows such errors had by this time driven
-them if anything too low, and the original one pound<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-share which had twice all but touched 9, had
-been for now many months unsaleable at a nominal
-price of 16/3.</p>
-
-<p>There exists a sound rule of public administration
-of this country&mdash;inaugurated, I believe, by Mr.
-Gladstone&mdash;which forbids a Cabinet Minister to hold
-any public directorship at the same time as his official
-post, and indeed it is this rule which renders it usual
-for a couple of men upon opposite sides of the House
-to come to an arrangement whereby the one shall be
-Director while his colleague is in office, lest important
-commercial affairs should be neglected through the
-too rigid application of what is in principle so
-excellent a rule. But there had been no necessity
-for this arrangement in the case of so great an
-Imperial business as the Van Diemens: it touched
-too nearly the major interests of the country for its
-connection with a Cabinet Minister to be remarkable,
-and all patriotic opinion was sincerely glad when,
-in the preceding January, Sir Charles Repton had
-consented to acquire without direct purchase a few
-thousand shares and to take an active part in raising
-the fortunes of the scheme.</p>
-
-<p>It was recognised upon all sides that the act was
-one of statesman-like self-sacrifice, and there were
-perhaps but two papers in London (two evening
-papers of large circulation but of no high standing)
-which so much as alluded to Sir Charles&#8217; labours in
-this field.</p>
-
-<p>Of these one, the <i>Moon</i>, catered especially<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-for that very considerable public which will have
-England mistress of the waves, which is interested
-in the printed results of horse-racing, which had
-formerly triumphantly carried at the polls the demand
-for protection, and which was somewhat embittered by
-so many years of office during which the Nationalist
-Party had done little more than tax the parts of
-motor cars, foreign unsweetened prunes, moss litter,
-and such small quantities of foreign sulphuric acid
-as are used in the manufacture of beer.</p>
-
-<p>The other, the <i>Capon</i>&mdash;to give it its entire name&mdash;was
-of a finer stamp. All the young enthusiasts read
-it, and it was enormously bought for its Notes on
-Gardening, its caricatures, its clever headlines, and
-its short, downright little leaders not twenty lines
-long, printed, by a successful innovation, in capitals
-throughout, and in a red ink that showed up finely
-against the plain black and white of the remainder.</p>
-
-<p>Both these papers had continually and violently
-attacked the connection of one of our few great
-statesmen with the last of the vast enterprises of
-Empire. The <i>Capon</i>, whose editor was a young man
-with very wild eyes and hair like a weeping willow,
-attacked it on principle. The <i>Moon</i>&mdash;whose proprietor
-was an intimate friend of Sir Charles&#8217; own&mdash;was
-more practical, and attacked the connection
-between Repton and the Company with good old
-personalities worthy of a more virile age.</p>
-
-<p>Well then, at this hour of half-past nine on that
-March day of 1915, Charles Repton rose from his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-breakfast. He touched the crumbs upon his waistcoat
-so that they fell, and those upon his trousers
-also. He looked severely at the footman in the hall,
-who quailed a little at that glance, he rapidly put on
-his coat unaided, and asked briefly to see the butler.</p>
-
-<p>The butler came.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m out to lunch.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, Sir Charles.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tell Parker that if one of my letters is ever left
-again on the table after I have gone, I shall speak to
-Lady Repton.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, Sir Charles.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The car is not to be used on any account.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, Sir Charles.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He turned round abruptly and went down the steps
-and into the street, while one of his large footmen
-shut the huge door ever so gently behind him.</p>
-
-<p>He was a man of such character, who conducted
-his household so firmly, that the man, though now
-five months in his service, dared exchange no jest
-with the butler who went quietly off to his own part
-of the house again. It was a singular proof of what
-rigid domestic government can do.</p>
-
-<p>From her room Maria, Lady Repton, when she
-was quite sure that her husband was gone, slunk
-downstairs. With a cunning that was now a trifle
-threadbare, she discovered from Parker the housekeeper,
-from the secretary, from the butler, by
-methods which she fondly believed to be indirect,
-what plans her husband had formed for the day.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-She sighed to learn that she might not have the
-car, for she had designed to go and see her dear
-old friend widow, Mrs. Hulker, formerly of Newcastle,
-now of Ealing, a woman of great culture and
-refinement and one who gave Maria, Lady Repton,
-nearly all her information upon books and life. Of
-course there was always the Tube and the Underground,
-but they greatly wearied this elderly lady,
-and it was too far to drive. She sighed a little at
-her husband&#8217;s order.</p>
-
-<p>He, meanwhile, was out in Oxford Street, and
-with the rapidity that distinguishes successful men,
-had decided not to take a motor-bus but to walk.
-The March day was cold and clear and breezy, and
-he went eastward at a happy gait. He did not need
-to be at his work until close upon eleven, and even
-that he knew to be full early for at least one colleague,
-the stupidest of all the Directors, a certain
-Bingham, upon whose late rising he counted. For
-the intolerable tedium of arguing against a man who
-invariably took the unintelligent side was one of the
-few things which caused Sir Charles to betray some
-slight shade of impatience.</p>
-
-<p>The day pleased him, as indeed it pleased the
-greater part of London, from its fineness. He
-walked upon the sunny side of the street, and
-his smile, though restrained and somewhat sadly
-dignified, was the more genial from the influence of
-the weather. His brain during this brief exercise
-was not concerned, as those ignorant of our great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-men might imagine, with affairs of State, nor even
-with the choice of investments upon which he was
-in so short a time to determine. He was occupied
-rather in planning (for his power of organisation was
-famous) how exactly he should fit in his engagements
-for the day.</p>
-
-<p>A Board meeting, especially if there is any chance
-of long argument with a late riser of exceptional
-stupidity, may last for an indefinite time. He gave
-it an hour and a half.</p>
-
-<p>Then he must lunch, and that hour was earmarked
-for a certain foreigner who could not wholly make
-up his mind whether to build a certain bridge over a
-certain river for a certain government or no.</p>
-
-<p>By a quarter to three he must be in the House of
-Commons to answer questions, for those which fell to
-his share came early upon the paper, and it was the
-pride of this exact and efficient man to keep no one
-waiting. Before four he must see the manager of a
-bank; the matter was urgent, he did not wish to
-write or telephone. By five he must be back again
-in his room in the House of Commons to receive
-a deputation of gentlemen who would arrive from
-his distant constituency, and who proposed with a
-mixture of insistence and of fear to demand certain
-commercial advantages for their town at the expense
-of a neighbouring borough whose representative but
-rarely busied himself with the Great Council of the
-Nation.</p>
-
-<p>At six he must order with particular care a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-dinner upon which (in his opinion) the chances of
-the Saltoon Development largely depended. At
-seven he must dress, at eight he must dine. His
-guests (many of whom to his knowledge would drink
-to excess) would certainly detain him till long after
-ten. He must be back in the House to vote at
-eleven; for some half-hour or so after eleven he
-must be present to attend a short debate (or what
-he hoped would prove a short debate) concerning his
-own Department. He would be lucky if he was in
-bed by twelve.</p>
-
-<p>Let the reader leave him there walking in Oxford
-Street and turn her attention to George Mulross
-Demaine, or rather, to Mount Popocatapetl.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IT will generally be conceded that an underground
-river flowing with terrific force through a region
-of perennial fire, must, of its nature, form a most
-insecure foundation for any large body of masonry;
-and the danger of building upon such a bottom will
-be the more apparent if the materials used in the
-construction of the edifice be insufficiently cemented
-through the business capacity of a contractor indifferent
-to the voice of conscience.</p>
-
-<p>Yet such were the conditions upon the flanks of
-Mt. Popocatapetl when, in the Autumn of 1914,
-it was determined to erect on such a site the
-Popocatapetl Dam, for the containment of the
-Popocatapetl reservoir and the ultimate irrigation
-of El Plan.</p>
-
-<p>Mt. Popocatapetl rises in a graceful cone to the
-height of 22,130 feet above the level of the sea. Its
-summit is crowned with eternal snows, while round
-its base, in spite of numerous earthquakes, constantly
-followed by the outburst of vast fountains of boiling
-water, cling a score of towns and villages, some with
-Spanish, others with unpronounceable names. To<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-these the beneficent and lengthy rule of Gen. Porfirio
-Diaz has lent a political security which Nature would
-do well to copy,&mdash;has led the inhabitants to seek
-their treasure upon earth, and has bequeathed the
-inestimable advantage of the great Popocatapetl
-Dam.</p>
-
-<p>I say the &#8220;inestimable advantage,&#8221; for though the
-construction of this remarkable barrage has wholly
-cut off the insufficient water supply of this region, it
-has brought into the neighbourhood very considerable
-sums of American money, an active demand for
-labour, and a line of railway at the terminus of which
-can be purchased the most enlightened newspapers
-of the New World. The simplest journalist,&mdash;should
-such a being be possessed of the means to travel
-in these distant regions&mdash;might also inform the
-residents,&mdash;should they in turn be willing to hear
-him patiently,&mdash;that the irrigation of El Plan, though
-150 miles distant from their now desiccated homes,
-can not but react to their advantage and create a
-market for their wares.</p>
-
-<p>Mysterious designs of Providence! This mountain
-(among the noblest of volcanic phenomena) was
-destined to threaten with ruin a great English family,
-to precipitate onto the Treasury bench a young man
-of unassuming manners and of insufficient capacity,
-to shake half the finances of the world, and to
-determine a peerage for a man to whom such
-ornaments were baubles!</p>
-
-<p>To appreciate by what chain of circumstances<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-Popocatapetl&#8217;s hoary head might with its nod produce
-so distant a consequence, it is necessary for
-the reader once again to fix her mind most firmly
-upon the truth that an underground river flowing
-with terrific force through a region of perennial fire,
-must of its nature form a most insecure foundation
-for any considerable body of masonry, and that the
-danger of building upon such a bottom will be the
-more apparent if the material used, etc.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In the light of this knowledge, which (in common
-with the majority of rational beings) Ole Man
-Benson possessed, an investment in the stocks of
-a Company whose dividends depended upon the
-security of such an edifice might have seemed to
-those ill-acquainted with our modern Captains of
-Industry, an unpardonable folly.</p>
-
-<p>It is none the less true that Ole Man Benson
-carried a heavy load of &#8220;Popocatapetls,&#8221; naked and
-unashamed.</p>
-
-<p>He did not positively control Popocatapetls.
-Heaven forbid! But apart from a considerable
-block of which he was the actual owner, no small
-fraction was held by the Durango Investment
-Company, the majority of whose shares being the
-property of the Texas and Western Equalisation
-Syndicate, gave to Ole Man Benson in his capacity
-of Chief Equaliser, a distant but effective control
-over the second lot of Popocatapetls in question;
-while the very large investment of which the N.N.O.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-and S.L. Line had made at his command of their
-reserve funds in the same company, gave him in his
-capacity of Chief Terroriser thereof yet a third grip
-upon the venture.</p>
-
-<p>One way and another Ole Man Benson stood in
-for Popocatapetls in a manner as healthy as it was
-unmistakable. And strangely enough, the fiercer
-the perennial fires and the louder the roaring of the
-subterranean river, the more steadily did Popocatapetls
-rise, the more sublimely did Wall Street urge their
-ascension, the more vigorously did the American
-investor (who was alone concerned) buy as he was
-told until, upon a certain day, a great Republican
-statesman of undoubted integrity but of perhaps too
-high an idealism, was announced to speak upon
-the great national enterprise.</p>
-
-<p>Ole Man Benson loved, trusted and revered this
-statesman and supported him in every way: his
-name escapes me, but upon his decision the future
-of the undertaking would without question lie; and
-such was the bond between the two men that the
-politician had not hesitated to receive from the
-capitalist certain rough notes which had been jotted
-down in the office for the supreme verdict which was
-to be delivered to the nation.</p>
-
-<p>It was to be delivered at Washington upon a
-certain Wednesday (the date is memorable) at the
-unconventional hour of ten, in order that a full report
-of it might reach the foolish and the wise in New
-York City in ample time for its effects to be fully felt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-upon the markets; and <i>Ole Man Benson</i> had given
-instructions to sell not later than half-past three of
-that same fateful Wednesday.</p>
-
-<p>But what, you cry (if such is your habit), what
-of all this in connection with the ancient houses of
-this land? With the Cabinet? With peerages and
-the rest?</p>
-
-<p>Tut! Have you never heard how sensitive is
-the modern world to every breath of commercial
-news, and how all the modern world is one? Well
-then, I must explain:</p>
-
-<p>Some two years before, in London, one <span class="smcap">George
-Mulross Demaine</span> had lain languishing for lack
-of money.</p>
-
-<p>He was of good birth, and doubtless had he possessed
-a secure and flowing fortune, his natural
-diffidence would have been less pronounced, and the
-strange fatality by which he could hardly place his
-hands and feet in any position without causing some
-slight accident to the furniture, would have passed
-unnoticed, or would have been put down to good
-nature. But George Mulross was wholly devoid of
-means.</p>
-
-<p>George Mulross Demaine, like so many of his
-rank, was related to Mary Smith.</p>
-
-<p>Now Mary Smith, her pleasing, energetic person,
-her lively eyes and dear soul, the reader can never
-fully know unless she has perused or rather learned
-by heart, that entrancing work, &#8220;Mr. Clutterbuck&#8217;s
-Election,&#8221; in which, like a good fairy, she plumps<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-across the scene and is perceived to be the friend,
-the confidant, the cousin, the sister-in-law or the
-aunt of at least three-quarters of what counts in
-England.</p>
-
-<p>She will not feel, I say, unless she has made that
-work her bible, how from St. James&#8217;s Place Mary
-Smith blessed Society with her jolly little hands, and
-indulged in the companionship of characters as varied
-as the Peabody Yid and Victoria Mosel.</p>
-
-<p>What a woman! Her little shooting-box in
-Scotland! Her place in the West Country! The
-country house which she so rarely visited in the
-Midlands but which she lent in the freest manner!
-Her vivacity, her charm, her go, her scraps of French&mdash;her
-inheritance from her late husband, himself an
-American and Smith, as I need hardly say, by name!</p>
-
-<p>The reader unacquainted with the Work which
-I refer her to, must further have introduced to her
-at the proper place the notable figure of cousin
-William Bailey, at what an expense of repetition
-upon my part I need hardly say. He also was of
-the gang; he also had been elected of the people:
-but violent eccentricities now kept him apart from
-his true world. Thus he professed a vast interest
-in Jews, making them out to be the secret masters
-of England. How far that fanaticism was sincere,
-he could not himself have told you. It diverted him
-hugely to discover mares&#8217; nests of every kind; he was
-never happier than when he was tracking the relationship
-between governing families or the connection<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-of some spotless politician with a spotted financial
-adventure. There was but one excuse for his manias,
-that he remained, through the most ardent pursuit
-of them, a genial cynic. We shall meet him again.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Smith, then, was related to all of them and
-they were all related to each other, and in their
-relationship there was friendship also, and they
-governed England and the taxes bore them on.</p>
-
-<p>That the Leader of the Opposition should be
-Mary Smith&#8217;s close friend goes without saying;
-much closer and dearer to her was her other cousin,
-the young and popular Prime Minister, to his friends
-Dolly, to the world a more dignified name, who
-suffered slightly from his left lung. He had attained
-his high position before his fiftieth year was closed.
-For over four years he had conducted with consummate
-skill the fortunes of the Nationalist Party,
-and was at that very moment when Popocatapetl
-nursed so sullenly its internal rage, piloting in distant
-Westminster the Broadening of the Streets Bill
-through an excited session of Parliament.</p>
-
-<p>But of all her relatives, near or distant, of all the
-friends whom she called by their Christian name, not
-the Chancellor of the Exchequer, not the First Sea
-Lord, not the six chief members of the front Opposition
-bench, not the eight or nine disappointed men
-with corner seats, not the score or so of great financiers
-whom she honoured at her board,&mdash;not the
-Secretary of State for the Colonies (a diminished
-post since the Sarawatta business),&mdash;not the young<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-and popular Prime Minister himself, who suffered
-slightly from the left lung,&mdash;was quite so dear to
-her as that sort of nephew, George Mulross Demaine.</p>
-
-<p>The relationship was distant, and it was less on
-account of the ties of blood than by reason of the
-strong friendship that had always existed between his
-father and herself that Mary Smith first befriended
-the lad as she had already befriended so many others.
-For Demaine&#8217;s father, though what the world would
-call a failure and even for many years separated from
-his wife, had always exercised a peculiar charm over
-his acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p>Opinion had been sharply divided upon several
-episodes of his life, so sharply that towards the
-close of it he preferred to live abroad, and George&#8217;s
-boyhood had been passed in the most uneasy of
-experiences, now with his father in Ireland, now
-with his mother in the neighbourhood of Constantinople,
-and occasionally under the roof of Mary
-Smith during her short married life.</p>
-
-<p>She had grown to do for him what she would not
-do for another&mdash;for Charlie Fitzgerald for instance,&mdash;for
-he was not a scatterbrain nor one to get rid
-of money with nothing to show for it. He was
-simply a quiet, unostentatious English lad, a little
-awkward (as we know) with his hands and feet but
-hiding a heart of gold, and destined to inherit
-nothing. He was not yet of age when his mother
-died, and during the first years of his manhood he
-passed more and more time under the roof of this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-kindly and powerful woman who had determined
-that the misfortunes or faults of his parents should
-not be visited upon him.</p>
-
-<p>She took him everywhere, she kept him in pocket
-money and, most important of all, two years ago
-she had arranged his marriage.</p>
-
-<p>The moment was opportune: he was twenty-five,
-he had lost his father, he was penniless, the title of
-Grinstead into which he would certainly come was
-distant and was unprovided for. He had not chosen,
-or rather had not been given, the opportunity of
-entering, the army, but there had been just enough
-bungling about that to make him miss the university
-also. He was so unfitted for diplomacy that even
-William Bailey, who was accustomed to recommend
-for that profession the least vivacious of his young
-friends, shook his head when it was proposed, and
-after a very short experience in Paris he was withdrawn
-from it.</p>
-
-<p>No profession naturally proposed itself to a man
-of his talents, and he had not the initiative to live
-as a free lance. His marriage, therefore, was one
-of these providential things which seemed to fit
-almost too exactly into the general scheme of life
-to be true. He met his wife when Mary Smith
-(after making all her inquiries at the Petheringtons&#8217;)
-had caught and branded that heiress: and the wife
-so branded was Sudie Benson, the daughter of so
-wealthy an American as made the traffic of London
-not infrequently halt for his convenience, and who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-rather more than two years before my story bursts
-open, had seen fit to bring the radiant girl to
-London.</p>
-
-<p>The two were forcibly introduced&mdash;I mean the
-boy and the girl&mdash;they understood from the first
-what their destiny was to be. She could find no
-fault in the society which swam round her and to
-which such a marriage would introduce her activities;
-he saw no drawback to the alliance save one or two
-mannerisms in his prospective father-in-law, which
-time might modify&mdash;or on the other hand, might not.</p>
-
-<p>Ole Man Benson, to give him once more the name
-by which he was known and hated in another sphere,
-from the first ten thousand<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> which by the age of
-forty-three he had laboriously accumulated in
-shredded codfish, had dealt not with things, as do
-lesser men, but with figures. He had gone boldly
-forward like a young Napoleon, using, it must be
-remembered, not only the money of others but very
-often his own as well.</p>
-
-<p>He had been born of Scotch-Irish parents, probably
-of the name of Benson, and certainly married in the
-First Baptist Church of Cincinnati not quite three-quarters
-of a century ago. He was the youngest
-child of a numerous family, and was baptized or
-named after the poet Theocritus, with a second or
-middle name of Chepstow, which in his signature he
-commonly reduced to its initial letter.</p>
-
-<p>Theocritus C. Benson, now familiar to the whole<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-Anglo-Saxon race of every colour and clime, was
-of that type always rare but now, though rare, conspicuous,
-which can so organise and direct the acts
-of others as to bring order out of chaos, chaos out
-of order, and alternately accumulate and disperse
-fortunes hitherto unprecedented in the history of
-the world.</p>
-
-<p>He was accustomed (in the interviews which he
-was proud to grant to the newspapers of England,
-America and the Colonies) to ascribe his great
-position to unwearied industry and to an abhorrence
-of all excess (notably in the consumption of fermented
-liquors) and particularly of the horrid practice
-of gambling. His puritan upbringing, which had
-taught him to look upon cards as the Devil&#8217;s picture-book,
-and upon racing as akin to the drama in its
-spiritual blight, was, he would constantly assert,
-the key to all that he had done since he left his
-father&#8217;s home. But in this manly self-judgment the
-Hon. Mr. Benson did himself an injustice. These
-high qualities are to be discovered in many million
-of his fellow-citizens, and he might as well have
-pointed, as sometimes he did point with pride, to
-the number of his Lodge or to his ignorance of
-foreign languages as the causes of his repeated
-triumphs.</p>
-
-<p>There was more: To his hatred of hazard and to
-his stern sense of duty and unbending industry, he
-added something of that daring which has made for
-the greatness of the blood in all its adventures<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-Overseas, and for no branch more than for the
-Scotch-Irish.</p>
-
-<p>He would boldly advance sums in blind confidence
-of the future, the mere total of which would have
-appalled a lesser man, and he would as boldly withdraw
-them to the ruin of prosperous concerns, where
-another would have been content to let production
-take its own course. And this fine command of
-cash and of credit which he used as a General uses
-an army, had in it something of personal courage;
-for towards the latter part of his life, when he had
-come to control a vast private fortune, it was imperative
-that in many a bold conception he himself
-should stand to lose or gain.</p>
-
-<p>At the moment when his only daughter left her
-happy Belgian convent to be presented at the Court
-of St. James, he was, though at the height of his
-fortunes, a lonely and to some extent an embittered
-man.</p>
-
-<p>His wife had married another: their only child
-he had not seen for three years, and though he knew
-that her robust common sense would stand against
-the religious environment of the gentle nuns who
-had been entrusted with her upbringing, yet he could
-not but feel that she had passed the most formative
-years of her life in an alien air, and under influences
-quite other than those of the Ohio Valley.</p>
-
-<p>He had therefore determined to decline numerous
-and advantageous offers and to be present himself
-in London during the season which saw her introduction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-to the world, and there, in spite of his
-unfamiliarity with English ways, he soon appreciated
-the central position of Mary Smith whose late
-husband indeed he had come across a quarter of a
-century before when he was freezing the Topekas
-off the Pit.</p>
-
-<p>Theocritus C. Benson had seen young Demaine
-and was contented; he was also naturally anxious
-to come across old Lord Grinstead if possible, that
-he might estimate for himself how long his daughter
-might have to wait for her title. Indeed he would
-not allow the marriage to take place until the old
-man had been pointed out to him, shrivelled almost
-to nothingness and pulled with extreme caution and
-deliberation in a bath-chair through the private
-gardens of Bayton House.</p>
-
-<p>Had he known that the figure thus exhibited to
-him so far from being that of the aged peer was but
-the carcase of a ruined dependant it would perhaps
-have done little to alter his decision, for though
-Lord Grinstead was of gigantic stature, with purple
-face and thunderous voice, yet his habit of gross and
-excessive drinking gave him a tenure of life at least
-as precarious as that of the enfeebled figure upon
-which the financier had gazed; and what is more,
-Lord Grinstead, though an execrable horseman,
-had suddenly begun to hunt upon hired mounts
-with a recklessness and tenacity which, if from that
-cause alone, should speedily ensure a violent death.</p>
-
-<p>When all was happily settled, when Demaine had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-been given away by his principal creditor, and Sudie
-by her upright and handsome old father, when the
-last of the wedding gifts had been exchanged at the
-usual discount and the young couple had gone off to
-Honiton Castle which had been lent them for 2000
-during the honeymoon, another aspect of life had to
-be considered.</p>
-
-<p>A point upon which Mary Smith had done her
-best and failed was the settlements&mdash;1500 a year
-to stand between his child and starvation or worse,
-Theocritus was willing to determine. It was the
-sum he had himself named before the first negotiations
-were begun; but as they proceeded he refused
-to change it by one penny, and at last the discussion
-was abandoned in despair. All the young people
-might need they should have&mdash;she was his only
-child, they could trust him to be more than generous.
-Capital sums when they were required for anything
-but direct investment, should be always at their
-disposal, and the half or more than the half of his
-enormous income should be ready to their call; but
-he resolutely retained to himself the right to control
-the management of all save the infinitesimal sum
-which was to stand between Sudie and her husband&#8217;s
-tyranny, or the world&#8217;s harshness.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Smith&#8217;s veiled threats and open flattery were
-alike useless. She capitulated, told the young
-woman to earmark her tiny allowance for journeys,
-and gained from Theocritus Chepstow only this:&mdash;that
-he would buy a freehold for them, build and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-furnish it. Theocritus was on like a bird; and the
-lovely little lodge which London now knows as
-Demaine House, with its curious formal gardens, odd
-Dutch stables and Grecian weathercock on the site
-of the old mews in what is now Benson Street, is the
-proof that he kept his promise.</p>
-
-<p>For a year Ole Man Benson had not only kept his
-promise in the way of building and furnishing for
-the young people: he had done more. He had
-floated them upon London with all the revenue that
-could be reserved from the new venture upon which
-he designed to double the colossal sums which
-directly or indirectly stood to his name, and every
-penny that he could spare from his first early
-purchases of Popocatapetls went into the status and
-future social position of his daughter. Now, after
-two years, Popocatapetl Dam was finished and yet
-greater things lay before them.</p>
-
-<p>Demaine was put into Parliament by a majority
-comparable only to the financial advantages which
-had secured it. His birth, her voice and its timbre,
-gathered into Demaine House all that so small a
-Great House could hold.</p>
-
-<p>So things had stood to within a week of the
-March day upon which we saw that very different
-man, Charles Repton, walking into the City of
-London....</p>
-
-<p>But from the name of Charles Repton let me
-rapidly slew off to the sombre pyramid of that
-peak in the neighbourhood of Darien and recall the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-caprice of Popocatapetl upon which so much was to
-depend.</p>
-
-<p>It was a Wednesday in that March of 1915 that
-the Statesman was to speak in Washington at ten:
-(for two years Demaine House had thriven, it slept
-that Tuesday night unconscious of its fate). It was
-for the Wednesday at 3.30 that the order to sell
-stood in Ole Man Benson&#8217;s name.... Well ...</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap2">LATE upon that Tuesday night Ole Man Benson
-boarded the Louis XV. Rosewood Express
-de Luxe as it steamed out of the Chicago Depot of
-the M.N. &amp; C.: he was off to his mountain property
-in Idaho, and in the privacy of his section, Ole Man
-Benson slept.</p>
-
-<p>Not so the forces of Nature, so often destructive
-of the schemes of pigmy man!</p>
-
-<p>An appalling convulsion altogether exceeding
-anything heard or dreamt of since the beginning of
-time, totally destroyed the Popocatapetelian landscape
-in the small hours of that same morning; and
-as, a thousand miles to the north, the Louis XV.
-Rosewood Express de Luxe rolled in a terrific
-manner upon its insufficient rock ballast, the
-subterranean river, the perennial fires and the unscrupulously
-erected edifice of the great dam, shot
-aloft in a vast confusion and were replaced by a
-chasm some quarter of a mile in breadth and of a
-depth unfathomable to mortal plummets. It was
-March; March 1915. In Iowa in March it snows.
-The locomotive and two of the cars attached to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-the Louis XV. Rosewood Express de Luxe were
-buried a little beyond Blucher in a drift of snow
-the height and dimensions of which exceeded
-the experience of the oldest settler in that charming
-prairie town. <i>The same storm which had caused
-the misadventure had broken the wires for many miles
-around.</i></p>
-
-<p>Ole Man Benson awoke, therefore, to a scene of
-great discomfort, but upon such a date and with a
-prospect of so considerable an increase of fortune
-awaiting him upon that very day, he was the gayest
-of the company, and in spite of his years he
-shovelled away with the best of them, a-splendid-type-of-Anglo-Saxon-manhood.</p>
-
-<p>By one o&#8217;clock that noon the telegraph at last
-was working, and the first messages came through
-to the little depot; they concerned a riot in a local
-home for paralytics. Next, before two, news was
-conveyed of an outbreak of religious mania in the
-town of Omaha. It was not till a late hour in the
-evening that Ole Man Benson, waiting anxiously
-for the report of the great speech, heard the earliest
-tidings of the practical joke which Providence&mdash;in
-spite of Gen. Porfirio Diaz&#8217; equable and masterly
-rule&mdash;had played him in the distant tropics.</p>
-
-<p>The same rapidity of thought which had enabled
-Theocritus to accumulate his vast fortune enabled
-him in that moment to perceive that he was ruined.
-Not indeed necessarily for ever,&mdash;he had known
-such things before&mdash;but at any rate in a manner<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-sufficiently hefty to produce his immediate collapse.</p>
-
-<p>When, next morning, he could bring himself to
-read the papers, the disaster appeared before him
-in its exact proportions and tremendous scale.</p>
-
-<p>That speech, that statesman-like speech, had never
-been delivered&mdash;and for the best of reasons:
-Popocatapetl had unbosomed first! In the wild
-fall of prices nothing had done more to ruin the
-market than the heavy selling of agents acting on
-account of Theocritus C. Benson. There were
-dozens within the roaring walls of the building in
-Wall Street, thousands in the anxious streets without,
-who saw in the Benson selling yet another move of
-diabolical cunning proceeding from that Napoleonic
-brain. His agents had done their work thoroughly
-and well. They had anticipated his orders with
-such promptitude that no stock was left unsaleable
-upon their hands, and when, before the end of that
-black day, Popocatapetls were offering at the cost of
-haulage, they could proudly say that every interest
-of their client&#8217;s in the ruined concern had been
-disposed of. And Theocritus C. Benson, henceforward
-known as the Earthquake King, was left
-with no unsaleable paper upon his hands, but on the
-contrary with a solid cash result equivalent to at
-least three cents on the dollar of his yesterday&#8217;s
-fortune. This it is to be faithfully served in the
-intricacies of modern speculation!</p>
-
-<p>A truce to Ole Man Benson! If I have introduced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-his wretched commercial adventures at such
-length it is but to explain the portentous effect
-which they had upon the fortunes of one British
-statesman.</p>
-
-<p>Far off in London (Eng.) George Mulross Demaine
-saw nothing in his morning newspaper but the news
-(to him a serious matter) that Pink Eye was scratched
-for the Grand National. His wife, whom her father
-had shielded from the vulgar atmosphere of
-commerce, noted indeed the news from the Western
-Hemisphere and was for a passing moment concerned;
-but Ole Man Benson did not telegraph,
-for there were no flies upon him, nor did Ole Man
-Benson even write, and for the same entomological
-reason.</p>
-
-<p>Oh! no. Ole Man Benson proceeded to New
-York, had certain interviews with certain people, took
-certain drugs, went through a certain cure, laid as
-he hoped the foundations of yet another scheme, and
-not until 30th of March, a full week after the matter
-I have described, did Theocritus dictate a brief note
-to his daughter, which I will here transcribe:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-<tr><td>(If not delivered, please return &nbsp; &nbsp; <br />
-&nbsp; &nbsp; within three days to<br />
-&nbsp; &nbsp; Theocritus C. Benson.)<br /></td>
-
-<td class="tdc">&#8220;2909 <span class="smcap">Kanaka Building</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">New York City</span><br />
-30/3/&#8217;15</td></tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>Coming across on Potassic. Depart 4th&mdash;probable
-arrival Plymouth 11th. Shall cable.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-(Signed) &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; <span class="smcap">Father</span>&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<p>With true business instinct the great organiser<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-dispatched the cable upon the 4th of April, so that
-his daughter received upon the evening of the same
-day in her London house the reassuring word
-&#8220;eleventh,&#8221; which her reception of the letter a few
-days later easily enabled her to comprehend; and
-on 11th of April, sure enough, Ole Man Benson
-in a grave and sober manner embraced his daughter
-on the landing-stage at Plymouth. George Mulross
-Demaine was also there, standing a little behind the
-affectionate group, clothed in a large green ulster
-and a cap of the same cloth and colour with an
-enormous peak.</p>
-
-<p>They got into the train together and all the way
-up to London the master of empty millions said
-nothing.</p>
-
-<p>As they were driving to Demaine House he spoke:
-&#8220;Any o&#8217; your folk to supper?&#8221; he said.</p>
-
-<p>His daughter with filial gaiety assured him that
-she had waited his orders, to which he replied, &#8220;Good
-girl Sudie.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>During the meal he was as silent as he had been
-upon the journey, and at the end of it he gave his
-son-in-law to understand that he desired to talk
-business with his daughter and preferred to be alone
-with her: and George Mulross went out, taking his
-wine with him, for his wife&#8217;s father drank none, but
-only Toxine.</p>
-
-<p>The message Ole Man Benson had to deliver to
-Sudie was simple enough: there would, for he could
-not say how long, be no more money forthcoming.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-He hoped the position might be retrieved; he was
-confident it would be retrieved before the Fall, by
-Thanksgiving at latest. Till then, nit!</p>
-
-<p>Sudie had all her father&#8217;s readiness; she pointed
-out to him at once that under the conditions of
-English politics the total cessation of an income the
-source of which was familiar to her husband&#8217;s friends,
-would at once affect her father&#8217;s credit in future
-transactions, and clearly showed that no investment
-could be more to his advantage than the placing of
-sums at her disposal for the proper up-keep of his
-daughter&#8217;s position in the society of London.</p>
-
-<p>To this powerful argument Theocritus immediately
-replied that those who looked for hens&#8217; teeth were
-liable to be stung; that cigars containing explosive
-matter had been offered him too frequently in the
-past for him now to entertain the thought of consuming
-them; and that when he was bulling London
-he would advise. By which parables he intended to,
-and did, convey to his daughter his fixed conclusion
-that it was up to her to bear futures: and lest she
-should have failed wholly to seize his point, he told
-her briefly and in the plainest terms that whatever
-rocks were going were wanted&mdash;badly&mdash;to sling at
-something with more dough in it than Mayfair.</p>
-
-<p>With that their brief discourse was ended.</p>
-
-<p>This little conversation over, Demaine was given to
-understand that he might re-enter the room. He
-was a little shy in doing so, for interviews of this
-sort usually meant some new gift or subsidy, but it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-was shyness of a pleasant sort and he had little
-doubt that he should hear in a moment the extent
-or at least the nature of the new bounty which his
-young household was to receive. He was therefore
-only puzzled by the novelty of phrasing when his
-father-in-law, looking at him in a manner rather
-humorous than severe, remarked:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;ve stacked it up with Sudie, and she may
-stack it up with you.&#8221; Then in a kinder tone, he
-added: &#8220;You catch?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes sir,&#8221; said George untruthfully.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why then, &#8217;nuff&#8217;s said,&#8221; concluded the Captain of
-Industry, and very thoughtfully he picked his teeth
-with a long fine silver point which he habitually
-carried in his waistcoat for that purpose of the
-toilet. &#8220;It&#8217;s no call ter last long,&#8221; he muttered half
-to himself and half to the bewildered Demaine;
-&#8220;anyhow the pump&#8217;s sucking; and there&#8217;s no more
-oil,&#8221;&mdash;to elucidate which somewhat cryptic phrase
-Sudie begged her husband not to stand gaping there
-like a booby, but to sit down and understand as much
-of it as he could.</p>
-
-<p>Whereupon in the clearest possible language,
-punctuated by her father&#8217;s decisive and approving
-nods, she translated into older idioms exactly what
-had happened, and exactly what it meant. They
-were worth just 1500 a year between them from
-that day onwards for&mdash;well, till there was a change.</p>
-
-<p>It was not tact but nervousness that prevented
-George at the end of this dreadful passage from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-suggesting that his father-in-law could do again what
-he had done before, that the strain was temporary,
-and that he for his part hoped for the best; but his
-wife, who was by this time fairly well accustomed to
-follow his thought, was careful to point out that
-whatever the future might do for them, the present
-was dirt black, and the present meant at least two
-years:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;At least two years?&#8221; (to her father).</p>
-
-<p>To which her father very simply and plainly
-answered her: &#8220;Yep.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There was much of the splendid blood of
-Theocritus in Sudie; indeed it is often observed
-that the genius of the father will descend to the
-daughter&mdash;and <i>vice versa</i>. The very next sentence,
-therefore, with which Sudie prodded her disconsolate
-spouse, was a demand for a list of those who might
-be ready to take Demaine House, to take it at once,
-to take it furnished, to take it high, to take it by the
-year and not for the season, and, when they had
-taken it, to <i>pay</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Demaine immediately suggested the name of such
-of his acquaintance as might most desire to occupy
-such a position in London, and were also least able
-to do so, but he was careful to add after each
-name, some such remark as &#8220;But of course they
-won&#8217;t do,&#8221; or &#8220;but I don&#8217;t think he can afford it,&#8221;&mdash;until
-his father-in-law in a pardonable lassitude
-went out.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The best thing you can do,&#8221; said his wife with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-renewed decision when they were alone, &#8220;is to get
-up right here and go round to Mary&#8217;s.&#8221; For it was
-a notable circumstance in Sudie&#8217;s relations with
-Mrs. Smith that while that lady gave <i>her</i> her full
-title, <i>she</i> would invariably allude to Mrs. Smith by
-the more affectionate medium of the Christian
-name.</p>
-
-<p>Demaine assented. He found his father-in-law at
-the door; they went out together into the night, and
-when he had timidly admitted that he was going
-South towards St. James&#8217;s, the financier with rapid
-decision announced that he was going North towards
-Marylebone,&mdash;and they parted.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Smith was not in. It was only eleven and
-the theatre detained her. George waited. He
-took counsel from several valuable pictures, was
-careful to touch and handle nothing upon her tables
-(for he knew that she detested an accident and with
-almost-canine-sagacity could invariably detect his
-interference), and stood, not at ease.</p>
-
-<p>She came in at twelve; she brought a party with
-her, and she insisted upon supper. It was one before
-she could talk to him alone, and she talked to him
-until two.</p>
-
-<p>The first thing she did was to tell him that he
-could not let his house that season and that he must
-make up his mind to it. The second was to discover
-what balance there was at the bank&mdash;and to hear
-that it was pitifully small. The third was to offer
-him a short loan that would carry him over at least<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-a few weeks of necessary expense, and the fourth to
-tell him that, not upon the morrow but upon the
-day after, she would have decided.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile he must post a letter for her.</p>
-
-<p>She sat down and wrote at once to William
-Bailey.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When you get outside, George,&#8221; she said as she
-gave him the letter, &#8220;you will see a very large pillar
-box. It is much larger than most pillar boxes; it
-has two slits in it instead of one. Do you follow
-me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he said humbly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You will not put this letter in your pocket,
-George,&#8221; she went on firmly and kindly, as certain
-practitioners do when they propose to hypnotise
-their patients. &#8220;You will carry it in front of you
-like this.&#8221; She put it into his right hand, crooked
-his arm, held his wrist upright, so that his eyes could
-not help falling upon the missive. &#8220;The moment
-you get outside you will put it in the <i>right</i>-hand slit
-of the pillar box, won&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He said &#8220;yes&#8221; again, as humbly as before. And
-as he went out he did all that she had asked him,
-though to make the matter more sure she watched
-for a moment from the window.</p>
-
-<p>When William Bailey received the letter next
-morning he was in the best of moods. For one
-thing he was going to leave London for three weeks,&mdash;a
-prospect that always delighted him. For
-another he was going to do some sea fishing, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-sport of which he was passionately fond. For a
-third, an Austrian money-lender and a baron at that,
-had shot himself&mdash;it had of course been kept out of
-the English papers, but he had read all the details in
-one of the anti-semitic rags which are the disgrace of
-Vienna, and his spirits had risen, buoyant at the
-news. Finally, and what was of perhaps most
-importance for an eccentric and middle-aged celibate,
-the house which he had hired for a month he knew
-exactly suited him. It was the house of Merry, the
-architect, and stood just so far from Parham Town
-as would give him the isolation he adored, yet just
-so near to Parham Harbour as would put him in touch
-with the sea.</p>
-
-<p>For all these reasons he read Mary Smith&#8217;s little
-note in great gaiety of heart, and in a mood in which
-men of influence are willing to do what they can for
-their kind.</p>
-
-<p>Like many men of wealth and ability whom
-opportunity has made eccentric, William Bailey
-could not bear to handle the pen. He hesitated for
-some moments between the extreme boredom of
-writing and the tantalising business of the telephone,
-decided in favour of the former, wrote on a form&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="center">&#8220;Get Dolly to make room for him.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="gap">(Signed) &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; <span class="smcap">Bill</span>&#8221;&mdash;</span>
-</p></div>
-
-<p>and sent the message out to be telegraphed to his
-cousin.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>Mary Smith, receiving it, received with it a great
-light.</p>
-
-<p>It was not always easy for her to follow the changes
-that took place in political appointments, but she
-was certain of <i>this</i>, that the present administration
-contained more unfamiliar names than she cared to
-think of, and that there <i>must</i> be room in such a crowd
-for a man of poor George&#8217;s standing.</p>
-
-<p>Now from the moment that such thoughts as these
-entered Mary Smith&#8217;s head about a man&#8217;s appointment,
-that man was safe: poor George&#8217;s future was
-therefore ultimately secure. But there was no time
-to lose. He must get on to the front bench, and he
-must get there with a salary, and the salary must be
-sufficient, and the promotion must be rapid. She
-remembered that Dolly would be at the Petheringtons&#8217;
-that evening, and she determined to be there too.
-She hoped and prayed that nothing would bring
-George, though since George was everywhere the
-chances were against her prayer being answered.</p>
-
-<p>For the moment she thought of warning him not
-to come, then, remembering certain indiscretions of
-his in the past, she thought it best to say nothing,
-but to trust to chance.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">CHARLES REPTON, manifold as were his
-financial interests, knew nothing of Popocatapetls,
-and cared less.</p>
-
-<p>The manner in which his life was to be influenced
-by that very distant cataclysm was hidden from him;
-as (for that matter) it would be hidden from the reader
-also had not this book been most boldly published.</p>
-
-<p>Yet another thing the full import of which may
-escape the reader, is the fact that Sir Charles
-Repton was extremely tender just behind the ears;
-but for this the reader herself alone and not the
-author is to blame, for if the reader had any knowledge
-of Caryll&#8217;s Ganglia she would have guessed at
-twenty things. But no matter: Caryll&#8217;s Ganglia and
-their effect upon self-control very much interrupt
-the chain of those absorbing adventures which, if she
-will continue, the reader will presently peruse.</p>
-
-<p>Anyhow, those regions of the head which lie
-behind either ear were for some reason or other very
-tender, large, sensitive to pressure, and in a way
-abnormal in Sir Charles Repton.</p>
-
-<p>When, therefore, somewhere about the corner of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-Tottenham Court Road (on that March day on which
-we left him walking to his Board meeting), his hat
-blew off: when he had run after it: when in doing
-so he had ruffled his fine crop of white hair; and when,
-to have it all set right, he had gone into a second-rate
-barber&#8217;s, it may well be imagined that he gave
-the man who served him minute instructions that the
-head rest upon the back of the chair should be made
-comfortable&mdash;and so it was. And on to it Sir
-Charles Repton leant gingerly the head upon whose
-clear action depended the future fortunes of Van
-Diemens.</p>
-
-<p>The man in brushing his hair with an apparatus
-of singular power, turned the monologue on to the
-commonplaces of the moment, which included the
-bestiality of the Government and the abhorrent
-nature of the Italian people, of whom at that particular
-moment in 1915 the people of London stood
-in abject terror.</p>
-
-<p>Whether it was the pressure of the violent rotating
-brush or some looseness in the screw that held the
-support behind him, with a shock and a clang that
-support slipped, and Sir Charles Repton&#8217;s head came
-smartly down, first through nothingness and then
-on to two iron nuts which exactly corresponded to
-those processes of the skull just behind either ear,
-in which, as I have taken pains to remark, he was
-peculiarly sensitive: for they were largely developed
-in him and nourished it would seem by an unusual
-supply of blood.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>Sharp as was the pain, Charles Repton controlled
-himself, listened to the explanations and apologies
-of the barber, and submitted himself again to the
-grooming for which he had entered.</p>
-
-<p>When he went out again into the street he had
-almost forgotten the accident. The two places where
-his head had been struck swelled slightly and he
-touched them now and again, but they soon passed
-from his mind; within ten minutes they were no
-longer painful; yet was there set up in them from
-that moment, an irritation which was to have no
-inconsiderable consequence.</p>
-
-<p>He went on into the City, ordered one or two things
-which he had set down in his memorandum before
-starting, looked in at a City Club where he knew one
-or two items of news were awaiting him, and slowly
-betook himself to the offices of the Van Diemens
-Company. He had thoroughly planned out the
-scheme of that morning&#8217;s work; it needed no
-recapitulation in his mind, yet as his habit was, just
-before opening the door of the Board Room, in the
-few seconds of going up the stairs, he briefly presented
-his scheme of tactics to his own mind.</p>
-
-<p>The Directors must ask the shareholders for fresh
-capital; a nominal million, an increase of 25 per
-cent. upon the value of the shares at par. That was
-the first point.</p>
-
-<p>The second point was the object for which this
-levy should nominally be demanded. On that also
-he had made up his mind. Paton had quite unconsciously<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-suggested to him the master idea; a little
-belt of untravelled and unknown country (locally
-known as the &#8220;Out and Out&#8221;) wherein the degraded
-Kawangas&mdash;so Paton had told him, and after all
-Paton had been there&mdash;held their orgies in Mutchi-time,
-alone separated Perks&#8217; Bay from the Straits,
-and the long detour which all traffic must now make
-between the coaling station and the high road to the
-East, could be cut off by a line crossing that region.
-Paton had assured him with immense enthusiasm
-that such a line would give its possessor the strategic
-key to the gate of everything East of the Bay of
-Bengal, and, what was more important in Sir Charles&#8217;
-eyes than Paton&#8217;s own opinion, a vast mass of
-gentlemen in the suburbs of London and perhaps
-five-sixths of the journalists in Fleet Street, were
-ready to rally to the idea. It had been well preached
-and well dinned in.</p>
-
-<p>These two points were clear: they must ask for
-a million and they must ask it for the purpose of
-building a railway that would at last ensure the
-Empire against the nightmare of foreign rivals.</p>
-
-<p>There was a third point. The shareholders would
-not or could not subscribe a million but that was easily
-turned. They should be asked for no more than
-200,000,&mdash;a shilling a share&mdash;in cash down, &#8220;the
-remainder to be paid,&#8221; etc. etc.</p>
-
-<p>Had not Sir Charles possessed an iron control of
-his face, the strong set smile which he wore as he
-entered the Board Room would have broadened at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-the recollection of that last detail. On the other
-hand had he not possessed such self-control some
-movement of annoyance might have escaped him
-to discover present at the table, among his other
-colleagues, the late-rising and impervious Bingham.
-The sight was sufficient to exasperate a man of less
-balance. The hour had been carefully chosen to
-avoid such an accident, and that accident meant
-perhaps another half-hour or more of close argument
-and of subtle effort.</p>
-
-<p>For his colleague Bingham added to a native
-idiocy of solid texture and formidable dimensions,
-the experience of extensive travel; and he was in
-particular well acquainted with the district with
-regard to which the Board must that day make its
-decision. It was certain, therefore, that his fellow-Directors
-would listen to him with peculiar respect,
-not only on account of his stupidity which necessarily
-commanded a certain attention, but also on account
-of his intimacy with plain matters of fact: he had
-been upon the spot: he was the man who knew.</p>
-
-<p>It was just as Repton had feared. Business that
-might have been done in a quarter of an hour and a
-decision which contained no more than the issue of
-pieces of paper was turned into a long practical discussion
-by the intolerable ponderance of Bingham,
-who would wait until every one had had his say, and
-then would bring in some dreadful little technical
-point about a marsh, a rainy season or a fly; he was
-careful to pepper his conversation with local terms a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-hundred times more remote than the Kawanga and
-Mutchi-time; in every conceivable manner he put
-his spoke into the wheels of business.</p>
-
-<p>So considerable was the effect produced by the
-redoubtable Bingham at that table that, were Csarism
-a common political theory in elderly men, the
-whole conduct of Van Diemens would for the future
-have been put into his hands. Luckily for the
-Company its forms were not so democratic.</p>
-
-<p>Charles Repton waited patiently. When he spoke
-his point was as simple as falling off a log: what was
-wanted was not a railway in itself, it was a new issue
-of capital. He was profoundly indifferent what label
-should be tied onto that issue, so long as it was a
-label good enough to get the original shareholders to
-come in. The public would never come in as things
-were: its pusillanimity was increased by the fact that
-the Company had been in existence for now eleven
-years and had hitherto failed to pay a dividend of
-any kind. After some thought he had decided, in
-company with one or two others upon the Board, that
-a railway through a certain district of the concession,
-locally known as &#8220;The Out and Out,&#8221; and remarkable
-for the fact that no white man had yet visited it, would
-be the best attraction he could offer. He was prepared
-to show by the aid of maps upon which should
-be marked all favourable things, that a line driven
-through this district would unite with the world two
-provinces teeming with inexhaustible wealth, of a
-heavenly climate, and hitherto by the mere accident<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-of the Out and Out belt, cut off from the longing
-embraces of commerce. More; he could show that
-this single line of railway would bestow upon his
-beloved country so vast a strategic superiority over
-all other nations as would ensure her immediate
-success in any campaign, no matter what the quality
-of the troops she might employ. To this he added
-the attractions of touring in the tropics and the allurements
-of big game for those wealthy gentlemen whom
-he designed in the new prospectus to term Shikaris.</p>
-
-<p>With the new capital subscribed and long before
-the line was surveyed, there was little doubt that the
-shares which had fallen from over 9 to the comparatively
-low quotation&mdash;but oh! not price&mdash;of
-16/3 (at which quotation he had first consented
-to tender his services to the Company) would rise to
-certainly over 1, perhaps to nearer 2, and what
-was more to the point they would be readily saleable.
-He was prepared in that event to transfer his property
-in them to others, a course which he sincerely hoped
-his fellow-shareholders would also follow, though of
-course he would not take it upon himself to advise
-any one of them.</p>
-
-<p>Bingham, like the practical man he was, pinned
-himself to the railway. He <i>knew</i> the Out and Out;
-not that he&#8217;d ever been there,&mdash;no white man had,&mdash;but
-he had talked to several of the Kawanga in
-Mutchi-time, and he shook his head despondently.
-There was one continuous line of precipice 3000 feet
-deep; there was a river which was now a stream<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-five miles broad, now a marsh and now again dry&mdash;, sometimes
-for years on end. There was a dense mass
-of forest; there was that much more difficult thing,
-a belt of shifting sand dunes; there were nearly 300
-miles without water through these. He was prepared
-to speak all day upon the difficulties of building a
-railway which none but the least intelligent had ever
-designed to build.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Charles Repton could ride himself on the curb,
-and more than anything else this mastery had given
-him his present great position; but that day he had to
-exercise his will to the full, and in that exercise he felt
-slight twinges behind the ear where the barber&#8217;s rest
-had struck him. It was all he could do to prevent
-himself from drumming on the table or from making
-those interruptions which only serve as fuel to the
-slow criticisms of the dull.</p>
-
-<p>At last&mdash;and heaven knows with what subtlety and
-patience&mdash;he conquered. There was a vote (a thing
-he had wished to avoid), but he carried it by two;
-and it was agreed that the issue of new capital
-should be made, that a General Meeting of the shareholders
-should be called for Tuesday the 2nd of June,
-and that he, Repton, should have the task of laying
-the scheme before them. The new prospectus, which
-he had already drafted, was passed round and with
-a very few emendations accepted. Then, after as
-heavy a bit of work as had ever been undertaken in
-the way of persuasion, the principal brain in that
-company was at last free for other things.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>It was half-past one. He had just time to meet
-and to convince yet another fool upon another matter:
-the foreigner acting as agent for his Government, on
-the matter of the bridge: a bridge which the Foreign
-Government might or might not build, and, if they
-built, might or might not order from a firm which
-Repton had reason to befriend. Repton must lunch
-with that foreigner: he must persuade him to build:
-he must get the order&mdash;then he must be in his place
-in the House in time for questions.</p>
-
-<p>The foreigner was as wax in his hands: not as
-good warm wax, adulterated wax, candle wax, but
-rather as beeswax, very ancient and hard. It was
-a full hour before that wax was pliable, but once
-again the unceasing, managed, strict watchfulness,
-the set face which had always in it something stern
-but never anything aggressive, the balance of judgment,
-conquered. Down to the smallest detail of
-that conversation Repton was the artist, his host at
-the lunch was the public, accepting and gradually
-convinced, and the bridge was ordered for the
-Foreign Government, though it was a useless bridge
-leading from nowhere to nowhere, and though it
-could have been built much more solidly and
-much better by the people of the place than by
-the English firm.</p>
-
-<p>Then Repton went on to the House of Commons,
-and there, as in every duty of the day, the weight of
-his character told.</p>
-
-<p>The questions were slight, there were not half a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-dozen that concerned his Department, but he answered
-them all with that curious restraint of tone which somehow
-made it difficult to cross-examine his Department.
-And he faced the House with such a poise
-and expression that one almost wondered, as one
-looked at him, upon which side he was sitting, or
-whether indeed the mere game of In&#8217;s and Out&#8217;s
-entered into his brain at all.</p>
-
-<p>He seemed to be quite above the divisions of party.
-He seemed a sort of Ambassador from the permanent
-officials and to carry into the House of Commons an
-atmosphere at once judicial and experienced which
-no one could resist. When he had first accepted the
-Wardenship of the Court of Dowry it had been
-wondered that he should take so secondary a post.
-Now, after these four years, it was rather wondered
-why no one had seen till then the possibilities that
-lay in the position.</p>
-
-<p>After that typical and decisive day, Repton, for
-more than a month, refrained from debate.</p>
-
-<p>He was ever in his seat on those two days in each
-week when it was his business to answer questions:
-he never let his understrapper appear for him; for
-one full fortnight he was permanently in attendance,
-watching the fortunes before a select committee of a
-certain Bill, for which the public cared nothing but
-which he knew might change in a very important
-particular the public fortune&mdash;but in general he
-seemed to be in retirement. He was planning hard.</p>
-
-<p>A mixture of Imperial sentiment and personal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-pride urged him to put Van Diemens on their legs,
-and all April, all through the Easter Recess, he
-remained in London working. He worked right on
-into May; for the first week after Parliament met
-again he was seen but little; one thing only troubled
-him, that at long intervals&mdash;sometimes as long as ten
-days, an uneasy twinge behind the ears, the result of
-that little half-forgotten accident, incommoded him.
-These twinges came a trifle more frequently as May
-advanced. After the last of them he had felt a little
-dazed&mdash;no more. And still he worked and worked,
-holding twenty reins in his hands.</p>
-
-<p>Before the end of May the fruit of all this labour
-began to appear. Camptons were reconstructed,
-arbitration had been forced upon the Docks combination
-in the North just in time to prevent a wholesale
-transference of shipping abroad, and more important
-than all, perhaps, there had begun to crop up in the
-papers, here, there, and everywhere, the mention&mdash;and
-the flattering mention&mdash;of Van Diemens, and the
-wealthy were already familiar with the conception of
-a certain railway in the land which was under the
-Van Diemens charter.</p>
-
-<p>The wealthy, but as yet only the wealthy; it is as
-fatal to be too early as to be too late, and that brain
-which knew how to drive and compel, had also known
-so well how to restrain, that the shares still remained
-unsaleable with the meaningless quotation of
-sixteen shillings and a few fluctuating pence still
-attached to them in the market lists.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>So Repton stood in the middle of May, 1915, when
-he became aware that an obscure member (obscure
-at least in the House of Commons&mdash;and Repton
-noticed little of, and cared nothing for, the merely
-luxurious world of London), an aristocrat of sorts,
-one of the <i>Demaine</i>,&mdash;George Demaine it seemed,
-was being talked about. He was being pushed somehow.
-Repton hardly heeded so commonplace a
-phenomenon, save perhaps to wonder what job
-was on:&mdash;he continued to push Van Diemens.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE Petheringtons&#8217; house, to which Mary Smith
-drove on the evening of 12th of April,
-under the two pretty little electric lights of her
-car, one for either side of her face, was one of a
-hundred similar London houses, a huge brown cube
-in the middle of Grosvenor Square.</p>
-
-<p>It was no longer called Petherington House; it
-had once again regained its more familiar appellation
-of No. 89, under which it had been famous for the
-complete lack of entertainment of any sort which had
-distinguished the short session of 1912. Then old
-Hooker had died, the changes in the Cabinet had
-come, Hooker&#8217;s wife had married the Bishop and also
-died immediately, and finally the Petheringtons had
-taken the place, foolishly called it by their own title
-for a few months, and finding it unknown to cabmen
-and to their friends&#8217; chauffeurs also under this
-appellation, they slowly reverted to the old name.</p>
-
-<p>If hospitality is a fault when pushed to an extreme,
-the Petheringtons exhibited that fault. But so
-excellent were their arrangements&mdash;for business will
-out even in the smallest details of domestic life&mdash;that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-no one suffered in the crush, and that it was
-perfectly easy in the time a guest ordinarily allowed
-himself for the function, to go up the stairs and down
-again, though perhaps too much time was wasted
-at the necessarily narrow entrance where men must
-seek their hats and coats.</p>
-
-<p>The movement of Society in this particular case
-was rendered the more facile by the emptiness of the
-hall, from which everything had been taken except
-the Great Stuffed Bear which had been shot by the
-servant of a trapper who had sold it to the correspondent
-of the furrier of Lady Petherington, and
-which now stood holding a tray, with an expression
-of extreme ferocity, and labelled &#8220;The Caucasus,
-17th June, 1910,&#8221;&mdash;for in those mountains Mr.
-Petherington&mdash;as he then was&mdash;had travelled.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Smith was not disappointed. Mooning
-aimlessly about the crowded rooms above, in an
-atmosphere surcharged with mauve Moravian
-music&mdash;the loudest of its kind&mdash;shuffled the anxious
-and slightly bowed form of Dolly, the young and
-popular Prime Minister.</p>
-
-<p>A foreigner might have thought him to have few
-friends, so slowly did he proceed and with so curious
-a gaze from one group to another, seeming half
-stunned by the vigour of the band and fascinated by
-the vigorous contortions of Mr. Arthur Worth who
-conducted it for all he was&mdash;I mean with his utmost
-capacity of gesture and expression. That foreigner
-would have suffered an illusion. The Prime Minister<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-was perfectly well known in face and figure to every
-one in that room, and there were few who did not
-hope for some advantage from his presence, but
-fewer, far fewer still, who attempted to obtain it. I
-must of course except Professor Kahn.</p>
-
-<p>Dolly knew his Mary Smith, and resigned himself
-to suffer. She had not come there that night for
-nothing. She got up to him within half a minute
-of the view, and found him with peculiar dexterity
-through a maze of wealthy people. She quietly took
-him away, and sat him in a large chair that stood
-in a remote recess, where the light was subdued; she
-took advantage of a deafening crash in the music to
-which its previous successes were child&#8217;s play, and
-shouted:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When are you going to have your next move?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister implored her not to talk shop.
-Then somewhat inconsequently he added, weakening:
-&#8220;Why do you want to know?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The music was now whining and part of it was
-taking breath for another charge. It was therefore
-in quite a low but exceedingly business-like tone that
-Mary Smith remarked:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Because I want you to do something for
-Dimmy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The name suggested to the Prime Minister one of
-twenty little jobs; he thought of a jolly little one in
-Ireland. But she added: &#8220;You know what has
-happened?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He didn&#8217;t.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>She told him briefly: Ole Man Benson was broke.</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister remembered the explosion of
-Popocatapetl: he had vaguely connected the news
-with something at the time: now he knew what it
-was. He looked extremely grave. And when Mary
-went on to tell him that Mrs. Demaine had only
-1500 he looked graver still.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There isn&#8217;t anything of a big sort going just now,
-Mary,&#8221; he said in quite another tone. But he was
-thinking his clearest. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know him as well as
-you do,&#8221; he added. &#8220;Can he <i>do</i> anything?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said Mary Smith decidedly, &#8220;he can&#8217;t. But
-he&#8217;d go well in harness.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister seemed to live more actively
-as he considered the problem. The warm air, the
-scent of clothes and flowers suited him well.</p>
-
-<p>The trouble with his left lung which had so
-endeared him to his fellow-citizens, he felt far less
-keenly in the beginning of a warm spring than at
-any other time, and evenings such as this rewarded
-him for the sacrifice he made every winter to his
-duty and to England. Of the four years during
-which he had held the highest of human offices he had
-spent but one winter on the Riviera, and though it
-had been necessary in one year to forego an Autumn
-session, such a session had not in the other three
-years delayed the meeting of Parliament beyond the
-end of February. His youth stood him in good stead
-during this ordeal; but there were those (and they
-were they who loved him most) who looked with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-anxiety upon the frail form and thought, although
-they dared not say, that the years were slipping by
-and that what a man could do with impunity when
-still upon the right side of fifty, would become
-another matter when his fifty-fifth year was passed....
-There was of course always the hope of opposition
-and its leisure.... The Broadening of the
-Streets Bill had roused a tempest of Party passion....
-He had already been publicly stoned in the
-North.... But no matter; for the moment the
-Prime Minister was full of appreciation, and for his
-cousin&#8217;s purposes in the kindliest of moods.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless he thought (and his cousin read his
-thoughts) that she was asking the impossible. An
-idea struck him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Has Dimmy been called to the Bar?&#8221; he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>She looked up, puzzled. &#8220;I don&#8217;t think so....
-No, I know he hasn&#8217;t. I put up a hundred for him
-in 1908 and he buzzed it. I should certainly have
-heard if he had done anything more before his
-marriage. Naturally <i>since</i> then....&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, naturally,&#8221; said the Prime Minister
-sympathetically. He mused. &#8220;He wouldn&#8217;t go
-abroad?&#8221; he said, looking round.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What on earth&#8217;s the good of that?&#8221; said Mary
-Smith a little testily.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; answered the Prime Minister vaguely, as
-he reviewed certain posts in his mind, &#8220;... No.
-There isn&#8217;t much in that. Anything that could be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-of any use wants leading up to.&#8221; And he plunged
-into thought again.</p>
-
-<p>Then with a gesture that many had noticed in him
-and had thought a mere idle trick but which was
-really an accompaniment to calculation, he put his
-ten fingers down upon his knees and lifted them
-slowly one after another. When he had so lifted
-nine (it was the ring finger of his left hand) a touch
-of animation passed over his face, an expression his
-cousin could see even in that subdued light.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How long does he want it for?&#8221; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Smith was inclined to say &#8220;For ever,&#8221; but
-she checked herself; she remembered the face and
-manner of Theocritus C. Benson, she trusted his
-future fortune, and she said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think even a little while would make a
-difference.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They were both thinking of the same thing. But
-the Prime Minister understood what perhaps she
-did not, that there is no such thing as autocratic
-intervention in our public life, that time is required
-for every innovation, and that he who leads must
-also follow. He was reviewing as she spoke the
-prejudices and the ambitions of perhaps twenty men,
-and the power of each. When he spoke again it was
-as though his decision were final:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see how I could do anything for him in
-the House. He&#8217;s hardly ever spoken, and when he
-did he made a fool of himself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; said Mary sympathetically.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>&#8220;He&#8217;s the only man,&#8221; went on Dolly reflectively,
-&#8220;whom I&#8217;ve ever seen fall right <i>off</i> a bench in the
-House of Commons....&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mean he&#8217;s physically awkward?&#8221; replied
-Mary in the tone of a woman who knows how to
-despise such trifles&mdash;but she scented danger. &#8220;I&#8217;ve
-never known Dimmy betray one word that was
-confided to him,&#8221; she continued gravely.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If one were beginning all over again,&#8221; said Dolly,
-as though thinking aloud. &#8220;But then,&#8221; he added,
-getting up from his chair and making as though to
-walk away,&mdash;&#8220;<i>that&#8217;s</i> impossible,&mdash;there&#8217;s Repton.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It has been said that women are inconsequent in
-their conversation and that if they desire to obtain a
-favour they do so by disconnected hints which men
-cannot follow. It may be so. But perhaps on this
-very account do they succeed. At any rate from the
-moment that the Prime Minister had let drop the
-phrase &#8220;there&#8217;s Repton,&#8221; Mary Smith&#8217;s plan was
-formed. She did not like Sir Charles Repton, largely
-because he had not known her well. She had half
-forgotten him; she understood now that in some way
-he stood as an obstacle to what she desired for poor
-George, and from that moment she determined that
-Repton should be thrust into the House of Lords.
-All she said was:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I forgot Repton.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And then she went back into the crowded rooms,
-pushing the friend of her girlhood playfully before
-her with her forefinger pressed into the small of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-back, until they reached the open door and entered
-the main rooms.</p>
-
-<p>The music of Mr. Arthur Worth&#8217;s band rose, a
-triumphant tyrant over, the howling talk, when,
-during a sharp momentary and calculated pause in
-the tornado of violins came the loud and unexpected
-crash of some heavy object falling violently in the
-hall below. Mary Smith moved very rapidly and
-silently downstairs towards the sound.</p>
-
-<p>It was as she expected; George Mulross had come!
-A little flushed and very much annoyed, he had upset
-the Great Stuffed Bear which stood near the door
-of the house. George was looking at the Prostrate
-Monster with angry defiance, and nothing but his
-dignity forbade him to attempt to raise it. The
-accident was enough to decide Mary. She dreaded
-the impression Dolly might receive if the poor lad
-went up now and was flurried again. She went up
-and put her hand on his shoulder as he stood there.
-He jumped round and discovered her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh Lord!&#8221; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dimmy,&#8221; she commanded firmly, &#8220;go out at
-once. A great deal depends on it. Go out at once.
-Don&#8217;t wait!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He began to say something about his wife and a
-carriage.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Go out at once!</i>&#8221; said Mary Smith.</p>
-
-<p>He tried to say something about his hat and coat.</p>
-
-<p>Some yards before them at the open door the
-noise of a carriage was heard and there were servants<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-waiting. Behind them more servants. But Mary
-Smith knew her world.</p>
-
-<p>It was a choice of evils, and George Mulross
-Demaine went out into the night, hatless and coatless.
-The policemen were pleased to see such familiarity
-among the great. They doubted not that the gentleman
-was taking the air, but they wondered why he
-walked so very rapidly eastward through Mayfair.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile from the carriage the daughter of
-Theocritus C. Benson came out, not without decision,
-and very soon the rooms of that house were filled and
-even its Moravian music dominated by the acuteness
-of her laugh and the tremendous decision of her tread.</p>
-
-<p>When every one had gone, one hat and coat
-remained. The footman pawned them: they were
-those of George Mulross Demaine.</p>
-
-<p>He, poor fellow, saw in all this nothing but that
-eternity of bad luck to which he was born. When
-his wife asked him next day why he had left the
-Petheringtons&#8217; so early, he told some ordinary lie:
-he had left indeed because one wiser than he had
-told him to leave, but he could make neither head
-nor tail of the whole affair: and his foot hurt him
-where the Bear had crushed it.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">EASTER, as those who survive will know, fell
-early in 1915&mdash;to be exact, upon April 4th;
-Ole Man Benson had returned on the 11th; on the
-12th Mary had seen Dolly; and the week after Ole
-Man Benson&#8217;s return to these shores, the week after he
-had delivered his important and somewhat depressing
-news to the young household, the week after
-Mary and Dolly had conferred at the Petheringtons&#8217;&mdash;was
-the week in which Parliament met after the
-Recess, the third week in April.</p>
-
-<p>In that week also there began to crop up here
-and there unexpectedly, beautifully, like the spring
-flowers, short newspaper notes upon George Mulross
-Demaine.</p>
-
-<p>They were notes of where he had been, whether
-he had been there or not,&mdash;at least at first they were
-notes of that kind. There had always been some
-such notes on him in the papers, but they seemed
-to be getting numerous.</p>
-
-<p>The public would hear that George Mulross loved
-his great poodle dog; next that the pressure of his
-engagements forbade him to open an Enormous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-Institution for the Cultivation and Study of Virulent
-Diseases, and in connection with this news the
-Institution was described at great length, and the
-passionate regrets at the absence of George Mulross
-Demaine sounded like a small but perceptible dirge
-in the corners of the daily press.</p>
-
-<p>He was attacked gently but cleverly in a paper
-upon his own side of politics; short biographical
-notes, only a few among several score, gave details
-of his happy little ways. He was fond of riding, said
-one author who can have had but little intimacy with
-her subject; he was fond of children, said another
-who had even less. He had &#8220;an eye for black game,&#8221;
-said a third, whose lack of intimacy included not
-only George himself but certainly black game as
-well.</p>
-
-<p>Later came anecdotes of his goodness of heart;
-how he had run over a boy in the Park with his
-motor and had then picked him up; and how he
-had good-humouredly refrained from telling people
-who he was in the railway accident, and had permitted
-the wounded to be taken to hospital before he himself
-would accept conveyance.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, as the month ended, and as May brought
-in the London season, George Mulross began to find
-himself uncomfortably prominent. For he very
-sincerely and very heartily hated fame. He could
-not so much as upset a glass of wine or stumble
-over public stairs without hearing his name whispered;
-and once when he had called at the wrong number,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-the servant, recognising him from some caricature in
-the papers, had mentioned his own name to him with
-reverence, though the door was the door of a house
-whose occupants he did not know.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the tiny balance at the bank had gone.
-The overdraft was large and at any moment there
-might come a note which he dreaded. And Mary
-Smith had compelled him to look for a small house
-in Westminster and to make every preparation for
-leaving Demaine House. He kicked feebly, but
-she insisted: and even Sudie gave way.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You haven&#8217;t enough to keep the house dry,&#8221; Mary
-said. And she compelled them both to a sense of
-business which Theocritus himself would have failed
-to make them feel.</p>
-
-<p>All this business was well advanced when Mary
-Smith proceeded to the next stage of the campaign.</p>
-
-<p>She carefully looked up the nature of the Court of
-Dowry, and when she had learned all that she could
-learn from her books (it took her half a day&mdash;though
-she was a woman of exceptional intelligence and
-excellent education) she set herself to learn all that
-could be learned from living men.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Court of Dowry, in its very survival and still
-more perhaps in the functions to-day attached to it,
-affords an admirable example of the value of fixed
-institutions in the life of a people.</p>
-
-<p>It was originally instituted to try cases falling
-within the jurisdiction of that Queen Mother of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-Middle Ages to whom the poet Gray so pathetically
-alludes in the striking lines</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="versefirst">&#8220;She-wolf of France with unrelenting fangs</div>
-<div class="verse">Tearing the bowels,&#8221; etc.</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>It had cognizance of all Escheats, Novels Tabulate
-and Malprisions Reguardaunt in the County of
-Ponthieu and the Seniory of Lucq. But when active
-jurisdiction over these continental territories was
-interrupted under King Henry <small>VI.</small>, there remained
-no function for the Court but the trial of cases arising
-in or without foreign ports upon decks subject to the
-Crown of England.</p>
-
-<p>It lingered thus into the beginning of the sixteenth
-century, at which moment it was reduced to a Clerk
-known as the <i>Mangeur</i>, and a Warden, each holding
-what were virtually sinecures (and not highly paid
-sinecures at that) about the Palace.</p>
-
-<p>Henry <small>VIII.</small>, whom we cannot call a good but
-whom surely we may call a great man, rudely
-suppressed the office of Mangeur with a cruel jest
-at the executioner&#8217;s expense, and only permitted the
-Wardenship itself to survive on the strict understanding
-that the salary should be paid to himself.
-The title, however, remained, a minor distinction
-among the numerous baubles of the time, and was,
-if I may so express it, resurrected from obscurity by
-the great family of Heygate at the moment of the
-Restoration of Charles <small>II.</small></p>
-
-<p>In their gladness at their recovery of a legitimate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-sovereign, this dominant house (now represented by
-the Parrells) trapped themselves in every accoutrement
-of joy, and, among other posts, the Wardenship
-of the Court of Dowry was voted in 1661 an annual
-salary of 2000, for which sum held by the same Act
-as an hereditary right, the head of the House of
-Heygate was content to license the annual holding
-of the Court within the Royal Manor and Liberties
-of Tooting.</p>
-
-<p>At first this Court sat for one full day in each year&mdash;St.
-Luke&#8217;s&mdash;but later, from 1731, this session was
-maintained in fiction alone. A crier in Westminster
-Hall, at the opening of every Hilary Term, would
-rapidly read out a list of three fictitious cases which
-went by default, claim seventeen and sixpence, and
-for ever after hold his peace.</p>
-
-<p>During the eighteenth century the fixed yearly salary
-of 2000 hereditarily enjoyed by the Heygate family
-steadily grew, till, by the time of the Reform Bill, it
-had reached the very considerable sum of 15,000,
-still payable to the Heygates though now all vestige
-of activity in the office had disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>Our grandfathers, in the zeal of that somewhat
-iconoclastic moment, swept away the corrupt figment.
-The emoluments of the post were ruthlessly cut
-down to the original 2000; its hereditary character
-was, after a violent debate in the House of Lords,
-destroyed by a majority of over fifty votes, determined
-(as were so many of the great changes of that
-time!) by the voice of Eldon. The Detainer of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-office (for such was his official title) received in
-compensation a lump sum of half a million only&mdash;not
-twenty years&#8217; purchase&mdash;and certain apparently
-unimportant functions were attached to the place
-which from that day forward became an appointment
-changing with the Administration.</p>
-
-<p>Mark here the silent virtue of organic constitutional
-growth, and how a gentry can find it possible to create
-where demagogues would have destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>Point by point and function by function, one
-marine interest after another attached itself to the
-Court of Dowry as the beautiful organisms of the
-sea attach themselves to the ships that plough its
-waters, until there had grown up round the Court of
-Dowry by the end of the nineteenth century so considerable
-a mass of precedent and custom and, with
-the vast extension of our maritime commerce, duties
-so manifold and of such moment to the nation, that
-the office re-emerged after its life of six centuries,
-an organ of capital importance in the workings of
-English Government.</p>
-
-<p>As must be the case in any old and secure State,
-certain anomalous duties were further attached to it:
-the inspection of patent medicines for instance, the
-giving out of contracts for buoys and rockets, and
-the formal stamping of licences to sell sarsaparilla.
-Even so the wretched and insufficient salary of
-2000 remained the sole remuneration of the
-Warden, though the great name of GHERKIN had
-raised it to be among the foremost posts of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-Cabinet, and it had since seen the brilliancy, the
-learning and the judgment respectively of a Dibley, a
-Powker and a Hump. By 1912 its strict control over
-the great steamship lines, its supervision of wrecks,
-derelicts, Hunnage, Mixings, and Ports Consequent,
-made it second only to the Foreign Office in the
-matter of public interest, and, like the Foreign Office,
-largely removed from the wranglings of party.</p>
-
-<p>Some months later the salary was raised, amid the
-cheers (as I have said) of a united House, to 5000
-a year, with a further allowance of 5000 for the
-expenses of entertainment and travel, which fall
-with peculiar severity upon this great Department;
-and in the hands of Charles Repton it had risen to
-be something even more, if that were possible, than
-GHERKIN had made it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>So much did Mary Smith discover: partly in what
-she already knew, partly in her reading. The living
-voices of men told her further things.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed that in the dingy offices which (by a
-lovely trait in the character of politics!) house this
-great Department&mdash;they stand between Parliament
-Street and New Scotland Yard&mdash;a certain Mr. Sorrel
-had for now seven years exercised his marvellous
-and hidden powers, and while all were prepared to
-admit the genius of Charles Repton, those who best
-knew the workings of a great Government office,
-spoke almost as though Mr. Sorrel were in himself
-the Court of Dowry.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>The quaint customs attaching to the office of
-Warden, the little bells upon the shoes, the bearing
-of a model ship, bareheaded, upon Empire Day (a
-recent innovation and one awkward only to the bald
-or the blind), though to some they seemed a drawback,
-to others were but an additional attraction, and
-the ceremony of waggling in backwards upon all fours
-into the presence of the Sovereign at Inauguration,
-had been, with perhaps doubtful wisdom, abolished,
-to suit the eccentric Radicalism of GHERKIN, who
-refused to take office under any other condition.</p>
-
-<p>The Accolade, or Ceremonial Stroke, however,
-heavily administered with a beam of ebony across the
-back of the Warden Accept, was retained and has
-often afforded a subject for illustration and archological
-research.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Smith learnt even more. She learnt that
-while decency forbade any saving to be effected
-on the further 5000 that was an allowance for entertainment
-and travel, yet custom allowed it to be
-spent in all forms of hospitality, and that travel
-might include such social visits as were necessary to
-the occupant of so high an office. When she learnt
-this she was but the more confirmed in her determination
-that Charles Repton who for the moment
-encumbered the post of Warden, should accept a
-barony, and that quickly; for she saw the agony of
-Demaine House already begun. Upon a certain
-morning in the mid-week of May the last stage of
-her beneficent action was ready.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In his study on that same morning, Charles Repton,
-a little weary but with all his action planned and
-designed, suffered again for a moment that slight dull
-pain behind the ears, where Caryll&#8217;s Ganglia are: he
-was dazed. He went out and sought his wife, and she
-was astonished to see as he put to her some simple
-question on the management of the household, a
-look of innocence in his eyes. It quickly faded. The
-pain also departed, and he returned to his study.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Mary Smith sent a note over to Demaine House.</p>
-
-<p>Mary&#8217;s note found George Mulross Demaine risen
-after a lonely lunch and wondering, as he regularly
-wondered every day, what was going to turn up.</p>
-
-<p>His wonderment had bewilderment in it also.
-Something was going to turn up he knew ...
-people were noticing him so. Only last evening
-there was a savage attack upon him in the <i>Moon</i>,
-saying that he had torn Hares to pieces with his own
-reeking hands, and killed a Carted Stag with a blunt
-knife; while the <i>Capon</i>, with more truth, had pointed
-out the beauty of the Sir Joshuas in his house, but
-had erroneously suggested that they were heirlooms
-in his family.</p>
-
-<p>He was still gazing at the May morning and
-gloomily considering the buds in the formal garden,
-when Mary&#8217;s note was forced upon him by a huge
-Dependant.</p>
-
-<p>A note in the firm hand of Mary Smith was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-always a pleasant thing to get; for a bewildered
-man it had something in it of salvation.</p>
-
-<p>George Mulross went in a mood lighter than any
-he had known for many weeks, towards his cousin&#8217;s
-house. He found her, of course, alone.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dimmy,&#8221; she said, lifting his hand gently from
-the chimneypiece where he was moving it aimlessly
-among several breakable and valuable things,&mdash;&#8220;Dimmy,
-when did you last ask a question in the
-House?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He looked frightened, and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh! ages ago.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now look here, Dimmy,&#8221; she said smoothly, &#8220;I
-want you to go and ask this to-day,&#8221;&mdash;and she
-handed him a bit of paper.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have you got any money in it?&#8221; he asked
-innocently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, certainly not,&#8221; she answered. &#8220;You silly
-ass! What could that have to do with it? Read it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He read: &#8220;<i>Mr. G. M. Demaine: to ask the Prime
-Minister whether his attention has been called to the
-fact that the Van Huren Company is not registered
-in London as the law provides, and what steps he
-proposes to take in view of this evasion of a public
-safeguard?</i>&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What on earth have I to do with that?&#8221; he
-asked, looking up at her, a little put out and evidently
-unwilling to take any risks. &#8220;What is it anyhow?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now look here, Dimmy,&#8221; she said, &#8220;do be a good
-fellow: it&#8217;s all for your good.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>&#8220;Well anyhow,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I can&#8217;t get an answer
-for two days.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes you can,&#8221; she said, &#8220;I&#8217;ve sent Dolly a little
-note typewritten, and signed it in your name; and
-you can call it a &#8216;matter of which you have given
-him private notice.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you have!&#8221; said Demaine, almost moved
-to energy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I have,&#8221; said Mary Smith firmly. &#8220;There
-are a hundred and eight questions to-day; it&#8217;s half-past
-three and you&#8217;ve time to get down to the
-House comfortably. I&#8217;ll take you there.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She did: and amid the general indifference of
-most members in a crowded House, the amusement
-of perhaps a couple of dozen, and the red-hot silent
-rage of at least two, G. M. Demaine in a half-audible
-voice, mumbled his query.</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister received more than a murmur
-of applause when he answered in his clear and rather
-high voice that in a matter of such importance and
-in a moment such as this, it was not to the interest
-of the country to give a public reply.</p>
-
-<p>If there was one thing George Mulross Demaine
-dreaded more than another it was to be questioned,
-and still more to be congratulated, upon things he
-did not understand. Luckily for him a scene of
-some violence connected with the religious differences
-of the Scotch, prevented the immediate
-opening of the debate at the end of Questions, and
-he had the opportunity to slip away. But to his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-terror he found the motor waiting for him and
-Mary Smith beckoning him from within; like the
-fascinated bird of the legend he was captured. He
-hoped that she would drive him to some more
-congenial air. But no, she produced, from a large
-and business-like wallet which she only carried in
-her most imperious moments, two questions to be
-set down for the day after the morrow.</p>
-
-<p>He took them with a groan and yielded as yield
-he must to her command that he should set them
-down. They were of no importance, the one was
-to his uncle by a second marriage, the First Civil
-Lord, to ask him the name of a Company that had
-proved less able than was expected in the manufacture
-of armour plates; the other to his cousin
-the Chancellor of the Exchequer asking if the
-action of some obscure servant of the Treasury in
-a peaceful Buckinghamshire village had received the
-attention which his recent services seemed to require.</p>
-
-<p>The day and hour came round. George Mulross
-in a voice perhaps a little more assured than that
-of two days before, said when his turn came:
-&#8220;Twenty-nine.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>To his surprise the Chancellor of the Exchequer
-answered with some tartness that he had nothing
-whatever to add to his predecessor&#8217;s answer of
-July 9th ten years before, and added amid general
-approval, that insinuations such as were those contained
-in the question were greatly to be deplored.</p>
-
-<p>A man of excitable temperament had already<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-leapt to his feet to ask a supplementary question
-when he was sharply checked by the Chair and the
-curious incident closed.</p>
-
-<p>Some ten minutes passed and once again, sweating
-with fear, Demaine heard his name called out and
-said in a voice still audible: &#8220;Fifty-four.&mdash;I mean
-Forty-five.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The First Lord of the Admiralty rose solemnly
-in all the dignity of his great white beard, adjusted
-his spectacles, looked fully at the intruder upon his
-peace, and said with his unmistakable accent, that
-the name of the Company could be dithcovered
-through the ordinary thourceth of information.</p>
-
-<p>So the game continued for ten days. In vain did
-his friends assure him that he was losing position
-in the House by this perpetual pose of the puritan
-and the sleuth hound. Mary Smith was a woman
-who must be obeyed, and of twenty-three questions
-which she put into his unwilling lips at least one
-had gone home. And the First Lord of the
-Admiralty in the same dignity of the same white
-beard and with the same striking accent, had
-admitted the nethethity of thtriking from the litht
-of contractorth the name of the firm of which, until
-that moment, the unhappy George Mulross had
-never even heard.</p>
-
-<p>He knew, he felt, that he, the most blameless of
-men, was making enemies upon every side. The
-allusions to his public spirit which were now occasionally
-to be discovered in the Opposition papers,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-the little bitter sentences in those which were upon
-the contrary subsidised by his own party, filled him
-with an equal dread.</p>
-
-<p>He was in no mood for going further, when upon
-the top of all this Mary Smith quietly insisted that
-he must make a speech.</p>
-
-<p>It need not be long: she would write it out for
-him herself. He must learn it absolutely by heart
-and must take the greatest care to pronounce the
-words accurately. She chose a debate in which he
-could talk more or less at large and put before
-him as gentle, as well reasoned, as terse and as
-broad-minded a piece of wisdom as the House might
-have listened to for many months.</p>
-
-<p>Morning and afternoon, a patient governess, Mary
-Smith heard him recite that speech; but as day
-succeeded day she slowly determined that it wouldn&#8217;t
-do. One slip might be his ruin. Upon the
-tenth rehearsal he still said &#8220;very precious&#8221; for
-&#8220;meretricious.&#8221; He was still unable to restrain a
-sharp forward movement at the words &#8220;I will go
-a step further&#8221;; and he could never get in its
-right order the simple phrase: &#8220;I yield to no one in
-my admiration for the right honourable gentleman.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>First he would yield to a right honourable gentleman;
-then no one would yield to him; then he
-would yield to no admiration, and at last she gave
-it up in despair.</p>
-
-<p>A woman of less tenacity would have abandoned
-her design; not so Mary Smith. She discovered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-with careful art that there was no reason why a
-Warden of the Court of Dowry should speak in the
-House at all; he might hold his post for three years
-and do no more than answer questions, leaving to a
-subordinate the duty of speaking upon those very
-rare public Bills, which, however distantly, concerned
-his office.</p>
-
-<p>She had already made him a name; she was
-determined not to destroy it by following up this
-false scent of training him to public speaking. At
-last, as the month of May was drawing to a close,
-she determined to put him upon the rails.</p>
-
-<p>Dolly and she were agreed. Perhaps Dimmy
-would need to be persuaded; he was naturally
-modest, and what was more he would very certainly
-be afraid, but still more certainly he wanted money
-most abominably.</p>
-
-<p>When the day came for him to receive his great
-illumination she called him to her once more, and
-once more he found her alone. She lunched him
-first, and gave him a wine of which she knew he
-could drink in moderation, for she felt he would need
-courage; she let him drink his coffee, she lit her own
-tiny cigar, and at last she said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dimmy, what does it take you to live?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; said Dimmy with some terror in
-his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Smith looked at him a little quizzically. He
-did not like those looks though he was fond of her.
-It made him feel like an animal.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>&#8220;Dimmy,&#8221; she said, &#8220;could you and Sudie
-manage it on seven thousand a year, or say on six
-thousand?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Dimmy thought long and painfully. For him
-there were but two scales of income, the poor and
-the rich. In the days when it was such a bore to
-raise a sovereign, he was poor. For nearly two years
-with an unlimited capital behind him, and about
-twenty thousand a year for his wife to spend, he had
-considered himself positively and fixedly among the
-rich. He had felt comfortable: he had had elbow
-room. Six thousand pounds puzzled him: it was
-neither one thing nor the other. A brilliant thought
-struck him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Can you tell me, Mary,&#8221; he said gently, &#8220;some
-one who has got about six thousand? I think I
-could judge <i>then</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can tell you one positively,&#8221; said Mary Smith.
-&#8220;Charlie Fitzgerald and his wife. Till the old Yid
-dies they&#8217;ve got six thousand exactly. I ought to
-know, considering that I went over every scrap of
-paper in order to make sure of Charlie repaying me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh!&#8221; said Demaine judicially. &#8220;Charlie Fitzgerald
-and his wife....&#8221; He thought for a long
-time. &#8220;Well, they&#8217;re pretty comfortable,&#8221; he said
-suddenly. &#8220;Of course they haven&#8217;t got a place
-and grounds; I suppose if they had a place and
-grounds they couldn&#8217;t do it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said Mary, &#8220;but the house in Westminster
-is very large when you get inside through the narrow<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-part. When are you going into Westminster,
-Dimmy?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; said Dimmy hopelessly. &#8220;Sudie&#8217;s
-got all muddled about it. She saw &#8216;City of Westminster&#8217;
-stuck up on one of those khaki Dreadnought
-hats that the street sweepers wear, an&#8217; the
-man was getting horrors into a cart right up by
-our house, an&#8217; she said that where we <i>were</i> was
-Westminster anyhow. And then when I argued
-with her she shoved me to the window and pointed
-out his hat. She was quite rough.&#8221; And George
-Mulross sighed.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Smith got testy. &#8220;Don&#8217;t talk rubbish,&#8221;
-she said, &#8220;and don&#8217;t bother me about your wife.
-Have you looked at anything in Westminster at
-all?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; said Demaine humbly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You must know,&#8221; said Mary sharply, and with a
-strong inclination to slap him. &#8220;Have you looked
-in Dean&#8217;s Yard, for instance?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said Demaine, slowly reviewing his perambulations
-of the last few days. &#8220;Yes, I&#8217;ve looked
-at Dean&#8217;s Yard. There&#8217;s nothing there.... All the
-rest seems to be so slummy, Mary.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There are some exceedingly good new houses,&#8221;
-said Mary severely, &#8220;and everybody&#8217;s going there;
-and the old houses are perfectly delicious. Anyhow,
-Westminster&#8217;s the place; and I&#8217;ll tell you something
-else. You&#8217;ve got to take office!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>George Mulross, worried as he always was when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-she began drilling him, on hearing the word &#8220;office&#8221;
-said simply:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well I won&#8217;t, that&#8217;s flat. I don&#8217;t believe in it.
-I&#8217;ve seen lots of men do that kind of thing. They
-get to the City and they think they&#8217;re learning
-business, and they&#8217;re rooked before....&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I said &#8216;TAKE office&#8217;!&#8221; shouted Mary Smith,
-&#8220;TAKE office&mdash;get a post.... Dolly will give you
-a post. Now do you understand?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What?&#8221; said Demaine vaguely.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dimmy,&#8221; she said more quietly but with great
-firmness, &#8220;look at me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He looked at her. It was a muscular strain upon
-his eyes to keep them fixed under her superior will.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s right.... Now listen carefully. The
-salary of the Wardenship of the Court of Dowry is
-five thousand a year&mdash;and ex&#8217;s.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said Demaine.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When the Wardenship of the Court of Dowry is
-vacant&mdash;if you play up worth tuppence, it&#8217;s yours
-for the asking. Do ... you ... understand?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; repeated George Demaine.</p>
-
-<p>It was as though he had been told that he had
-been asleep all these years, that his real name was
-Jones and that he lived in Australia, or as though
-he had discovered himself to be covered with feathers.
-He was utterly at sea. Then he said slowly:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Repton&#8217;s Warden of the Court of Dowry.&#8221; He
-was proud of knowing this, for he often blundered
-about the Cabinet.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>&#8220;Will you or will you not fix your mind upon
-what I have said?&#8221; said Mary Smith.</p>
-
-<p>The full absurdity of it grew increasingly upon
-Demaine&#8217;s imagination. &#8220;The House would think
-Dolly was mad,&#8221; he remarked with really beautiful
-humility.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nonsense!&#8221; said Mary Smith in disgust, &#8220;the
-House will know nothing about it one way or the
-other. The House doesn&#8217;t meddle with government&mdash;thank
-God! You&#8217;re popular enough I
-suppose?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh yes,&#8221; said Demaine.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And you never speak, do you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said Demaine, &#8220;only once three years ago,
-the time I fell down, you know; an&#8217; that was quite
-short.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How many people do you know in the House?&#8221;
-she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; said Demaine.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh NONSENSE!... I mean how many people
-would write to you for instance, and congratulate you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Demaine gave it up. But one could see from his
-demeanour what she had guessed from her own study
-of the debates and from her great knowledge of
-London: a month ago people just knew that
-Demaine was in the House and that was about all.
-They knew him now as a man whose name they had
-seen fifty times and who asked questions. A better
-candidature could not be conceived, and his close
-family connection with so many men on both front<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-benches would render the appointment reasonable in
-all eyes.</p>
-
-<p>All sorts of things were lumbering against each
-other in George Mulross&#8217; brain. He wondered
-whether one had to know anything, or what one
-had to do, and how the money was paid; and
-whether income tax was deducted at source; and
-how long the Government would stay in. Then
-the absurdity of it recurred to him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course there was Pitson,&#8221; he murmured, &#8220;and
-everybody laughed and said he was a half-wit,&mdash;but
-he was in with everybody, although he was a half-wit.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So are you,&#8221; said Mary.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, but I don&#8217;t laugh and go about as he did.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s against a man to laugh much,&#8221; said Mary,
-&#8220;and really, if it comes to going about, even a dog
-can do that. You&#8217;ve only got to go and sniff round
-people.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The conversation could not profitably be continued.
-Demaine had been introduced to the idea,
-and that was all Mary desired to do.</p>
-
-<p>She sent him home and invited herself that weekend
-to a house in which she would find Dolly: the
-Kahns&#8217;&mdash;but no matter. Dolly was there.</p>
-
-<p>When the Prime Minister saw that dear figure of
-hers with its promise of importunities he groaned in
-spirit. She brought him up to the sticking point
-during a long walk on Sunday afternoon, and he
-promised her that at least he would sound.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>&#8220;But I don&#8217;t know, Mary,&#8221; he said, half trying to
-retreat, &#8220;Repton&#8217;s not a man to speak unless he
-chooses, and he&#8217;s like a stone wall against one unless
-he also chooses to hear.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Take him walking as I&#8217;m taking you,&#8221; said Mary.</p>
-
-<p>It was Sunday, the 31st of May. The weather
-had begun to be large and open and warm. He
-thought there was something in what she said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Meet him as he comes out of his house to-morrow.
-Do you know when he comes out?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said the Prime Minister a little shamefacedly,
-&#8220;I do. It&#8217;s always half-past nine.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; said Mary, &#8220;I really don&#8217;t see what your
-trouble is.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s an absurd hour to catch a man, half-past nine&mdash;and
-I should have to get up God knows when&mdash;besides
-to-morrow&#8217;s a bad day,&#8221; said the Premier,
-pressing his lips together when he had spoken. &#8220;It&#8217;s
-a bad moment. It&#8217;s a big week for him. He&#8217;s got
-a dinner on that&#8217;s something to do with his dam
-companies to-morrow evening. I know that. And
-then Tuesday he&#8217;s got that big Van Diemens meeting
-in the City. And before the end of the week, I
-know he&#8217;s talking at the big Wycliffite Conference&mdash;I
-can&#8217;t remember the day though. Pottle told me
-about it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They had turned to go home, and Mary Smith for
-the first hundred yards or so was honestly wondering
-in her mind why men found so difficult what women
-find so easy.</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>&#8220;I&#8217;ve told you what to do,&#8221; she said. &#8220;Catch him by
-accident outside his house as he leaves after breakfast,
-then he&#8217;ll walk with you. Say you&#8217;re walking.
-Anything can be said when one&#8217;s walking.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are you sure he&#8217;ll come with me?&#8221; asked the
-Prime Minister.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Positive!&#8221; said Mary Smith in a very quiet tone.</p>
-
-<p>The air was serene above them, and one lark had
-found his way so high that they could hardly hear
-him singing. The Prime Minister wished from the
-bottom of his heart that he could live in that field for
-a week. He rose to one despairing rally:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mary,&#8221; he said, &#8220;suppose it rains?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh Dolly, Dolly, Dolly!&#8221; she answered, stopping
-short and standing in front of him. &#8220;It&#8217;s for all the
-world as though you were just back from school for
-the last time, and I was a little girl who had been
-sent for on the grand occasion to tea.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She put both hands on his awkward shoulders to
-stop him, and she kissed him anywhere upon the
-face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It won&#8217;t rain, Dolly,&#8221; she said, &#8220;I&#8217;ve seen to that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">CHARLES REPTON had taken no weekends.
-Charles Repton had sat tight in
-London.</p>
-
-<p>The end of that May did not tempt him to move;
-he was right on to his business, and never had his
-silent life been more silent or Maria, Lady Repton,
-felt more alone, though she did as she was bid
-and remained immovable in her London house,
-only seeing, when the leisure was afforded her,
-her few dear friends (none conspicuous), and
-once or twice presiding at a great dinner of her
-husband&#8217;s.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond all his other concerns one chief concern
-was resolving itself in Charles Repton&#8217;s head. He
-was wondering exactly where he stood between
-commerce and politics.</p>
-
-<p>These moments, not of doubt but of a necessity
-for decision, are the tests of interior power. Some
-half-dozen such moments had marked the career of
-his strict soul: one when he had determined to risk
-the transition from his native town to Newcastle
-carefully calculating the capital of clients and how<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-much could be successfully lent in that centre:
-another, when he had risked the expense of his
-first election: a third when he had decided to
-take office&mdash;and there were others.</p>
-
-<p>Now as May drew to its close, as the discussion
-on the Budget was in full swing and as the eager
-public notice of Van Diemens was on the point
-of filling the press, he was in some balance as to
-whether the precise proportion of activity which he
-gave to the House of Commons&mdash;it was a large
-proportion&mdash;might not be absorbing just too much
-of his energy.</p>
-
-<p>He calculated most exactly&mdash;as a man calculates
-a measurable thing, an acreage, or a weight of metal&mdash;what
-the future proportions should be.</p>
-
-<p>He must remain in touch with everything that
-passed at Westminster; on that he was fixed. But
-he knew that there was a growing criticism of his
-combination of high political idealism with affairs
-in the City. The <i>Moon</i> had said one exceedingly
-unpleasant thing about the Oil Concession in
-Burmah&mdash;it was only a newspaper but he had had
-to settle it. The <i>Capon</i> was paying a little more
-attention than he liked to his position in the House
-of Commons.</p>
-
-<p>He thought hard, and under the process of his
-thought his mind somewhat cleared. But he had
-come to no decision when, late in the night of
-Sunday, the 31st of May, he marshalled the papers
-upon his desk, deliberately turned his mind off the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-problems that had been engaging him, and drew up
-a list of his next engagements.</p>
-
-<p>The next day, Monday the 1st of June, after leaving
-his house punctually at half-past nine, he was to
-give half the morning to the Wardenship. He was
-to return home at noon. From noon to lunch he
-must see to his accounts. It was doubly important,
-for it was a Monday and it was the first of the
-month. He would lunch: preferably alone, for he
-would be tired, and he would give Maria to understand
-that he must be undisturbed.</p>
-
-<p>On Tuesday, the 2nd, was the speech to the
-General Meeting of Van Diemens. He glanced at
-his notes for that speech; they were all in excellent
-sequence, and he felt, so far as men of that stern
-temper can feel it, a little touch of pride when he
-noted the procession of the argument. He saw in
-his mind&#8217;s eye first the conviction and then the
-enthusiasm of the men whom he must convince: the
-vivid portrayal of the Empire&#8217;s need of the railway:
-the ease of building it,&mdash;the delivery of the great
-metaphor wherein he compared that thin new line of
-iron to the electrical connection which turns potential
-and useless electrical energy into actual and working
-force.</p>
-
-<p>He re-read the phrase in which he called it
-&#8220;completing the circuit&#8221;; he did not doubt at all
-that the meeting would follow him. Sentence after
-sentence passed before his memory (for he had
-carefully learned the peroration by heart); the name<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-of Nelson shone in one of them, the name of Rhodes
-in another, of Joel in a third, till the great oration
-closed with a vision, brief, succinct (but how vivid!)
-of the Gate of the East and of England&#8217;s hand upon
-it, holding</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="indent2">&#8220;... the keys</div>
-<div class="verse">Of such teeming destinies&#8221;</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>through them: through them!</p>
-
-<p>It was a great speech.</p>
-
-<p>He turned more carelessly to the already typewritten
-stuff which he must deliver upon the
-Thursday to the Wycliffite Conference. It would
-do&mdash;and it was of importance for the moment. It
-reminded him a little contemptuously of the High
-Meat Teas in the North of England and of his
-youth, and of that maundering war between Church
-and Chapel which was then of real moment to him,
-and which now he still had wearily to wage,&mdash;at least
-in public.</p>
-
-<p>Whether this little bout of study had been too
-much for a man who had already spent a full month
-glued to his work, or whatever else was the cause, he
-felt as midnight approached a trifle brain-sick. He
-leant his head upon his hand, and it seemed to him&mdash;he
-hoped it was an illusion for the sensation was
-yet vague&mdash;but it <i>did</i> seem to him that the pain
-behind the ears, or at least an oppression there, was
-beginning. He muttered an exclamation so sharp as
-would have astonished those who had never seen him
-under a strain. Then he went quickly upstairs to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-drawing-room and found his wife, sitting all alone
-with her book.</p>
-
-<p>She looked up as he entered, and again she was
-startled by that strange innocence in his eyes. Odd,
-(but what living!) flashes of thirty, of forty years ago
-pierced her heart. Youth goes down every lane, and
-these two, just after their marriage, just before the
-first loan he had made, had been, for a month or so,
-young: the memory of it was a jewel to her.</p>
-
-<p>He came in at that instant loosened: he was
-walking ill: he made towards her as though he were
-seeking a refuge, and still that persistent innocence
-shone from his eyes. He sat down beside her,
-breathing uncertainly, groped out and took her
-hand. He had made no such movement since&mdash;what
-year? Since before what first hardening had
-frightened her? How many years, how long a life
-ago?</p>
-
-<p>The mood was of no long duration. She could
-have wished it had been longer. He slept with a
-sort of deep lethargy that was not his way, and twice
-in the night she rose to watch him; but with the
-morning all his powers and, alas! all that difference
-had returned.</p>
-
-<p>She was to see nothing of him while he went
-through every detail of his affairs for the week and
-the month with his assistant; she was not even to
-be allowed to see something of him at his midday
-meal; she watched him as he went out of the house
-at the invariable hour to drive to the office of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-Court of Dowry. And as she watched him with new
-feelings in her, and the breaking of dead crusts, she
-saw another man accost him, the cab turned away,
-and the two go together, walking, towards the Park.
-She knew the figure though she came so little into
-the life of London, and she recognised, in the sloppy
-clothes and the stooping walk, the Prime Minister.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If you are a member of the governing classes
-of this great Empire it is not an easy thing to
-approach a house between the Edgware Road and
-Hyde Park from the North, at half-past nine in the
-morning it is supremely difficult if you are making
-for Westminster.</p>
-
-<p>It presupposes being carted at an impossible hour
-to some place in the North West, and there let loose
-and making a run for home. And why should any
-man of position be carted to any place in the North
-West at dawn? On the whole the best excuse is
-Paddington Station. Eton is a good place to come
-from, for the liar comes in at Paddington. It was from
-Eton, therefore, that the Prime Minister came that
-morning ... anyhow he was N.W. of the Park before
-nine. He walked slowly towards the Marble Arch.
-As he approached Charles Repton&#8217;s house he walked
-somewhat more slowly, but he had timed himself well.</p>
-
-<p>The tall straight figure came out and hailed a cab.</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister crossed before him, turned
-round in amiable surprise, and said: &#8220;My <i>dear</i>
-Repton!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>And Repton greeted, with somewhat less effusion,
-the Prime Minister.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I was walking from Paddington,&#8221; said the Prime
-Minister.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have you eaten?&#8221; said Sir Charles, as he paid
-the cabman a shilling for nothing.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I breakfasted before I started. I was
-walking down to Westminster. Can&#8217;t you come
-with me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Sir Charles found it perfectly easy, and the two
-men walked through the Park together towards Hyde
-Park Corner and Constitution Hill.</p>
-
-<p>To most men the difficulty of the transition from
-daily converse to important transactions is so difficult
-that they will postpone it to the very end of an
-interview. The Prime Minister was not of that kind.
-They had not got two hundred yards beyond that
-large arena near the Marble Arch wherein every
-Sunday the Saxon folk thresh out and determine for
-ever the antinomy of predestination and free will&mdash;not
-to mention other mysteries of the Christian
-religion,&mdash;when the Prime Minister had reminded
-Charles Repton of the absolute necessity of a new
-man on the Government bench in the House of
-Lords.</p>
-
-<p>Charles Repton heartily agreed, and for ten
-minutes gave his reasons. He hoped, he said in an
-iron sort of way, that he was talking sense, and that
-he was not meddling with things not his business.
-He was warmly encouraged to go on, and he minutely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-described the kind of man whom he thought was
-wanted. They had too many business men as it
-was, and there were too many men fresh from the
-House of Commons. The Government forces in the
-Upper House had come to be a sort of clique, half
-of them very intelligent, but now and then, especially
-in big debates, out of touch with their colleagues.
-Could not some man of real position, a man with a
-long established title, wealthy and thoroughly well
-known if only in a small world for some proficiency
-of his, be got to take an interest in the Government
-programme? A man like Pulborough, for instance?
-If Pulborough had had to earn his living he would
-have been the best bantam breeder alive. And then,
-look at his talents, why, he designed all the new
-work at Harberry himself, etc. And so forth.</p>
-
-<p>As they were crossing by the Wellington statue,
-the Prime Minister, in the uneasy intervals of dodging
-the petrol traffic, explained that that was not in his
-mind. He must have some one who had heard
-everything in the Cabinet for the last two years.
-&#8220;Repton,&#8221; he said ... (as they left the refuge
-pavement&mdash;a taxi-cab all but killed him).... &#8220;Repton,
-would you, have you thought of ....&#8221; Two gigantic
-motor-buses swerved together and the politicians were
-separated. The Prime Minister saw the Warden far
-ahead, a successful man, whole upon the further shore.
-The Prime Minister leapt in front of a bicycle, caught
-the kerb and ended his sentence &#8220;... a peerage
-yourself?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>They had come through all the perils of that space
-and were walking quietly down Constitution Hill;
-Dolly could develop his thought more freely, and in
-the most natural way in the world he put it that they
-could not do without Charles Repton.</p>
-
-<p>He was very careful not to force the position.
-Charles Repton was absolutely essential: they must
-have him or they must have nobody.</p>
-
-<p>An Egyptian smile, a smile of granite, could be
-guessed rather than seen upon Charles Repton&#8217;s firm
-lips.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Would you propose that I should be Master of
-the Horse?&#8221; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said the Prime Minister, smiling very much
-more easily, &#8220;nor Manager of the King&#8217;s Thoroughbred
-Stud, either. But I know that Abenford is
-mortally tired of the Household; though what there
-is to be tired of,&#8221; he added....</p>
-
-<p>To the Prime Minister&#8217;s very great surprise, Charles
-Repton simply replied: &#8220;If I went to the Lords, I
-should go without office.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At this unexpected solution the Prime Minister
-was in duty bound to propose a hundred reasons
-against it. He implored Repton to remember his
-great position and the peculiar value that he had for
-him, the Prime Minister. &#8220;It&#8217;s never more than
-three men that do the work, Repton, whether you&#8217;re
-dealing with ten in committee or half a thousand.
-You know that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But Charles Repton was firm. These solid masters<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-of finance are glad to think out their world; in a
-sense nothing comes to them that is unexpected when
-it comes. Their brains may be compared to the
-great new War Office in Whitehall, where a hundred
-minutely detailed plans for the invasion of Germany,
-France, Russia, Spain, Italy and the Baltic States,
-lie pigeonholed, in perfect order, ready to be put into
-immediate execution at the pronouncement of the
-stern words <i>Krieg-mobil</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Long before the simple intrigues of the drawing-rooms
-had taken shape, Charles Repton had swept
-the whole landscape with his inward eye. He knew
-every fold of the terrain, he had measured every
-range. He had determined that, upon the whole,
-a peerage was worth his while: now; at the very
-height of his fortune.</p>
-
-<p>To have a permanent place, free from office, with
-the prestige of title, with committees open to him
-and every official source permanently to his hand,
-was worth his while. It was worth his while to go to
-the House of Lords had it been a matter for his free
-choice; and if he went to the House of Lords he
-must go a free man. It would do more to save
-Van Diemens than any other step, and that great
-Company was worth twenty places in the Cabinet.
-Van Diemens was the master of this Cabinet and
-the last.</p>
-
-<p>He had made up his mind then that a peerage
-was worth his while even if it depended entirely on
-his choice. Now that he could make it a favour, it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-was doubly worth his while. The alternative meant
-useless friction.... Yes, he would take that peerage:
-but there was one thing that he must have quite
-clear:&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>The two men walked together in silence past the
-Palace; they went through the superb new entrance
-to St. James&#8217;s Park, crossed the bridge, and turned
-towards Westminster.</p>
-
-<p>It had been a shock. The relief for the Prime
-Minister was somewhat too great, and the last thing
-that Repton had to say was awkward; but he was
-accustomed to leap such hedges. He began boldly:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you happen to know what I have set aside
-for the regular purposes of the Party?&#8221; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister shook his head. If there was
-one thing he detested, it was the kitchen side of
-politics.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;ll tell you,&#8221; said Repton. &#8220;I&#8217;ve put
-exactly the same sum aside every year for fifteen
-years, whether we&#8217;ve been in office or out of it. Not
-a large sum, only five hundred pounds. Pottle will tell
-you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Premier made such a movement with his head
-as showed that he did not care.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Only five hundred pounds but exactly five
-hundred pounds,&#8221; continued Repton firmly. &#8220;Now
-Pottle must understand quite clearly that that subscription
-will neither be increased nor diminished.&#8221;
-He spoke as men speak in a shop, and in a shop of
-which they have the whip hand.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>&#8220;That&#8217;s between you and Pottle,&#8221; said the Prime
-Minister in the tone of one who doesn&#8217;t want to go
-on with the subject.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said Repton, looking straight in front of
-him, &#8220;it <i>has</i> got to be understood quite clearly. I&#8217;ve
-made it a standing order. Pottle&#8217;s never pestered
-me, but he <i>can</i> pester like the deuce.... And I&#8217;ve
-absolutely made up my mind.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course, of course,&#8221; said the Prime Minister.
-&#8220;I think it&#8217;s wise,&#8221; he went on,&mdash;&#8220;It isn&#8217;t my business,
-but I do think it wise to keep in touch with the
-Central Office. But it&#8217;s between you and Pottle.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There was another long silence as they went down
-Great George Street.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s all,&#8221; said Repton, opposite the Pugin
-fountain. The two men walked on. The statues of
-great men long dead looked down upon them; those
-statues were unused to such conversations. One of
-the statues must have thought Charles Repton a
-tactless fellow, but Charles Repton had calculated
-everything, even to his chances of life and to the
-number of active years that probably lay before him.
-And nothing would have more offended or disturbed
-him than any ambiguity upon the business side of
-the transaction.</p>
-
-<p>They parted, one for the Court of Dowry, the other
-for Downing Street, and the affair was settled.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>That afternoon the Prime Minister asked Demaine
-to come and have a cup of tea. He said he would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-rather it was in his own room; he took Demaine&#8217;s
-arm and led him round.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have you anything on to-night, Dimmy?&#8221; he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>Dimmy thought. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; he answered
-after a long examination of possible engagements.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, you&#8217;ve got to be here for the division
-anyhow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh yes,&#8221; said Dimmy. His high record of
-divisions was the sheet anchor of his soul: he had
-sat up all night sixteen times.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; said the Prime Minister hesitating, as
-though after all he didn&#8217;t want to drink a cup of
-tea, &#8220;you might see me then ... no, come along
-now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And as they drank their tea he told his companion
-that there was to be a change in the Cabinet.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I want to leave you perfectly
-free.&#8221; He seemed to be suffering a little as he said
-it, but he went on tenaciously: &#8220;I want to leave you
-perfectly free; ... but of course you know your
-name has been put before me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; began Demaine.</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister stopped him with his hand.
-&#8220;Well, anyhow it <i>has</i>.&#8221; He paused and thought.
-&#8220;I can&#8217;t tell how it would suit you, but I think I can
-tell how you would suit it. Now on <i>that</i> point I&#8217;m
-satisfied, Dimmy. You know the kind of work
-it is?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But Demaine didn&#8217;t know.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>&#8220;Well,&#8221; said the Prime Minister, leaning back easily
-and joining his hands, &#8220;it&#8217;s like all those things:
-you&#8217;ve got your staff ... in one way the work&#8217;s
-cut and dried. It&#8217;s very varied work. No man can
-be expected to grasp it all round. But,&#8221; (leaning
-forward) &#8220;like all these things, it wants a sort of
-general point of view, you understand me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Dimmy did not dare to shake his head.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It wants a sort of ...&#8221; the Prime Minister swept
-his hand over the table&mdash;&#8220;a sort of what I may call
-a&mdash;well, a&mdash;a <i>common sense</i>, especially about sudden
-things. You have to decide sometimes.... But
-you&#8217;ll soon get into it,&#8221; he added in a tone of relief.
-&#8220;You&#8217;ll have Sorrel with you all the first few
-days; he&#8217;s exceedingly easy to get on with; he&#8217;s
-been there for years&mdash;that is, of course, if you
-take it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said Demaine in a whirl, &#8220;yes, if I take it
-I shall have Sorrel.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then of course,&#8221; went on the Prime Minister
-rapidly, &#8220;it&#8217;s the kind of place which you can make
-anything of. It can count enormously; it counted
-enormously under Gherkin until he died. And
-Repton of course has made quite a splash in it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Demaine shuddered slightly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But there&#8217;s no necessity,&#8221; continued the other
-quickly, &#8220;it&#8217;s really better without a splash. It&#8217;s a
-plodding sort of attention that&#8217;s wanted,&#8221; he ended
-wearily; then with an afterthought he added: &#8220;Why
-not go to Sorrel now?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>&#8220;Couldn&#8217;t you give me a note?&#8221; asked Demaine
-nervously.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh nonsense,&#8221; answered his cousin, upon whom
-the strain was beginning to tell. &#8220;Just go up and
-see him in his office. He&#8217;s the mildest of men.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right,&#8221; said Demaine sighing. He finished
-his tea and went out,&mdash;and as he left the Prime
-Minister called after him: &#8220;Don&#8217;t forget to find me
-after the division to-night. Then I can tell you if
-anything is settled.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Demaine walked undeterminedly towards the
-Dowry Offices behind Scotland Yard; his heart
-failed him; he did not go in. He stood aimlessly
-in Whitehall, staring at the traffic; his knees were
-not quite straight and his mouth was half open.</p>
-
-<p>Past him, as he so stood, strode, full of vigour and
-of will, the fixed form of Sir Charles Repton, walking
-towards Trafalgar Square. The younger man
-followed him with his eyes and felt in his heart
-what a gulf there was between them. He was by
-no means of those who dare, and the thought of
-office appalled him. Then suddenly he remembered
-the salary. His legs straightened beneath him and
-he forced himself up the stairs to where he might
-ask to see Mr. Sorrel.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">SIR CHARLES REPTON strode up Whitehall.
-His day&#8217;s work had been heavy, in the hours
-since that morning conversation, and he was suffering.</p>
-
-<p>It was no spiritual suffering which affected that
-strong character: his life was fixed; the decision
-he had taken was final. Nay, every circumstance
-surrounding that decision delighted him. The
-peerage had been offered at precisely the right
-moment; he himself could have chosen no better. It
-was the moment when he particularly desired to be
-at once more powerful, if that could be, and yet free;
-more fixed in his political tenure, yet more at large
-to catch the hand of opportunity. For all his
-strategy was centred upon the Company which he
-was determined to save.</p>
-
-<p>That from which he now suffered was physical; he
-suffered that pain at the back of the head: it had
-a novel intensity about it; it was not exactly a
-headache, it was a sort of weight, an oppression, and
-as he went on northward the pressure got worse and
-more concentrated just behind either ear.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>He would not relax his pace. He saw a taxi
-which had just discharged a fare at Cox&#8217;s Bank; in
-spite of the trouble in his head which was rapidly
-increasing, he was clear enough to note that the little
-flag was up, that the man was free and was about to
-go away. He signalled to him and got in, and gave
-the address of his house, bidding him call at the Club
-on his way.</p>
-
-<p>He remembered, though the bother was getting
-worse, that there was a big dinner that evening; he
-tried to remember the names, then quite suddenly a
-stab of pain behind the right ear almost made him
-cry out. But Repton was indomitable and he stifled
-the cry. Hardly had he so conquered himself when
-he felt another similar violent agony behind the left
-ear: a man less master of himself would have fainted.
-It was over in a moment, but he was white and
-actually uncertain of his steps when he got out at the
-Club and went up to the porter&#8217;s box to ask for
-letters and messages. There were none.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are you certain there are none?&#8221; he asked in a
-weak voice.</p>
-
-<p>That query was so unusual from the man that the
-porter looked up surprised.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t look at me as though I was stuffed,&#8221; said
-Sir Charles sharply, &#8220;don&#8217;t you know what your
-place is worth?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The man grumbled a little.</p>
-
-<p>With the most unworthy ferocity, but perhaps the
-pain must excuse him, Sir Charles bent his head in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-to the little window in the glass and hissed: &#8220;This
-kind of thing has happened before. Just you bally
-well sort the papers in front of you and make sure.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His hands were trembling with constricted rage
-the porter ran through the bundle, and found a card.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What did I tell you, you b&mdash;&mdash;y snipe!&#8221; darted
-the now uncontrollable Baronet. Then recovering
-himself he said with no shame but in a little
-confusion: &#8220;I&#8217;ve had enough of this.&#8221; He looked
-at the card: it was an advertisement inviting him to
-spend a week for eleven guineas in lovely Lucerne,
-and there was a picture of the Rigi Kulm. He tore
-the card up savagely, threw it into the waste-paper
-basket, hurriedly went down the steps of his Club,
-bolted into the taxi and slammed the door behind
-him.</p>
-
-<p>The driver had let the engine stop. Sir Charles
-sat tapping either foot, his eyes alight, and his hands
-working nervously. The man was working the
-barrel organ in front of the machine; the piston
-started once or twice vigorously, then died down
-again. Sir Charles got out.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you can&#8217;t make your damn kettle go,&#8221; he said,&mdash;then
-he suddenly smiled. &#8220;What a good-natured
-face you have,&#8221; he remarked with an abrupt transition
-of tone. &#8220;It&#8217;s a brutal thing for men like me with
-enormous incomes to bully people who have to be
-out in all weathers, though I must say you taxi-men
-are a privileged lot! You&#8217;ve always got a herd of
-poor fellows round you, running messages for you and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-what not. You know,&#8221; he went on still more
-familiarly, &#8220;if you didn&#8217;t look so jolly good-natured I
-wouldn&#8217;t get into the cab again: but I will now. I
-will now,&#8221; he nodded reassuringly to show there was
-no ill-feeling, and he climbed again into the taxi,
-which at last started off upon its journey.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Charles, within that vehicle, preserved for some
-moments the expression of strong silence which was
-at least one-half of his fortune. Suddenly that
-expression broke down; something tickled him
-hugely. Such a merry look came into his eyes as
-had perhaps not visited them since he was a child&mdash;if
-then. It occurred to him to look out of the
-window. The fact that the window was up in no
-way incommoded him. He butted his head through
-it and then very cautiously drew it in again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s dangerous,&#8221; he muttered, &#8220;might have cut
-myself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The driver of the taxi heard nothing. Sir Charles
-looked through the star of broken glass for a moment,
-then cautiously lowered the sash. He put his head
-out again, smiling almost to the point of laughter,
-and asked the driver whether he had noticed the
-absurd pomposity of the two sentries and the
-policemen outside Marlborough House. The taxi
-man simply said &#8220;Yes sir,&#8221; and went on driving.</p>
-
-<p>For a few minutes Sir Charles was silent, ruminating
-and smiling within. Then he put his head
-out again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, but did you?&#8221; he asked.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>And just at that point the traffic was stopped to
-allow a cross current from another street to pass.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What a fool a man can make of himself,&#8221; said
-Sir Charles suddenly to nobody, communing half
-aloud with his own soul. &#8220;It&#8217;s an amazing thing!
-I can&#8217;t conceive why I should put my head out of a
-window like that to tell him the way.... I suppose
-I was telling him the way ... but my head is so
-bad!... What a fool a man can make of himself!&#8221;
-The sternness of his expression returned. He remembered
-that the taxi-man knew his address and
-he bethought him how to escape from humiliation.
-When they had driven up to his house he would
-pretend it was the wrong number and drive somewhere
-else.</p>
-
-<p>Yet again his mood changed and he burst into an
-explosion of laughter as he remembered the sentries.
-Then the name over a shop which recalled to him
-certain mortgages tickled his fancy. He almost
-stopped the taxi to get out and have a bout of fun
-with the proprietors of that shop but he was going
-swiftly through the streets and he preferred his ease.</p>
-
-<p>Long before they reached the Marble Arch he
-had forgotten all about his intention of secrecy.
-Nay, he had forgotten about his dinner; he only
-knew he was going home. And when he got out
-he saw upon the little machine the notice &#8220;1/10.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The register marks one and tenpence,&#8221; he said
-slowly and gravely to the driver, upon whose honest
-and happy face the tendency to astonishment was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-hardly controlled. &#8220;Now I don&#8217;t think these
-machines are infallible&mdash;far from it&mdash;but it isn&#8217;t
-worth my while, you understand, to argue it. So
-there&#8217;s one and tenpence.&#8221; He laboriously counted
-out the money. &#8220;Wait a moment,&#8221; he said, &#8220;give
-me back three coppers.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The man hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Give me back three coppers,&#8221; snapped Sir Charles
-testily, &#8220;I want to get rid of a thruppeny-bit,&#8221; and
-he handed over the offensive coin.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now wait a minute, wait a minute,&#8221; he added,
-&#8220;don&#8217;t be in a hurry. I always give a tip to taxi
-drivers&mdash;I really don&#8217;t know why,&#8221; he said with a
-sudden change of expression, &#8220;there&#8217;s no particular
-favour, and they earn lots of money. But one&#8217;s got
-to&mdash;I suppose if one didn&#8217;t,&#8221; he continued in a
-ruminative tone, &#8220;they&#8217;d mark one in some way,
-same way they do the boxes in hotels, and your
-watch, me boy, when you pawn it,&#8221; he ended with
-an explosion of mirth, digging the man sharply in
-the ribs. &#8220;Eh?&#8221; He pulled out two pence, added
-another penny, and then another, took out a sixpence,
-put it back again, finally put the three pence into the
-man&#8217;s hand, and went up to his door.</p>
-
-<p>The taxi-man as he was driving off nodded
-familiarly to a policeman, and, by drawing up all
-one side of his face while he left the other in repose,
-gave it to be understood that he had grave doubts of
-the mental balance of the gentleman whom he had
-just conveyed to his residence.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>Alas, for simple men! The policeman strode up
-to him, rated him soundly, asked what he meant by
-it, and in general gave him to understand that he
-was dealing with no ordinary household. And the
-taxi-man, who was but recently landed from the
-sea, went off pondering, as far as the congested
-traffic would allow him, upon the mysteries of
-London.</p>
-
-<p>The policeman solemnly returned to his duty,
-which was that of guarding the residence of so great
-a citizen, and Sir Charles, putting his hat upon the
-table in the hall, went past the two servants upon
-whose presence in that vestibule he insisted, and
-walked majestically up the staircase, as though the
-last half-hour had not been.</p>
-
-<p>But he felt during this progress unaccountable
-desires. Before he was half-way up they were too
-strong for him. He stopped, leaned over the
-bannisters, looked at the two well-trained domestics
-who stood like statues below him, and said:
-&#8220;Henry!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Henry, with a perfect turn of the head, answered,
-&#8220;Yes, Sir Charles?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;William!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>William, with a precisely similar change of attitude,
-said, &#8220;Yes, Sir Charles?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What does it feel like to stand like that when
-another man, who simply happens to be richer than
-you, is going by?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The well-trained domestics made no reply.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>&#8220;Are you dumb?&#8221; he shouted angrily. &#8220;What&#8217;s
-it feel like, I say?... Blasted fools!&#8221; he muttered,
-when he had endured for a few seconds their continued
-silence. He went on up the stairs, saying
-half to himself and half to them: &#8220;Catch <i>me</i> doing
-it. Why, there&#8217;s more money in a whelk stall!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He found his wife reading. She put down her
-book and asked him timidly what had been going on
-in the House.</p>
-
-<p>His only answer was to put his hand to his head
-and say that he was suffering.</p>
-
-<p>And so he was, for the pain, though less violent,
-had returned. She suggested, though very hesitatingly,
-that he should lie down. He made no reply.
-He put his hand before his eyes and waited with set
-teeth until the first violence of the pang had passed,
-and then said to her gently: &#8220;I beg your pardon,
-dear, what did you say?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was nearly twenty years since she had heard
-that tone from him. She was frightened.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Did you ask what was going on in the House?&#8221; he
-sighed. &#8220;Well, I can tell you.&#8221; He put his hands
-on the chimneypiece and looked down at the fender.
-&#8220;There&#8217;s going on there,&#8221; he said decidedly, &#8220;as
-crass, imbecile and hypocritical a piece of futility as
-God permits: as Almighty God permits!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh Charles!&#8221; she cried, &#8220;Charles! Is there any
-trouble?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; he said, looking round at her with mild
-surprise, &#8220;just the usual thing. Nobody has the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-slightest idea what they&#8217;re talking about, and nobody
-cares.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Charles!&#8221; she said, feeling the gravity of the
-moment, for he was evidently suffering in some
-mysterious way. &#8220;Have you left it all right in
-your room? Haven&#8217;t you any appointments or anything?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I never thought of that,&#8221; he answered. His
-eyes had in them an expression quite childlike and
-he said suddenly: &#8220;One can still see what you were
-like when I married you, Maria. Turn your face
-round a little.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She did so, with her face full of colour.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he said, &#8220;they keep their profiles best.
-You can remember them by their profiles.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Charles darling,&#8221; said Lady Repton getting up,
-her white hair shining against the flush of her
-forehead. &#8220;Let me look after you.&#8221; She had not
-used such a tone nor dreamed of such an endearment
-for many many years.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t mind, old girl,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I don&#8217;t mind,&#8221;
-and the innocence of his eyes continued. Then as
-though something else were battling within him he
-began abruptly: &#8220;Maria, have you got a full list of
-the people who are coming to-night? I thought not.
-I&#8217;m sorry to have to speak of it again, I told you
-when we first came to town, and I&#8217;ve told you fifty
-times since, that I can do nothing without such a list.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I&#8217;ve got it,&#8221; she said, in great suffering, &#8220;I&#8217;ve
-got it, Charles.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>His eyes changed again. &#8220;You&#8217;ve got what?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The list of the people who are coming, Charles.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh ... I didn&#8217;t understand. The list of the
-people who are coming,&#8221; he repeated slowly. &#8220;Well,
-show it to me in a moment.&#8221; He moved towards
-the door.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll come with you,&#8221; she said.</p>
-
-<p>For the first time since her husband had decided
-to enter Parliament and had entered it, twenty years
-before, while their child was still alive, Lady Repton
-had to take a decision of importance. She decided
-in favour of the dinner. It was too late to change it,
-and she must trust to chance, but evidently some
-terrible thing had befallen the Warden of the Court
-of Dowry.</p>
-
-<p>As he was dressing she heard him now and then
-humming a chance tune (a thing which in his normal
-self he would no more have dreamed of doing than of
-walking the streets without his hat) and now and
-then commenting upon the character and attributes
-of the opera singer whom he had last heard sing it.
-She heard him launch out into a long monologue,
-describing the exact career of the new soprano at
-Covent Garden, the name of her father and her
-mother, the name of the Russian Grand Duke, the
-name of a wealthy English lady who had asked her
-(and him) to supper, and then, oh horror! the name
-of an English statesman. There was a burst of
-laughter which Lady Repton could hardly bear: and
-then a silence.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>When they met again and their guests had begun
-to come he seemed right enough, except that now
-and then he would say things which every one in the
-room knew well enough to be true, but which were
-by no means suitable to the occasion.</p>
-
-<p>It was thought eccentric in him, especially by
-those who knew him best, that he should comment
-somewhat upon what man was paired off with what
-woman in the procession, and it was thought exceedingly
-coarse by his partner that he should explain a
-strong itching upon his right ankle to be due, not to
-a flea, for his man was most careful, but to some little
-skin trouble.</p>
-
-<p>The noise of talking during the dinner covered
-any other indiscretions, and when the men were
-alone with him over the wine, he sat gloomily enough,
-evidently changed but guilty of nothing more exceptional
-than a complete ignorance of where the wine
-came from or what it was.</p>
-
-<p>There were the beginnings of a quarrel with a
-pompous and little-known fellow-member of his
-own Party who attempted to talk learnedly on
-wine. Repton had begun, &#8220;What on earth d&#8217;you
-know about wine? Why, your old father wouldn&#8217;t
-allow you swipes when you went to fetch the
-supper beer!&#8221; He had begun thus, I say, to
-recall the humble origins of the politician, when he
-added: &#8220;But there, what&#8217;s the good of quarreling?
-You&#8217;re all the same herd,&#8221;&mdash;his evident illness
-excused him. He led them back to the women, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-gloomy troupe; they began to leave uncommonly
-early.</p>
-
-<p>The one who lingered last was a very honest man,
-stupid, straightforward and rich. He was fond of
-Charles Repton, simply because Repton had once
-done him a very cheap good turn in the matter of
-a legal dispute; he had stopped a lawsuit. And this
-man ever, since&mdash;it was now five years ago,&mdash;was
-ready to serve that household. His name, I should
-add, was Withers, and he was a Commoner; he sat
-for Ashington. He had not only this loyal feeling
-for Charles Repton, which he was perhaps the only
-man in London to feel; he had also a simple admiration
-for him, for his career, for his speeches, for his
-power of introducing impromptu such words as
-&#8220;well,&#8221; and &#8220;now&#8221; and &#8220;I will beg the House to
-observe&#8221; into his careful arguments. Lady Repton
-trusted him, and she was glad to see him remaining
-alone after the others had left. Charles Repton was
-sitting at the end of the room, staring at nothingness.</p>
-
-<p>Withers whispered to Lady Repton a rapid query
-as to what had happened. She could tell him
-nothing, but her eyes filled with tears.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wouldn&#8217;t it be better,&#8221; said Withers hurriedly, in
-a low tone, &#8220;if I got him back to vote to-night?
-There&#8217;ll be three divisions at eleven. There&#8217;s bound
-to be a scandal if he doesn&#8217;t turn up.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;no&mdash;very well,&#8221; said Lady Repton. &#8220;I
-don&#8217;t understand it. I don&#8217;t understand anything.&#8221;
-She almost broke down.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>&#8220;Repton,&#8221; said Withers, &#8220;won&#8217;t you come along
-with me? It&#8217;s half-past ten, there&#8217;ll be three
-divisions.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Repton startled them both nearly out of their skins.
-&#8220;Divisions?&#8221; he shrieked, jumping up. &#8220;Go down
-and maunder past those green boxes in a great
-stifling pack for nothing at all? Not if I know it!
-Why I can guess you the majority from here. And
-if there wasn&#8217;t any majority I should blasted well like
-to know the difference it would make! Divisions!
-Oh chase me!&#8221; And he snorted and sat down again.</p>
-
-<p>Withers did not know whether to stay or to go, but
-before he could reply Charles Repton in the most
-ordinary of tones went on: &#8220;I can&#8217;t understand a
-man like you, Withers, putting up with it. You&#8217;re
-rich, you&#8217;re a gentleman born, which I&#8217;m not; you&#8217;d
-be just as big a man in Buckinghamshire, especially
-nowadays when the county&#8217;s crawling with Jews, if
-you were out of the House. You&#8217;d be infinitely freer.
-You know perfectly well the country&#8217;ll stagger along
-without the silly tom-fool business or with it, and that
-neither it nor anything else can prevent the smash.
-Why don&#8217;t you go and live your life of a squire like a
-sensible chap? And make one prayer that you may
-die before the whole bag of tricks comes to an end?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come along, Charles,&#8221; said Withers smoothly, &#8220;do
-come along.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not I!&#8221; said Repton, &#8220;I&#8217;m going to bed. I&#8217;m
-tired, and my head hurts me!&#8221; And he went out like
-a boor.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>&#8220;Lady Repton,&#8221; said Withers very gently when he
-had gone, &#8220;what has Charles got to do to-morrow?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He never tells me,&#8221; said the wretched lady. &#8220;I
-suppose he will go into the City as usual.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s very unwise,&#8221; said Withers, &#8220;and yet I don&#8217;t
-know after all. It might help him to be in harness,
-and you&#8217;ll have him out of the house while you&#8217;re
-making your plans. I&#8217;ll do what I can, Lady Repton,
-I&#8217;ll do what I can. Isn&#8217;t to-morrow the meeting of
-the Van Diemens Company?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t tell,&#8221; said Lady Repton despairingly. She
-was impatient to be seeing to her husband. She had
-grown terrified during the last few hours when he was
-out of her sight.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, it is,&#8221; said Withers. &#8220;Oh that&#8217;ll be all right.
-It&#8217;ll do him all the good in the world: I&#8217;m sure it will.
-Good-night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He came back again. He remembered something:
-&#8220;Of course,&#8221; he said a little awkwardly, &#8220; I don&#8217;t know
-anything about these things, but I read in the paper
-that he was down to speak at the big Wycliffite meeting.
-Don&#8217;t let him go there, Lady Repton, until
-you&#8217;re quite certain, will you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh no,&#8221; she said with the terrified look coming
-back again upon her face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s not like business,&#8221; said Withers. &#8220;There&#8217;d be
-excitement, you know. Good-night.&#8221; And he went out.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Those of Charles Repton&#8217;s guests who were
-Members of the House of Commons had returned to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-it. One or two of them had hinted that things were
-a little queer with Repton, but Withers when he got
-back just in time for the divisions, found no rumours
-as yet, and was profoundly grateful. One man only
-who had been present at the dinner, took him aside
-in the Lobby and asked him whether Charles Repton
-had had any trouble.</p>
-
-<p>Withers laughed the question away, and explained
-that he had known Repton for many years and that
-now and then he did give way to these silly fits of
-temper. It was digestion, he said; perhaps the guest
-had noticed there were no onions.</p>
-
-<p>The House had something better to gossip about,
-for after the divisions Demaine was seen going arm
-in arm with the Prime Minister into his room for a
-moment. There had been plenty of talk of Demaine
-lately: that visit increased it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Certain members more curious or fussy than the
-rest scoured the journalists in the lobbies: they had
-news.</p>
-
-<p>It was all settled. The paragraphs had been sent
-round to the papers. The Lobby correspondents had
-each of them quite special and peculiar means of
-knowing that Certain Changes were expected in the
-Cabinet in the near future; that the House of Lords
-was to be strengthened by the addition of talents
-which were universally respected; several names had
-been mentioned for the vacancy; perhaps Mr.
-Demaine, with his special training and the experience<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-drawn from his travels would, on the whole, form the
-most popular appointment.</p>
-
-<p>Thus had the announcement been given in its
-vaguest form by the Prime Minister&#8217;s secretary; two
-or three favoured journals had been permitted to say
-without doubt that Charles Repton had resigned; the
-exact title under which he would accept a peerage was
-suggested, and Demaine was put down in black and
-white as being certainly his successor.</p>
-
-<p>All this Demaine was told meanwhile that evening
-in the Prime Minister&#8217;s room.</p>
-
-<p>His interview with Sorrel had been exceedingly
-satisfactory, and never in his life, not in the moments
-when he could spend most of his father-in-law&#8217;s money,
-had Demaine experienced so complete a respect and
-so eager a service. He felt himself already Warden,
-and what was better, he felt himself perfectly capable
-of the Wardenship. His mood rose and rose. He forgot
-Sudie; he had not even told her when he would
-be home. He shook his cousin&#8217;s hand as warmly as
-might a provincial, and went out by the entry under
-Big Ben, to calm down the exuberance of his joy
-with breaths of the fresh night air along the Embankment.
-It was nearly twelve o&#8217;clock.</p>
-
-<p>So ended for George Mulross Demaine that
-Monday, June 1st, 1915.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WHEN Sir Charles Repton woke upon the
-Tuesday morning he felt better than he
-had felt at any moment since the loss of his
-youth. There seemed something easy in the air
-about him, and within his mind a lack of business
-and friction which he did not account for at the
-time, but which perhaps in a vague manner he may
-have ascribed to the purity of the air and the beauty
-of the day.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was streaming into his windows from
-over the Park. It was already warm, and as he
-dressed and shaved himself he allowed his thoughts
-to wander with an unaccustomed freedom over the
-simple things of life. He noted the colour of the
-trees; he was glad to see the happiness of the
-passers-by in the streets below; he felt an unaccountable
-sympathy with the human race, and he was
-even touched with contempt as he gazed at the long
-procession of wealthy houses which marked the line
-of Park Lane.</p>
-
-<p>At breakfast he ate heartily, though he was alone;
-he looked at the small batch of letters which awaited<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-him, and when he opened his newspaper he positively
-laughed at the opinions expressed in the leading
-article. He nearly broke into another laugh as he
-read the news from America, and then&mdash;with a gesture
-which horrified the two solemn servants who had
-watched the unaccountable change in their master&#8217;s
-manner, he tore the paper rapidly into four pieces
-and threw it on the floor. Having done this he
-jumped up gaily, nodded to the menials, said &#8220;You
-didn&#8217;t expect that,&#8221; walked briskly out, took his hat
-and coat and with no conscious purpose but as
-habit moved him jumped into a motor-bus going
-East.</p>
-
-<p>The conductor, who had a respect for Sir Charles
-Repton&#8217;s clothes, and especially for his spats, and
-who seemed to recognise his face, asked him gently
-how much he desired to spend upon a ticket: to
-which he answered in a breezy manner, &#8220;Penny of
-course. Never pay more than a penny; then if the
-beastly thing breaks down you&#8217;re not out of pocket ... &#8217;sides
-which,&#8221; he went on as though talking to
-himself, &#8220;if they forget about you you can have
-tuppence-worth or thruppence-worth for the same
-money!&#8221; And he chuckled.</p>
-
-<p>The conductor looked at him first in terror, then
-smiled responsively and went forward to deal with
-less fortunate people, while Sir Charles hummed
-gently to himself,&mdash;a little out of tune but none the
-less cheerfully on that account&mdash;an air of ribald
-associations.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>The top of the bus was pretty full, and a workman
-who had occasion to travel in the same direction as
-his betters saw fit to sit down in the one empty
-place beside the Baronet. It would have been difficult
-to decide upon what occupation this honest
-man had most recently been engaged: but there
-had certainly entered into it oil, wet clay, probably
-soot, and considerable masses of oxidised copper.
-It was not remarkable, therefore, that, beside such
-a companion, especially as that companion was a
-large man, Sir Charles should have found himself
-considerably incommoded. What <i>was</i> remarkable
-was the manner in which the Baronet expressed his
-annoyance. He turned round upon the workman
-with an irritated frown and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t make out why they allow people like
-you on omnibuses!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yer carn&#8217;t wort?&#8221; said the breadwinner in a
-threatening voice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I say I can&#8217;t make out,&#8221; answered Sir Charles,
-carefully picking out each word&mdash;&#8220;I can&#8217;t make
-out why they allow people like you on omnibuses,&mdash;dirty
-<i>brutes</i> like you, I should say. Why
-the devil....&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At this moment the workman seized Sir Charles
-by the collar. Sir Charles, though an older man,
-was by no means weak; his tall body was well-knit
-and active, and he felt unaccountably brawny that
-morning; he got the thumb and forefinger of his
-left hand like a pitchfork under his opponent&#8217;s chin,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-and there began what promised to be a very pretty
-scuffle. Everybody on the top of the bus got up,
-a woman tittered, and a large consequential fellow
-who attempted to interfere received a violent backhander
-from the huge left hand of the Operative,
-the wrist of which was firmly grasped by the right
-of the Politician and was struggling in the air.</p>
-
-<p>The bus stopped, a crowd gathered, the workman,
-as is customary with hard-working people, was
-easily appeased; Sir Charles, a good deal ruffled,
-got off the bus, and pressing two shillings into the
-hand of a policeman who was preparing to take
-notes, said loudly:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s all right! You can&#8217;t do anything against
-<i>me</i>, and of course I can prevent the thing getting
-into the papers; but it&#8217;s always better to give a
-policeman money,&mdash;safe rule!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>With that he wormed his way through the increasing
-mob and disappeared into a taxi, the driver of
-which, with singular sagacity, drove off rapidly
-without asking for any direction. When he was
-well out of it, Repton put his head out of the window
-and addressed the driver in the following remarkable
-words:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t really know where you&#8217;d better go: of
-course if you go to my Club I could change there&#8221;
-(his collar was torn off him and his hat was badly
-battered) &#8220;but on the whole you&#8217;d better take me
-to Guy&#8217;s&mdash;No you hadn&#8217;t, go to the Club. Stop at
-a Boy Messenger&#8217;s on your way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>&#8220;What Club, sir?&#8221; asked the driver with the
-deference due to a man at once wealthy and mad.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You won&#8217;t know it,&#8221; said Sir Charles kindly and
-still craning in a constrained manner out of the
-window. &#8220;By the way, why don&#8217;t they have a
-speaking-tube or something from inside to you
-people? It&#8217;s awkward turning one&#8217;s head outside
-like a snake. You won&#8217;t know it, but I&#8217;ll shout to
-you when we get to the bottom of St. James&#8217;s Street.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The driver, now convinced that he had to do with
-something quite out of the ordinary, touched his cap
-in a manner almost military, and fled through the
-streets of London. At a Boy Messenger&#8217;s office Sir
-Charles sent home for clothes and for a change, got
-to his Club, informed the astonished porter that it
-was a very fine day, that he had just had a fight
-on the top of a bus, that by God the Johnnie didn&#8217;t
-know who he was tackling! He, Sir Charles, was
-no longer a young man, but he would have shown
-him what an upper cut was if he could have got
-a free swing! He proceeded to illustrate the nature
-of this fence&mdash;then suddenly asked for his letters,
-and for a dressing-room.</p>
-
-<p>After this, which had all been acted in the most
-rapid and violent manner, he ran up the steps, stood
-for a few moments with his hands in his pockets
-gazing at the telegrams, and forgetful that he had
-no collar on, that his coat was torn, that there was
-blood upon his hands, and that half of his waistcoat
-was wide open with two buttons missing. He found<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-the telegrams of some interest; he did not notice
-the glances directed towards him by those who
-passed in and out of the building, nor the act of a
-page who in passing the porter&#8217;s box tapped his
-forehead twice with his forefinger.</p>
-
-<p>He stood for a moment in thought, then it
-suddenly occurred to him that it would have been
-a wiser thing to have gone straight home. He got
-another taxi and drove to his house. There, after a
-brief scene with the footman in which he rehearsed
-all that he had already given them at the Club, he
-ordered his clothes to be put out for him, and took a
-very comfortable bath.</p>
-
-<p>Luckily for him he found lying upon his table
-when he came down, a note which he had left there
-the night before with regard to the Van Diemens
-meeting.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Forgot that,&#8221; he said, a little seriously. &#8220;Good
-thing I found it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He picked it up, folded it once or twice, unfolded
-it, re-read it perhaps three times, and while he was
-so employed heard the grave voice of his secretary
-begging him to go into town in the motor.</p>
-
-<p>Repton did not for the moment see any connection
-between his recent adventures and this request, but
-he was all compliance, and nodding cheerfully he
-waited for the machine to come round. When it
-had come he looked at it closely for a moment,
-confided to the chauffeur that he intensely disliked
-its colour, but that it was a bargain and he wasn&#8217;t<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-going to spend any money on changing it, because
-he meant to sell it to some fool at the end of the
-season&mdash;got in, and was driven to the Cannon Street
-Hotel.</p>
-
-<p>He was a little late. The platform was already
-occupied and his empty chair was waiting for him.</p>
-
-<p>At his entry there was some applause, such as
-would naturally greet the man who was known to
-be the Directing Brain of all that interest. None
-noticed a change in him. His clothes were perhaps
-a little less spick and span: it was unusual to see
-him stretch his arms two or three times before he
-sat down, and those who knew him best, in his
-immediate neighbourhood upon the platform, were
-astonished to see him smile and nod familiarly to
-several of the less important Directors; but on the
-whole he behaved himself in a fairly consecutive
-manner, and if he did whisper to a colleague upon
-his right that he looked as though he had been
-drinking a little too much overnight, the unaccustomed
-jest was allowed to pass without
-comment.</p>
-
-<p>When the moment came for him to speak, he
-jumped up, perhaps a little too briskly, faced his
-audience with less than his usual solemnity, nay,
-with something very like a grin, and struck the first
-note of his great speech in a manner which they had
-hitherto never heard from his lips.</p>
-
-<p>It was certainly calculated to compel their attention
-if not their conviction, for the very first words<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-which he shouted into the body of the hall, were
-these:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>WHAT ARE WE HERE FOR?</i>&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>After that rhetorical question, delivered in a roar
-that would have filled the largest railway station in
-London, he repeated it in a somewhat lower tone,
-clenched his fists, struck them squarely on the table,
-and answered as though he were delivering a final
-judgment:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>MONEY!....</i></p>
-
-<p>Ladies and gentlemen,&#8221; he went on, raising his
-right hand and wagging his forefinger at them&mdash;&#8220;we
-are here for money! And don&#8217;t you forget it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He blew a great breath, watched them quizzically
-a moment and then continued:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What <i>most</i> of you <i>most</i> lack is the power of
-thinking clearly. I can see it in your faces. I can
-see it in the way you sit. And people who can&#8217;t
-think clearly don&#8217;t make <i>money</i>. No one can think
-clearly who hasn&#8217;t got a good grip of his first
-principles and doesn&#8217;t know first of all what he wants
-before he tries to get it. Well, I repeat it, and
-I challenge any one to deny it: what we want is
-<i>money</i>! Let us make that quite clear. Let us
-anchor ourselves to that ... and when we once
-have that thoroughly fixed in our minds we can
-go on to the matter of how we are to get it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now ladies and gentlemen,&#8221; he proceeded in a
-more conversational manner, rubbing his hands
-together, and smiling at them with excessive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-freedom, &#8220;let us first of all take stock. Sitting
-here before me and round me here upon this
-platform (he waved his right arm in a large gesture)
-are four million pounds of Van Diemens stock.
-Four million pounds, ladies and gentlemen! But
-wait a moment. At what price was that stock
-bought? I am not asking at what price <i>I</i> bought,&#8221;&mdash;here
-he looked to the left and the right, sweeping
-the hundreds of faces before him&mdash;&#8220;I am not asking
-at what price <i>I</i> bought: my position differs from
-yours, my hearties; I&#8217;m in the middle of things and
-my official position obtains me even more knowledge
-than I should gather with my own very excellent
-powers of observation: I&#8217;ve spent a whole lifetime
-in watching markets, and I have never cared a <i>dump</i>&mdash;I
-repeat, ladies and gentlemen, a DUMP, for
-anything except the profit. I have never listened
-to any talk about the &#8216;development of a country&#8217; or
-&#8216;possibilities&#8217; or &#8216;the future,&#8217; or any kid of that sort.
-I&#8217;ve bought paper and sold paper ... and I&#8217;ve done
-uncommonly well out of it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He paused a moment, more for breath than for
-anything else, for he had been speaking very rapidly;
-and in the terrified silence round him Bingham was
-heard muttering as though in reply to some whispered
-question: &#8220;You leave him <i>alone</i>! It may be unconventional,
-but....&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The question is, ladies and gentlemen, at what
-price have you bought ... on the average? Many
-of you are country parsons, many of you ladies with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-far more money than you have knowledge what to
-do with it. Not a few of you stock-brokers&mdash;an
-exceptionally inexperienced class of men&mdash;you are
-a fair average lot of British investors, and I ask
-<i>at what price did you buy?</i>&#8221; He looked at them
-fixedly for a few moments, then pulling out a scrap
-of paper he read it briefly:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;From figures that have been laid before me I
-find that the average price at which the present
-shareholders bought was eight pounds sixteen
-shillings and a few pence,&#8217;&#8221; and then added &#8220;We&#8217;ll
-call it eight pounds. Always be on the Conservative
-side.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At this remark, which was supposed to contain a
-political jest, two old ladies in the second row
-tittered, but finding themselves alone, stopped
-tittering.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I say take it at eight pounds. Well, that four
-million of stock stands for thirty-two million pounds.
-<i>Thirty-two million pounds!</i>&#8221; he said with a rising
-voice&mdash;&#8220;THIRTY-TWO MILLION POUNDS!&#8221; he roared,&mdash;banging
-the table with his fist and leaning forward
-with a determined jowl.... &#8220;And what&#8217;s left of it?
-<i>Nothing!</i>&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There was another dead silence at the end of this
-striking phrase, and Bingham was again heard to
-mutter: &#8220;You leave him <i>alone</i>; he knows what he&#8217;s
-at!&#8221; A certain uneasy shuffling of feet behind him
-caused Repton to turn his head snappishly, then he
-looked round again and resumed his great oration.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>&#8220;I say <i>nothing</i>.... Oh! I know there are some of
-you stupid enough to think that you have still got
-sixteen and thruppence a share. That was the
-quotation in the paper this morning. Eugh!&#8221; he
-sniffed sardonically, &#8220;You try and <i>sell</i> at that and
-you&#8217;ll soon find what you&#8217;ve got! No! you haven&#8217;t
-even got that sixteen and thruppence. You haven&#8217;t
-got two shillings in the pound for what you put in.
-You&#8217;ve got nothing! nothing! nothing!! Put that in
-your pipes and smoke it....&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And so, gentlemen,&#8221; he added, leaning his body
-backwards and putting his thumbs into his waistcoat,
-&#8220;the business before us is how to get out of this hole.
-There are perhaps some of you,&#8221; he went on, frowning
-intellectually, &#8220;there are perhaps some of you who
-imagine that the Government is going to buy. Well,
-I&#8217;m a member of the Government and I can tell you
-they are <i>not</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At this appalling remark the elements of revolution
-upon the platform all but exploded, but the solid
-weight of Bingham was still there, and if I may hint
-at a phrase with which the reader is already familiar,
-he suggested that Sir Charles knew what he was
-about and should be let <i>alone</i>.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Even if they did buy,&#8221; Repton went on seriously
-and argumentatively, &#8220;they could hardly buy at more
-than par. I&#8217;m the last man,&#8221; he continued rapidly &#8220;to
-jaw about public opinion or things of that sort. The
-real reason why they won&#8217;t buy is the Irish. But even
-if they did buy they could hardly give more than par.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-And what&#8217;s par?&#8221; he said with great disdain. &#8220;No,
-that cock won&#8217;t fight!... Mind you, I&#8217;m not saying
-you couldn&#8217;t have got the Government to buy a little
-time ago. I think you could. But you can&#8217;t now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think there&#8217;s a single man on either front
-bench&mdash;&#8221; this was said meditatively and tapping off
-the fingers of one hand with the forefinger of the
-other&mdash;&#8220;who&#8217;s personally interested, and I don&#8217;t
-<i>think</i> there&#8217;s any direct connection since Cooke died
-between the Cabinet and any one who is&mdash;except me.
-No, that&#8217;s not the way out. What you&#8217;ve got to do,
-ladies and gentlemen, is to throw a sprat to catch a
-whale.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A sprat,&#8221; he meditatively repeated, &#8220;to catch a
-whale: a great Whale full o&#8217; blubber! ... an&#8217; how
-are you going to do that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now listen&#8221;&mdash;his tone had become very earnest
-and he was leaning forward, bent and fixed and
-holding them with his fine strong eyes, &#8220;listen, there
-are three steps. You&#8217;ve got first of all to show the
-public that you <i>believe</i> in the future of the Company;
-next you&#8217;ve got to decide upon a dodge to show
-that: something that&#8217;ll make every one think that you
-the shareholders do really believe in that future.
-What&#8217;s the third step? Why up goes the price&mdash;real
-price&mdash;money offered&mdash;<i>then you can sell</i>. That&#8217;s my
-opinion,&#8221; he concluded, clapping his hands together
-and laying them upon the table before him: and he
-let it sink in.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now you&#8217;ll notice,&#8221; he went on, &#8220;in the prospectus<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-you have received, some talk of a railway.
-We&#8217;re asking money from you to build a railway.
-Now why are we doing that? Please follow me
-carefully.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The hundreds of heads bent forward and the
-intelligences they contained were prepared to follow
-him carefully. He was a great man.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We have asked you to build a railway,&#8221; he pronounced,
-leaving a little space of time between each
-word, &#8220;because a railway still catches on. I don&#8217;t
-know why, but it <i>does</i>. Mines don&#8217;t. You might
-discover ore all over the place and they wouldn&#8217;t go:
-I&#8217;ve got two men of my own, engineers, <i>experts</i>,
-who&#8217;ll discover ore anywhere; they&#8217;d discover tons
-before three o&#8217;clock this afternoon and you might
-swear your dying oath to them, but the public
-wouldn&#8217;t believe you. As for agriculture,&mdash;Piff!
-And as for climate, Boo! But <i>railways</i> still work.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very well. You raise your capital for your
-railway. What that railway may be imagined to do
-is set out in full before you and I won&#8217;t go into it.
-But I will ask you especially to note the passage in
-which it is described as giving a strategical supremacy
-to the Empire. You know what the Empire is. You
-<i>may</i> know, some o&#8217; you, what strategy is. Looks as
-if there were a fleecy general or two among you!
-But that&#8217;s as may be&mdash;just note the phrase. It&#8217;s
-safety! That&#8217;s what it is! No odds. No blighter
-to run any risk of having to fight any one anywhere!
-Grand!&#8221;... &#8220;I <i>think</i> also,&#8221; he mused, &#8220;something<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-could be done with the tourist side ... there are
-falls and mountains and things ... but no matter:
-the point is the railway.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He drank from a glass of water on the table,
-turned round angrily and said: &#8220;Good lord what
-water! It&#8217;s bad enough to have to drink water in
-public for a show, but it needn&#8217;t be tepid! If the
-place wasn&#8217;t so public I&#8217;d spit it out again!&#8221; Then
-facing the audience again: &#8220;However.... About
-that railway. First understand clearly, ladies and
-gentlemen, <i>that railway is not going to be built</i>!
-There is no intention of building it. There is no
-intention of surveying it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Two or three voices rose in protest at the back of
-the hall. Sir Charles leaned forward and put out his
-hand appealingly:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;One moment, one moment pray! Hear me out!
-I don&#8217;t mean that <i>no</i> one will build it. That&#8217;s not
-our funeral. I mean that <i>we</i> won&#8217;t. The &#8216;Company&#8217;
-may, whatever that means. But you and I&mdash;the
-people who have got into this hole&mdash;<i>we</i> won&#8217;t. It
-won&#8217;t be <i>our</i> money. Seize that! Get a hold of that!
-It&#8217;s the key to the whole business.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Little gasps and one profound sigh, but no
-interruptions followed this explanation, and Sir
-Charles with perfect coolness continued:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What we want is five shillings a share&mdash;only five
-shillings a share. Five shillings where most of you have
-already given a hundred and sixty! Five shillings a
-share ... four million shares ... that&#8217;s a million.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-And mind you, only a nominal million. We don&#8217;t
-want your two half-crowns; bless you no. All we
-want in cash is a shilling. For the rest, you&#8217;ll see in
-a moment. Well, there you are then, a shilling, a
-miserable shilling. Now just see what that shilling
-will do!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In the first place it&#8217;ll give publicity and plenty
-of it. Breath of public life, publicity! Breath o&#8217;
-finance too! We&#8217;ll have that railway marked in a
-dotted line on the maps: all the maps: school maps:
-office maps. We&#8217;ll have leaders on it and speeches
-on it. And good hearty attacks on it. And
-th-e-n....&#8221; He lowered his voice to a very
-confidential wheedle,&mdash;&#8220;the price&#8217;ll begin to creep
-up&mdash;Oh ... o ... oh! the <i>real</i> price, my beloved
-fellow-shareholders, the price at which one can
-really <i>sell</i>, the price at which one can handle the
-<i>stuff</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He gave a great breath of satisfaction. &#8220;Now
-d&#8217;ye see? It&#8217;ll go to forty shillings right off, it
-ought to go to forty-five, it may go to sixty!...
-And then,&#8221; he said briskly, suddenly changing his
-tone, &#8220;then, my hearties, you blasted well sell out:
-you unload ... you dump &#8217;em. Plenty more fools
-where your lot came from. I won&#8217;t advise,&mdash;sell out
-just when you see fit. Every man for himself, and
-every woman too,&#8221; he said, bowing politely to the
-two old ladies in the second row,&mdash;&#8220;and the devil
-take the hindmost. But you&#8217;ll all have something,
-you&#8217;ll none of you lose it all as it looked like last<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-week. Most of you&#8217;ll lose on your first price: late
-comers least: a few o&#8217; ye&#8217;ll make if you bought
-under two pounds. Anyhow <i>I</i> shall.... There! if
-that isn&#8217;t finance I don&#8217;t know what is!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And with a large happy, final, satisfactory and
-conclusive smile, the Builder of Empire, to the
-astonishment of every one, looked at his watch,
-called upon his Creator as a witness to the lateness
-of the hour, and suddenly went out.</p>
-
-<p>It would be delicious to describe what happened
-in the vast body of that hall when the Chief had
-left it: how the shareholders made a noise like
-angry bees swarming; how a curate who had done
-no man any harm was squashed against a wall and
-broke two ribs; how five or six excited and almost
-tearful men surrounded the reporters and fought
-for their notebooks; how Bingham continued to
-reiterate that Charles Repton knew what he was at;
-and how a certain quiet little man with a bronzed
-face and very humorous eyes, slunk out and got
-rid of his block of shares within the hour, to a
-young hearty Colonial gentleman who was wealthy
-and had come to London to learn the business ways
-of our City.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
-
-<p>But I must follow Sir Charles in his rapid drive
-to the House of Commons. I must mention his
-unconventional remark to the policeman to the effect
-that he hoped that old fool Pottle hadn&#8217;t come in
-yet; and his taking his place on the front bench just<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-after prayers with a look so merry and free that it
-illumined the faces opposite like a sun.</p>
-
-<p>The questions to which he had to reply came
-somewhat late on the paper, and he caused not a
-little scandal by suggesting in a low tone such
-answers to his colleagues for <i>their</i> questions as
-seemed to him at once humorous and apposite.</p>
-
-<p>The aged Home Secretary especially afforded
-him fine sport, and when a question was asked with
-regard to the new Admiralty docks at Bosham, he
-went to the length of chucking a cocked-hat note
-to the principal contractor who sat solemnly upon
-the benches behind him, nodding cheerfully over
-his shoulder and whispering loudly: &#8220;It&#8217;s all up!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>All this boded ill for what might happen when
-his own turn came; and indeed the scene that
-followed was of a kind entirely novel in the long
-history of the House of Commons.</p>
-
-<p>It was a simple question; Question 63. Not ten
-minutes of question-time were left when it was
-asked. It was put by a gentle little man who
-had put it down for the sake of a friend who lived
-on the South Coast, and it was simply to ask the
-right honourable Baronet, the Warden of the Court
-of Dowry, whether his attention had been called
-to the presence upon the Royal Sovereign shoals of
-a wreck which endangered navigation, and what
-he intended to do in the matter.</p>
-
-<p>Charles Repton jumped up like a bird; he
-jovially and rapidly read the typewritten answer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-which his permanent officials had given him&mdash;to
-the effect that he had nothing to add to the reply
-given three years before with regard to the same
-wreck, which was then, they were careful to point
-out, far more dangerous than at the present day.</p>
-
-<p>But when he had finished reading the official
-reply, he looked up genially at his interlocutor and
-said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We don&#8217;t want to interfere with that wreck: it&#8217;s
-full of gin!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>An angry fanatic hearing the word &#8220;gin&#8221; rose at
-once and put the supplementary question: &#8220;May I
-ask whether that gin was destined for the unfortunate
-natives of the Lagos Hinterland?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said the Warden of the Court of Dowry
-politely, &#8220;Yes sir, you may: but they will never get
-it. However, several thousand tons of gin I am
-glad to say have gone out to the negroes of our
-colonies since the ship was lost, to the no small
-advantage,&#8221; he added, &#8220;of my friend Mr. Garey;
-whom, by the way,&#8221; he continued with conversational
-ease, &#8220;we all hope to see in this House shortly, for
-old Southwick who&#8217;s up against him hasn&#8217;t got a
-dog&#8217;s chance, and you probably know that we are
-forcing Pipps to resign. Bound to be an election!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He sat down. It was a quarter to four and the
-House was saved. But though the decorum of that
-great assembly prevented one word from being
-uttered as to what had passed, the Lobbies were full
-of it, and when the first division was taken men who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-ordinarily filed past the Treasury bench avoided it,
-while from distant and dark corners where one
-cannot be observed, long and intent looks were
-darted at the happy Warden of the Court of Dowry.</p>
-
-<p>He sat there gay and quite unconscious of the
-effect he had produced, passed with his Party into
-the Lobbies for the division, greeting with familiar
-joy men who appeared rather anxious to avoid his
-eye, and making, I regret to say, such unseemly
-jests upon the Party system as had never been heard
-within those walls before.</p>
-
-<p>The young Prime Minister, though suffering so
-considerably from the left lung, was never at a loss
-where tact, and especially tact combined with rapid
-action, was necessary. A horrified servant called
-him from his room and described what was passing.
-He did not stop to ask why or how the thing had
-happened. He came in rapidly through the door
-behind the Speaker&#8217;s chair, and beckoned to Sir
-Charles Repton who was at that moment occupied
-in drawing a large caricature of the Leader of the
-Opposition, with his hands deep into the pocket of
-an amiable farmer-like gentleman in top-boots and
-whiskers, who made a presentable image of John
-Bull.</p>
-
-<p>Charles Repton got up at once and went out to
-his Chief. &#8220;What d&#8217;you think of this?&#8221; he said,
-showing his picture.</p>
-
-<p>The young Prime Minister smiled as death would
-smile. &#8220;It&#8217;s very good, it&#8217;s very good,&#8221; he said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-hurriedly. &#8220;Have it coloured ... colour it yourself.
-Oh, do what you like with it.... Come with me.
-Come into my room, do. No, I&#8217;ll tell you what,
-I want to speak to you. Let&#8217;s get out into the air.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He walked his subordinate away rapidly arm in
-arm across Parliament Square towards St. James&#8217;s
-Park, talking about a thousand things and never
-giving Repton time for a word. Then he said
-suddenly: &#8220;What I really want to say to you,
-Repton, is ...&#8221; He abruptly broke off. &#8220;Is Lady
-Repton at home?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said Repton a little puzzled, &#8220;or she will
-be by this time. I make her show me her plan for
-the afternoon at lunch, and she&#8217;s got to suit me, or
-there&#8217;s a row.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well now,&#8221; said the Prime Minister, &#8220;will you do
-me a great favour?&#8221; He put his hand on Repton&#8217;s
-shoulder and looked candidly into his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Certainly my dear fellow,&#8221; answered the Warden
-of the Court of Dowry in the utmost good humour.
-&#8220;After all my position depends upon you, and a
-good deal of my income depends upon my position.
-It isn&#8217;t likely I should put your back up, even if I
-didn&#8217;t like you, which is far from being the case,
-though I must say I don&#8217;t think you&#8217;re a man of
-very exceptional talent. I think you owe most of
-your position to birth.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, yes,&#8221; said the Prime Minister hurriedly,
-&#8220;I understand. Now what I want you to do is this:
-jump into the first thing you see and <i>go straight home</i>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-You will see why when you get there. It&#8217;s absolutely
-urgent. Will you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Certainly,&#8221; said Repton more puzzled than ever.
-&#8220;All you politicians are such liars that I make a
-point of believing the exact opposite of what you
-say: but if you tell me it&#8217;s of any service to you, it
-certainly does <i>me</i> no harm.&#8221; And whistling gaily
-he walked off towards a cab that was meandering
-across the Parade.</p>
-
-<p>When the Prime Minster had seen him well off
-he went as rapidly as dignity would allow into
-Downing Street, took the telephone from his
-secretary and in an agony of apprehension lest he
-should be too late, at last heard Lady Repton&#8217;s
-voice. He told her that her husband was the
-victim of a most distressing malady; she would
-understand it when she saw him. He implored her
-to save so valuable a man for the country by
-managing in some way or other to confine him to
-the house until he should be medically examined.</p>
-
-<p>It was a great relief to the young fellow to have
-got this duty done. His fifty-four years seemed to
-weigh less upon him: for the ten minutes between
-leaving the House and seeing Repton off he had been
-on a grill: there was still ridicule to be faced, but
-he had a sentiment of having achieved his end and
-of having just saved as difficult a situation as ever
-the chief of a State had had to meet.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It was an anxious moment, but many moments<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-are necessarily anxious in the life of a man who
-holds in his hands the destinies of Great Britain, and
-the young and popular Prime Minister had the stuff
-in him to stand worse scenes than that, but he was
-exhausted and he was slightly troubled. The full
-consequences of the dreadful affair had not yet shaped
-themselves in his mind.</p>
-
-<p>He walked back to his room in the House of
-Commons, ruminating during those few steps upon
-the developments that might arise from Repton&#8217;s
-terrible accident, and beginning to plan how he
-should arrange matters with Demaine. It would
-want caution, for Demaine was slow to understand
-... but then there was a corresponding advantage
-to that, for like all slow men, Dimmy could hold his
-tongue.... In fact he couldn&#8217;t help it.</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister was pleased to think that he
-had that second string to his bow, and that opinion
-had been sufficiently prepared for the change.
-Repton would be certified of course, the sooner the
-better,&mdash;that would prevent any necessity for a
-peerage. Demaine&#8217;s taking the place would seem
-more natural, and those gadflies, the <i>Moon</i> and the
-<i>Capon</i>, would not fall into a fever about the appointment....
-Perhaps after all the Repton business
-would be an advantage in the long run!</p>
-
-<p>The more he thought of his choice of Demaine
-the more pleased he was, and he had almost persuaded
-himself that the appointment was due to
-some extreme cunning upon his own part, when,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-coming round from his room into the Lobbies, he
-casually asked a colleague where Demaine was at
-the moment.</p>
-
-<p>The colleague didn&#8217;t know. &#8220;I have my back
-turned to the benches behind us you know,&#8221; he
-explained elaborately.</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister cast upon him a look of
-contempt, and asked the doorkeeper whether he had
-seen Mr. Demaine.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;G. M. Demaine,&#8221; said the doorkeeper solemnly,
-running his finger down a list.</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister was almost moved to reprove
-him, but dignity forbade.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not in the House!&#8221; said the man curtly,
-addressing as an equal the chief power in England; for
-his post was secure, the Prime Minister&#8217;s precarious.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mean not on the benches: I can see that
-for myself!&#8221; said the Prime Minister sharply.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I mean he hasn&#8217;t passed this door, sir,&#8221; said the
-official with quiet dignity, and Dolly went off
-considerably nettled, and looked into the tea-room
-and the libraries, and even wasted a little time in
-going round by the smoking-room. The policemen
-in the central hall had not seen Demaine, nay, a
-constituent with an exceedingly long black moustache
-and fierce eyes had been waiting by appointment
-with Demaine for two hours, and Demaine had not
-been found. The Prime Minister condescended so
-much as to speak to this man, and the man, not
-knowing whom he might be addressing, told him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-plainly that &#8220;if Mr. Demaine interpreted his duties
-in this fashion, he couldn&#8217;t answer for his seat, that
-was all!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister further condescended to go
-out of the House in the ordinary way, and the
-policeman who guarded the ordinary portal had not
-seen Mr. Demaine.</p>
-
-<p>It was really very awkward and exasperating,
-though it was only a detail. He must see Demaine
-that afternoon: it was imperative. But it was also
-important that he should see him as soon as possible.
-He wanted to keep him out of the way till he was
-coached.</p>
-
-<p>There is nothing in this happy English life of
-ours more soothing to the brain in moments of
-anxiety, than the perusal of any one of those great
-Organs of Opinion which are the characteristic of
-our people and the envy of Europe, and of these
-it must be admitted none stand on quite the same
-intellectual and moral plane as the best two or
-three of our London evening papers. One of these
-the Prime Minister had always found particularly
-soothing. He bought it of the newsman at the
-corner of Parliament Square and opened it as he
-walked along at leisure towards Downing Street.</p>
-
-<p>There was one corner of this sheet which was
-always a recreation to Dolly in the few moments
-he could spare from the House: it was the corner
-in which prizes were offered for the best pun, on
-condition of course that nothing coarse or personally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-offensive should be sent in by the competitors. To
-this he had turned an indifferent eye, when for the
-second time that day he received a shock which was
-almost like a blow in the face....</p>
-
-<p>There, in great letters, with a flamboyance surely
-unworthy of a paper that professed to support his
-own Party, was the headline:</p>
-
-<p class="center">&#8220;DISAPPEARANCE OF A MINISTER ELECT.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And his forebodings did not deceive him....
-It was ... it was ... the permanently unlucky
-Demaine!</p>
-
-<p>He cursed the crass imbecility by which such a
-thing could have got into the papers at all. He
-strode to his house and to his room, crumpled the
-paper which he was still holding, unfolded it, and
-then read the news again. There were but a few
-lines of it: Demaine had disappeared, and the full
-detective power of London was attempting to solve
-the mystery of his disappearance.</p>
-
-<p>What madness to let such things get out!</p>
-
-<p>Why, twenty things might have happened! He
-might simply have stopped in the house of a friend
-and not bothered to tell his wife that he was not
-coming home; he might simply have fallen ill
-and have been taken to a hospital or to a hotel.
-What a piece of idiocy to put it into the Press at
-all!</p>
-
-<p>Much as he hated the exercise, he rang to be put
-through to Demaine House, and heard from Sudie<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-herself, whom he knew but distantly, that her fears
-had done all.</p>
-
-<p>She had sat up for George till nearly five o&#8217;clock
-in the morning; underrating perhaps her husband&#8217;s
-talents, and notably his ability to find his way home,
-she thought it possible he had fallen a victim to
-an unscrupulous taxi driver or that any one of a
-thousand other fates might have befallen him.</p>
-
-<p>With too little comprehension of the social forces
-that build up the society of the Mother Land, Sudie
-had communicated at once with Scotland Yard,
-and on learning that her husband had last been
-seen leaving the House of Commons and walking
-towards the river, she had taken the unpardonable
-step of sending messages to all the evening papers
-in the hope that such publicity would advance the
-solution of the mystery.</p>
-
-<p>It was perfectly damnable! As though the cares
-of his office were not enough, the Prime Minister
-found himself upon this Tuesday afternoon with a
-doubtful and anxious division awaiting him in the
-evening, with one of his Ministers gone mad, and
-his successor the subject at the best of a vulgar
-mystery, and at the worst of a hopeless disappearance.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE phrase &#8220;intoxicated with pleasure,&#8221; too
-common in our literature, would most inexactly
-describe the condition of George Mulross
-Demaine as he left the Prime Minister&#8217;s room upon
-that Monday midnight.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place he was not and never had been
-intoxicated, and even when he exceeded (as in youth
-he frequently had) in the matter of wine, spirits,
-liqueurs and fancy liquids, the effect of such excess
-had rather been atrophy than intoxication. Nor
-had he ever felt what poets finely call the &#8220;sting
-of joy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But he was pleased: he was very pleased.
-Thoughts that in another more volatile and less
-substantial brain might have crowded, appeared
-slowly separated one from another and in a solemn
-procession. They comforted rather than exhilarated
-him.</p>
-
-<p>First of all there was the 5000 a year: that was
-something.</p>
-
-<p>He ruminated on that about as far as Cleopatra&#8217;s
-Needle; there, as he leant upon the parapet of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-Embankment and looked down into the water,
-a second thought rose upon the horizon of his
-mind: the 5000 a year would be his, not
-Sudie&#8217;s.</p>
-
-<p>In the first stage of this nightly ramble he had
-barged into two men: one a poor man who had
-made the accident the excuse for the delivery of
-money; the second a rich one who cursed him
-abominably, but George was in too equable a mood
-to mind. Now, as he left Cleopatra&#8217;s Needle behind
-him and strolled still farther eastward, ruminating
-upon the fact that the 5000 a year would be his
-and not Sudie&#8217;s, he had the misfortune to cannon
-against yet a third, to whom he apologised: but it
-was a post, not a man.</p>
-
-<p>He looked at it with those slow, sensible eyes of
-his for perhaps thirty seconds, and saw in large red
-letters under the electric light &#8220;Motors to the right
-of this post.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He repeated the phrase mechanically as was often
-his wont upon reading anything, and it set up a new
-train of thought. Post.... The post offered him
-was not permanent ... but he considered the
-careers of his friends and he could remember none,
-neither Ted nor Johnny nor old Bill Curliss, nor
-Fittleworth nor Glegg, who from the moment they
-had received such promotion had not gone forward.</p>
-
-<p>It always meant something, even when one was
-out of office, and then who knows? One might be
-in office again. A Party may be in office twice<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-running! Stranger things had happened. And
-then, even if they went out of office, Ole Man
-Benson would have brought something off by that
-time.</p>
-
-<p>Look at it how he would, heaven was smiling on
-him, and he in return, and as though in gratitude,
-smiled at the gaunt front of Blackfriars Station,
-opposite which he had now arrived.</p>
-
-<p>Between him and it there lay the street, and he
-was naturally too cautious to attempt to cross until
-he had gazed carefully to the front and right. But
-at midnight there is no pressure of traffic in the City
-of London, and when he had allowed a belated dray
-and a steam roller to pass him at their leisure he
-hurriedly crossed over with a vague intention of
-taking the train.</p>
-
-<p>Like many men of the governing classes, whose
-mental activities are naturally divorced from the
-petty details of London life, and who are independent
-of that daily round which makes the less fortunate
-only too familiar with our means of communication,
-George Mulross Demaine was not quite certain where
-the Underground went to, nor what part of London
-precisely it served. But he had been taught from
-childhood that it was circular in form, and that round
-it like Old Ocean<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> in a perpetual race, went along
-streams of trains. Enter it where you would, and
-you might leave it somewhere upon its periphery.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>He knew that St. James&#8217;s Park Station was at his
-very door. He asked for and obtained a ticket with
-that promptitude which distinguishes the service of
-our premier Metropolitan line, left the change for
-sixpence by an oversight on the ledge of the ticket
-window, and then, as Fate would have it, turned to
-the left-hand stairs.</p>
-
-<p>The official whose duty it was to examine and to
-cut designs upon the tickets presented to him by the
-public, was that evening (under the guidance of Fate)
-most negligent.</p>
-
-<p>He should surely have seen that he was dealing
-with an Obvious Gentleman and should gently have
-directed him to the opposing platform. As it was
-he did no more than half puncture the cardboard
-without so much as glancing at it, and George
-Mulross Demaine (in whom now yet another pleasing
-thought had arisen&mdash;that there were such things
-as Cabinet pensions&mdash;) sauntered down on to the
-platform.</p>
-
-<p>A train roared in; he stumbled into it just in time
-to save his coat from the shutting of the gate, and
-sat contentedly until he should hear the conductor
-shout &#8220;St. James&#8217;s Park!&#8221; But this cue word which
-would have aroused him to action, he was destined
-not to hear.</p>
-
-<p>The Mansion House went by, and Cannon Street,
-but yet another pleasing thought having arisen in
-his mind he noted them not.</p>
-
-<p>A shout of &#8220;Monument&#8221; startled him, for he had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-heard in a general way of the Monument, and it was
-nowhere near his home. When he came to Mark
-Lane he was seriously alarmed, and at the cry of
-Aldgate East, his mind was made up. He got out.</p>
-
-<p>He asked with the utmost courtesy of the man
-who took the tickets what he should do to get to
-St. James&#8217;s Park, and the man who took the tickets
-replied with less courtesy but with great rapidity
-that he had better turn sharp to the right and that
-on his right again he would find Aldgate Station,
-whence there was still a service of trains, late as was
-the hour.</p>
-
-<p>Alas, for the various locutions of various ranks in
-our society! he did turn sharp to the right; he went
-right round the corner into Middlesex Street, and to
-the right again into Wentworth Street, but not a
-station could be seen. The summer night was of
-a glimmering sort of darkness. It was hot, and
-many of the local families were still seated upon
-their steps, speaking to each other in a dialect of
-the Lithuanian Ghetto which George Mulross
-erroneously took for an accent native to the London
-poor.</p>
-
-<p>He stepped up to one and asked whether he were
-yet near the station. The voluble reply &#8220;Shriska
-beth haumelshee! Chragso! Yeh!&#8221; illumined him
-not at all, and as he moved off uncertainly up the
-street, a roar of harsh laughter tended to upset his
-nerves.</p>
-
-<p>He could not bear this raking fire: he turned,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-most imprudently, up a narrow court which was in
-total darkness; and, then at first to his surprise but
-almost immediately afterwards to his grave chagrin,
-he felt a voluminous and exceedingly foul cotton
-sheet drawn sharply round his throat, twisted, the
-slack of it thrown over his head, and one end
-crammed into his mouth for a gag; almost at the
-same moment his wrists were jerked behind him, a
-rope whose hardness must have been due to tar was
-hitched round them with surely excessive violence,
-putting him to grievous pain, his feet were lifted
-from under him, he felt several hands grasping his
-head and shoulders at random, a couple of them
-seizing his ankles; he was reversed, and in the attitude
-described at the Home Office as &#8220;The Frogs&#8217;
-March&#8221; he felt himself carried for some few yards,
-and at last reversed again and placed face upwards
-upon a narrow and hard surface.</p>
-
-<p>Through the filthy cotton which still enveloped
-his face, the disgusting stains of which were dimly
-apparent to him, he saw the glimmer of a light, and
-he heard round him language the accent and many
-of the words of which were so unfamiliar to him that
-he could make nothing of it. He was incommoded
-beyond words.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever his defects, George Mulross Demaine
-was not lacking in physical courage; he begged
-them in a mumble through the gag that covered his
-mouth, to let him go. There was no direct reply,
-but only a good deal of whispering, which so far as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-he could make it out&mdash;and much of it was foreign&mdash;related
-to his person rather than to his request.</p>
-
-<p>An attempt to move betrayed the fact that some
-heavy body was seated upon his shins; another
-attempt to raise the upper half of his body was met
-by so sharp a reminder upon the side of his head
-that he thought it better for the moment to lie still.</p>
-
-<p>What followed was an examination of his clothes
-and their contents, which showed his new neighbours
-to be unacquainted with the sartorial habits of the
-wealthy. The two slits in his cape were taken for
-pockets and their emptiness provoked among other
-comments the shrill curse of a woman. His trouser
-pockets, wherein it was fondly hoped that metal
-might lie hid, and wherein he would rather have died
-than have put anything, similarly drew blank, and
-to their disgust, of the two little lines on the waistcoat
-one was a sham and the other contained nothing
-but a spare stud. However, this contained a small
-precious stone, and was the immediate object of a
-pretty severe scuffle.</p>
-
-<p>He was next reversed yet a third time without
-dignity, and in a manner the violence of which was
-most wounding: but in his tail pocket was nothing but
-a large new silk handkerchief which went (apparently
-by custom, for there was no discussion) to the captain
-of the tribe.</p>
-
-<p>Purse there was none, a thing that bewildered
-them; not even a portmonnaie, until, to their mingled
-astonishment and joy, some one acuter than the rest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-discovered in a mass of seals at his watch chain, a
-little globular receptacle which opened with a spring,
-and revealed no less than four sovereigns.</p>
-
-<p>It was a poor haul, but the clothes remained. Not
-for long. They were all removed, and that not with
-roughness but, he was glad to note, tenderly: less
-perhaps from the respect they bore him than from a
-consideration of the value of the cloth. The precise
-man&oelig;uvre whereby the difficulty of the ankles and
-the wrists was eliminated, I leave to those of my
-readers who are better acquainted with such problems
-than I. There are several well-known methods, I
-understand, whereby a man may have his trousers
-and his coat removed and yet his hands and feet
-preserved in custody.</p>
-
-<p>His boots (they were astonished to note) were
-elastic-sided. They were under the impression that
-among the wealthy buttoned boots alone were
-tolerated at the evening meal and thenceforward
-until such hours as the wealthy seek repose. But
-they were good mess boots, and take it all in all,
-his clothing, every single article of which was soon
-folded and put into its bundle, made the best part of
-their booty.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was a considerable movement of feet,
-a murmur of voices purposely low; there seemed to
-be one person left, agile and rapid in movement ...
-perhaps two: at any rate after these or this one had
-held him for some thirty seconds, during which he
-had the sense and prudence to lie still, there was a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-sharp sliding of feet, the quick but almost noiseless
-shutting of a door, and he found that he was free.</p>
-
-<p>His first act was to disembarrass himself of his
-stinking head-gear, but his captors had laid their
-trap with science, and it was precisely this which was
-destined to give them the leisure for their escape.
-The sheet was tied to his head by a series of small
-hard knots which took him, between them, quite a
-quarter of an hour to undo.</p>
-
-<p>At last he was free. He tore the filthy thing from
-his head and the bunch of it from his mouth with the
-same gesture, overcame a strong desire to vomit, and
-looked round him.</p>
-
-<p>He found himself seated upon a sort of narrow
-bench attached by iron clamps to the wall of a small
-and exceedingly noisome room, which even at that
-moment he had the wit to think that he would
-certainly have dealt with by the local inspector when
-he should have assumed what he had heard called
-the reins of office.</p>
-
-<p>But for the moment other considerations occupied
-him to the exclusion of the condition of the room.
-A dirty paraffin lamp with no shade stood on the
-rickety table; the one window was blinded by a
-large old wooden shutter barred down against it; on
-the cracked, distempered walls, stained with a generation
-of grease and smoke, hung a paper upon which
-a few figures had been scrawled roughly in pencil,
-and most of them scratched out again, and here and
-there the same pencil or others had inscribed the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-surface of the plaster with sentiments and illustrations
-most uncongenial to his breeding.</p>
-
-<p>The next thing that met his eye was a peculiarly
-repulsive pair of breeches, an old green-black torn
-overcoat, and a pair of workmen&#8217;s boots, cracked,
-grey with weather, laceless and apparently as stiff as
-wood. He had no choice: his first business was to
-find aid. He must put these on, break his way out
-of this den as best he could, and summon the Police.</p>
-
-<p>He had never had his feet in such things as those
-boots before; it was like shuffling in boxes. He
-hated to feel the clammy grease of the trousers and
-coat against his skin.</p>
-
-<p>He left the lamp burning and made for the door.
-To his astonishment the latch was open. To his
-further astonishment it gave into an open passage
-like a tunnel, with no door but a plain arch opening
-into the court beyond. He shuffled out. He was glad
-that it was not yet day. Fortunately it was not cold.</p>
-
-<p>He turned, he knew not whither, following the
-streets aimlessly, but more or less in one direction,
-until he saw in a blotted silhouette against the darkness
-of the walls, the glad and familiar form of a
-policeman. It was like coming home! It was like
-making a known harbour light after three days of
-lost reckonings and a gale.</p>
-
-<p>He went up to the man and began in that
-pleasant but not condescending tone in which he
-had ever addressed members of the force:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>&#8220;Policeman, can you tell me....&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He got no further. The agile though weighty
-custodian of order, with the low and determined
-remark, &#8220;I know yer!&#8221; had seized him by the
-shoulders, whirled him round and away, so that he
-fell, bruised and a little dazed, against the steps of
-a house.</p>
-
-<p>George was angered. He had already risen with
-some remark on his lips about taking a number
-when he saw his antagonist make a sharp gesture&mdash;there
-was a shrill whistle, immediately afterwards
-an answering whistle from perhaps a hundred yards
-away, and George Mulross Demaine,&mdash;blame him if
-you will,&mdash;kicked off the impossible boots, and ran
-for it.</p>
-
-<p>They let him run, and it is not for us to criticise.
-He left their district at any rate.</p>
-
-<p>He had run for but a few moments in his absurd
-and horrible greatcoat and on his naked feet, until
-he saw down the end of an alley a great gate, a light
-to one side of it, and beyond it an empty space of
-glimmering nightly sky. Ignorant of where he was
-or what he did, but determined upon safety, he
-looked round and to his horror saw the form of yet
-another policeman pacing slowly towards the place
-where he was crouching.</p>
-
-<p>That determined him. With an agility that none
-of his acquaintances, not even his wife, would have
-believed to be in him, he slunk quite close to earth
-in the shadow of the great gate and entered the open
-space beyond.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>Such a space he had never seen. Under the very
-faint light which was now beginning to show over
-the east of heaven, he guessed that he was upon the
-river, for he saw masts against the sky and that
-peculiar pale glint of water which, even at night,
-may be distinguished between the hulls of ships. All
-he sought was shadow, and the great wharves of the
-docks&mdash;for he had blundered into the docks&mdash;give
-ample opportunity.</p>
-
-<p>He heard a measured step pacing slowly towards
-him. He crept along the edge of the quay into a
-sort of narrow lane that lay between a row of high
-barrels and the bulwarks of a big steamship which
-just showed above the stone. He flattened himself
-against the high barrels which, had he been better
-acquainted with the details of commerce, he would
-have known to contain fishbone manure.</p>
-
-<p>The measured tread came nearer; it passed, it
-reached a certain point in the distance, it turned and
-passed again. It reached yet another extreme of its
-beat, turned and re-passed.... And all the while
-the light was growing: and as it grew the nervous
-agony of George Mulross grew with it, but more
-rapidly.</p>
-
-<p>He could now just see the figure of the watchman
-near the gate, he could distinguish part of the nearer
-rigging; in half an hour he would be visible to whatever
-eyes were watching for vagabonds. He knew
-what that meant; further humiliation, perhaps further
-dangers. There was not a gentleman for miles,&mdash;and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-with that thought the heart of this most unfortunate
-of gentlemen beat slow.</p>
-
-<p>The reader has been sufficiently told that Mr.
-Demaine, however solid the quality of his brain, was
-not a man of rapid decision. But agony and peril
-are sharp spurs, and as the conception of a gentleman
-floated through his mind he suddenly remembered
-that ships had captains.</p>
-
-<p>Upon their exact functions he was hazy; he would
-know it better no doubt when he had undertaken
-his functions in the Court of Dowry (the blessed
-thought warmed him for a moment even in that
-dreadful dawn!); anyhow, the word &#8220;captain&#8221; meant
-something ... it wasn&#8217;t like a captain in the army of
-course ... but then there were captains and captains
-... of course the Royal Navy was superior to the
-Merchant Service ... but it was all the same kind
-of thing&mdash;only upper and lower, like a barrister and
-a solicitor.... For instance there was the Naval
-Reserve.... And he remembered a captain upon an
-Atlantic liner who was a splendid great fellow, and
-he was sure could tell any one at once. And the
-captain of Billy&#8217;s schooner was better than that
-because he understood about motor engines.</p>
-
-<p>He had just come to the point of remembering
-that on the P. and O. it was rather a grand thing to
-dine with the captain, when his mind arrived at its
-conclusion. He would slip over the side of the big
-ship, and when the proper time came he would reveal
-himself to the captain for what he was. The captain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-would show him every courtesy, he would give him
-a change of clothes, ready-made but decent, he
-would know where there was a telephone, he would
-have authority to speak to the watchman and the
-rest, he would send for a taxi, and George&#8217;s troubles
-would be over....</p>
-
-<p>George prepared to slip over the side.</p>
-
-<p>Now to slip over the side in a book is one thing,
-but to do it on a real ship is another. The bulwarks
-were high and greasy and salt and slimy. Demaine
-was weakened by a night of terrors, and he came
-down on the hard iron deck of the tramp with a
-noise resembling distant thunder, and in a manner
-that hurt him very much indeed.</p>
-
-<p>It was a new misadventure and one that had to
-be repaired. He heard voices and bolted for a large
-coil of rope which lay beneath the shadow of the
-turtle-deck. Here the stench, though somewhat
-different in quality from that of the fishbone manure,
-was not less noisome, and carried with it a reminiscence
-of Channel passages which weakened the
-very soul within George Mulross Demaine. But the
-sensation was soon swamped in one much more
-poignant; this was aroused in him by the approach
-of two inharmonious voices, one of which was borne
-towards him perpetually clamouring:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes ah deed!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>While the other repeated as a sort of antiphon:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Noa ee diddun, tha silly fule!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>When this dialogue was exhausted the first voice<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-in a lower and much more determined tone
-hissed: &#8220;Ah&#8217;ll ave im aowt!&#8221; and a large stave which
-might, for all Demaine knew, be a marlingspike or
-some other horrid instrument, began rummaging
-behind the coil of rope.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;T&#8217;ould man sez ef ah doan catch next &#8217;un ee&#8217;ll
-skin me live!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>To this the second voice reiterated his certitude
-that his companion was a silly fool, and that he had
-had stowaways upon the brain since he was last
-made responsible for the presence of one of these
-supercargoes upon the <i>Lily</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The voices moved away and Demaine, while he
-breathed somewhat more freely, was back again in
-his former doubt and terror.</p>
-
-<p>It grew to be broad day; he heard the rattling of
-chains; the presence of men upon every hand made
-him but the more determined to remain in his hiding-place
-until he could approach the Captain in some
-more convenient manner than through the medium
-of the unfeeling and ill-educated North Countrymen
-who seemed to compose the crew.</p>
-
-<p>He felt the great ship swinging, he could see the
-patch of cloud in the sky of which he had a glimpse,
-turning as she turned, he felt the slight throb of her
-engines; she was passing down the dock, she was out
-of the gate&mdash;she was almost in the river, when, to his
-horror ... the coil of rope which had been his
-bulwark against an unfeeling world, <i>began slowly to
-uncoil at the top</i>, with the motion of some great and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-wicked snake that was making for its harmless
-prey.</p>
-
-<p>Had George Mulross attained that acquaintance
-with seafaring terms which is proper to an
-administrator of this sea-girt isle (and especially to
-a Warden of the Court of Dowry), he would have
-known that the rapidly disappearing coil before him
-was being used as a warping rope, and he would
-have connected the steady clank of the donkey
-engine which accompanied its disappearance with
-the absorption of fathom after fathom of what had
-been kindly shelter. But even had he known these
-things it is doubtful whether they would have
-interested him at the moment.</p>
-
-<p>He crouched lower and lower as the coil diminished,
-occupying the smallest space compatible with
-keeping his legs tucked away behind what was left
-of the cable: but the Gods were deaf that morning
-to all prayers. The last eighteen inches of the coil&#8217;s
-height were reached and still the pitiless donkey
-engine clanked, and still the lengths went slithering
-away, until at last his back appeared above the
-element it lived in,&mdash;the unmistakable back of a
-human being, clothed in a ragged green-black
-coat.</p>
-
-<p>To the trained and piercing eye of sailor-men the
-object was unmistakable, and like two cats upon one
-mouse his acquaintances of an hour before pounced
-upon his trembling form: the sceptical one now converted
-and protesting that he had been convinced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-from the first of the stowaway&#8217;s presence, the other
-in cruel triumph dragging him along the deck and
-threatening him with such consequences as not even
-the peculiar idiom of the North Country could completely
-veil.</p>
-
-<p>With such energy as remained to him, George
-sprang up at the first opportunity they gave him.
-He had the sense not to run upon those crowded
-and confined decks. The button torn off his coat-collar
-in the scramble showed his bare neck and
-chest. Masses of grime, tar and dust streaked his
-face; his hair was most untidy, and his bootless feet
-were caked in mud.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I want to see the captain,&#8221; he said between his
-gasps.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tha wants...!&#8221; began his irate captor,&mdash;then
-plain words failed him, and he took refuge in a few
-oaths. The other said more quietly:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tha&#8217;lt see im, ladd; ow! tha&#8217;lt see im,&#8221;&mdash;and
-he nodded twice gravely in a manner which George
-would have found reassuring had he not already
-begun to suspect that the lower classes were capable
-of sarcasm.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tha&#8217;lt see im!&#8221; he suddenly repeated with the
-utmost ferocity; and catching Demaine sharply by
-the back of the neck he ran him in to the semi-darkness
-under the bridge where, as luck would have
-it, the first officer in a somewhat surly mood was
-going down off duty.</p>
-
-<p>I should over-weight these pages were I so much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-as to attempt the language of the first officer when
-he cast eyes upon the unfortunate figure before him.
-A stowaway! It was the second time it had
-happened in three months.</p>
-
-<p>One stammering attempt to make himself heard so
-dreadfully increased the power of this man&#8217;s passion
-that George perforce was silent. The first officer&#8217;s rage
-rose into a sort of typhoon, and had the law or even the
-custom of the sea permitted him to do one quarter of
-that with which he threatened the poor vagabond, a
-British ship would certainly be no fit place to live in.
-As a matter of fact when his tirade was over he confined
-himself to a general curse upon the town of London
-and its inhabitants, to a particular one directed with
-menace against the able seaman who had captured
-the stowaway, and at last, with directions that he
-should be shown to the captain when the ship was in
-the fairway and the anxious business of getting her
-out was over.</p>
-
-<p>For some little time, therefore, Demaine still stood
-a butt for the occasional but half-exhausted ribaldry
-of his two guardians, and not until the waterman&#8217;s
-boat had dropped away from alongside and the
-warping rope had splashed into the slime of the
-Thames, not until the donkey engine had clanked
-once more and got it aboard, horrible with all the
-horrors of that water, and not until the engine
-was going fairly and the <i>Lily</i> dropping swiftly
-down the tide, was the captain ready to sit in
-judgment.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>Captain Higgins was a man who had made method
-and self-control the hinges of success in life. <i>His</i>
-Caryll&#8217;s Ganglia were all right!</p>
-
-<p>Accuracy in accounts, faithfulness to employers, and
-strict discipline aboard, were, as he was proud of repeating,
-his motto. And when he heard that yet another
-stowaway had claimed the hospitality of the <i>Lily</i>, he
-betrayed no unusual perturbation but sat down at his
-little desk, and ordered the prisoner to be brought in.</p>
-
-<p>George, somewhat hurriedly introduced by both
-arms between his now silent captors, perceived
-sitting at that table a sight very different from that
-which he had expected. He saw a very small, thin
-man with a little pointed red beard and the eyes of
-a weasel, wearing a well-used and somewhat dirty
-peaked cap, upon the front of which was embroidered
-a coat of arms long indistinguishable, and surrounded
-by a scroll of tawdry and threadbare gold braid.</p>
-
-<p>This was the individual upon whom Demaine&#8217;s
-hopes of speedy restoration depended. He was
-determined not to speak first, though he was certain
-that the superior education of the officer would pierce
-through his involuntary disguise.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Higgins pulled out a large, official-looking
-paper divided into certain mysterious compartments,
-each headed with a printed rubric, and said briefly,
-without looking up and with his pen ready to write:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Name?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Demaine,&#8221; said George, with all the dignity he
-could summon.... &#8220;But&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>&#8220;Silence!&#8221; commanded Captain Higgins sharply,
-still without looking up from the paper on which he
-scratched rapidly and in an official manner: &#8220;Mane.&#8221;
-&#8220;First name,&#8221; he chanted musingly, his pen suspended
-to write further.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;George Mulross,&#8221; enunciated that individual, and
-&#8220;George Ross&#8221; went down onto the sheet.</p>
-
-<p>He began once more by clearing his throat, but
-though he had not yet said a word, Captain Higgins
-looked up with such an expression in his small and
-unpleasing eyes as would brook no nonsense.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;George Ross Mane,&#8221; said he, speaking through
-his nose. &#8220;You have been discovered on my ship,
-the <i>Lily</i>, one thousand three hundred and twenty
-tons burthen, London rating, bound from London to
-Portland with agricultural and general cargo.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Captain Higgins loved these formalities.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have no jew-risdiction in the matter....&#8221;
-And here he began speaking by rote out of a dirty
-little book in which were laid down the elements of
-his trade: &#8220;Of-breach-of-contract-tort-replevin-stave-jury-or-execution-major-and-minor-nor-authority-to-act-savin&#8217;-always-and-exceptin&#8217;-in-such-way-as-and-whereby-discipline-accoutrement-good
-order-<i>and</i>-the-fear-of-the-Lord-proper-to-the-navigatin&#8217;-of-this-ship-from-her-departure-to-her-port-of-destination-is-concerned-<i>wherefore</i>-you-shall-be-fed-in-such-manner-as-shall-keep-you-livin&#8217;-until-the-next-port-or-ports-whereat-this-good-ship-may-touch-and-there-delivered-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>to-the-Sheriff-or-his-officers-or-other-justices-of-our-Sovereign-Lord-the-King-and-of-his-peace:
-Take-away-the-prisoner!
-Gawd-save-the-King.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This sentence, which was delivered in one breath
-and with the rapidity of an expert, became towards
-its close a torrent of syllables ending up sharp upon
-the word &#8220;King&#8221; as upon a bell, and followed by a
-stinging silence.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I demand,&#8221; shouted George in an uncontrolled
-voice over his shoulder as they dragged him
-away.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Put him in irons!&#8221; cried Captain Higgins as
-loudly as was consistent with order, discipline and
-self-control. &#8220;Put the &mdash;&mdash; in irons!&#8221; And after
-this natural exhibition of feeling (which in his heart
-he regretted) the navigator returned to the bridge,
-relieved the second officer there present, and continued
-to take his ship down the fairway.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In a little cubical space with iron sheeting above,
-below and all round, and a dirty porthole still streaked
-with the salt of the sea, the prospective Warden of
-the Court of Dowry sat upon the floor in a despondent
-mood.</p>
-
-<p>There was already a slight swell upon the vessel;
-his dungeon was far forward and he felt it to the full.
-They had brought him some detestable mess or other
-in a battered pannikin at noon. He had sent it away
-untasted. Whither they were taking him, what would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-be his fate, had formed for too many hours the
-subject of his speculations.</p>
-
-<p>The movement of the ship was beginning to drive
-even these gloomy considerations from his mind.
-He had already discovered two things: first that the
-term &#8220;irons&#8221; was a purely conventional one; and
-signified no more than that his harsh treatment
-might be made indefinitely severe. Secondly, that
-he was permitted to communicate with an extraordinarily
-lop-sided boy of some fifteen years who
-acted as general drudge in the ship and was deputed
-to bring him his food from the galley. He was about
-to discover a third feature in his new life.</p>
-
-<p>A person evidently containing mixed the blood of
-the Caucasian and of the Negroid races approached
-him in his confinement and ordered him in broken
-English to follow up on deck.</p>
-
-<p>The sea air revived him somewhat, but George was
-far from well when the half-breed, kicking towards
-him a lump of something which reminded poor
-Demaine of a diseased brick, a bucket of dirty water
-and a large and peculiarly evil mop, bade him scrub.</p>
-
-<p>But George&#8217;s first attempts at this new trade were
-such that his overseer after looking at him first in
-astonishment and then in anger, assured him that
-any lack of good-will would necessarily be followed
-by some form of physical compulsion, the which, so
-far as his victim could gather from the torrent of
-broken English, would probably consist in a larruping
-with the rope&#8217;s end.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>Doggedly and despairingly the poor fellow scrubbed
-away. He scrubbed perhaps too hard; at any rate
-he produced a patch of surpassing brilliance though
-of exiguous dimensions; and as the result of his
-efforts turned faint and ill with something worse
-than sea-sickness. He rose from his knees and
-tottered to his legs, and began aimlessly swabbing
-the odd patch of cleanliness with which he had
-diversified the beastly decks of the <i>Lily</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But the friend and brother (if I may so term the
-Eurafrican) could bear no more, and seizing the
-unstable landsman by the arm he thrust him,
-stumbling, down the stairway, and locked him again
-into his cell.</p>
-
-<p>The exhaustion of nature had caused the unfortunate
-politician to fall into a troubled doze, when
-he was aroused by a gentle kick, and saw before him
-the boy, the battered pannikin, a piece of bread which
-had unfortunately dropped upon the deck aft of the
-funnel on its way, and, within the tin, a peculiarly
-loathsome liquid compound upon which, like the
-magic island of Delos, floated at large a considerable
-glob of fat.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t want it,&#8221; said George feebly, &#8220;take it
-away.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>To his surprise&mdash;if surprise is not too strong a word
-for the faint emotions that still stirred him, the boy
-began, as the conventional term goes, to look ugly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Na yer dahn&#8217;t!&#8221; he said, &#8220;yer dahn&#8217;t gemme inter
-trouble, yer brute! Yer gort them two Newcastle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-men inter trouble, and the myte seyes yer nearly
-gort im. And yer gort Blacky inter trouble; yer
-dahn&#8217;t ger <i>me</i>! Yer gottereatit!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t!&#8221; again said George feebly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yer gottereatit!&#8221; repeated the boy, with that
-dogged assumption of authority which so ill fits the
-young. &#8220;By Gawd, if yer get cookie inter trouble,
-I&#8217;ll ave the next watch dahn an&#8217; they&#8217;ll skin yer.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Throw it away,&#8221; said George, &#8220;there&#8217;s a good
-boy. Throw it overboard. I&#8217;ll make it all right in
-the long run,&#8221; he added, nodding encouragingly.</p>
-
-<p>The boy looked doubtful. &#8220;I dursent,&#8221; he said
-sullenly. &#8220;Sides which, ow&#8217;ll yer myke it all
-roight?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never you mind,&#8221; whispered George mysteriously.
-&#8220;You leave me the bread&mdash;I might try that ... the
-clean part,&#8221; he added after a sudden wave of nausea&mdash;&#8220;but
-chuck the rest, there&#8217;s a good lad. I can&#8217;t
-bear it.&#8221; His whisper almost rose to a little scream....
-&#8220;I can&#8217;t bear to look at it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The boy still continued to eye him doubtfully and
-contemptuously.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yer cawn&#8217;t myke it all roight!&#8221; he said, but he
-bethought him that if the wretched prisoner could
-not eat he should catch it from the cook just the
-same, and that his own interest lay in the disposal
-of the garbage. He drank a good swill of it himself&mdash;he
-was not over-fed on the <i>Lily</i>,&mdash;went up on deck
-for a moment,&mdash;and George could hear the splash
-as the horror went overboard.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>In a moment the boy had returned.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yer ought ter be griteful,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I&#8217;ve sived yer
-a lickin.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank you,&#8221; said George warmly, with his mouth
-full. He had found himself able to munch the bread,
-and it did him good.</p>
-
-<p>The boy lingered; he took the same interest in
-the stowaway that he might have taken in an animal
-at the Zoological Gardens, and the episode broke the
-monotony of his fourth voyage.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yer&#8217;ll ketch it at Parham!&#8221; he said in a cheery tone.</p>
-
-<p>George did not understand. &#8220;Why Parham?&#8221; he
-asked weakly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Coz that&#8217;s where they&#8217;ll land yer. That&#8217;s where
-they&#8217;ll put yer shore. They&#8217;ll ave the cops there
-roight on the quay wytin for yer, and they&#8217;ll put yer
-ahverboard in the little dinghy, they wull: they wahn&#8217;t
-thrah yer bundle arter ye, anforwhoy? acause yer
-arn&#8217;t got none. But they&#8217;ll send one of th&#8217; orficers
-and ee&#8217;ll and yer ahver ter th&#8217; cops, and ee&#8217;ll sye: &#8216;ee&#8217;s
-been very vilent&#8217;&mdash;that&#8217;s what ee&#8217;ll sye; that&#8217;s what
-they said wiv the larst un; and they clapped th&#8217;
-darbies on <i>im</i> ... saw em meself,&#8221; continued the
-boy most untruthfully. Then not knowing his man
-and going a step too far, he continued: &#8220;Ee was ung,
-ee was: ung in Lewes Gaol,&#8221; he ended, to give the
-story point and finish.</p>
-
-<p>The poor pedantry of maps does not weigh upon
-the governing classes of this country, and Demaine
-might have had some difficulty in answering in an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-examination exactly where Parham lay, but he
-knew that it was on the south coast, he knew one
-reached it easily in an hour or two from London,
-because he had gone to golf there. He knew that
-there was a good motor track between the harbour
-and Highcliff, and altogether Parham sounded to
-him like an echo from now forgotten, dearer, and
-long dead days. He affected indifference.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; he said, &#8220;it&#8217;s all the same to me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah,&#8221; said the boy, not ready to relinquish the
-delicious morsel, &#8220;sah yer sye! Ut wahn&#8217;t be th&#8217;
-syme tomorrermornin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you mean,&#8221; said George, with&mdash;what might
-seem in such a man impossible&mdash;a touch of cunning
-lent him by adversity, &#8220;Do you mean that this old
-tub can make Parham in twenty-four hours?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I dunno bout arhs,&#8221; said the boy surlily, &#8220;an&#8217; she&#8217;s
-norr a tub either&#8221; (for they have a curious loyalty
-to their temporary homes), &#8220;but it&#8217;s a dy&#8217;s run. Any
-fool knahs that,&#8221; he added courteously.</p>
-
-<p>George dared not betray the hope that was rising
-in his heart. Luckily for him the boy volunteered
-his next information.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re orf Long Nahse now,&#8221; he said, &#8220;but I
-dunno bout th&#8217; toide outsoide.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No?&#8221; said George, merely desiring to prolong
-this all-important conversation.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nah: I dahn&#8217;t, I tell yer!&#8221; said the boy defiantly,
-&#8220;nor there&#8217;s norr many does. I&#8217;ll lye yer dahn&#8217;t
-yerself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>At this stage of the conversation and just as an
-awkward pause interrupted it, a new terror struck
-the boy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh chise me!&#8221; he said, &#8220;look at yer tin!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s the matter?&#8221; asked George as he peered
-into the empty tin.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s gorn empty,&#8221; whimpered the boy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; said George, his spirits already improved
-by the news of Parham, &#8220;what of it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Whoy,&#8221; said the unhappy scullion, &#8220;Whoy, yer
-cuddenever empty that tin&mdash;they&#8217;ll foind me aht!&#8221;
-he said, and began to sniffle. &#8220;Wort are yer to
-empty it wiv, yer fool? Yer eyn&#8217;t got a spoon!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Say I licked it,&#8221; said George with attempted
-humour.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They&#8217;d blieve ut of yer,&#8221; said the boy viciously,
-&#8220;ye&#8217;re nothin but a woilbeast! Gettin us all
-inter trouble!&#8221; He sniffled. &#8220;Ye&#8217;re a curse on
-th&#8217; ship, that&#8217;s wort you are, an I blieve she&#8217;ll
-founder. I blieve she&#8217;ll stroike in th&#8217; noight and go
-to Ell. <i>You</i>&#8217;ll be drahwnded, anyow!&#8221; he viciously
-added as he restrained his tears in prospect of the
-wrath to come.</p>
-
-<p>But the thought of safety which the mention of
-Parham had brought revived George, and he bore
-no ill-will. &#8220;Look here,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I&#8217;ll swab it out
-with my bread and they&#8217;ll think I cleaned it up, but
-it&#8217;s on condition that you chuck the bread overboard,&#8221;
-he added.</p>
-
-<p>The boy accepted the pact and was comforted. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-was a cheap act of kindness, but he hoped it might
-stand him in good stead a few hours later.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The June night fell gradually upon the sea, the slight
-swell dropped to something almost imperceptible.
-Through his miserable porthole George could see
-great sheets of moonlight playing upon the easy
-surface, and there was no noise but the regular thud
-of the engine.</p>
-
-<p>He fell into a profound sleep.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XI</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap2">AS George Mulross Demaine drifted down river
-in his cell that Tuesday afternoon the 2nd of
-June, Dolly sat blankly in Downing Street with the
-waters of despair at his lips.</p>
-
-<p>Evil breeds evil.</p>
-
-<p>As he considered the gloomy prospect, new aspects
-of it rose before him. Not only was he privately
-between these two fires, the sudden madness of the
-outgoing Warden, the disappearance of his successor,
-but the retirement of Charles Repton had been
-publicly announced and Dimmy&#8217;s nomination had
-appeared alongside with it in the morning papers.
-The double news was all over England.</p>
-
-<p>Yet another torturing thought suggested itself.
-How and when should he fill the vacancy? What
-was he to do?</p>
-
-<p>Repton was impossible. His disaster was not in
-the papers, thank God, and could not be, under the
-decent rules which govern our press. But it was
-already the chief tittle-tattle of every house that
-counted in London. There could be no interregnum
-with Repton still nominally filling the place. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-might wait as long as he dared, give it to a third
-man, and then have Demaine turn up smiling and
-hungry: and if that happened the Prime Minister
-would earn what he dreaded most on earth, the
-enmity of those who had been his friends; perhaps a
-breach with Mary Smith herself.</p>
-
-<p>He was not fit to do more than survey the
-misfortune of the moment: he was still in his
-perplexity, when he heard the bell ringing in the
-next room, and was told that he himself was
-personally and urgently wanted upon the telephone.</p>
-
-<p>He put up his hand but the secretary would take
-no denial; it was something absolutely personal.
-Who was it from? It was from Lady Repton.</p>
-
-<p>If it can be said of any wealthy and powerful man
-that he ever betrays in his features or gait a purely
-mental anxiety, then that might be said in some
-degree of the unfortunate Prime Minister at that
-moment. He suffered so acutely that his left lung,
-the sense of which never wholly left him, seemed to
-oppress him with actual physical pain.</p>
-
-<p>He took the telephone, dreading what he might
-hear.</p>
-
-<p>It was a trifle less of a blow than he had expected.
-All he heard was the agitated voice of Lady Repton
-assuring him that she had waited as long as possible
-before troubling him, but that she was now really
-anxious, because Charles had not come home. Had
-he gone in a taxi or a hansom, or how? It was more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-than half an hour since the Prime Minister had
-telephoned her, and Charles was always <i>so</i> regular.</p>
-
-<p>It was perhaps weariness or perhaps a sense that
-he could do nothing which made the Prime Minister
-merely answer that he was sure to come in a
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Repton has been very busy to-day,&#8221; he said, &#8220;and
-has had a great deal on his mind. He has become
-a little unhinged: that is the whole truth, Lady
-Repton: nothing more. But I think he should be
-carefully nursed. Pray do not be anxious.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The words faltered a little, for he himself was more
-than anxious. Heaven only knew what Repton
-might not be capable of, until they had got him safe
-behind the four walls of his home.... And after
-that the doctors.</p>
-
-<p>He stopped the conversation a little rudely, by
-taking advantage of a long pause to ring off. While
-he was in the act of doing so a servant asked him in
-the most natural manner in the world whether he
-would not see Sir Charles Repton who was waiting
-below.</p>
-
-<p>I grieve to record that the young and popular
-Prime Minister gave vent to the exclamation
-&#8220;Good God!&#8221; For a moment he thought of
-refusing to see him; then he heard coming up
-through the distances of the official house a cheery
-voice saying:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, it&#8217;s all very well for you, you&#8217;re a butler with
-a regular place; when the Government goes out you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-don&#8217;t. You&#8217;re a sort of permanent official. But
-we...!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Show him up,&#8221; said the Prime Minister in a
-qualm, &#8220;show him up at once. <i>At once!</i>&#8221; he
-repeated, losing all dignity in his haste, and tempted
-to push the solemn form of the domestic who stalked
-upon his mission of doom as majestically as though
-he were about to announce a foreign Ambassador, or
-to give notice.</p>
-
-<p>In a moment Charles Repton had entered.</p>
-
-<p>He had bought, during his brief odyssey, a gigantic
-Easter Lily in a Bond Street shop which sells such
-ornaments. This blossom flourished in the lapel of
-his coat and pervaded the whole room with its
-perfume.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My dear fellow,&#8221; he shouted, running up to the
-horrified Prime Minister and taking him by both
-hands, &#8220;My dear fellow! Come, no pride; you know
-as well as I do it&#8217;s all bunkum. Why, I could buy
-and sell you any day of the week. It&#8217;s true,&#8221; he
-mused, &#8220;there&#8217;s birth of course, but it&#8217;s a fair bargain.
-Birth gives you your place and brains give me mine.
-Do you mind smoking?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said the Prime Minister, after which he said,
-&#8220;No,&mdash;I don&#8217;t know ... I don&#8217;t care. Why didn&#8217;t
-you go home?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t go home,&#8221; said Sir Charles solemnly, and
-thinking what the reason was ... &#8220;didn&#8217;t ... go ... home,
-because&mdash;Oh, I know, because I wanted
-to talk to you about that peerage.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>&#8220;For God&#8217;s sake don&#8217;t talk so loud,&#8221; said Dolly
-with real venom in his voice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right then I won&#8217;t,&#8221; shouted Sir Charles,
-&#8220;though I really don&#8217;t see what there is to be
-ashamed of. You&#8217;re going to give me a peerage and
-I&#8217;m going to take one. You know as well as I do
-that you didn&#8217;t think I&#8217;d take one and I wasn&#8217;t
-quite sure myself. Mind you, it&#8217;s free,&#8221; he added
-coarsely, &#8220;gratis, <i>and</i> for nothing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My dear fellow,&#8221; said the unhappy Premier,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh yes, I know, that&#8217;s the double-ruff dodge.
-You won&#8217;t ask for anything, but old Pottle will.
-And then when I come to you and complain you will
-say you know nothing about it. Of course I shan&#8217;t
-pay! It&#8217;ll be no good asking me; but what I want
-is not to be <i>pestered</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister almost forced him down into
-the chair from which he had risen, and said again:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do talk lower, Repton. Do remember for a
-moment where you are. No, certainly you shan&#8217;t be
-bothered.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What else was there?&#8221; continued Sir Charles
-genially, interrogating the ceiling and twiddling his
-thumbs. &#8220;There was something, I know,&#8221; he continued,
-looking sideways at the carpet.</p>
-
-<p>He got up, walking slowly towards the door, and
-still murmuring: &#8220;There was something else, I
-know.&#8221; He touched his forehead with his hand,
-stood still a moment as if attempting to remember,
-then shook his head and said: &#8220;No, it&#8217;s no use. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-was something to do with some concession or other,
-but I&#8217;m not fit for business to-day.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Repton,&#8221; said Dolly in a tone which he rarely
-used and had never found ineffectual, &#8220;don&#8217;t say
-anything as you go out, don&#8217;t say anything to anybody.
-Do get into a cab and go straight home.
-You promised me you would.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll keep my promise,&#8221; said Sir Charles with fine
-candour, &#8220;I always do. See if I don&#8217;t. Look here,
-to please you I&#8217;ll make him drive across the Parade
-here under your windows. There!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And he was true to his word. He did indeed dig
-the servant in the ribs as that functionary handed him
-his hat, his malacca cane and his gloves, he also wished
-to see if the butler could wrestle, and he winked a
-great wink at one of the footmen, but he said no word.
-He jumped into the cab that was waiting for him, and
-told the driver to go round by Delahaye Street onto
-the Parade.</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister was cautiously watching from
-a window to make sure that the new incubus upon his
-life was on its way to incarceration, when he found
-himself only too effectually assured: for he saw,
-leaning out of a hansom which was going at a great
-pace towards the Mall, a distant figure waving its hat
-wildly and calling in tones that could be heard over
-the whole space of the Parade:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m keeping my word, Dolly, I&#8217;m keeping my
-word!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>So went Sir Charles Repton homeward, and a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-settled darkness gathered and fell upon the Premier&#8217;s
-heart.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Sir Charles did keep his word.</p>
-
-<p>He drove straight to his house, enlivening the way
-by occasional whoops and shouting bits of secret
-information very valuable to investors, to sundry
-acquaintances whom he recognised upon the way.
-At one point (it was during a block at the top of St.
-James&#8217;s Street) he insisted on getting out for a
-moment, seizing by the hand the dignified Lord
-String who had advised the highest personages in
-matters of finance, and telling him with a comical
-grin that if he had bought Meccas that day on behalf
-of the Great he had been most imprudent, for there
-was an Arab rising and the big viaduct was cut&mdash;the
-first misfortune that hitherto prosperous line had
-suffered.</p>
-
-<p>Near the Marble Arch a change came over him.
-He felt a sudden and violent pain behind the ears,
-and clapped his hands to the place. He did more:
-when the spasm was over he put up the little door
-and told the cabby; he made him a confidant; he
-told him the pain had been very severe.</p>
-
-<p>The driver, who was not sympathetic, replied in an
-unsuitable manner, and they were in the midst of a
-violent quarrel when two or three minutes later the
-cabman, who was handicapped by having to conduct
-his vehicle through heavy traffic, drove up to the house.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Repton was waiting near the door; she sent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-out no servant, she came out to the cab herself,
-silenced the rising vocabulary of the driver with a
-most unexpected piece of gold, and tripped up again
-into the house.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Charles was philosophising aloud upon the gold
-band round his umbrella, letting his domestics
-thoroughly understand the precise advantages and
-disadvantages of such an ornament, when she took
-him by the arm quite gently and began leading
-him upstairs.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Meanwhile in Downing Street an indispensable
-secretary of the name of Edward was hearing what he
-had to do.</p>
-
-<p>Edward had been at King&#8217;s, for his father had sent
-him there. From the Treasury which he adorned
-he had been assumed by the Prime Minister, his
-father&#8217;s chief college friend, and given the position of
-private secretary; admirably did he fill its functions.</p>
-
-<p>He was a silent Welshman, descended from a short
-line of small squires, and he comprehended, in a
-manner not wholly natural to a man under thirty, the
-frailties of the human heart. The instructions he
-received from his chief, however, were of the simplest
-possible type, and called for the moment upon none
-of his exceptional powers.</p>
-
-<p>There was to be no writing and no telephoning:
-he was to call upon Bowker, because Bowker had the
-largest specialist experience of nervous diseases in
-London, and therefore in the world.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>He was to come as from the Reptons, and to give
-an appointment at Repton&#8217;s house, telling the doctor
-that he should there find Sir Anthony Poole. He
-was to go at once to Sir Anthony Poole, whose general
-reputation stood higher than any other medical
-man&#8217;s, to approach him as from the Reptons, to give
-him a similar appointment and to inform him that he
-would meet there Dr. Bowker. He was to tell them
-the whole sad truth, and beg for a certificate. The
-unfortunate gentleman could then be given the advantages
-of a complete rest cure.</p>
-
-<p>He was next to go to Lady Repton&#8217;s at once, and
-ask her leave to call upon Dr. Bowker and Sir
-Anthony Poole. She would give it: the Prime
-Minister had no doubt of that. He was to suggest to
-her the hour he had already named to those eminent
-men. That very evening Sir Charles would be certified
-a lunatic, and one load at least would be off the
-Premier&#8217;s mind; and a load off his mind, remember,
-was a load off his lung, and consequently an extension
-of lease granted to a life invaluable to the State.</p>
-
-<p>Within three-quarters of an hour Edward Evans
-had done all these things. He had even cut matters
-so fine that the physicians were to call at seven, and
-Lady Repton would telephone the result&mdash;she dared
-trust no other agency.</p>
-
-<p>So far as a man in acute anxiety can be satisfied,
-the young and popular Prime Minister was satisfied,
-but his left lung was at least one-half of his being as
-he went back again on his weary round to the House<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-of Commons, and the other half of his being was
-fixed upon a contemplation of his fifty-fifth year.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>At the door of Sir Charles Repton&#8217;s house was
-drawn up an exceedingly neat brougham, and Dr.
-Bowker had entered.</p>
-
-<p>A few moments later there walked up to it the tall
-strong frame of a man a trifle over-dressed but redeeming
-such extravagances by a splendidly strong
-old face, and he was Sir Anthony Poole.</p>
-
-<p>Two things dominated the conceptions of Sir
-Anthony: the first the antiquity of his family, which
-was considerable; the second a healthy contempt for
-the vagaries of the modern physical science.</p>
-
-<p>He was himself as learned in his profession as any
-man would care to be, but his common sense, he
-flattered himself, was far superior to his learning,&mdash;and
-he flattered himself with justice. He was a devout
-Christian of some Anglican persuasion; his family
-numbered thirteen sons and one daughter. His
-income was enormous. I should add that a knowledge
-of the world had taught him what real value
-lay behind men like Sir Charles Repton, who had
-stood the strain of public life and had found it possible
-to do such great service to their country.</p>
-
-<p>The mind of Dr. Bowker was dominated also by
-two considerations: the first a permanent irritation
-against the survival of those social forms which permitted
-men an advantage purely hereditary; the
-second a conviction, or rather a certitude, drawn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-from clear thinking, that organisation and method
-could deal with the cloudy blunders of mere general
-knowledge as a machine can deal with dead matter,
-or as an army can deal with civilians.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Bowker&#8217;s birth was reputable and sound; his
-father had been a doctor before him in a country
-town, and an earnest preacher in the local chapel;
-his grandfather a sturdy miner, his great-grandfather
-a turnkey in Nottingham Gaol.</p>
-
-<p>He was therefore of the middle rank of society;
-but after all, his social gospel such as it was weighed
-upon him less than his scientific creed. He did
-not <i>think</i>: he <i>knew</i>. What he did not know he
-did not pretend to know. For the rest he was
-always a little nervous and awkward in society,
-and preferred the communion of his books and an
-occasional spin upon a bicycle to the conversation
-of the rich.</p>
-
-<p>I should add that he revered Sir Charles Repton
-not only as all men of the world must revere a great
-statesman who has found it possible for many years
-of the strain of public life to be of service to his
-country, but also as a man of inestimable value in
-proving that the solid Nonconformist stock could do
-in administration, when it chose to enter that sphere,
-what it had so triumphantly shown it could do in
-commerce.</p>
-
-<p>The two men were shown into an enormous room
-on the ground floor where it was the custom of Sir
-Charles (in happier days!) to receive those whom he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-feared or would inveigle. Lady Repton at once
-joined them.</p>
-
-<p>She was agitated; it was even distressing to watch
-her agitation. She described to them the violent
-pain which her husband had suffered twice, first the
-yesterday evening just before dinner, next at this
-moment on driving up to his house in a cab. She
-described as best she could the situation of these
-spasms of suffering, and she more than hinted that
-she connected with them a novel and very astonishing
-demeanour on her husband&#8217;s part which (here
-she almost broke down) she hoped would justify
-them in ordering him if necessary with their <i>fullest</i>
-authority, to take a rest cure. She warned them
-that she had told him nothing; she had always
-heard it was wise in such cases. He thought they
-had come merely as advisers upon the pains he had
-felt behind the ear, but a few words of his conversation
-would be enough to convince them of that much
-graver matter.</p>
-
-<p>She left them for a moment together, and went to
-prepare her husband. She was a woman of heroic
-endurance. Her father had been in his time a
-God-fearing man, and had accumulated a small
-competence in the jute line.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Dr. Bowker, let it be remembered, was a specialist
-in nervous diseases. Sir Anthony Poole, let it also
-be remembered, was not, but he was something
-infinitely better in his own estimation: he was a man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-who had attended more distinguished people and
-with greater success than any other physician in
-London. Dr. Bowker&#8217;s word as a specialist could not
-be doubted. Sir Anthony Poole had only to express
-an opinion upon a man&#8217;s health in any particular
-and that opinion became positive gospel to all who
-heard it.</p>
-
-<p>The medical judgment of no two men given concurrently
-could carry greater weight. By an accident
-not infrequent in all professions, these two great men,
-though their rivalry was not strictly in the same
-field, each undervalued the scientific aptitude of the
-other. Each would have gone to the stake for the
-corporate value of that small ring to which both belonged,
-but neither would admit the claim of the
-other to a special if undefined precedence.</p>
-
-<p>On the rare occasions when they met, however,
-they observed all the courtesies of life, and on this
-occasion in the large ground-floor room of Sir
-Charles Repton&#8217;s house, they sat, when Lady Repton
-had gone out, exchanging platitudes of a very
-attenuated, refined sort, in a tone worthy of their
-correct grooming and distinguished appearance. By
-a singular inadvertence they were summoned together.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sir Anthony,&#8221; said Dr. Bowker, bowing, smiling
-and making a motion with his hand towards the
-door.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dr. Bowker,&#8221; said Sir Anthony, copying the
-courteous inclination, and thus it was that Sir<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-Anthony Poole had precedence, and first interrogated
-Sir Charles Repton alone.</p>
-
-<p>The conversation was brief. When Sir Charles
-had answered the first questions very simply, that
-he had two or three times in the last twenty-four
-hours felt shooting pains behind the ear, he began to
-speak in an animated way upon a number of things,
-and described a humorous incident he had recently
-witnessed in the Strand with a vigour highly suspicious
-to so experienced a physician as Sir Anthony
-Poole.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Anthony asked him what he ate and drank,
-received very commonplace answers, and was twice
-assured by the Baronet, whose wife had used that
-simple method to deceive him, that he had not for
-weeks felt any return of his old complaint, and that
-he only regretted that Lady Repton should have put
-Sir Anthony to the trouble of calling. He understood
-also that Dr. Bowker had been sent for.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said Sir Anthony a little uneasily. &#8220;I
-really imagined that the matter would be rather
-worse than it seems to be. You know it is our
-custom sometimes to call in another....&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes I know,&#8221; said Repton, with a slight smile,
-&#8220;it&#8217;s a pity you called in old Bowker. I know he&#8217;s
-very good at nerves or aches or something, but he&#8217;s
-such an intolerable old stick. The fact is, Sir
-Anthony,&#8221; he said, fixing that eminent scientist with
-a keen look and slightly lowering his voice, &#8220;the
-fact is, Dr. Bowker <i>isn&#8217;t quite a gentleman</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>&#8220;You&#8217;re a little severe,&#8221; said Sir Anthony, smiling,
-&#8220;you&#8217;re a little severe, Sir Charles!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mind you,&#8221; added Repton, &#8220;I don&#8217;t say anything
-against him in his professional capacity.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Certainly not,&#8221; said Sir Anthony.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But there are cases when a man&#8217;s manners do
-make a difference,&mdash;especially in your profession.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Sir Anthony beamed. &#8220;Well, Sir Charles,&#8221; he said,
-&#8220;I&#8217;m very glad to hear it&#8217;s no worse,&#8221;&mdash;and as Sir
-Anthony went out he muttered to himself: &#8220;No
-more mad than I am; but he mustn&#8217;t go talking
-like that about other people.&#8221; And the physician
-chuckled heartily.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Bowker&#8217;s introduction to, and private stay
-with, the patient was briefer even than had been Sir
-Anthony&#8217;s. He chose for his gambit the remark:
-&#8220;Sir Anthony Poole has just seen you I believe, Sir
-Charles?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes he has,&#8221; answered Charles Repton in a
-pleasant and genial tone, &#8220;yes he has, Dr. Bowker,
-though why,&#8221; he added, with a happy laugh, &#8220;I
-can&#8217;t conceive. After all, if I wanted a doctor for
-any reason I should naturally send to a specialist.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>When Sir Charles had answered the next few questions
-very simply, that he had two or three times in
-the last twenty-four hours felt shooting pains behind
-the ear, he then reverted to his praise of the specialist.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I had any nervous trouble, for instance, Dr.
-Bowker, I should send for you. If I had trouble
-with my tibia, I should send for Felton.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>Dr. Bowker nodded the most vigorous approval.
-It was evident that Sir Charles Repton&#8217;s considerable
-if superficial learning was standing him in good
-stead.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I had trouble with my aural ducts I should
-send for Durand, or,&#8221; he continued, in the tone of
-one who continues to illustrate a little pompously,
-&#8220;if my greater lymphatics were giving me trouble,
-Pigge is the first name that would suggest itself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Bowker&#8217;s enthusiasm knew no bounds. &#8220;You
-are quite right, Sir Charles,&#8221; he said, &#8220;you are quite
-right.&#8221; He almost took the Baronet&#8217;s hand in the
-warmth of his agreement. &#8220;If more men&mdash;I will
-not say of your distinction and position, but if more
-people&mdash;er&mdash;of what I may call the&mdash;er&mdash;directing
-brain of the nation, were of your opinion, it would
-be a good day for Medicine.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now a man like Poole,&#8221; went on Charles Repton
-nonchalantly, &#8220;what does he know, what <i>can</i> he
-know, about any particular trouble? And mind
-you, an educated man always knows in more or less
-general terms what his particular trouble is. Why
-Poole&mdash;well....&#8221; Here Sir Charles ended with a
-pitying little smile.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;At any rate,&#8221; said Dr. Bowker, bursting with
-assent, &#8220;I understand the old trouble has not
-returned. And if it had, as you very well said,
-it would be Felton&#8217;s job rather than mine. Of
-course it has a nervous aspect; everything has, but
-every specialist has his own field.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>And Dr. Bowker went out, communing with
-himself and deciding that the foolish anxiety of
-wives might be an excellent thing for the profession,
-but was hardly fair upon the purses of their
-husbands.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, Sir Anthony?&#8221; said Dr. Bowker as he
-entered the ground-floor room.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, Dr. Bowker?&#8221; said Sir Anthony with a
-responsive smile.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I really don&#8217;t see why they sent for us,&#8221; said
-Dr. Bowker.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thoroughly agree,&#8221; said Sir Anthony Poole.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s nothing more to be done, I think?&#8221; said
-Dr. Bowker.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing,&#8221; said Sir Anthony Poole.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Shall we speak to Lady Repton?&#8221; said Dr.
-Bowker.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll write her,&#8221; said Sir Anthony Poole.</p>
-
-<p>They took leave of Lady Repton in a solemn and
-sympathetic manner, assuring her that it was better
-to give their impression in writing, and that she
-should receive it in the course of that evening. And
-having so fulfilled their mission, these two eminent
-men went off together with a better feeling between
-them than either would have thought possible an
-hour before.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He is a singularly intelligent man,&#8221; said Sir
-Anthony Poole as they parted at the door of Dr.
-Bowker&#8217;s Club, &#8220;a singularly intelligent man. Of
-course one would have expected it from his position,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-but I did not know until to-day how really remarkably
-intelligent and cultivated he was.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thoroughly agree with you,&#8221; said Dr. Bowker,
-taking his leave, &#8220;he is what I call....&#8221; He sought
-a moment for a word.... &#8220;He is what I call a really
-cultivated and intelligent man.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>That evening Lady Repton received a short but
-perfectly clear opinion signed by both these first-class
-authorities, that her husband was in the full
-possession of his faculties, and that it would be the
-height of imprudence to set down any extravagance
-of temper or momentary zeal upon any particular
-question to mental derangement or to connect it
-with a slight accidental headache.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Repton in her grievous anxiety (for at the
-very moment she read the message she heard Sir
-Charles talking to a policeman out of a window,
-and telling him that it was ridiculous to try and
-look dignified in such a uniform), Lady Repton I
-say, at her wits&#8217; end for advice, was bold enough to
-ring up the Prime Minister whom she hardly knew,
-and to tell him all: There was no chance of a
-certificate; what, oh what should she do?</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister was not sympathetic. He
-did not desire further acquaintance with the lady.</p>
-
-<p>The Premier&#8217;s cup was full. His Warden of the
-Court of Dowry had resigned: the new Warden
-was appointed. The Warden who had resigned
-had gone mad; the Warden whom he had appointed
-had fled. At least&mdash;at least he might have been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-spared the madman! But no, he was not granted
-even this! the madman was still loose over London
-like a roaring lion, capable of doing infinite things
-within the next twenty-four hours. What was a
-peerage to a madman? What was a Wardenship
-of the Court of Dowry to a man who was not? The
-crumb of comfort that would have been afforded
-him by locking up the wretched lunatic who was
-the root of half his troubles was snatched from
-him.</p>
-
-<p>It was enough to make a man cut his throat.</p>
-
-<p>So ended that dreadful Tuesday in Downing
-Street, and all night long between his fits of tortured
-and horror-stricken sleep wherein his left lung and
-his fifty-fifth year were the baleful demons of his
-dreams, the young and popular Prime Minister
-would wake in a cold sweat and imagine some
-new horror proceeding from Repton let loose.</p>
-
-<p>The summer night is short. Wednesday most
-gloriously dawned, and after two hours of attempted
-slumber under the newly risen light, the Prime
-Minister arose, a haggard man.</p>
-
-<p>The lines on either side of the young Prime
-Minister&#8217;s mouth had grown heavier during the
-suffering of the night.</p>
-
-<p>Had he been married and had his wife felt for him
-that affection which his character would surely have
-called forth she would have been anxious to observe
-the change. But such is the strain of political life
-and such the ambitions it arouses, that his suffering<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-passed unnoticed with the majority, and with the
-rest was a subject for secret congratulation.</p>
-
-<p>He was down very early. Before he had eaten he
-went rapidly and nervously into his secretary&#8217;s room
-and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Any news, Edward?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said his secretary, looking if possible more
-nervous than his chief, &#8220;I&#8217;m sorry to say there is.
-The <i>Herald</i> is advertising an interview with Repton.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The <i>Herald</i>!&#8221; said the Prime Minister between
-his set teeth.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, the <i>Herald</i>,&#8221; answered the secretary, &#8220;it
-really doesn&#8217;t much matter,&#8221; he continued wearily,
-(he had been up most of the night) &#8220;if it wasn&#8217;t the
-<i>Herald</i> it would be somebody else.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We must pot &#8217;em as they come,&#8221; answered the
-Premier grimly, &#8220;and the <i>Herald</i> won&#8217;t publish that
-interview at any rate.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, let them publish it,&#8221; said the secretary....
-&#8220;I&#8217;ll write it if you like.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s what I mean,&#8221; said the Prime Minister.
-&#8220;I mean they won&#8217;t publish what people think they
-will.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said Evans, &#8220;they won&#8217;t.... He&#8217;s been
-shouting out of a window,&#8221; the secretary went on by
-way of news.</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister groaned.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What has he been shouting?&#8221; he breathed
-hoarsely.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh just insults, nothing important, but the police<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-have complained. And late last night he pointed
-out Betswick, who was a little buffy, stumbling down
-the pavement&mdash;sitting down, some say&mdash;. He shouted
-from his window to a lot of people in the street that
-it was Betswick. And now Betswick is afraid of
-going to open the Nurses&#8217; Home this afternoon....
-It&#8217;s a damned shame!&#8221; ended the secretary, exploding.
-&#8220;What the devil are you to do with a man ... it&#8217;s
-like&mdash;it&#8217;s like&mdash;it&#8217;s like an anarchist with little packets
-of dynamite.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have you looked at the papers yet, Edward?&#8221;
-asked the Prime Minister.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Some of &#8217;em,&#8221; answered his secretary gloomily.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing in the <i>Times</i>?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh no,&#8221; said Edward, &#8220;nothing in any of the
-eleven London papers on the official list.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you think the others count?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; answered the secretary thoughtfully, &#8220;there
-are the two evening papers that have been making
-such a fuss about the Concessions in Burmah.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Edward,&#8221; said the Prime Minister, &#8220;it&#8217;s a
-desperate remedy, but take the paper you have here,
-write out a note and get them to lunch. Not with
-me&mdash;with you. They&#8217;ll come.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Lunch is no good,&#8221; said Edward.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why not?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Evening papers go to press in the morning.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do they indeed?&#8221; said the Prime Minister, with
-the first lively glance he had delivered since the
-beginning of this terrible debacle. &#8220;That&#8217;s really<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-worth knowing! I never knew that.&#8221; He gazed
-into space, then suddenly waking up he said: &#8220;Why
-then, Edward, there&#8217;s no time to lose! Go and see
-them at once. Go and see them yourself, Edward.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It isn&#8217;t much good,&#8221; said Edward. &#8220;I know one
-of them, and the other&#8217;s dotty.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never mind,&#8221; said the Prime Minister, &#8220;never
-mind. Do it somehow. Kill &#8217;em if you must,&#8221; he
-added jocosely, and his secretary went.</p>
-
-<p>The Premier left his secretary&#8217;s room and mournfully
-approached his breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>Upon his table a time-honoured device constructed
-of brass and wood was designed to hold the newspaper
-while the tenant of that historic house might
-be at meals. Upon this was propped up, open at
-the leading page, a copy of the <i>Times</i>. The leaders
-were discreet. He found no word from beginning
-to end, save a little note in small type to the effect
-that Sir Charles Repton would be unable to speak
-at the great Wycliffite Congress, he was confined to
-the house with influenza; a similar note he was
-assured had appeared in all the eleven newspapers
-upon the official list, and through them would be
-distributed to the provincial press; the only thing
-left to the discretion of their editorial departments
-being the disease from which the distinguished patient
-might be suffering, which appeared in one as phlebitis,
-in another as tracheotomy, and in a third as a severe
-cold.</p>
-
-<p>Of Demaine not a word.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>Dolly thanked Heaven for the discipline which
-makes the Press of London the most powerful
-instrument of Government in the world.</p>
-
-<p>His thanks were premature; and the gentle, somewhat
-mournful atheism which was his only creed
-received excellent support when he saw among certain
-items of news which were laid upon his table every
-morning, two cuttings from foreign papers which told
-at great length and in the plainest details the whole
-story of the dreadful episode in the City, and connected
-it in so many words with the scandalous scene
-in the House of Commons. He could only comfort
-himself by reflecting that news which leaked out
-abroad was rarely if ever permitted to enter the
-Island. He reflected that time is a remedy for all
-evils, and he made ready for the duties of the day.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Meanwhile his secretary, Edward,&mdash;to give him
-his full title, Teddy Evans&mdash;had come to the first of
-the two offices which it was his business to visit. It
-was not yet nine o&#8217;clock and there was still time to
-cut on the machine.</p>
-
-<p>At the Treasury Evans had written regularly for a
-large evening paper,&mdash;he knew his way about such
-an organism. He betrayed no undue haste, well
-knowing the subtle delight the menials would have
-before such a display of retarding his every effort,
-and when the fat man, Mr. Cerberus, who keeps the
-door of the <i>Capon</i> offices, had pushed to him a dirty
-scrap of paper on which he was to write his name and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-business, he quietly asked for an envelope as well.
-It was given him with some grumbling.</p>
-
-<p>He wrote his message: &#8220;If you have begun machining,
-stop. I&#8217;ve been sent up here urgently.&mdash;E. E.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He closed it, gummed it down, and waited. He
-had not ten seconds to wait. A young man who
-looked and was underfed, a gaunt tall young man
-with hair as long and as dank as the waving weeds
-of the sea, received him with immense solemnity. It
-was not often that affairs of State came his way.
-One such had come earlier in that very year. It had
-been the occasion of his lunching with the exalted
-individual who now sat before him, and he had
-never forgotten it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Evans,&#8221; he said rather pompously, lifting his
-left hand and fixing two large burning, feverish eyes
-upon the secretary, &#8220;this place is the confessional.
-Anything you say shall be sacred ... absolutely
-sacred!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But Evans was cheery enough.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s nothing of any importance,&#8221; he said, &#8220;but,
-well, I&#8217;m a great friend of the Reptons.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know,&#8221; said the editor sympathetically, which
-was odd, for Evans only just knew the Reptons&#8217;
-address from having to write them letters, and the
-Reptons only just knew the look of Evans&#8217; face from
-having once had to ask him to a dinner of an
-official sort.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; went on Evans unblushingly (how valuable
-are men of this kind!), &#8220;I am a great friend, especially<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-of dear old Lady Repton&mdash;through my mother,&#8221; he
-added in an explanatory tone, &#8220;but I won&#8217;t go into
-that. The point is this: the whole family are really
-dreadfully concerned.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know, I know,&#8221; said the editor of the <i>Capon</i>, still
-most sympathetic, and most grave.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; said Evans with affected ill-ease, &#8220;the fact
-is we don&#8217;t want anything said about it at all&mdash;nothing.
-That&#8217;s the simplest way, after all. It&#8217;s a
-great trouble. You really would do me a personal
-service, and they would be so grateful.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;By all means,&#8221; said the editor of the <i>Capon</i>. He
-turned to a speaking-tube upon his right and was
-about to pull out the whistle, when a violent blast
-blew that instrument at the end of its chain into his
-face. The editor expressed disgust, and when this
-expression was over, asked for the statement. The
-statement was brought.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They&#8217;re waiting for the machine, sir.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The editor ran his blue pencil down the list, made
-a little X against one item, and said: &#8220;Bring me a
-proof of that, will you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A slip of proof came up: it was to the effect that
-Sir Charles Repton was to speak at the Wycliffite
-Congress and from his candid and vigorous action
-of the day before, both in the House and outside it,
-it was hoped that his address would act as a clarion
-call in the present crisis of religion. (&#8220;And it
-would!&#8221; thought Edward, all goose-flesh at the
-thought).</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>&#8220;There&#8217;s no harm in that,&#8221; he said. Then with
-sudden thought: &#8220;What&#8217;s the leader about?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Concessions,&#8221; said the editor of the <i>Capon</i>,
-smiling.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; said Evans, &#8220;we don&#8217;t agree about that, do
-we?&#8221; And he smiled back.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Shall I leave general orders about Repton items
-during the day?&#8221; said the editor.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why yes,&#8221; said Evans, and then remembering his
-little subterfuge he added: &#8220;Don&#8217;t print anything
-unless it&#8217;s directly from the family. You understand
-me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I understand,&#8221; said the editor. &#8220;Riggles, the
-sub-editor will be in charge after this. I&#8217;m going
-home.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He wrote in a large hand upon a large sheet of
-paper: &#8220;No Repton items, not even Press Agency,
-except from the house itself. F. D.&#8221;&mdash;for his name
-was Francis Davis. &#8220;Take that to Mr. Riggles,&#8221;
-he said to the devil, and the two men went out
-together.</p>
-
-<p>Well knowing that Davis&#8217; house lay in the extreme
-of the suburbs, and that he himself was going into
-the heart of Fleet Street, Evans offered to give his
-companion a lift. To his disgust it was accepted,
-and he was constrained to drive the editor of the
-<i>Capon</i> to St. Paul&#8217;s Station; it lost him ten minutes,
-and those ten minutes were nearly fatal. For when
-he had got back at full speed to the offices of the
-<i>Moon</i>, the paper had gone to press. The machines<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-were shaking and thundering away in the basement,
-and mile after mile of diffused culture was pouring
-out in a cataract to feed the divine thirst for
-knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed too late, but Evans went boldly through
-it all the same. The editor was gone, but to the
-sub-editor he sent in his card and wrote upon it
-&#8220;From the Prime Minister.&#8221; It was a time needing
-heroic measures.</p>
-
-<p>He asked to see an advance copy. The leader
-was Repton&mdash;Repton&mdash;Repton, nothing but Repton....
-Repton had given away the wickedness of
-modern finance; Repton for purposes of his own
-was prepared to expose the mockery of our politics;
-Repton would tell them the truth about the Concessions;
-they had a promise of an interview with
-Repton. What motives might have caused Repton
-to act as he had done they could not determine.
-It was sufficient for them that Repton, etc....</p>
-
-<p>The leader had a title, and the title of the leader
-was Repton. It had coined a new word: the word
-was &#8220;to Reptonise,&#8221; upon the model of &#8220;to peptonise.&#8221;
-The <i>Moon</i> threatened to reptonise the whole of our
-public life.</p>
-
-<p>Evans spent about thirty seconds looking at the
-floor.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Can they stop the machines, Mr. Price?&#8221; he
-asked, for Price was the sub-editor&#8217;s name.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said the sub-editor, &#8220;Why?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Evans walked to the window and looked out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-into the City street and said without showing his
-face:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Price, your proprietor is a very valued
-member of our party.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At the word &#8220;proprietor,&#8221; Mr. Price changed
-colour. Yet Evans had not meant the proprietor
-of Mr. Price, he had merely meant the proprietor of
-the <i>Moon</i>.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Price, I will tell you all&#8221; (and he told him
-more than all!). &#8220;Your proprietor left for Canada
-during the Easter Recess; he was taken ill in
-Montreal; he is on his way back, and he will be
-home next week.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Price nodded and at the same time inwardly
-admired the omniscience of the Government.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now, Mr. Price,&#8221; continued Edward, still gazing
-at the street opposite, &#8220;there is the promise of a
-peerage. These things are hardly ever mentioned,
-and I tell it to you quite frankly. If that leader
-appears,&#8221;&mdash;turning round sharply&mdash;&#8220;the peerage will
-not be conferred, and your proprietor shall be told
-that that leader was the cause of it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But, Mr. Evans,&#8221; began the sub-editor blankly.</p>
-
-<p>Evans was suddenly determined. It was astonishing
-to see the change in the man. His conduct
-and attitude would have seemed remarkable to the
-most indifferent observer: to one who knew that the
-proprietor of the <i>Moon</i> had never been, until that
-moment, within five hundred miles of a peerage, it
-would have seemed amazing.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>&#8220;Mr. Price,&#8221; said Evans rapidly and very clearly,
-&#8220;you are in a cleft stick. If you don&#8217;t print your
-present issue, if you must delay it, it will cost your
-proprietor a heavy sum directly and indirectly. I
-know that. But if you <i>do</i> print it will cost him no
-money, but....&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Price thought of the little home at Peckham;
-of the three young Prices, of Mrs. Price and of
-sundry affections that grow up in the most arid and
-most unexpected soils: he was in an agony as to
-which course would least destroy him: he made one
-last appeal:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;May I have it in writing?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Certainly not!&#8221; said Evans.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very well, Mr. Evans,&#8221; said the sub-editor
-humbly, &#8220;I&#8217;ll stop the machines,&#8221; and with a heavy
-heart he rang the bell.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it was that the <i>Moon</i> came out an hour
-later than usual, and that the leader dealt at so
-singular a moment with the pestilent vices of the
-King of Bohemia, and with his gross maladministration
-of Spitzbergen which it summoned to the bar of
-European opinion.</p>
-
-<p>Those who have wondered why Edward, without
-previous training so soon after this incident was
-made a partner of the great bank he now adorns,
-would wonder less if they had been present at that
-interview.</p>
-
-<p>The press was safe.</p>
-
-<p>That the agencies were safe went of course without<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-saying. Block A (as a group of eight papers owned
-by one man is familiarly called by permanent
-officials) had been squared, the day before. Block B,
-another group of six owned by a friend of his,
-was for private reasons unable to publish news of
-this kind. The <i>Evening German</i> wouldn&#8217;t dare, and
-the <i>Bird of Freedom</i> wouldn&#8217;t know. The <i>Press</i> was
-safe so far as Repton was concerned.</p>
-
-<p>But what about Demaine?</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Herald</i> had been informed pretty sharply
-that it was compelled for unavoidable reasons to
-postpone its interview with Sir Charles Repton.
-The very paragraph had been written out by
-Edward, and the <i>Herald</i> had swallowed the pill.</p>
-
-<p>But what about Demaine?</p>
-
-<p><i>That</i> had got ahead of them, and there was
-nothing to do but to wait until Demaine should be
-found. The very moment that he was found they
-could act and an explanation should be given that
-would soon cause the mystery to be forgotten. But
-a silence still surrounded that unlucky name.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing had been heard in the Lobbies, nothing
-from Scotland Yard. Finally, and more important,
-Mary Smith herself could tell Dolly nothing, and
-if <i>she</i> could not, certainly no one else in London
-could.</p>
-
-<p>She was really fond of her cousin, and for his
-sake she comforted, and, what was more important,
-restrained the imprudent Sudie.</p>
-
-<p>As for Ole Man Benson, beyond a natural regret<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-that such an asset as a son-in-law in the Cabinet
-was still held over as a contingent and that he
-could not for the moment close upon the option,
-he took the matter in a calm and philosophical
-spirit.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XII</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">&#8220;OH Liberty!&#8221; says the Bulgarian poet
-Machinchose in a fine apostrophe, too little
-known in this country. &#8220;Oh Liberty,&#8221; etc.</p>
-
-<p>Never had George Mulross Demaine known the
-sweets of that word in the days when he enjoyed
-its privilege to the full. Now, as the brilliant dawn
-of that Wednesday awakened him upon the deep he
-learned the beauty of Freedom.</p>
-
-<p>Its meaning saturated his very being as he woke
-in his miserable cell, refreshed but very weak, and
-saw shafts of the happy morning sun coming level
-with the dancing of the sea, and making a rhythmic
-change of unreal network in the oval patch of light
-that was cast by the porthole against the filthy rust
-of the walls.</p>
-
-<p>He felt mechanically for his watch and found
-nothing but bare skin; then (such a teacher is
-adversity!) he to whom induction was grossly
-unfamiliar, began to induce away like any child
-of Nature.</p>
-
-<p>The sunlight was level, for the image of the porthole
-upon the wall was but little lower than the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
-porthole itself:&mdash;therefore the sun had but just
-risen.</p>
-
-<p>It was June, therefore if the sun had but just
-risen the hour was very early: how early he
-certainly could not have answered if you had asked
-him a week ago, but adversity, that admirable
-schoolmistress, was developing the mind of George
-Mulross as the blossom of a narcissus develops
-under the first airs of Spring, and he was capable
-of remembering a sunrise after the ball at the
-Buteleys&#8217;, and another after a big supper at Granges&#8217;.
-He was in bed before half-past five on each occasion.
-It must therefore be between four and five
-o&#8217;clock.</p>
-
-<p>The term &#8220;solstice&#8221; was unfamiliar to this
-expectant member of the British Executive, but he
-seemed to remember that somewhere about this time
-of year the nights were at their shortest.</p>
-
-<p>He was full of a new pride as he made these
-discoveries. Then two things struck him at once:
-the first that he was ravenously hungry, the second
-that all motion of the ship had ceased. He heard
-no sound of any kind except the gentle lapping of
-the tiny waves alongside, for it was calm except
-for the little breeze of morning.</p>
-
-<p>He attempted with his new-found powers to pass
-the time in further induction, to guess by the
-position of the light how the ship lay, but as he had
-forgotten at which end of a ship the anchor is let
-go, and as he had no notion of the tide in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-English Channel, nor even whether tides ran for
-six hours or twelve (he was sure it was one of the
-two), and as, in general, he was grossly ignorant of
-the data upon which such an induction should
-proceed, the effort soon fatigued him. He was
-content to prop himself up against the wall and
-crave for food.</p>
-
-<p>He heard a step outside, he struck the door with
-his fist. To his delight a key turned in it, and
-the doubtful visage of the boy once more appeared.
-Early as was the hour, and divine the weather, the
-boy was still gloomy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gettin&#8217; us inter more trouble, orl on us, yer dirty
-skunk!&#8221; was his greeting.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sure I&#8217;m very sorry,&#8221; said George. &#8220;I only
-knocked because I&#8217;m so terribly hungry. Can&#8217;t
-you get me something to eat?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yus,&#8221; said the boy thoughtfully, &#8220;I dahn&#8217;t think!
-Yer&#8217;d myke me chuck it. Yer&#8217;s particler as a
-orspital nuss,&#8221; he added, with a recollection of a
-brazen woman in gaudy uniform whom a kind lady
-had thrust upon his mother&#8217;s humble home just before
-he had gone aboard.</p>
-
-<p>Demaine was in acute necessity. &#8220;Look here,&#8221;
-he said, &#8220;get me some bread.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Whaffor?&#8221; asked the boy.</p>
-
-<p>Demaine nodded mysteriously, and once again
-was his gaoler torn between a desire for some
-ultimate gain and the certitude that no present
-gain was obtainable.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>He was a London lad, with all the advantages
-that London birth implies, and it had already
-occurred to him that Demaine&#8217;s accent, manner and
-cuticle differed in a strange way from those of your
-stock stowaway. He had been impressed in the
-matter of the food; he was more impressed by
-certain little turns of language which he associated
-with those hateful, but, as he had been told, wealthy
-people, who came down and did good amid his
-mother&#8217;s neighbours in the East End; and when
-he had thought it well over and tamed his prisoner
-further by one more well-chosen epithet, he went
-off and came back with a hunk of bread.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yer lucky,&#8221; he said as he returned, &#8220;thet
-yer on a short trip. Otherwyes t&#8217;d uv been
-biscuit....&#8221; Then he added, &#8220;and gryte wurms
-in ut!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>George did not reply. He bit into the bread in
-ecstasy, and his eyes, which his acquaintances in
-London commonly discovered to be lifeless, positively
-gleamed upon this summer morning.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They gotter communicyte wiv the orfferities fust,&#8221;
-said the boy pompously.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes?&#8221; said George with his mouth full.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ho! yus, it is!&#8221; sneered the boy, who thought
-there was something of the toff in this use of the
-simply affirmative. &#8220;An&#8217; after that they&#8217;ll land yer,
-and yer&#8217;ll ave the darbies on afore breakfast-toime.&#8221;
-He added nothing this time about hanging. The
-details of the moment were too absorbing.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>&#8220;How do you mean &#8216;communicate&#8217;?&#8221; asked
-George carelessly and all ears.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Woy, wiv a flag, that&#8217;s ow,&#8221; said the boy.</p>
-
-<p>Demaine had often been told of the long and
-complicated messages which little pieces of bunting
-could convey, and he had himself presented to a
-country school a whole series of flags which, in a
-certain order, signified that England expected every
-man to do his duty. But he could not conceive
-how so complete a message as the presence and
-desired arrest of an unfortunate stowaway could be
-conveyed to the authorities ashore by any such
-simple means, unless indeed the presence of stowaways
-was so common an occurrence that a code
-signal was used for the purpose of disembarking
-that cargo.</p>
-
-<p>The boy illumined him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They got th&#8217; flag up,&#8221; he said, &#8220;syin&#8217; &#8216;Send a
-baht,&#8217; and when they sees it they&#8217;ll run up one
-theirselves&mdash;then&#8217;s yer toime.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But the boy&#8217;s information, as is common with the
-official statements of inferiors, was grossly erroneous.</p>
-
-<p>A voice came bawling down from above, ordering
-him to tumble up with the prisoner.</p>
-
-<p>Tumble up George did; that is, he crawled up
-the steep and noisome ladder, and as he put his
-head out into the glorious air, thought that never
-was such contrast between heaven and hell. He
-drank the air and put his shoulders back to it, to
-the risk of the green-black coat.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>George Mulross was one of those few men who
-have never written verse, but he was capable that
-moment if not of the execution at least of the
-sentiment which the more classical of my readers
-are weary of in Prom. Vinc. Chor. A. 1-19, Oh the
-god-like air! The depth and the expanse of sky!</p>
-
-<p>The fatherly sky was all light, the sun was
-climbing, and a vivid belt of England lay, still
-asleep, green and in repose under that beneficence;
-and in the midst of it, set all round with fields, lay
-a lovely little town. It was Parham.</p>
-
-<p>Demaine had once or twice noted how strangely
-glad the houses of men seem from off the sea, but
-as he was familiar rather with Calais and Dover,
-with Ostend, Folkestone and Boulogne than with
-other ports, and as he had more often approached
-them in winter weather than in the London season,
-there was something miraculously new to him in
-this vision which had been the delight of his forefathers:
-England from the summer sea.</p>
-
-<p>The clear spirit bubbling within him encountered
-another and muddier but forceful current as his eyes
-fell upon the first officer.</p>
-
-<p>That individual surveyed him with hatred but
-did not deign to throw him a word. He bade the
-lad stand by George in a particular place upon the
-deck till he should be sent for; he next threatened
-several of the boy&#8217;s vital organs if his prisoner were
-not properly kept in view, and having pronounced
-these threats, lurched away.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>&#8220;Th&#8217; old man&#8217;ll want yer soon, ter fill in is sheet,&#8221;
-said the lad by way of making conversation.
-&#8220;Myebe ee&#8217;ll ave ye larrupped, myebe ee wahn&#8217;t. Ee
-didn&#8217;t the larst un,&#8221; he put in as an afterthought, as
-though it were the custom to larrup some seven
-stowaways out of eight by way of parting, and to
-make capricious exception of certain favourites.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yer&#8217;ll ave to tyke thut sheet wiv yer; leastwyes
-whoever&#8217;s in charge of the baht&#8217;ll ave ter, an thye
-gives ut to th&#8217; cops, and th&#8217; cops shahs ut to the
-beak. As to do ut, to ave everyin roight and
-reglar. Otherwyes they cudden put yer awye&mdash;and
-they&#8217;re bahnd ter do that: not arf!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But Demaine was not heeding the discomforting
-comment of his warder. He was balancing in his
-mind the poor chances of the morning, and as he
-balanced them they seemed blacker with every
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>The shore was perhaps half a mile away: the
-hour say five, perhaps half-past. By six, or half-past
-six at the latest, the earliest people in Parham
-would be astir.</p>
-
-<p>The fixed inveterate hope of the governing class
-that a gentleman can always get out of a hole, had
-dwindled within him to that dying spark to which
-it dwindles during invasions and at the hour of
-death.</p>
-
-<p>He did not trust his accent, he did not trust his
-skin, he did not trust his parentage, he did not
-trust his wealth&mdash;alas, his former wealth!&mdash;to speak<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-more accurately, his wife&#8217;s former wealth,&mdash;to speak
-still more accurately, the former wealth of his wife&#8217;s
-father.</p>
-
-<p>He trusted nothing but blind chance, his muscles
-and flight.</p>
-
-<p>He hated the vision which was in immediate
-prospect of the little weasel-faced captain with his
-pointed red beard, reciting by rote yet another
-string of idiotic sentences from a manual; he hated
-the vision of the next step, the men in blue, with
-their violence and their closing of his mouth by
-brutal means. Whether he could convince a
-magistrate he did not pause to inquire. The way
-was too long&mdash;it was a dark corridor leading to
-Doom.</p>
-
-<p>He heard a second voice calling the boy to the
-accompaniment of oaths quite novel and individual
-and in a high voice that he had not yet heard, and
-he thought that his hour had come.</p>
-
-<p>But the boy&#8217;s reply undeceived him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oi dursn&#8217;t!&#8221; he yelled down the decks, &#8220;Oi
-gotter look arter th&#8217; Skunk.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Apparently, thought George bitterly, he already
-had a fixed traditional name aboard the <i>Lily</i>, like
-Blacky and the Old Man.</p>
-
-<p>The cook, for it was he, emerged from the galley
-aft, stood in the brilliant sunlight and delivered rapid
-blasphemy with tremendous velocity and unerring
-aim.</p>
-
-<p>The boy whimpered and was irresolute.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>If the threats of the mate had been less practical,
-those of the cook might have had less effect, but
-between the prospect of the excision of his liver and
-of a series of hearty buffets and mighty kicks endways,
-what reasonable youth would hesitate in a
-civilisation such as ours?</p>
-
-<p>The boy faltered visibly, and turning upon the Skunk
-informed him once again that he was always gettin&#8217;
-people inter trouble. Nay, more, he threatened to
-pay out the innocent cause of his despair for the
-divided duty in which he found himself.</p>
-
-<p>The cook re-emerged; he had fixed on a new belt
-of ammunition and began firing in a manner if
-possible more direct and devastating and quite as
-rapid, as that which had distinguished the first volley.
-And the boy, who was, after all, more directly the
-servant of the cook than of any one else on board,
-wavered and broke. With a clear statement of the
-consequences should Demaine move an inch from
-the spot, and a promise to return before a man could
-spit to leeward, the boy dashed off to the galley,
-and for perhaps five seconds, perhaps ten, the
-prospective Warden of the Court of Dowry was
-free.</p>
-
-<p>The movement of the human mind, says Marcus
-Aurelius (imitative in this sentence, as in most of
-his egregious writings), resembles that of a serpent.</p>
-
-<p>There are serpents and serpents. Minds of
-Demaine&#8217;s type move commonly with the motion
-of a gorged python but just roused from sleep; but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-even the python will, under compulsion, dart,&mdash;and,
-in those five seconds, not reason but an animal
-instinct drove the politician&#8217;s soul.</p>
-
-<p>He was up, on to the bale, over the bulwark and
-down ten feet into the sea, before he had even had
-time to formulate a plan. He could swim, and that
-was enough for him.</p>
-
-<p>The splash made by Demaine&#8217;s considerable form
-as it displaced in an amount equal to his weight the
-waters of the English Channel, came to the ears of
-the Watch, who was leaning comfortably over the
-farther railing at the other end of the vessel, looking
-out to seaward and ruminating upon a small debt
-which he had left behind him in the parish of
-Wapping. With no loss of dignity the Watch
-shuffled forward to see whether aught was displaced.
-The splash had been a loud one, but it might have
-been something thrown from the galley.</p>
-
-<p>He first of all looked carefully over the starboard
-bow to seaward. There was no foam upon the water:
-everything was still. It occurred to him to cross
-the deck; he did so in a leisurely manner and
-thought he noted far down the side, and already
-drifting astern with the tide, a rapidly disappearing
-ring of foam. He was a stupid man (though I say
-it that shouldn&#8217;t, for he came from Bosham, noble
-and fateful Mistress of the Sea), and he looked at the
-ring of foam in a fascinated manner, considering
-what could have caused it, until he was roused to
-life and to his duties by the thunder of the first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-officer who from the bridge demanded of him in
-perfectly unmistakable language what he had done
-to the Skunk.</p>
-
-<p>The sense of innocence was so strong in the honest
-seafaring soul that he replied by a simple stare which
-almost gave the first officer a fit, and in the midst
-of the language that followed, the boy, positively
-pale with fear, came tearing from the galley and
-found, not his charge, but the Bosham man gazing
-like a stuck pig at his superior above, and at the
-world in general.</p>
-
-<p>The reappearance of the boy was a welcome relief
-to the chief officer&#8217;s lungs and intelligence; it added
-fuel to his flame. He very nearly leapt down from
-the bridge in his paroxysms of wrath, and heaven
-only knows what he would have done to the wretched
-lad whom he would render responsible for the misadventure
-had he not at that moment caught sight
-of a little speck upon the sunlit water far astern: it
-was the head of George Mulross Demaine, battling
-with fate.</p>
-
-<p>The prospective Warden of the Court of Dowry
-could swim fairly well. It had been his practice to
-swim in a tank. He had swum now and then near
-shore, but he had no conception of the amount of
-salt water that can get into a man&#8217;s mouth in a
-really long push over a sea however slightly broken,
-especially if one enters that sea in a sort of bundle,
-without taking a proper header. Moreover, the
-phenomenon of the tide astonished him; he had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-imagined in his innocence that the sea also was a
-kind of tank and that he had a dead course of it for
-the shore, the nearest point of which lay just eastward
-of the harbour mouth.</p>
-
-<p>As it was, England seemed to be flitting by at a
-terrible rate, and the <i>Lily</i>, when he turned upon his
-back and floated for a moment to observe her, had
-all the appearance of a ship proceeding at full speed
-up Channel, so rapidly did he drift away.</p>
-
-<p>He swam too hurriedly and he exhausted himself,
-for his mind was full of terrors: they might fire upon
-him&mdash;he did not know what dreadful arsenal the
-<i>Lily</i> might not contain!</p>
-
-<p>He remembered having noticed upon the cross-Channel
-steamers exceedingly bright little brass
-guns, the purpose and use of which had often
-troubled him. Now he knew!&mdash;and he hoped
-against hope that no such instrument of death
-swivelled upon the poop of the <i>Lily</i>.</p>
-
-<p>He dreaded every moment to catch the sharp spit
-of flame against the sunlight, a curl of smoke, the
-scream of the light shell, the ricochet, the boom
-that would come later sullenly upon the air, and
-all the rest that he had read of:&mdash;the first shot to
-find the range: the dreadful second that would sink
-him.</p>
-
-<p>He was relieved, as minute after minute passed,
-and no such experiment in marine ballistics was
-tried. There was faintly borne to his ears as he
-was swept down the ceaseless stream of Ocean, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-little clamour which, on the spot itself, was a roaring
-babel; he saw a group of men wrestling with the
-davits, but the davits were stiff, and boat-drill was
-not in the programme of the <i>Lily</i>. Indeed of all
-the crew but two had ever handled such a contrivance
-as a davit before, and of these one was an
-Italian.</p>
-
-<p>Another man than Captain Higgins would have
-been profoundly grateful to see the stowaway drown;
-not so that conscientious servant of the Firm. The
-stowaway received such food and lodging as had
-kept him living until such time as he could be
-handed over to the Sheriff or his officers or any
-other servants or justices of our lord the King, who
-were competent to deal with breach of contract,
-tort, replevin and demurrer. The stowaway was
-responsible to the Law, and Captain Higgins was
-responsible for the stowaway; therefore must a boat
-be lowered. And because there was something
-grander in swinging out the davits in full view of
-a British town and harbour than in chucking the
-dinghy into the water, swing out the davits he would,&mdash;and
-he lost ten minutes over it&mdash;ten precious
-minutes during which the tide had carried the little
-speck that was the head of George Mulross Demaine
-almost beyond the power of his spyglass.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Higgins capitulated; he left the davits as
-they were&mdash;one stuck fast, the other painfully
-screwed half round, a deplorable spectacle for the
-town of Parham, and one shameful to the reputation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-of the sailor-men aboard the <i>Lily</i>, and he ordered
-the little dinghy out over the side.</p>
-
-<p>They unlashed her and let her down. Two men
-tumbled into her, the second officer took command,
-and they rowed away down tide with all the
-vigour that Captain Higgins&#8217; awful discipline could
-inspire, directed in their course by his repeated
-injunctions and proceeding at a pace that must surely
-at last overhaul the fugitive.</p>
-
-<p>When Demaine heard the beat of the oars and
-again floated to look backwards, he estimated the
-distance between himself and the shore and gave
-himself up for lost. Now indeed there could be
-no doubt of the rope&#8217;s end! He could not disappear
-like a whale for any appreciable time beneath the
-surface; the tales he had read (and believed) of heroes
-in the Napoleonic and other wars, who themselves,
-single-handed and in the water, had fought a whole
-ship&#8217;s crew with success, he now dismissed as idle
-fables. There was nothing left for him but, somewhat
-doggedly, to continue the overhand stroke, for
-now that he was discovered there was no point in
-the slower breast stroke that had helped to conceal
-him. They were making (as they said in the days
-of the Clippers) perhaps three feet to his one, but
-freedom is dear to the human heart, and he pegged
-away.</p>
-
-<p>The Shining Goddesses of the Sea loved him more
-than they loved the odious denizens of the <i>Lily</i>;
-they set the tide in shore, and the Sea Lady, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-Silver-Footed One, led the little waves along in his
-favour.</p>
-
-<p>He had come to a belt of water where the tide set
-inward very rapidly, along a gulley or deep of the
-shore water. It was a godsend to him, for his pursuers
-were still in the outer tide. He was now not a
-quarter of a mile from the water-mark, and still going
-strong, with perhaps two hundred yards between
-the boat and him; he could not feel their hot breath
-upon his neck, but he could hear the rhythmic yell
-of the officer astern, criticising the moral characters
-of his crew with a regular emphatic cadence that
-followed the stroke of the oars ... when his cold,
-numbed right foot struck something; then his left
-struck sand: ... It was England! And the
-English statesman, like Antus, was glad and was
-refreshed.</p>
-
-<p>He stumbled along out of it&mdash;the water on the
-shelving sand was here not three feet deep. He
-stumbled and raced along through the splashing
-water. It fell to his knees, to his shins, to his ankles,
-and he was on dry land!</p>
-
-<p>A very pretty problem for the amateur tactician
-learned in the matter of landing-parties, was here
-presented. The dinghy must ground far out: she
-could not be abandoned; it was an even race, and
-his pursuers would be one man short from the
-necessity of leaving some one in a boat which had
-grounded too far out for beaching.</p>
-
-<p>Some such combination occurred in a confused<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-way to Demaine, but he had no time for following
-it up. He did what he had done more than once in
-the last unhappy days&mdash;he ran. His numbed feet
-suffered agonies upon the shingle above the sand,
-but he ran straight inland, he crossed a rough road,
-went stumbling over a salted field, and made for a
-wind-driven and scraggy spinney that lay some half
-a mile inland, defying the sea winds. As he approached
-that spinney he saw two men from the
-boat just coming full tilt over the ridge of the sea
-road; as he plunged into it they were in the midst
-of the field beyond.</p>
-
-<p>The undergrowth in the spinney was thick, but
-Demaine had the sense to double, and he crept
-cautiously but rapidly along, separating the thick
-branches as noiselessly as he could, and bearing
-heroically with the innumerable brambles that tore
-his flesh. He halted a moment to look through
-a somewhat thinner place towards the field, and
-there, to his considerable astonishment, he perceived
-the two sailor-men dawdling along in amicable converse
-and apparently taking their time, as though
-they were out upon a holiday rather than in the
-pursuit of a criminal.</p>
-
-<p>It dawned upon George that there was a reason
-for this: the second officer could not leave the boat.
-The boat and the sea were hidden by the ridge of
-the sea road, and the longer the time the hearty
-fellows could spend ashore, the greater their relief
-from labour and their enjoyment of a pleasant day.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-He saw them sauntering towards the spinney; they
-took sticks and beat it in a sort of aimless, perfunctory
-manner, poking into the brushwood half-heartedly
-here and there, as though Demaine had been a hare
-whom they desired to start from its form. They
-wandered off along the edge of the wood in a direction
-opposite to his own, and paused a moment to light
-their pipes upon their way.</p>
-
-<p>It was a peaceful scene: but a moment would
-come when that scene could not be prolonged, and
-when their activity must be renewed. Demaine,
-therefore, pushed through the brushwood, still going
-as noiselessly as he could, and came out to the
-landward side of it upon a disused lawn.</p>
-
-<p>The grass was brown and rank and trampled. It
-had not been mown that season. An old sun-dial
-stood in the midst of it; a wall bounded it upon
-two sides, and there was the beginning of a gravel
-path. He followed that path between two rows of
-rusty laurels, and round a sharp turn came upon the
-house to which this derelict domain belonged. He
-came upon it suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>It stood low and had been masked from him by a
-belt of trees. He saw a little back door, and,&mdash;fatal
-as had such reasoning been in his immediate past,&mdash;he
-reasoned once more: that where there was a house
-with servants&#8217; offices, there would be a difference
-of social rank, there would be education, there would
-be understanding, and he must certainly come into
-his own.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>His bleeding feet, the soaked rags that clung upon
-him, his hair hanging in absurd straight lines clogged
-with salt, would, could he have seen them in a
-looking-glass, have given him pause. But the exhaustion
-of these terrible hours was now upon him;
-the heat of the sun was increasing,&mdash;he was under
-an absolute necessity for food and repose.</p>
-
-<p>He boldly opened the door and went in.</p>
-
-<p>He found himself in a little room of which this
-door was evidently the private communication with
-the garden; it was a room that lifted his heart.</p>
-
-<p>To begin with, it was lined everywhere with books,
-and though he himself had read perhaps but eighteen
-volumes in the whole course of his early manhood,
-yet a room lined with books justly suggested to him
-cultivation, leisure, and a certain amount of wealth.
-A volume was lying with its flyleaf open upon the
-table. He saw pasted in it a book-plate in the
-modern style, made out in the name of Carolus
-Merry Armiger. Mr. Armiger, it seemed, was his
-unsuspecting host. Mr. Armiger&#8217;s literary occupations
-did not interest George Mulross; such as they
-were he gathered them to have some connection
-with the Ten Lost Tribes.</p>
-
-<p>Manuscripts were lying upon the table, manuscripts
-consisting of long double lists of names with
-a date between them. The Jewish Encyclopedia
-was ranged in awful solemnity before these manuscripts;
-the Court Guides, reference books and
-almanacs of London, Berlin, New York, Frankfort,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-Paris, Rome and Vienna, were laid ready to hand, and
-sundry slips detailing the family origins and marital
-connections of most European statesmen, including
-of course our own, completed the work upon which
-the chief resident of the house appeared to be
-engaged.</p>
-
-<p>Forgetting the deplorable condition in which he
-was, a big scarecrow reeking and dripping salt water
-from sodden black rags that clung to his nakedness,
-George Mulross sank into a large easy-chair and
-breathed a sigh of profound content.</p>
-
-<p>They might look as long as they chose, he thought
-they would look for him in vain! His pursuers did
-not know who he was nor that he had come back
-into his own rank of life again and had certainly
-found, though they were as yet unknown to him,
-equals who would as certainly befriend and protect
-him.</p>
-
-<p>He pictured the scene to himself:&mdash;the owner of
-the house enters&mdash;he is wearing spectacles, he is a
-busy literary man, a professor perhaps&mdash;who could
-tell?&mdash;a learned Rabbi! The papers and the books
-upon the table seemed to concern the Hebrew race.
-At any rate, a literary man&mdash;a solid literary man.
-He would come in, preoccupied, as is the manner of
-his tribe, he would look fussily for something that he
-had mislaid upon the table, his eyes would light upon
-the form of George Mulross Demaine. At first sight
-he would be surprised. A man partially naked,
-glistening in the salt of the sea, his hair falling in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-absurd straight wisps clotted with damp, his face a
-mixture of grime and white patches where the water
-had washed it, his nails a dense black, his bare feet
-bleeding, would stand before him. But this strange
-figure would speak a word, and all would be well.
-He would say:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sir, my name is Demaine. You are perhaps
-acquainted with that name. I beg you to listen to
-me and I will briefly tell you,&#8221; etc. etc.</p>
-
-<p>The literary man would be profoundly and
-increasingly interested as the narrative proceeded,
-and at its close a warm bath and refreshment of the
-best would be provided, a certain deference even
-would appear in his host&#8217;s manner when he had
-fully gathered that he was speaking to a Cabinet
-Minister, and from that moment the unhappy business
-would be no more than an exciting memory.</p>
-
-<p>As George Mulross so mused he rose from his
-chair and was horrified to note that there stood in
-the hollow of it little pools of salt water, that the
-back was dripping wet, and that where his feet had
-reposed upon the Axminster carpet damp patches
-recalling the discovery of the Man Friday, the marks
-of human feet, were clearly apparent.</p>
-
-<p>Even as he noted these things and appreciated
-that they would constitute some handicap to his
-explanation, he heard voices outside the door.</p>
-
-<p>Alas, they were not the voices of the governing
-classes, they were not the voices of refinement and
-leisured ease. Oh! no. They were the voices of two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-domestics engaged in altercation, the one male, the
-other female; and the latter, after affirming that
-it was none of her partner&#8217;s business, evidently
-approached the door of the room in which he was.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment his heart stopped beating. He
-heard her hand upon the outer handle of the door;
-by what form of address could he melt that uncultivated
-heart? Those bitter hours of his just
-passed had filled him with a mixture of terror and
-hatred for such English men and women as work for
-their living. He had always regarded them as of
-another species: he beheld them now in the aspect
-of unreasoning wolves.</p>
-
-<p>By the grace of heaven the door was locked. He
-heard a female expletive, extreme in tone though
-mild in phrase, directed towards the domestic habits
-of her master, especially with regard to the privacy of
-his study, and he next heard her steps moving away.
-She was coming round by the garden; there was not
-a moment to lose ... and there was not a cranny
-in which to hide.</p>
-
-<p>I have expatiated on the effect of misery and of
-terror upon George&#8217;s brain: I have but here to add
-that for two seconds he was a veritable Napoleon in
-his survey of terrain. He grasped in a flash that if
-he retreated by the garden door he was full in the
-line of the enemy&#8217;s advance without an alternative
-route towards any base; and with such an inspiration
-as decided Jena, he made for the chimney.</p>
-
-<p>The eccentricities of the master of the house (for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-he was obviously eccentric) appeared to include a
-passion for old-fashioned fireplaces; at any rate there
-was no register nor any other devilish device for
-impeding the progress of the human form, and
-George, with a dexterity remarkable in one of his
-bulk, hoisted himself into the space immediately
-above the grate. There the chimney narrowed
-rapidly to a small flue, and he must perforce support
-himself by the really painful method of pressing with
-his feet against the one wall, and with his cramped
-shoulders against the other, lying in the attitude of a
-man curled up in bed upon his right side,&mdash;but in no
-such comfort, for where the bed should be was air.</p>
-
-<p>He had not gained his lair a moment too soon.
-He could discover from it the hearth-rug, a small
-strip of the carpet, and the legs of sundry tables and
-chairs, when he heard the garden door open, and
-other legs,&mdash;human legs&mdash;natty, and their extremities
-alone visible, passed among the legs of the inanimate
-things. The head which owned them far above continued,
-as the legs and feet bore it round the room, to
-criticise the habits of its master. It dusted, it went
-to the farther side of the apartment, the feet disappeared.
-They reappeared suddenly within his
-line of vision and stopped dead, while the invisible
-head remarked in a tone of curiosity:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Whatever&#8217;s that!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was looking at the imprint of the feet. Next
-he heard her patting the damp arm-chair, and exclaiming
-that she never!</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>The strain upon George Mulross Demaine was
-increasing, but had it been tenfold as severe he
-dared not descend. A slight involuntary movement
-due to an effort to ease his shoulder off a point of
-brick produced a fall of soot which most unpleasantly
-covered his face.</p>
-
-<p>He could hear a startled exclamation from the
-wench, her decision that she didn&#8217;t understand the
-house at all, and her sudden exit.</p>
-
-<p>Hardly had she shut the garden door behind her
-when a key was heard turning in the lock in the other
-door opening into the house, and the Expected
-Stranger, the Unknown Host, entered. The moment
-of George&#8217;s salvation was at hand.</p>
-
-<p>Two very large flat boots slowly tramped into the
-narrow region he could survey: above each nine
-inches of creased grey trouser leg could be seen; the
-boots, the trouser legs, did not approach the arm-chair;
-they took little notice apparently of things
-about them. Their owner grunted his satisfaction
-that none of his papers had been removed by the
-maid to whom he applied a most indiscreet epithet;
-he grunted further satisfaction that she had laid his
-fire and not lit it. Apparently it was among his
-other eccentricities to have a fire upon a June morning
-simply because the room was cold, and to let it die
-down before noon.</p>
-
-<p>The Unknown came close to the grate. George
-heard large hands fumbling upon the mantelpiece,
-the unmistakable rattle of a match-box; next an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-arm midway to the shoulder, and at its extremity
-a hand bearing a lighted match appeared, and the
-Stranger Host thoughtfully lit the Newspaper upon
-which the fire was laid.</p>
-
-<p>The dense and acrid smoke produced by our
-Great Organs of Opinion when they are put to this
-domestic purpose rose up and enveloped the unhappy
-George. It was the limit! And with one cry and
-with one roar, as Macaulay finely says of another
-crisis, the prospective Warden of the Court of Dowry
-slid down into the grate, ruining the careful structure
-of coal and wood, and stood in the presence
-of&mdash;he could scarcely believe his eyes&mdash;William
-Bailey!</p>
-
-<p>That tall, bewhiskered, genial oligarch expressed
-no marked astonishment. It is, alas! a characteristic
-of the eccentric that, just as he sees the world all
-wrong where it is normal, so, before the abnormal he
-is incapable of expressing reasonable emotion. All
-he said was, in a mild tone of voice:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well! well! well!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>To which Demaine answered, with the solemnity
-the occasion demanded:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;William, don&#8217;t you know me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I know you,&#8221; said William Bailey thoughtfully,
-&#8220;Dimmy, by God!... Dimmy, d&#8217;you know
-that you present a most extraordinary spectacle?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You needn&#8217;t tell me that,&#8221; said Dimmy bitterly,
-drawing his hand across his mouth and displaying
-two red lips which appeared in the midst of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-features like those of a comedy negro. &#8220;The point
-is what can you do for me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My dear Dimmy,&#8221; said William Bailey, his
-interest increasing as the situation grew upon him,
-&#8220;I am delighted to hear that phrase! I haven&#8217;t
-heard it since I gave up politics! I haven&#8217;t heard
-it since they tried to make me an Under Secretary,&mdash;only
-it used to be worded a little differently. Old
-schoolfellows of mine whom I had thrashed with a
-cricket stump in years gone by used to come up
-washing their hands and saying, &#8216;What can I do
-for you?&#8217; Now for once in my life some one has
-asked me what <i>I</i> can do for <i>him</i>. Sweet Dimmy,
-all I have is at your disposal. Would you like
-to borrow some money, or would you prefer to
-wash?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish you&#8217;d chuck that sort of thing,&#8221; said
-Demaine, angrily and with insufficient respect for a
-senior. &#8220;It isn&#8217;t London and I&#8217;m not out for jokes.
-I&#8217;m in trouble.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In trouble?&#8221; said William Bailey, asking the
-question sympathetically. &#8220;Oh don&#8217;t say that!
-Dirty, maybe, and very funnily dressed, but not, I
-hope, in trouble?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Damn it!&#8221; said the other, &#8220;what are you in this
-house?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What I am out of it,&#8221; said William Bailey cheerfully,
-&#8220;a harmless eccentric with a small property,
-several bees in my bonnet (the present one an anti-Semitic
-bee), and a great lover of my friends, Dimmy,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-especially men of my own blood. Now then, what
-do you want?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you own this house, or do you not?&#8221; demanded
-Dimmy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why,&#8221; said William Bailey, &#8220;it is very good
-of you to ask. I am what the law calls a lessor
-or lessee, or perhaps I am a bailee of the
-house. The house itself belongs to Merry. You
-know Merry, the architect who builds his father&#8217;s
-houses?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The books have got &#8216;Armiger&#8217; in them,&#8221; said
-Dimmy suspiciously.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s a title,&#8221; replied William Bailey, &#8220;not an
-English title,&#8221; he continued hurriedly, &#8220;it was given
-him by the Pope.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Anyhow, you&#8217;re master here?&#8221; said Demaine
-anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh yes,&#8221; said Bailey, &#8220;I&#8217;ve been master here since
-the end of the first week. At first there was some
-doubt whether it was Elise or the groom or Parrett,
-the housekeeper, who was master. But I won,
-Dimmy,&#8221; he said, rubbing his hands contentedly, &#8220;I
-brought down my servant Zachary and between us
-we won. They&#8217;re as tame as pheasants now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very well then,&#8221; said Demaine, &#8220;you&#8217;ve got to
-do two things. You&#8217;ve got to cleanse me and to
-clothe me and to hide me during the next few hours
-if the necessity arises.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know why you shouldn&#8217;t cleanse yourself,&#8221;
-said William Bailey thoughtfully. &#8220;You&#8217;ve<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-never learned a trade, Dimmy, and you were never
-handy or quick at things, but you&#8217;re a grown man,
-and there&#8217;s lots of hot water and soap and stuff in
-the bathroom; there was a beastly thing called a
-loofah that Merry had left there, but I&#8217;ve burned it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t be a fool, Bill!&#8221; pleaded Demaine, &#8220;there
-isn&#8217;t time, really there isn&#8217;t. Then tell me, what
-clothes have you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mine are too narrow in the shoulders for you,&#8221;
-said William Bailey, thinking, &#8220;Zachary is altogether
-too thin. You&#8217;re big, Dimmy, not to say fat. The
-trousers wouldn&#8217;t meet and the coat wouldn&#8217;t go on.
-But I can put you to bed and send for clothes.
-What d&#8217;you mean about hiding? I can see you have
-some reasons for privacy; in fact if you <i>hadn&#8217;t</i>,
-getting up that chimney would be a schoolboy sort
-of thing to do at your age. Have you been bathing
-without a licence, and some one stolen your clothes?
-Or have they been having a jolly rag at the Buteleys&#8217;?
-They&#8217;re close by.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll tell you when I&#8217;ve washed,&#8221; said Demaine
-wearily, &#8220;only now do let me slip up to the bathroom
-like a good fellow. Good God, I&#8217;m tired!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>William Bailey opened the door and peered
-cautiously into the corridor, listened for footsteps and
-heard none, and then, after locking the door of the
-study behind him, as was his ridiculous habit, he
-popped up a narrow pair of stairs, with Dimmy,
-whose old nature had sufficiently returned to cause
-him to stumble, following at his heels.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>They were not quite out of the range of the front
-door when there came a violent pull at the bell, and
-Elise went forward to open it.</p>
-
-<p>William Bailey pushed his guest and cousin into
-the bathroom and went down to meet two policemen
-who stood with awful solemnity, clothed in suspicion
-and in power, at his threshold. From the depths of
-his sanctuary and through the crack of the half-open
-window, Demaine heard a conversation that did not
-please him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very sorry to have to ask you sir,&#8221; a deep bass
-was saying, &#8220;we&#8217;re bound to do it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re bound to do it,&#8221; echoed a tenor.</p>
-
-<p>Demaine did not hear his cousin&#8217;s reply.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are you sure he&#8217;s been on the premises, sir?&#8221;
-came from the first policeman, whom I will call
-&#8220;<i>Basso Profondo</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Positive,&#8221; answered William Bailey&#8217;s voice, cheerful
-and loud. &#8220;Positive!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Did you see him with your own eyes, sir?&#8221; this
-from the second policeman, whom I will call &#8220;<i>Tenore
-Stridente</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Certainly I did, or I wouldn&#8217;t be telling you
-this,&#8221; came again from William Bailey a little
-testily.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well now, sir, we&#8217;ve suspicions that he&#8217;s on the
-place still.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re wrong there,&#8221; said William Bailey, &#8220;he
-ran off down the Parham road when he heard my
-dog bark.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>&#8220;We didn&#8217;t meet any one on the Parham road, sir:&#8221;
-it was the voice of the Tenore policeman who spoke,
-evidently a less ingenuous man than the Basso.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t help that,&#8221; said William Bailey. &#8220;You&#8217;re
-welcome to look over the house.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They thanked him and walked in like an army.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is for your own good, sir,&#8221; said the first policeman,
-in his deep bass.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Besides which it&#8217;s our duty,&#8221; said the second
-policeman in his <i>tenore stridente</i>.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; said William Bailey, &#8220;of course, and I
-hope that while one of you is doing the good, the
-other will look after the duty. It&#8217;s the kind of thing
-people like me are very fond of doing, hiding stowaways.
-I&#8217;ve hidden bushels of them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The tenor was indifferent to his sarcasm, the bass
-was touched.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You know very well, sir,&#8221; he said, &#8220;what the
-criminal classes are, or rather you gentlemen don&#8217;t
-know. Why, he&#8217;d cut the women&#8217;s throats in the
-night and make off with the valuables.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Would he cut mine?&#8221; asked William Bailey as
-he followed them from room to room.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s capable of it,&#8221; said the bass, nodding
-mysteriously. &#8220;He&#8217;s not an ordinary stowaway,&#8221; he
-continued, lowering his voice almost to a gruff
-whisper, &#8220;<i>he&#8217;s well known to the police</i>. He&#8217;s <i>Stappy</i>,
-that&#8217;s what he is, <span class="smcap">Stappy the Clinker</span>! He&#8217;s done
-this trick before, getting aboard a vessel and pretending
-he&#8217;s a vagabun; the Chief knows all about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-him! He did a man in last Monday night in
-London!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>To the unhappy man in the bathroom there
-returned with vivid horror the recollection of Lewes
-Gaol; but so long as William Bailey&#8217;s wits did not
-fail him he knew that more than even chances were
-in his favour. His mood changed suddenly, however,
-when the police, who had been perambulating the
-small rooms near his retreat, suddenly rattled the
-door of his bathroom and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s in here?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I do beg of you to take care, gentlemen,&#8221; said
-William Bailey angrily, &#8220;that&#8217;s the bathroom, and if
-you want to know, my niece is inside.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh I beg your pardon,&#8221; said the bass, &#8220;I&#8217;m sure.&#8221;
-He had the sense not to doubt the master of the
-house in a matter directly concerning his own
-interest. But the tenor added:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We must make a note of it, sir.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;By all means,&#8221; said William Bailey, &#8220;by all
-means. Her name is Rebecca.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>George Mulross Demaine, in the delight of the
-very warm water, was soothed to hear them
-tramping heavily down the stairs once more.</p>
-
-<p>They examined every room and cranny of the
-place until they came to the study door.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s my study,&#8221; said William Bailey apologetically,
-&#8220;I always keep it locked.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He unlocked it and they entered. Their trained
-eyes could see nothing unusual in the aspect of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-room until the tenor inadvertently putting his hand
-upon the back of the arm-chair discovered it to be
-both wet and to the taste salt. He had found a
-clue! In a voice of excitement unworthy of his
-office, the intelligent officer shouted:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ve got &#8217;im sir, we&#8217;ve got &#8217;im! He&#8217;s been
-here! Look&mdash;sea water. We&#8217;ve got &#8217;im!&#8221; He
-looked round wildly as though expecting to see
-the runaway appear suddenly in mid-air between
-the floor and the ceiling.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is certainly most disconcerting,&#8221; said William
-Bailey in evident alarm. &#8220;But wait a minute.
-Perhaps he came in here from the garden to see
-what he could get, found the door locked on the
-outside and made out through the garden again;
-that would explain everything.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No it wouldn&#8217;t sir,&#8221; said the bass respectfully, &#8220;it
-wouldn&#8217;t explain <i>that</i>!&#8221; And his mind, which, if
-slower than his colleague&#8217;s, was prone to sound
-conclusions, pointed his hand to the wreck of the
-fire, to the heaps of soot that lay upon it, and the
-disturbance of the fender.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s gone up the chimney, that&#8217;s what he&#8217;s
-done,&#8221; said the tenor.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s what he&#8217;s done,&#8221; said the bass, putting
-the matter in his own way, &#8220;he&#8217;s gone up the
-chimney.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>William Bailey put his head in and looked up the
-flue, the top of which was a little square of blue
-June sunlight above. &#8220;I don&#8217;t see him,&#8221; said he.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>The constables, one after the other, solemnly
-performed the same feat.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A man couldn&#8217;t get up that,&#8221; said Bailey
-stoutly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah, <i>Stappy</i> could,&#8221; said the bass in a tone of
-one who talks of an old acquaintance, &#8220;Stappy
-could get out of anywhere, or through anything!
-He&#8217;s a wonderful man, sir!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the tenor solved the whole business.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s on the roof!&#8221; he said.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing would suit them but ladders must be
-brought, and they must climb upon the slates, while
-William Bailey, consoling himself with the thought
-that the property was not his, took the opportunity
-of dashing up to the bathroom and banging at the
-door.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dimmy, Dimmy!&#8221; he whispered loudly, &#8220;Dimmy,
-get out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m all wet,&#8221; said Dimmy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re used to that,&#8221; said Bailey unfeelingly.
-&#8220;Dry your feet. Never mind the rest. Quick!&#8221;
-He threw a dressing-gown in, and Dimmy, as clean
-as Sunday morning, emerged.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are your feet quite dry, Dimmy?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said that great Commoner, still a trifle
-ruffled.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well then, let me think.... Go in there.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He pushed Demaine into a little writing-room that
-gave out of the corridor.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now then, go to that little table and sit perfectly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-tight. Do as I tell you and you are saved. Depart-by-but-one-iota-from-my-specific-instructions-and
-though you&#8217;ll ultimately be redeemed by your
-powerful relatives from the ignominy of incarceration,
-you cannot fail to become a laughing-stock before
-your fellow-citizens! Do you take me, Dimmy?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Dimmy, who like the rest of the family was never
-quite certain whether William Bailey&#8217;s final outbreak
-into downright lunacy might not take place at any
-moment, suddenly sat where he was bid, and his
-cousin returned within thirty seconds bearing a
-woman&#8217;s walking-cloak and a respectable bonnet
-which, I regret to say, were those of Parrett herself.
-Bailey huddled the cloak upon the younger man,
-banged the bonnet upon his head, tied the ribbons
-under his chin, disposed his person with the back
-to the door, in the attitude of one writing a note,
-and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dimmy, could you talk in a high voice?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, I can&#8217;t!&#8221; said Dimmy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Try. Say &#8216;Oh don&#8217;t, I&#8217;m busy.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t!&#8221; said Dimmy again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Great heavens! is there no limit to the things
-you can&#8217;t do?&#8221; said William Bailey testily. &#8220;Try.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At a vast sacrifice of that self-respect which was
-his chiefest treasure, Dimmy uttered the grotesque
-words in a faint falsetto.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Excellent!&#8221; said William Bailey. &#8220;Now when
-you hear the word &#8216;Rebecca&#8217; that&#8217;s your cue. Say
-it again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>The second step is easier than the first, and
-Dimmy this time replied at once, the falsetto quite
-just: &#8220;Oh don&#8217;t, I&#8217;m busy.&#8221; And William Bailey
-was satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>By this time the policemen could be heard scrambling
-down from the roof; they had found nothing,
-which, seeing that the roof was in shape exactly pyramidical,
-was not wonderful.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, he&#8217;s gone, sir,&#8221; said the bass a little
-relieved.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We must see the bathroom before we leave,
-though,&#8221; added the tenor fixedly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;By all means,&#8221; said William Bailey, &#8220;if it&#8217;s
-empty,&#8221; he added with a decent reserve.</p>
-
-<p>They went upstairs and on their way he opened
-the writing-room door, and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, there she is. Rebecca!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh don&#8217;t worry me, I&#8217;m busy,&#8221; boomed in a
-manly voice from the seated figure.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sorry I&#8217;m sure sir,&#8221; said the tenor, who was now
-sincerely apologetic. &#8220;We have no desire to disturb
-the lady, but it was our duty.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; said William Bailey hurriedly, &#8220;of
-course,&#8221; and he shut the door, mentally renewing
-his profound faith in the imbecility of political life.</p>
-
-<p>The active and intelligent officers of the law gazed
-mechanically round the bathroom; they were too
-modest to examine a certain damp heap of black
-cloth that was flung huddled into a corner. They
-went out with every assurance that they would not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-have disturbed Mr. Bailey for a moment had they
-not been compelled by that sense of duty to their
-country to which they had already so frequently
-alluded.</p>
-
-<p>William Bailey accompanied them to the gate, in
-the fixed desire to see them off the place, and with
-a heartfelt silent prayer that Parrett would not go
-into the writing-room until he had returned.</p>
-
-<p>As they reached the gate the bass, who remembered
-the necessity for subscriptions to local clubs, charities
-and balls, and especially to the Policemen&#8217;s balls,
-charities and clubs, said once more that he hoped
-Mr. Bailey understood they had only done their
-duty.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; he added, &#8220;we know Mr. Merry very
-well, and we take it you&#8217;re a friend of his.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes sir,&#8221; said the tenor more severely, &#8220;and we
-know who you are. We know everybody in the place,
-sir. It&#8217;s our business. We know what they do, where
-they come from and where they go to. They can&#8217;t
-escape us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>With this cheerful assurance the bass and the tenor
-both slightly saluted, and the gate shut behind them.</p>
-
-<p>Outside the gate a little crowd consisting of the
-two sailor-men, a dingy officer of the mercantile
-marine, three young boys, a draggle-tailed village
-girl, and a spaniel, awaited the return of the police,
-and when it was known that they had drawn blank,
-this little crowd paradoxically enough gave cry.
-Each was now as certain that he had seen the fugitive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-in some one of a hundred opposing and impossible
-directions as he had formerly been determined that
-the refugee was still concealed in Mr. Merry&#8217;s house.</p>
-
-<p>William Bailey hurried back: he went straight to
-the writing-room. He thanked heaven that no one
-had disturbed Rebecca. Without an apology he
-rapidly untied the ribbons of the bonnet, hoicked off
-the cloak and was bearing them back to Parrett&#8217;s
-room when he heard the voice of that admirable
-female raised in hot remonstrance against the misdeeds
-of a domestic.</p>
-
-<p>In tactics as in strategy there is a disposition known
-as the offensive-defensive. William Bailey was
-familiar with it. He adopted it now, and in a voice
-that silenced every other sort, he roared his complaint
-that the servants perpetually left their clothes hanging
-about at random right and left all over the
-house.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Whose is this?&#8221; he demanded, pointing to the
-cloak and bonnet where he had flung them sprawling
-on a chair.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s mine, sir,&#8221; said Parrett with considerable
-dignity.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh it is, is it?&#8221; said Bailey a little mollified.
-&#8220;I&#8217;m sorry, Parrett. If I&#8217;d known it was yours I&#8217;d
-have spoken to you privately.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I never left them there, sir!&#8221; said Parrett all aruffle
-with indignation.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I never said you did, I never said you did. It&#8217;s
-none of my business. I don&#8217;t care who left them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-there; but I will have this house <i>orderly</i> or I will not
-have it at <i>all</i>,&#8221; with which enigmatical sentence for
-the further discipline of Merry&#8217;s impossible household,
-he went back to Demaine in his dressing-gown and
-brought him through the corridor to the study.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now my dear fellow,&#8221; he said, &#8220;are you cold?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said Dimmy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are you hungry?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said Dimmy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are you thirsty?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am very tired,&#8221; said Dimmy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very well then, you shall eat and drink. I will
-try and light the fire.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He did so and the room, which was already warm
-with the June sun, became like an oven. As he rose
-from his chair Demaine said in some anxiety: &#8220;For
-heavens&#8217; sake don&#8217;t send for the servants!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not going to,&#8221; said William Bailey simply.
-He went to a cupboard and brought out some ham, a
-loaf and a bottle of wine.</p>
-
-<p>Demaine ate and drank. When he had eaten and
-drunk he could hardly support himself for fatigue.</p>
-
-<p>William Bailey took him to his own room and told
-him to sleep there. &#8220;I&#8217;ve established,&#8221; he said, in a
-genial tone, &#8220;so healthy a reign of terror in this
-house that you certainly will not be disturbed if you
-sleep in my bed. I will see about the clothes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And thus, after so many and so great adventures,
-George Mulross Demaine slept once again between
-sheets, in a bed well aired, in a room with reasonable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-pictures upon the walls, and reasonable books upon
-the table, with blankets, with curtains, with pillows,
-with mahogany tallboys, with three kinds of looking-glasses,
-with an eider-down quilt, with a deep carpet,
-with a silver reading lamp, soothed by a complete
-cleanliness, and, in a word, amid all that the governing
-classes have very properly secured for themselves
-during their short pilgrimage through the wilderness
-of this world.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIII</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap2">ALL through that hot noon and down the beginning
-of the sun&#8217;s decline, George Mulross
-slept heavily; he slept as in a death, in Parham.</p>
-
-<p>He slept in the house of Carolus Merry Armiger,
-under the shield and tutelage of William Bailey,
-eccentric, and with God&#8217;s benediction upon him.
-His troubles were at an end.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Meanwhile in London, the young and popular
-Prime Minister had received his secretary&#8217;s report.
-The <i>Moon</i> and the <i>Capon</i> were squared.</p>
-
-<p>How squared he was not busy to inquire. Gold
-and silver he had none&mdash;for those purposes at
-least&mdash;that would not be in the best traditions of
-our public life: but they <i>were</i> squared: Edward
-assured him they were squared, and there was an
-end of it.</p>
-
-<p>There was more even than Edward&#8217;s assurance,
-though that was as solid as marble; there were two
-early copies of the papers themselves which had been
-ordered and brought to him. The leader of the one
-dealt with those eternal Concessions in Burma,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-and he smiled. There was not a word about Repton.
-The leader of the other was on Fiddlededee, and the
-Prime Minister experienced an immense relief.</p>
-
-<p>But there was still Demaine,&mdash;or rather, there was
-still no Demaine. And there was still Repton, mad&mdash;mad&mdash;mad!</p>
-
-<p>Between Dolly and the awful unstable equilibrium
-of the modern world, between him and a cosmic
-explosion, was nothing but the four walls round
-Repton, Lady Repton who bored him, and the
-sagacity of Edward. It was a quarter to three, a
-time when meaner men must wend them to the
-House of Commons. He also wended. He was the
-shepherd and he must look after his sheep.</p>
-
-<p>That august assembly was astonished to perceive
-the Premier positively present upon the front bench
-during the process of that appeal to the Almighty
-which precedes the business of the day. But <i>that</i>
-did not get into the papers:&mdash;there is a limit!</p>
-
-<p>As he knelt there he knew that a man whom he
-could not disobey was about to ask a question of
-which he had given private notice. He feared it
-much, he more feared those supplementary questions
-which are so useless to the scheme of our polity
-but which buzz like unnecessary midges round the
-cooking of the national food. And when prayers
-were over and questions begun, not an inquiry as
-to an Admiralty contract, not a simple demand for
-information from the Home Secretary as to the
-incarceration of a beggar or the torture of some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
-insignificant pauper, but put his heart into his
-mouth.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Maloney&#8217;s long cross-examination on the
-matter of the postmistress at Crosshaurigh gave
-him a little breathing space. They couldn&#8217;t bring
-Repton or Demaine in on that! But there was
-an ominous question about a wreck, and who
-should answer it? He had indeed arranged that
-the answer should proceed from the Treasury, but
-the clouds were lowering.</p>
-
-<p>The question came as mild as milk: it was
-concerned with the wreck which still banged and
-battered about on the Sovereign Shoals; it had
-been put down days before, and the chief legal
-adviser of the Crown rose solemnly to reply.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My right honourable friend has asked me to
-answer this question. He has no further information
-beyond that which he has already furnished to
-the honourable gentleman, but every inquiry is being
-made and papers will shortly be laid upon the table
-of the House.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The fanatic rose, the inevitable fanatic, towering
-from the benches, and thundered his supplementary
-demand: What had been done with the gin? He
-was told to give notice of the question.</p>
-
-<p>For three dreadful seconds the Prime Minister
-feared some consequence. His fears were well
-grounded. A gentleman rose and spoke from the
-darkness under the gallery and desired to know why
-the <i>Warden of the Court of Dowry</i> was not present<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
-to deal with matters concerning his Department?
-He would have been reproved by the Chair had not
-the young and popular Prime Minister taken it upon
-himself to rise and reply.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is the first time,&#8221; he said, &#8220;and I hope it will
-be the last, that I have heard the illness of a colleague
-made the excuse for such an interruption.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>From the benches behind him those who knew the
-truth applauded and those who did not applauded
-more loudly still.</p>
-
-<p>With what genius had he not saved the situation!
-And the questions meandered on, and all was well,
-save for that last dreadful query of which he had had
-private notice.</p>
-
-<p>It was put at the end of question-time, not, oddly
-enough, by the member who most coveted the
-apparently vacant Wardenship, nor even by any
-relative of that member, nay, not even by a friend:
-a member surely innocent of all personal motives put
-that question. He desired to know, whether rumours
-appearing in the papers upon the Wardenship of the
-Court of Dowry were well founded, whether the
-Wardenship of the Court of Dowry were not for the
-moment vacant, and if so what steps were being
-taken to fill that vacancy.</p>
-
-<p>The reply was curt and sufficient: &#8220;The honourable
-member must not believe everything he reads in
-the newspapers.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It is not often that wit of a lightning kind falls
-zigzag and blasts the efforts of anarchy in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-National Council. Wit is very properly excluded
-from the exercise of legislative power; but when it
-appears&mdash;when there is good reason for its appearance&mdash;its
-success is overwhelming: and by the
-action of this one brilliant phrase, perhaps the
-most dangerous crisis through which the Constitution
-has passed since the flight of James <small>II.</small> was
-triumphantly passed.</p>
-
-<p>Question-time was over. The young and popular
-Prime Minister, now wholly oblivious of his left lung,
-answered one or two minor questions, gave assurances
-as to the order of business, and left the House
-a happier man than he had entered it. He went
-straight to Downing Street. When he got to his
-room Edward was there awaiting him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They&#8217;ve got Demaine,&#8221; he said.</p>
-
-<p>The luck had turned!</p>
-
-<p>For half a minute Dolly couldn&#8217;t speak: then he
-gasped:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; said Edward. &#8220;I don&#8217;t think
-anybody knows. There was a telephone message
-sent to the Press everywhere.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A thousand horrid thoughts! Found dead? Found
-wandering and imbecile? Found&mdash;&mdash;? He was faster
-bound than ever&mdash;and that just in the hour when he
-must act and decide. He said again:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where did it come from?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I couldn&#8217;t find out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Edward,&#8221; said the Premier faintly, as he sat down<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
-and fell to pieces, &#8220;you know how to do these
-things.... Puff!&mdash; ... Do go like ... a good
-fellow&mdash;find out ... quietly ... ch ... <i>where</i> it
-came from.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edward went into the next room and called up
-009 Central. He was given 1009, kept his temper
-and repeated his call. A Being replied to him in an
-angry woman&#8217;s voice and begged him not to shout
-into the receiver.</p>
-
-<p>He asked for the clerk in charge and waited ten
-minutes. Nothing happened.</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister in his room was not at ease.
-His mood was if anything burdened by the delivery
-of an express message which ran: &#8220;They&#8217;ve found
-Dimmy. M. S.&#8221; The writing was the writing of
-Mary Smith. He asked the messenger with some
-indifference to find out who had sent the message and
-where it had come from.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, in the absence of Edward, he went into
-an outer room and begged them to call up Mrs.
-Smith&#8217;s house. When he returned there was a
-telegram from Charing Cross upon his table which
-ran:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;George found.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There was no signature. He waited patiently for
-the return of Edward or the messenger or of something&mdash;hang
-it all, <i>something</i>!</p>
-
-<p>The little buzzer on his table buzzed gently and
-the telephone whispered into his ear that &#8220;Mrs.
-Demaine wished him to know that Mr. Demaine was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
-found.&#8221; He had already asked &#8220;Where is he?&#8221;
-when he was cut off.</p>
-
-<p>He had received so much information and no more
-when Edward returned with the information that the
-news had come in from Trunk Seven.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What is Trunk Seven?&#8221; said the Prime Minister.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; said Edward.</p>
-
-<p>They sat together for a moment in silence. The
-Premier, as befitted his office, was a man of resource.
-Outside Westminster Bridge Underground Station
-men of insufficient capital but of economic ambition
-deal in the retail commerce of news. It occurred to
-the Prime Minister to reassure himself from their
-posters, and from a room that gave upon Westminster
-Bridge Road, his excellent eyesight&mdash;for it was
-among his points that his eyesight at fifty-four was
-still strong&mdash;perused the placards opposite.</p>
-
-<p>They were clear enough.</p>
-
-<p class="center">&#8220;LOST MINISTER FOUND&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>said the most decent.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">&#8220;DEMAINE RESULT&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>said the <i>Capon</i>, which appeared to have forgotten its
-good manners.</p>
-
-<p>It ought not to be difficult to get the <i>Capon</i>
-without loss of dignity. He returned to his room
-and in about five minutes the <i>Capon</i> was brought to
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Under the heading &#8220;Stop Press News,&#8221; he saw<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-&#8220;Demaine Result,&#8221; and then underneath, more
-courteously: &#8220;Mr. Demaine has been heard of.&#8221; It
-was printed in faint wobbly type in a big blank
-space&mdash;and there was nothing more.</p>
-
-<p>Edward, entering at that moment, told him that
-the exact point from which the message had been
-sent could not be discovered until Brighton had
-cleared.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh!&#8221; said the Prime Minister.</p>
-
-<p>He was going to call up Mary Smith, but Edward
-assured him that nothing more than an inept
-half-wit maid would answer the demand&mdash;he had
-tried it.</p>
-
-<p>Dolly sat on in patience and wondered where
-Demaine had been discovered. The matter was of
-some moment. Without the least doubt he would
-have to make up his mind as to the succession of
-the office that very afternoon, and it was already
-close on five.</p>
-
-<p>Demaine might be discovered suffering from a loss
-of memory (though what he had to remember Dolly
-couldn&#8217;t conceive); he might have been discovered
-in the hands of the police. He might have been
-discovered attempting for some unknown reason to
-fly the country. Till the Premier knew more he
-could not act.</p>
-
-<p>For a good half-hour he persuaded himself that it
-was better to wait. Then he went out and motored
-to Mary&#8217;s.</p>
-
-<p>And Mary of course was not at home.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>He went on to Demaine House, and found there
-nothing but a man making a very careful inventory
-of all the pictures, all the furniture and all the glass.
-He came back to his room, and at last the mystery
-was solved.</p>
-
-<p>All good things come to an end, as do all delays
-and all vexations, and life itself. By a method less
-expeditious than some of those which modern
-civilisation has put at our disposal, the full truth
-was revealed to him.</p>
-
-<p>George Mulross Demaine was at that moment (it
-was six o&#8217;clock) upon that afternoon of Wednesday,
-the 3rd of June, ... drinking brandy and soda in
-great quantities and refusing tea, at the Liverpool
-Street Hotel. A courteous message from the
-Manager thereof was the source of the information,
-and Edward&mdash;Edward who never failed&mdash;had been
-the first to receive it.</p>
-
-<p>The message had gone up and down London
-a good deal before it had got to the House of
-Commons; at Demaine House the Manager had
-been told to try Mary Smith&#8217;s number, and at Mary
-Smith&#8217;s the half-wit having almost had her head
-blown off by Edward&#8217;s repeated violence, very
-sensibly suggested that the Manager should telephone
-direct to the House of Commons and give a
-body peace.</p>
-
-<p>An instant demand (said Edward) that Demaine
-should himself come to the instrument, had been
-followed by a very long pause, after which he was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
-told that the gentleman had gone off in a four-wheeler
-with a lame horse, and had left the bill
-unpaid.</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing to do but to wait.</p>
-
-<p>Half-past six struck, and the quarter. Their fears
-were renewed when, just upon seven, a figure strangely
-but neatly clothed was shown into the room, by a
-servant who displayed such an exact proportion
-between censure and respect as would have puzzled
-the most wearisome of modern dramatists to depict.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
-
-<p>It was Demaine!</p>
-
-<p>His clothes were indeed extraordinary. You could
-not say they fitted, and you could not say they did
-not fit. The trousers and the coat and the waistcoat
-were made of one cloth, a quiet yellow. The lines
-of the shoulders, the arms, the legs, the very stomach,
-were right lines: they were lines proceeding from
-point to point; they were lines taking the shortest
-route from point to point. They were straight: they
-were plumb straight. The creases upon the trousers
-were not those adumbrations of creases which the
-most vulgar of the smart permit to hint at the
-newness of their raiment: they were solid ridges
-resembling the roofs of new barns or the keels of
-racing ships. The lapels of the coat did not sit well
-upon it; rather they were glued to it. The waistcoat
-did not fit, it stuck. And above this strange
-accoutrement shone, with more fitness than Edward<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
-and Dolly could have imagined, the simple face of
-George Mulross Demaine.</p>
-
-<p>His hair&mdash;oh horror!&mdash;was oiled; one might have
-sworn that his face was oiled as well.</p>
-
-<p>The colour of his skin resembled cedarwood save
-on the nose, where it resembled old oak. If ever a
-man was fit, that man was George Mulross, but if
-ever a man was changed, George Mulross was also
-that man.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sit down,&#8221; said the Prime Minister delightedly.
-&#8220;Oh my dear George, sit down!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t,&#8221; said George, using that phrase perhaps
-for the twentieth time during the last forty-eight
-hours. &#8220;They&#8217;re ready-made,&#8221; he explained, blushing
-(as Homer beautifully puts it of Andromache)
-through his tan. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t sit down in the train and
-I didn&#8217;t sit down in the cab.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where have you been, George?&#8221; asked the Prime
-Minister.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve had an adventure,&#8221; said George modestly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But hang it all, where have you <i>been</i>?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been to sea,&#8221; said George.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh-h-h-h-h-h!&#8221; said the Prime Minister.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Beastly luck, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; said George simply.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s worse than that,&#8221; said Edward grimly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221; asked George with something like fright
-upon his honest if oleaginous face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, never mind,&#8221; said Dolly. &#8220;It must have
-been pretty tough. Were you blown out to sea?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>George Mulross Demaine&#8217;s only reply was to feel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
-inside his coat for the place where pockets are often
-constructed for the well-to-do, but where no pocket
-seemed to exist. He made five or six good digs for
-it, but it was not there. He looked up huntedly and
-said: &#8220;Wait a minute.&#8221; He put his hand into his
-waistcoat. There again there was no receptacle,
-but that which should have held his watch&mdash;and even
-the young idealism of the Prime Minister permitted
-him to wonder why no watch was there. Then
-George did what I hope no member of the governing
-class has ever done before&mdash;he felt in his trousers
-pocket, and thence he pulled out a bit of paper.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he said, concealing the writing from them,
-&#8220;You&#8217;re quite right. I <i>was</i> blown out to sea. I had
-a&#8221;&mdash;(here he peered closely at the paper and apparently
-could not make out a word.) &#8220;Oh yes,&#8221; he
-said, &#8220;a terrible time.&#8221; His diction was singularly
-monotonous. &#8220;I-thought-I-should-never-have-survived-that-terrible-night.
-A-foreign-ship-passed-me-but-the-scoundrels-left-me-to-my-fate.
-I-was-nearly-dead-when-under-the-first-rays-of-morning-I-saw-the-British-flag-and-my-heart-leaped-within-me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edward, though not usually impetuous, bereft him
-of the document, and as he did so the Prime Minister
-saw the square firm characters.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good lord!&#8221; shouted the Premier, &#8220;It&#8217;s Bill!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And it <i>was</i> the writing of William Bailey.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;William&#8217;s been very good to me, if you mean
-that,&#8221; said Demaine reproachfully.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>The Prime Minister burst into the first hearty
-laugh he had enjoyed in fifteen years. After all,
-men like Bailey were of some use in the world!</p>
-
-<p>In spite of Dimmy&#8217;s obvious choler, with the tears
-of laughter in his eyes, and interrupted by little
-screams of merriment, the Prime Minister completed
-the reading.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;I bit my arm, I sucked the blood, I cried &#8220;A
-sail! a sail!&#8221;; and in less time than it takes to read
-this, hearty English hands were tugging at the oars.&#8217;
-(&#8220;Oh Edward, Edward!&#8221; gasped the exhausted
-man, and when he had recovered his breath continued:)
-&#8216;With the tenderness almost of a woman
-he lifted ...&#8217; (&#8220;Who lifted you?&#8221; he asked between
-his shrieks and wagging his forefinger to George
-Demaine. &#8220;Oh George, who lifted you?&#8221;) ... &#8216;He
-lifted me on board the good ship <i>Lily</i>, and when I
-told him of the treacherous action of the foreigners,
-muttered &#8220;Scoundrel&#8221; between his teeth. But a man
-has naught to fear when the brave hearts of his
-countrymen are his shield. They landed me at
-Lowestoft, pressing into my hands their petty
-savings, and left me with three hearty cheers that
-did me almost as much good as to feel my feet once
-more upon British soil.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister laid his head upon the table,
-wagged it gently from side to side, uttered a series
-of incongruous sounds, and very nearly broke
-down.</p>
-
-<p>George Mulross Demaine was exceedingly angry.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>&#8220;It may seem very funny to you,&#8221; he began,
-&#8220;but&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t, George!&#8221; said the Premier, going off
-again, &#8220;Don&#8217;t!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But George was boiling. &#8220;How would you like
-it&mdash;&mdash;&#8221; he began shouting.... When the door
-opened and there was announced with extreme
-solemnity Mr. Pickle, Mr. Hogge, Mr. Gracechurch,
-Mr. Fuell, Mr. Nydd, Sir John Clegg, Lord Cuthbertson,
-and last but by no means least, Mr.
-Howll....</p>
-
-<p>One would have said that nothing had happened.
-There were three doors to the room&mdash;as is proper to
-every room in which farces are played.</p>
-
-<p>Through one of these Edward very gently led the
-stiff but still burning George.</p>
-
-<p>Through the second appeared an official gentleman
-commonly present at interviews of this kind.</p>
-
-<p>Through the third the deputation had entered;
-and the young and popular Prime Minister, all
-sympathy, all heart, all ears, all teeth, all intelligence,
-heard such an indictment of the maladministration
-of Spitzbergen by the infamous King of Bohemia as
-he had perhaps not listened to more than thirty-eight
-times during the course of the last two years.</p>
-
-<p>Edward took George by the arm through room
-after room, down a corridor, into a hall, then as
-though by magic an excellent motor appeared.</p>
-
-<p>They got in, Edward still making himself perfectly
-charming, Dimmy in a constrained attitude<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-stretched tangentially to the edge of the seat, and
-the motor drove them for a very great number of
-miles, during which journey Edward learned all the
-main story; the robbery, the refuge aboard-ship, the
-escape, and the fortunate discovery of William Bailey.</p>
-
-<p>George was given to understand with that method
-and insistence most proper to his character that <i>that</i>
-story had better be forgotten and that only what
-he had been given to read,&mdash;and only the gist of
-that,&mdash;might very well be published to his wife and
-to the world....</p>
-
-<p>It was an understood matter. George did now
-and then like to row and fish; a friend had asked
-him to run down to Port Victoria&mdash;it was only an
-hour; the friend hadn&#8217;t turned up. George only
-meant to go out for a minute, put up the sprits&#8217;l
-like a fool, got blown right away in front of a
-so&#8217;wester into the Swin; then the wind going round
-a point-o&#8217;-two got blown, begad, right over the Gunfleet.
-High tide luckily, and the rest naturally
-followed.</p>
-
-<p>These nautical experiences filled George with
-doubts.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There wasn&#8217;t any so&#8217;wester,&#8221; he said with bovine
-criticism.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You silly ass,&#8221; said Edward, &#8220;who notices a
-thing like that in London?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;d notice it at sea,&#8221; said George with profound
-conviction.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Anyhow, unless you want a good story against<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-you to the end of your life, you&#8217;ve got to be outside
-for thirty-six hours, and you&#8217;ve got to land a dam
-long way off from Parham,&mdash;I can tell you that!&#8221;
-said Edward firmly.</p>
-
-<p>And George agreed.</p>
-
-<p>They dined together at Richmond, which suburban
-town they had reached by Edward&#8217;s directions, and
-George, replete after so much suffering, became most
-genial. He betrayed in his conversation the fact
-that Sudie might or might not know the truth; he
-had not dared to communicate with her. William
-Bailey had done so after getting his new clothes, but
-there had been no one at home. There was only
-a man in, making an inventory, and the footman
-thought the message had something to do with him.
-What Sudie might have heard from others he didn&#8217;t
-know.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where did the telephone message come from?&#8221;
-asked Edward who remembered the torturing anxiety
-of his Chief upon that point which now seemed so
-futile.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; George bleated, if I may use so
-disrespectful a term of a man with 100 a week. &#8220;I
-really don&#8217;t know. He hired a motor, I know that,
-and he drove it himself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh he did, did he? Where did he drive it to?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To a station,&#8221; said George lucidly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A long way off?&#8221; asked Edward.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh dear!&#8221; said George, &#8220;Don&#8217;t ask me. Right
-away over all sorts of places.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>&#8220;Now, Demaine, listen,&#8221; said Evans, concentrating
-&#8220;Could you see the sea?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said George with a shudder.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Could you see the river,&mdash;anything?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said George. &#8220;We got there at three, and
-William telephoned from the station.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But damn it all!&#8221; cried Edward, &#8220;what was the
-name of the station?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; said George, &#8220;I didn&#8217;t notice.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edward tried another approach. &#8220;Were there
-houses round it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh yes, lots,&#8221; said George, &#8220;lots&mdash;and they had
-laurels, and there was a lot of gas lamp-posts, and
-there was a tramway&mdash;oh it was a beastly place!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Then Evans understood and Kent, the Garden of
-England, was in his mind: Kent and one of its deeply
-bosomed towns, Chislehurst haply or St. Mary Cray.
-&#8220;But why did you go to Liverpool Street when you
-got in at Cannon Street?&#8221; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How did you know I got in at Cannon Street?&#8221;
-asked George with wide-open eyes like a child who
-sees the secretly marked card come out of the
-pack.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never mind. Why did you go to Liverpool
-Street?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;William told me to,&#8221; answered George simply.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll make a good front benchman,&#8221; said
-Edward half to himself. &#8220;Do you know why he
-told you to go to Liverpool Street?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said George, &#8220;I don&#8217;t.... I don&#8217;t know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>&#8220;Well,&#8221; said Edward, as though conveying a profound
-secret, &#8220;if ever you happen to be at Lowestoft,
-that&#8217;s the way you get in to London.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, is it?&#8221; said George blankly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where did he buy your clothes?&#8221; asked Edward
-suddenly, &#8220;what shop?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, in Parham somewhere,&#8221; said George, &#8220;I
-don&#8217;t know where. I put &#8217;em on before I started of
-course. I couldn&#8217;t stay in a dressing-gown.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A thought occurred to Edward. He pulled back
-the collar of Demaine&#8217;s coat, and saw marked upon a
-tape, &#8220;Harrington Brothers, Parham.&#8221; Without so
-much as asking his leave he cut the label.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s on the shirt?&#8221; he asked laconically.</p>
-
-<p>George opened his waistcoat and looked. &#8220;Six
-sixty-six,&#8221; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is the mark of the beast,&#8221; said Edward.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who do you mean?&#8221; said George, bewildered.
-&#8220;William Bailey lent it to me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If you&#8217;d told me that,&#8221; said Edward, &#8220;I wouldn&#8217;t
-have asked you what the mark was; and what&#8217;s more,
-if you had told me the mark I could have told you
-the owner. Good lord!&#8221; he muttered, &#8220;what other
-man in England!... Had he hauled his Jewish
-Encyclopedia down there?&#8221; he suddenly turned
-round to ask.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said George eagerly, &#8220;how did you
-know?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh nothing,&#8221; said Edward, &#8220;only I know he is
-fond of it. Did you eat ham?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said George thinking closely, &#8220;I did. Yes,
-I remember distinctly, I did.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The expression of Edward was completely satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>The time had come for their return. George,
-whose carelessness about money had received very
-distinct and very severe shocks in the last few
-months&mdash;nay, in the last few days&mdash;insisted upon
-paying, and Edward, who knew more than was good
-for him, allowed him to pay: and further advised
-him to spend the morrow, Thursday, in bed.
-&#8220;At any rate,&#8221; he concluded, &#8220;not where the sharks
-can get at you. Wait till Dolly sends, and that&#8217;ll be
-Friday, I know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They drove back to Demaine House, and Sudie,
-having heard the news from half London, was left to
-deal with the truant as she saw fit.</p>
-
-<p>As for Edward, he was back late at night in
-Downing Street where bread-and-butter called him.
-But he found his chief with the mood of that happy
-afternoon long past, for, one encumbrance well discharged,
-the other did but the more gravely harass
-him, and the memory of Repton, of Repton doing he
-knew not what,&mdash;perhaps at that very moment
-wrecking any one of twenty political arrangements&mdash;tortured
-him beyond bearing.</p>
-
-<p>But as the Premier had justly thought that afternoon,
-the tide had turned; and when the tide
-turns in the fairway of a harbour, though it turns
-here and there with eddies and with doubt, at last
-it sets full, and so it was now with the fortunes of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-our beloved land and of its twentyfold beloved
-Cabinet.</p>
-
-<p>Repton was at that very moment restored to
-his right mind&mdash;his Caryll&#8217;s Ganglia were restored to
-their normal function&mdash;and would never tell the truth
-again.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIV</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap2">ALL night Sir Charles Repton had tossed in an
-uneasy slumber; all night his faithful wife
-Maria had sat up watching him. She dared not trust
-a trained nurse; she dared not trust a single member
-of the household, for he muttered as he slept strange
-things concerning the governance of England, and
-stranger things concerning his own financial schemes.</p>
-
-<p>At one moment, it was about half-past four in the
-morning,&mdash;much at the time when Demaine, seventy
-miles away, upon the bosom of the ocean, had woken
-to see the sun&mdash;his predecessor in the Wardenship of
-the Court of Dowry (and still the titular holder of
-that office) had started suddenly up in bed, and
-violently denounced a man with an Austrian name as
-having cheated him by obtaining prior information
-upon the Budget. He asked rapidly in his mania
-why Consols had gone up in the first week of April,
-and would not be pacified until his wife, with the tact
-that is born of affection, had assumed the rle of the
-unpleasing foreigner and had confessed all. Then
-and then only was he pacified and fell into the first
-true sleep he had enjoyed for twenty-four hours. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
-slept until eleven, and she, brave woman that she was,
-snatched some little sleep at his side, but only upon
-the edge of sleep as it were, waking at any moment
-to shield him from the consequences of his disease.</p>
-
-<p>When he woke she herself made it her duty to go
-downstairs and fetch him his breakfast, but though
-his repose had recruited his body, his dear mind was
-still unhinged.</p>
-
-<p>He would have it that the Royal Family when they
-invested in some concern were not registered under
-their true names, and he began a long wild rambling
-harangue about the death duties and some new story
-about yet another outlandish name, and the insufficiency
-of the taxes for which it was responsible.
-The whole thing was described in a manner so
-clear and sensible as added to the horror of the
-contrast between his sanity and that other dreadful
-mood.</p>
-
-<p>By noon, still lying in his bed, he was contrasting
-to her wearied ear the cost of the Tubes in London
-as against those in Paris, and making jokes about
-&#8220;boring through the London clay.&#8221; He went on to
-ask why a friend of his had drawn his salary as a
-Minister for some little time after his death, and
-suddenly went off at a tangent upon the noble
-self-sacrifice of Lord Axton in exiling himself to a
-tropic clime, threatening that unfortunate peer with
-certain bankruptcy and possible imprisonment unless
-a report upon the Bitsu Marsh were favourable.
-Then for a blessed half-hour he was silent.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>At the end of it he called for a pen and paper, and
-wrote a number of short notes. Luckily he gave
-them to her to be posted; she read but a few, and
-with trembling hands she burned them all, even the
-stamps, though she knew how particular he had been
-in the old days on that detail.</p>
-
-<p>He dressed and came down. She persuaded him&mdash;oh
-how lovingly,&mdash;to sit in his favourite room
-overlooking the Park. She forgot that it overlooked
-the crowded throng, and from close upon one until
-late in the afternoon this devoted angel clung to him
-while he poured out meaningless denunciations of all
-his world, up hill and down dale, relieved from time
-to time (a relief to him but not to her) by a sudden
-throwing up of the window, and an address to the
-passers-by.</p>
-
-<p>He warned more than one omnibus as it passed, of
-an approaching combine between the various lines,
-and urged the shareholders to buy while yet there
-was time. At one awful moment he had begun
-excitedly to point out the figure of a Bishop upon the
-opposite pavement and to begin a full biography of
-that hierarch, when she thought it her duty to slam
-down the window and to bear the weight of his anger
-rather than permit the scene.</p>
-
-<p>Small knots of people gathered outside the house,
-but the police had been warned and they were
-easily dispersed, with no necessity for violence beyond
-the loss of a tooth or two on the part of the
-crowd.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>As though her task were not enough, the house was
-full of the noise of bells, message after message
-calling for news and for information, but she had
-already given orders to the secretary to write out
-whatever commonplace messages might occur to him,
-and he faithfully performed his duty.</p>
-
-<p>In her confusion she could see no issue but to try
-yet another night&#8217;s sleep, and when he carried his
-hand to his head as he now and then did, when the
-touch of pain stung him, she comforted herself with
-this assurance, that a paroxysm of such violence
-could not long endure.</p>
-
-<p>I say a paroxysm of such violence, though there
-was nothing violent in the man&#8217;s demeanour: the
-horror lay in the cold contrast between the pleasant
-easy tone in which the things were said and the
-things that were said in that pleasant easy tone, while
-the violence was no more than the violence of contrast
-between his absurd affirmations and the quiet current
-of the national life.</p>
-
-<p>The printing of one-tenth of those simple, easily
-delivered words might have ruined the country. We
-owe it to Lady Repton&mdash;and I trust it will never be
-forgotten&mdash;that no syllable of them all was printed,
-and that the greater part of them were not even heard
-by any other ear than her own.</p>
-
-<p>She had persuaded him to an early dinner; she
-had even put it at the amazing hour of half-past
-seven. She had ordered such food as she knew he
-best loved, and the wine that soothed him most&mdash;which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-happened to be a Norman champagne. She
-was particular to request a full service of attendance,
-for her experience told her that in such surroundings
-he was ever at his best.</p>
-
-<p>Another attack of pain in the head seized him and
-passed. She sat doggedly, and endured. This
-admirable wife after her day-long watch was
-exhausted and heart-sick. She saw no issue anywhere.
-She sat by her husband&#8217;s side, starting
-nervously at the least sound from below, and
-listening to his impossible commentaries upon
-contemporary life, his hair-raising stories of his
-friends, his colleagues and even of her own religious
-pastors, and his bouts of self-revelations, or rather let
-us hope, of diseased imaginings, when there was put
-into her hand an express letter.</p>
-
-<p>The superscription was peculiar; it ran:</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="gapright">To the Rt. Hon.</span><br />
-<span class="gapright">To the</span><br />
-<span class="gap2">The Lady C. Repton, M.V.O.</span></p>
-
-<p>She opened it in wonderment. Its contents were far
-simpler than its exterior: they ran as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;<span class="smcap">Madam</span>,&mdash;Your husband&#8217;s case noted as per
-enclosed cutting. I know what is wrong with him
-and I can cure him. My price is five hundred dollars
-($500.00) one hundred pounds (100). The operation
-is warranted not to take more than ten minutes of his
-valuable time.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>&#8220;Will call upon you when you are through tea
-and he is quite rested, somewheres round eight o&#8217;clock.</p>
-
-<p class="right">&#8220;Yrs. etc., &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; <span class="smcap">Scipio Knickerbocker</span>&#8221;<br />
-</p></div>
-
-<p>Caught in the fold of this short note was a newspaper
-paragraph and a card printed in gold letters upon
-imitation ivory:</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Dr. Scipio Knickerbocker, M.D.</span><br />
-415 Tenth St.<br />
-<span class="gap2">London, Ont.</span><br />
-
-<span class="gap4">And the Savoy Hotel.</span></p>
-
-<p>Had she been alone she would have prayed for
-guidance.</p>
-
-<p>Eight o&#8217;clock, of all hours! And what was
-&#8220;Ont.&#8221;?</p>
-
-<p>Drowning women catch at straws. Under no
-other conceivable circumstances would Lady Repton
-have caught at such a wretched straw as this. But
-the faculty had deserted her, she had no remedy; she
-saw, she knew, everybody knew, that her husband
-was mad; she divined from twenty indications and
-especially from the suddenness of the pain, that
-the madness was some simple case of mechanical
-pressure. And suppose this man really knew how
-to cure him? She dared not ask her husband to put
-yet earlier the hour of his meal, at which he had
-already grumbled; beside which, it was too late.
-The incomprehensible Scipio would arrive.</p>
-
-<p>She was still in an agony of doubt when she
-accompanied her husband (who as he went down<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
-the stairs and entered the dining-room was chatting
-gaily upon the amours of a prominent member of
-the Opposition) and as their lonely meal proceeded
-in the presence of those great over-dressed mutes,
-their servants, to all her other anxieties was added
-her irresolution upon the prime question, whether
-she should or should not accept the desperate
-aid of an utterly unknown man, perhaps an
-adventurer.</p>
-
-<p>Just as Sir Charles had finished his soup, and
-with it his amusing little story about the Baronetcy
-which though it had been paid for by the son and
-heir (who was solvent) came out after all in the
-Birthday List as a Knighthood,&mdash;just as he had
-finished his soup I say, he gave a loud cry and put
-both hands to his head just behind the ears.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Crickey how it hurts, William!&#8221; he remarked to
-the butler.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, Sir Charles,&#8221; said the butler in the tone of
-a hierarch at his devotions.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s gone now,&#8221; said the Baronet, with a sigh of
-relief, &#8220;but it <i>does</i> hurt when it comes! What&#8217;s the
-fish?&#8221; and he continued his meal.</p>
-
-<p>He drank a great gulp of wine and was better....
-&#8220;It&#8217;s dry,&#8221; he said doubtfully, &#8220;it&#8217;s too dry ...
-but there are advantages to <i>that</i>. You know why
-they make wine dry, William?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, Sir Charles.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh! you do, do you? You&#8217;re getting too smart.
-You couldn&#8217;t tell me, I&#8217;ll bet brazils!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>&#8220;No, Sir Charles.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why,&#8221; said Repton with a merry wink, &#8220;it&#8217;s to
-save your mouth next morning!&#8221; Then up went
-his hands to his head again and he groaned.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is your head hurting you again, darling?&#8221; said
-Lady Repton when she saw the gesture repeated.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, damnably,&#8221; said Sir Charles in a loud tone.
-&#8220;It&#8217;s hurting just under both ears, just where Sambo
-gave ... ah! that&#8217;s better ... (a gasp) ... gave
-the Tomtit that nasty one in the big fight I went
-to see last week&mdash;the night I telephoned home to
-say that I was kept at the House,&#8221; he added by
-way of explanation.</p>
-
-<p>The servants stood around like posts, and Lady
-Repton endured her agony.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think what I should have enjoyed most,&#8221; mused
-Sir Charles after this revelation, &#8220;would have been
-to run across old Prout just as I came out of that
-Club. Not that he knows anything about such
-things, but still, it was a pretty lousy place. Besides
-which, the people I was with! It would have been
-fun to see old Prout sit up. Shouldn&#8217;t wonder if
-he&#8217;d refused to let me speak at the Parson&#8217;s Show
-after that; and in <i>that</i> case,&#8221; ended Sir Charles
-significantly tapping his trousers pocket, &#8220;there&#8217;d
-be an end to the wherewith!&#8221; He nodded genially
-to his wife. &#8220;There&#8217;d be a drying up of the needful!
-Wouldn&#8217;t there, William?&#8221; he suddenly demanded
-of the gorgeous domestic, who was at that moment
-pouring him out some wine.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>&#8220;Yes, Sir Charles,&#8221; said the hireling in a tone
-of the deepest respect.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s what keeps &#8217;em going, my dear,&#8221; he said,
-&#8220;and here&#8217;s to you,&#8221; he added, lifting his glass.
-&#8220;Are you put out about something?&#8221; he said, with
-real kindness in his voice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s nothing, it&#8217;s nothing,&#8221; said that really
-Christian woman, nearly bursting into tears.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m really very sorry if I&#8217;ve hurt your feelings in
-any way, my dear,&#8221; said Charles Repton.</p>
-
-<p>No symptom of his malady was more distressing
-than this unmanly softness, it was so utterly different
-from his daily habit.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d never dream of wounding her ladyship intentionally;
-would I, William?&#8221; he asked again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, Sir Charles,&#8221; said William.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think we&#8217;d better go upstairs, dear,&#8221; said the
-unfortunate lady. &#8220;Oh dear!&#8221; she sighed as a
-sudden peal rang through the house, and then subsiding,
-she said: &#8220;Oh it&#8217;s only a bell!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Her ladyship&#8217;s nervous to-night, William,&#8221; said
-Repton as one man should to another.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, Sir Charles,&#8221; repeated William in a grave
-monotone.</p>
-
-<p>A card was brought in upon a salver of enormous
-dimensions and of remarkable if hideous workmanship.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Repton recognised the name.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I must go out a moment. I&#8217;ll be back in a
-moment, Charles.&#8221; She looked at him with a world<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-of anxiety and affection, and left him chatting gaily
-to the servant.</p>
-
-<p>Scipio Knickerbocker stood without.</p>
-
-<p>Any doubts upon the matter were settled not only
-by his appearance but by his first phrase which ran
-in a singular intonation:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Lady <i>C.</i> Repton? I am Scipio Knickerbocker,
-M.D. (Phillipsville), Ma&#8217;am,&#8221;&mdash;and he bowed. He
-was an exceedingly small man; he wore very long
-hair beautifully parted in the middle; his jaw was so
-square, deep and thrust forward as to be a positive
-malformation, but to convey at the same time an
-impression of indomitable will, not to say mulish
-obstinacy. His arms and legs were evidently too
-thin for health, and the development of his chest was
-deplorable. He was dressed in exceedingly good
-grey cloth, but his collar, oddly enough, was of
-celluloid. His buttoned boots were of patent leather,
-his tie had been tied once and for ever, and sewed
-into the shape it bore. He carried in his left hand
-an ominous little black leather bag.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come into this room,&#8221; said Lady Repton hurriedly.
-She took him into a small room next to the dining-room,
-and communicating with it by a little door;
-she switched on the electric light and stood while she
-asked him breathlessly what credentials he had.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ma&#8217;am,&#8221; said the physician in a metallic staccato,
-&#8220;I hev no credentials. What I propose to-night will
-be my sole credential.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In the silence before her reply, Sir Charles&#8217; merry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-monologue, occasionally broken by the grave assent
-of the butler, could be heard in the next room.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What do you say you can do?&#8221; she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ma&#8217;am, let me first tell <i>you</i> right now what
-the Senator&#8217;s gotten wrawng with him. In nineteen
-fourteen, month of September, I could not hev told
-you; but in nineteen fourteen, month of October,
-I could: fur your distinguished British physicist
-<i>and</i> biologist, Henry Upton, then pro-mulgated his
-eppoch-making discovery. You hev hurd tell of
-Caryll&#8217;s Ganglia?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said Lady Repton nervously, and in a
-quavering voice, &#8220;I have not.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ma&#8217;am,&#8221; said the Imperial authority with perfect
-composure, &#8220;I hev them here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He dived into his bag and produced a little card
-on which was perfectly indicated the back of the
-human head, only with the skin and hair removed;
-two lumps on either side of the neck of this diagram
-bore in large red letters, &#8220;Caryll&#8217;s Ganglia,&#8221; and two
-white lines leading from them bore in smaller
-type, &#8220;Caryll&#8217;s Ducts.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This card he gravely put into her hands. She
-looked at it with some disgust: it reminded her of
-visits to the butchers&#8217; during the impecuniosity of
-her early married life.</p>
-
-<p>When, as the Son of Empire fondly imagined,
-his hostess had thoroughly grasped the main lines
-of cerebral anatomy, he suddenly thrust his hand
-into the bag again and pulled out a little pamphlet,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-which, as it is carefully printed at the end of this
-book and as the reader will most certainly skip it, I
-shall not inflict upon her in this place.</p>
-
-<p>It was a reproduction, in portable form, of the
-great lecture delivered in the January of that year
-at the Royal Institute. It set forth the late Henry
-Upton&#8217;s discovery that Caryll&#8217;s Ganglia were the seat
-of self-restraint and due caution in the Human Brain.</p>
-
-<p>The poor woman was too bewildered to make
-head or tail of it, and whether the reader give herself
-the pains to peruse it or no is indifferent, for
-its contents in no way affect this powerful and
-moving tale.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Madame,&#8221; he said when she lifted her eyes from
-it and as he fondly imagined had mastered its details,&mdash;&#8220;you
-do not perhaps see the con-nection.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her face assured him that she did not.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Neither,&#8221; he added grandiloquently, &#8220;did the
-world, until I perceived that if indeed such functions
-attached to Caryll&#8217;s Ganglia, why the least obstruction
-of their ducts would condemn the sufferer to
-occasional violent pain accompanied by such inability
-to refrain from expression as must ruin his career
-and ultimately make a wreck of his bodily frame.
-Madame, cases of such obstruction I hev found to
-hev occurred in the ducts. Madame, <i>I</i> discovered
-by what slight touch of the lancet the tiny <i>im</i>pediment
-could be instantly removed. Madame,&#8221; he
-continued, &#8220;the Caryll&#8217;s ducts in Sir Charles&#8217; head
-are ob-structed, hence the recurrent pain and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
-lamentable attack of <small>VERACITITIS</small> from which he
-in-dub-it-ab-ly suffers.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Velossy what?&#8221; gasped Lady Repton.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Veracititis</i>, Ma&#8217;am. The phrase is my own; for
-it is I who have identified the relation between the
-ganglia and the distressing symptoms you have
-observed. He stands before you, <i>he</i> does. Madame,
-it is already enshrined in the proofs of the Columbia
-Encyclopedia&#8221;&mdash;he dived once more into his bag
-and handed her yet another paper&mdash;&#8220;as <i>Veracititis
-Knickerbockeriensis</i>. In Ontario since Washington&#8217;s
-Birthday, we hev hed three cases; I was called over
-privately a month ago for a most distressing case,
-luckily suppressed&mdash;never hurd of, Madame, outside
-the family. I hev operated with success. Ma&#8217;am, I
-can operate with success upon your husband.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At this moment a loud scream of pain from the
-next room, followed by a gasp of relief and the
-expletive &#8220;Great Csar&#8217;s Ghost!&#8221; almost decided
-Sir Charles&#8217; faithful spouse. Another scream that
-proved the spasms to be increasing in violence quite
-decided her. She hurriedly re-entered the dining-room,
-found Sir Charles white with the severity of
-the suffering, and took him gently by the hand.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Darling,&#8221; she said, &#8220;I have a practitioner who
-can relieve this. He is waiting for you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh,&#8221; sighed Sir Charles, as the pain left him, &#8220;I&#8217;m
-glad to hear it, profoundly glad. They&#8217;re all such
-scoundrels, Maria, ... but if he&#8217;s a surgeon and can
-cut something out, I&#8217;ll trust him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>&#8220;It won&#8217;t be as bad as that,&#8221; said Maria, tenderly
-helping the Baronet out through the small door
-towards the inner room.</p>
-
-<p>Hardly had he set his eyes on the little doctor
-when he burst into a hearty laugh.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What a ridiculous little ass, Maria!&#8221; he said at
-the top of his voice. &#8220;Good lord, what a little
-rat!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>If proof were wanted of the truth of Scipio&#8217;s
-contention, his demeanour at this painful moment
-was sufficient. It was plainly evident to Lady
-Repton&#8217;s not insufficient dose of intellect that no
-man would have stood firm who had not seen the
-ghastly disease in its worst forms before.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; said Sir Charles, &#8220;so you&#8217;re going to cut
-me up, are you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh! <i>My</i> no!&#8221; said Scipio. &#8220;Lady Repton
-would never hev permitted a serious operation without
-your full con-currence. My proposition, Senator, is
-nawthing but two slight pricks in the neighbourhood
-of the pain. Ye&#8217;ll hardly feel it, but it&#8217;ll change
-ye,&#8221; added the determined Knickerbocker with a
-suspicion of a smile upon his bony jaws.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What with?&#8221; said Sir Charles a little nervously.
-(&#8220;Ouch!&#8221; by way of digression as there was a stab
-of pain.) &#8220;Yes, anything, s&#8217;long as you can do it
-quickly.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It don&#8217;t take but a moment,&#8221; said Scipio. &#8220;But
-there&#8217;d better be some one hold your hands. There&#8217;s
-no pain worth accountin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>&#8220;Might we re-quest the Senator to be seated?&#8221;
-he politely suggested to the lady.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Charles as politely commented: &#8220;I&#8217;m not a
-Senator, you skimpy little fool! Good lord, Maria,
-where do people like that come from?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And as he chatted thus, Scipio passed one firm hard
-skeleton hand over the top of that great brain, and
-with the other, even as Sir Charles, with his chin bent
-upon his chest, was occupied in explaining to Maria
-the physical deficiencies of his medical attendant,
-he put the edge of the lancet in the precise position
-behind the ear which his science had discovered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s his beastly Yankee accent, if it isn&#8217;t that
-beastlier thing, the Australian,&#8221; the great Imperialist
-was in the act of saying when the lancet struck
-suddenly and was as suddenly withdrawn.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re quite right, monkey,&#8221; said Sir Charles in
-a weaker voice, &#8220;it&#8217;s only a prick, and I think&#8221;&mdash;his
-voice still sinking,&mdash;&#8220;that it&#8217;s only due to your
-great position in the medical world that I should
-express my heartfelt thanks for your courteous
-services. It is men like you, sir, who mean to
-suffering humanity....&#8221; Sir Charles suddenly
-stopped. His voice grew a little louder. &#8220;Did you
-say he was a Yankee or an Australian, Maria?
-Australians have the Cockney &#8216;a&#8217;; a filthy thing it
-is, too!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The skeleton hand was poised again upon Sir
-Charles&#8217; head; he felt his chin pressed down upon
-his chest; there was another sharp little stroke, this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-time behind his left ear, and with a deep sigh he
-seemed to sink into himself.</p>
-
-<p>Scipio quietly touched the delicate point of his
-instrument with antiseptic wool, put it back into
-its case and watched his patient with a professional
-eye.</p>
-
-<p>The man was dazed. He gripped his wife&#8217;s hand
-until he almost caused her pain, and they could
-hear him mutter disconnected words:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The highest possible appreciation.... My
-public position alone ... sufficient reward ... in
-its way a link between ... provinces ...
-our great Empire ... daughter ... daughter ...
-daughter....&#8221; Then almost inaudibly &#8220;... <small>nations</small>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For perhaps five minutes the Great Statesman
-was silent, and his breathing was so regular that he
-might have been asleep.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Will he go to sleep, doctor?&#8221; whispered Lady
-Repton.</p>
-
-<p>Scipio Knickerbocker shook his head. &#8220;He&#8217;ll be
-less rattled every minute, Ma&#8217;am,&#8221; was his pronouncement,
-and once again he proved his science
-by the justice of his prognostication.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Charles stood up, a little groggy, leant one
-hand on the back of a chair, took a deep breath,
-stood up more strongly, and said at last in a voice
-still weak but quite clear:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank you sir. How can I thank you? I seem
-to remember&#8221;&mdash;he passed his hand over his forehead&mdash;&#8220;I
-seem to remember some one telling me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
-that you were born,&mdash;though I assure you it is
-impossible for us in England to distinguish it,&mdash;in
-one of our Britains Overseas. Sir, an action such as
-that which you have just done&mdash;a good deed if I
-may call it so,&#8221; he went on more loudly, seizing
-Scipio&#8217;s right hand between both of his, &#8220;is a
-cement of Empire! I will never forget it, never!
-Will you excuse me a moment sir, while I speak to
-Lady Repton?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>With his best and most winning smile Sir Charles
-asked this question of Scipio, who for the tenth or
-eleventh time that evening, bowed with a kink in
-the fourteenth vertebra.</p>
-
-<p>He drew his wife into the hall.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose he wants payment on the spot, doesn&#8217;t
-he, Maria? These specialists usually do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes dear,&#8221; said Lady Repton, her old awe
-returning with his changed mood. &#8220;Yes dear, I&#8217;m
-afraid he does ... he ... in fact, I&#8217;m afraid I
-promised it him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How much?&#8221; said Sir Charles sternly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well dear, it doesn&#8217;t matter, does it? I&#8217;ll
-pay.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But it does matter. It matters a great deal,
-Maria. It all comes out of <i>my</i> pocket in the long
-run. How much did he stipulate for?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A hundred pounds,&#8221; said Lady Repton.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh come,&#8221; said Sir Charles, greatly relieved.
-&#8220;A hundred! That&#8217;s a good lot. How often will
-he come for that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>&#8220;He won&#8217;t want to come again, dear,&#8221; said Lady
-Repton.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What!&#8221; said Sir Charles, &#8220;a hundred pounds
-for that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My dear&mdash;if you knew the difference!&#8221; said
-Lady Repton.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, yes, I know,&#8221; he said impatiently, &#8220;the
-pain&#8217;s gone. It can&#8217;t be helped, and of course
-ninety&#8217;s a broken sum. He&#8217;d have taken fifty,
-Maria. I ought to have seen to this myself,&#8221; he
-added.</p>
-
-<p>And so, the matter settled, he returned.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll allow me to leave you one moment with
-her ladyship,&#8221; he said in his most winning manner.
-Then suddenly, &#8220;<i>Good</i>-night,&#8221; and with a warm grasp
-of the hand Sir Charles left them.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Repton was moved beyond words. She
-put into the young man&#8217;s hand a packet of notes
-which she had carefully prepared. &#8220;It is nothing,&#8221;
-she said, &#8220;it is nothing for what you have done, but
-oh, doctor, will it last?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;ll last for ever&mdash;at least,&#8221; he corrected himself
-hurriedly, &#8220;they&#8217;ve all lasted so fur, and it&#8217;s more&#8217;n
-a year since I did the first. It isn&#8217;t the <i>kind</i> er
-thing that comes on again. &#8217;Tain&#8217;t a growth.&#8221; He
-was almost going to say what it was, when he
-remembered that he held the monopoly. Then,
-lest he should stay too long in that house where
-he was, after all, but a paid instrument, he very
-courteously bade her good-night, and as he went<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-home, carrying his little bag, Scipio reflected
-that he liked Maria, Lady Repton, better than he
-did her husband. But he remembered that operations
-for Veracititis were, of their nature, causes for
-grievous disillusion.</p>
-
-<p>He put the matter from his mind and took a cab
-back to his hotel and to bed.</p>
-
-<p>Thus was Sir Charles Repton cured of Veracititis,
-late upon Wednesday night, the 3rd of June, 1915,
-and he slept his old sleep.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XV</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IT was Friday morning, the 5th of June, 1915,
-and the young and popular Prime Minister
-was busied in the Inaugural Ceremony of the
-Wardenship of the Court of Dowry.</p>
-
-<p>Repton or no Repton, the place must be filled.
-Demaine was back and Demaine must be there
-on the front bench before there was an explosion.</p>
-
-<p>The Inaugural Ceremony which introduces a
-Statesman to the Wardenship of the Court of
-Dowry, technically called &#8220;L&#8217;Acceptance,&#8221; in strict
-constitutional practice requires the presence of at
-least three persons, the outgoing Warden (technically
-the Dischargee), the incoming Warden (technically
-the Discoverer) and the Sovereign; but since
-GHERKIN had, in spite of his eccentric
-Radicalism, raised the office to its present position,
-the outgoing Warden could be represented by
-proxy, though such a substitution was rarely made
-since it eliminated the quaint custom of the &#8220;Braise&#8221;&mdash;one
-hundred pounds one hundred shillings one
-hundred pence, and a new brass farthing specially<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
-minted for the occasion, the whole in a silver-gilt
-case, and handed over to the outgoer, to be regarded
-with historic respect and some one of its coins to
-be kept as an heirloom.<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></p>
-
-<p>But Dolly, as he considered the situation on the
-Friday morning, Friday the 5th of June, 1915, could
-see no way out of it; he must simply tell Lady
-Repton briefly, and best by telephone, that she
-must not dream of her husband&#8217;s appearing at Court,
-even with a keeper, and that it would be necessary
-for the Repton household to forego the hundred
-sovereigns, the hundred shillings, the hundred pence
-and the new brass farthing specially minted for the
-occasion (the whole in a silver-gilt case), rather than
-have a scandal.</p>
-
-<p>It was Friday, and he was glad to remember it, a
-Private Members&#8217; Day. There were no questions.
-There was all Saturday and Sunday before him.
-He would arrange for the Inauguration the very
-next week. He was already advised that the
-officials had been permitted by the highest authority,
-in view of Demaine&#8217;s recent privations when he was
-blown out to sea in the little boat, treacherously
-abandoned by the foreign vessel and rescued by
-the willing hands, etc., to omit the final accolade
-with the ebony cudgel which had now for so many
-generations formed the last and most picturesque
-feature of the ritual.</p>
-
-<p>He took up his telephone and asked the next<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
-room to put him on to the Reptons. He held the
-receiver while a servant told him that his message
-should be immediately communicated, and then in
-a few seconds, heard, to his great astonishment, not
-the tremulous tones of Maria, but the masterly voice
-of Sir Charles, as incisive and direct as of old,
-saying, &#8220;What is it?&#8221; in the tone of a man who
-must come at once to business and has many things
-to do.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh!&#8221; cried Dolly into the machine, quite taken
-aback. &#8220;That&#8217;s you, Repton, is it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, of course,&#8221; came the answer shortly.
-&#8220;Well?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh nothing. Are you feeling better?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know what you mean.&#8221; This in
-restrained, quite unmistakable tones. &#8220;My headache&#8217;s
-gone, if that&#8217;s what you mean.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ye-es,&#8221; said the Prime Minister, wondering
-what on earth to say. &#8220;Yes.... Oh it&#8217;s gone,
-has it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes it has; I&#8217;ve told you that already.&#8221; Then
-after a pause, &#8220;Look here, I&#8217;m really very busy. I&#8217;ve
-got three men here about that absurd concession.
-You gave me a free hand, and I can&#8217;t wait. Hope
-I&#8217;m not rude. It&#8217;s really very kind to ask after my
-health. You&#8217;ll be in the House at twelve?&#8221; And
-the telephone suddenly rang off.</p>
-
-<p>Dolly was in a stupor; he did what he always did,
-when things perplexed him: he sent for Edward.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Edward,&#8221; he said, &#8220;that cracked Dissenter has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
-got three men in his house and is talking about the
-oil concession to them! Oh lord!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister was evidently frightened and
-troubled, but he did not seem less frightened and
-more troubled than the occasion warranted. He
-couldn&#8217;t make Repton out: there seemed to be
-another change.</p>
-
-<p>Edward answered simply: &#8220;Why that makes
-three more who know,&mdash;that&#8217;s all.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do get a taxi,&#8221; said the Prime Minister, &#8220;and see
-what you can do.&#8221; And he waited anxiously till
-Edward returned.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well?&#8221; said Dolly as he entered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well!&#8221; said Edward. &#8220;He wasn&#8217;t very polite,
-but&mdash;but&mdash;are you quite sure that you weren&#8217;t worried
-when you saw him on Tuesday?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Worried,&#8221; said Dolly, &#8220;I should think I was!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well that&#8217;s what I mean,&#8221; said Edward a little
-uneasily. &#8220;Didn&#8217;t you ... didn&#8217;t you perhaps
-exaggerate a little?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Exaggerate!</i>&#8221; said Dolly, jumping up with all
-his youthful vigour, and looking for the moment
-less than forty-eight in his excitement, &#8220;Why man
-alive, he was wearing a huge great Easter Lily in his
-buttonhole, and he tried to wrestle with the butler
-in the hall!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, but you know,&#8221; said Edward, &#8220;there&#8217;s gaiety
-in everybody, and it comes out now and&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh gaiety be blasted!&#8221; interrupted Dolly. &#8220;The
-man was raving!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>&#8220;Well, they wouldn&#8217;t certify him anyhow,&#8221; said
-Edward, &#8220;and he&#8217;s not raving <i>now</i>! He&#8217;s as sane
-as a waxen image, and as sharp as an unexpected
-pin. I&#8217;m glad <i>I&#8217;m</i> not doing business with him to-day.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Look here,&#8221; protested the Prime Minister. &#8220;If
-he wasn&#8217;t off, why did he stay at home like a prisoner
-all Wednesday, with Lady Repton preventing any one
-seeing him? And what was he doing all yesterday,
-Thursday? Why didn&#8217;t he come down to the House,
-eh, if he wasn&#8217;t off?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t say he wasn&#8217;t ill,&#8221; said Edward blandly.
-&#8220;I only said there might have been some exaggeration.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh very well,&#8221; ended the Prime Minister wearily,
-&#8220;oh very well!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Edward came to a swift decision and telephoned
-first to the <i>Moon</i> then to the <i>Capon</i> privately that
-&#8220;it was all right about Repton; there&#8217;d been a
-mistake.&#8221; His chief went out on the duties of the
-day.</p>
-
-<p>Yet <i>another</i> change of plan! More bother! He
-would have to go through with the peerage now!
-He went gloomily down to the House of Commons
-and learned that Charles Repton was already in his
-place, stiff, groomed and regular upon the Treasury
-bench.</p>
-
-<p>Dolly came in nervously and shook hands with
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Charles took his hand rather coldly; he did<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
-not see why a couple of days&#8217; headache which no one
-had heard about should be made the excuse for so
-much public affection. It emphasised the thing.
-And he sat through the first hour of the debate
-looking as if he would have been just as well pleased
-to be made less fuss about. &#8220;Anyhow,&#8221; he thought
-to himself by way of consolation, &#8220;I shall be rid of
-it next week,&#8221; and his mind turned in an equable
-fashion to his taking his seat in the Upper House and
-to what his first business there might be.</p>
-
-<p>As he was so thinking George Mulross Demaine
-came in quietly by one of the side doors. As he
-entered there was a little subdued cheering from those
-who remembered the announcement of his approaching
-appointment. It flurried him a little. He sat
-down and tried to forget it, while the debate
-maundered on.</p>
-
-<p>In the Lobbies Repton continued to suffer somewhat
-from occasional congratulations on his return to
-health. He did not easily understand them, and he
-was a trifle gruff in his replies. He was going into
-the library for a little peace when a messenger put
-a note into his hand; it was from the Duke of
-Battersea.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;More fuss!&#8221; he thought, but he went immediately
-with his stiff, upright gait to where that great
-Financier was waiting for him, and he greeted him
-warmly enough.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke, like the business man he was, was very
-brief and to the point. He congratulated Charles<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
-Repton not (thank heaven!) on having got rid of the
-slight headache which seemed to have filled the
-thoughts of too many people, but upon the great
-accession the Upper House was to receive, and then
-the Duke having said so much went on to what he
-really had to say, his pronunciation marred only
-by that slight lisp which ill-natured reports so constantly
-exaggerated. Sir Charles Repton (he said)
-would remember the very disgraceful case of the
-editor of the <i>Islington Hebdomadal Review</i>?</p>
-
-<p>Charles Repton tried to remember, but could not.</p>
-
-<p>Well, it wath the cathe of the man who had very
-properly got twenty yearth of the betht for thaying
-that he could reveal how old Ballymulrock had got
-his peerage ... a dithgratheful cathe! There wath
-blackmail behind it!</p>
-
-<p>Yes, Charles Repton could remember now, and he
-smiled a grim smile as he considered the peculiar
-ineptitude of that particular convict. Why old
-Ballymulrock was the seventh in the title, he had
-nothing a year, he was a doddering old bachelor of
-eighty-seven, he had got it by a fluke from a half-nephew,
-and it was only an Irish elective peerage at
-that! The convict had pleaded a misprint! What
-a fool! Yes, Sir Charles Repton could remember
-the case. What about it? &#8220;I&#8217;m not going to take
-any action to save him,&#8221; he said sharply, &#8220;if that&#8217;s
-what you want: he deserved all he got! If you
-want some one get Birdwhistlethorpe; Isaacs that
-was: he knows North London.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>&#8220;Noh, noh, noh,&#8221; said the aged Duke of Battersea
-in alarm, &#8220;you mithunderthand me!&#8221; And he
-went on to tell the outgoing Warden that they
-were determined to bring this sort of thing before
-the House of Lords in a Resolution. Would he
-move?</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see what I&#8217;ve got to do with it,&#8221; said
-Repton shortly.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke smiled as he had smiled years ago,
-when he produced Lord Benthorpe&#8217;s paper and
-brought that now forgotten personage to heel. Had
-Sir Charles seen what the <i>Moon</i> had been saying
-that very day?</p>
-
-<p>No, Sir Charles hadn&#8217;t. He supposed it was
-about the oil concessions. He paid no attention
-to the <i>Moon</i>. But Edward&#8217;s telephone to the <i>Moon</i>
-and the <i>Capon</i> had borne dreadful fruit. Each editor
-had thought to have regained his freedom.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke of Battersea&#8217;s smile grew more portentous;
-he discovered a cutting in the inner pocket
-of a coat which somehow or other always looked
-greasy upon him, and as Sir Charles read it, his
-face darkened.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s pretty scandalous,&#8221; he said as he laid it
-down. For the leader in the <i>Moon</i> gave it to be
-understood in no very roundabout way that there
-had been a deal over Repton&#8217;s peerage.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The <i>Capon&#8217;th</i> worth, <i>far</i> worth!&#8221; insinuated the
-Duke of Battersea.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is it?&#8221; said Sir Charles, &#8220;indeed!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>&#8220;Yeth, indeed yeth,&#8221; said the aged Duke, putting
-the paper forward as though over a counter; and
-Sir Charles Repton could not forbear to read it.
-It certainly <i>was</i> worse; it simply said point blank
-that the Burmah Oil Concession was the price of
-Repton&#8217;s promotion to the Upper House. And the
-passage ended with these words:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>&#8220;We have no desire to add to a domestic affliction
-which no friend of the Government regrets more
-sincerely than we do ourselves, and we are willing
-to believe that the unfortunate gentleman, who we
-fear can never again take his old place in public
-life, was himself quite innocent of any such dealing;
-but ambitions other than his own may have been
-concerned in this matter, and the giving of permanent
-legislative power to a man who now
-notoriously can no longer take part in active public
-life, does but add to the scandal.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>That decided him! He would nip off that headache
-legend at once, and sharply!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I&#8217;ll move as soon as you like,
-and the sooner the better.&#8221; He did not say it as
-though he was granting a favour; and it was
-easy to see that the Duke was a little afraid of
-him:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>After a pause during which the two men rose
-to part, the old gentleman suggested that Methlinghamhurst
-should speak after him.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>&#8220;Messlingham <i>who</i>?&#8221; said Repton, puzzled. The
-name was unfamiliar to him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, not Methlinghamhurtht! <i>Meth</i>linghamhurtht,&#8221;
-said the Duke of Battersea, rather too
-loud. &#8220;<i>Meth</i>linghamhurtht!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Sir Charles shook his head, still puzzled. &#8220;I
-daresay he&#8217;s all right,&#8221; he said all starch.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>You</i> know,&#8221; said the Duke of Battersea, craning
-forward in a confidential way, &#8220;Clutterbuck that
-wath.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh! Clutterbuck! Yes, I remember. Well?
-Can he speak?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not very well,&#8221; hesitated the Duke of Battersea,
-&#8220;but you know he wanted....&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I really don&#8217;t care,&#8221; said Sir Charles moving
-away. &#8220;Anyhow I&#8217;ll do it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Duke was profuse in his thanks.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Charles Repton returned to the House of
-Commons. Another message!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Prime Minister begged to see Sir Charles
-Repton:&#8221; really there was no end to the number
-of people wanting to see him that day! Charles
-Repton went towards Dolly&#8217;s room with such
-muscles showing upon his face as would have made
-any one afraid to say another word about the headache,&mdash;but
-it was not of the headache, at least not
-of that directly, that Dolly had to speak.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Repton,&#8221; he said apologetically and in some
-dread, &#8220;I&#8217;m afraid I made arrangements for a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
-proxy next week&mdash;I mean for L&#8217;Acceptance you
-know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh you did!&#8221; said Sir Charles, really nettled.
-&#8220;You might have asked me first I think!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, you see,&#8221; began his unfortunate chief,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As a fact I don&#8217;t see,&#8221; said Repton drily, &#8220;but
-I suppose you&#8217;ve put it right. I&#8217;ve written to say I
-should be there.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh yes, certainly, certainly,&#8221; said Dolly hurriedly,
-&#8220;I&#8217;ve changed it.&#8221; As a fact he&#8217;d done nothing of
-the kind and was wondering what he should say
-to the proxy. &#8220;Certainly!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right,&#8221; said Charles Repton moving towards
-the door. &#8220;That&#8217;s all, I suppose?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, that&#8217;s all,&#8221; said Dolly, with perhaps a
-hundred more things to say. &#8220;I&#8217;ll see that you get
-notice of the exact hour.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; said Charles Repton briefly, and he
-shut the door quietly but firmly behind him.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The inaugural ceremony, though shorn for some
-years of the backward entrance which was its most
-picturesque feature, and now (though not as a precedent)
-of the accost with the ebony cudgel, was
-impressive enough. The silver-gilt case with the
-Three Hundred and One specially minted Coins had
-been put into Charles Repton&#8217;s Seisin by the Symbol
-of the Flask of Palm Oil, and was already on its way
-to his house; the tinkling shoes had been rapidly put
-on and off, and Demaine had sworn fealty for sergeanty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
-in Ponthieu and the Seniory of Lucq, and all the
-embroglio was done.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Repton (for he was content with that simple
-title&mdash;in the Manor of Giggleswick) was present for
-the first time upon the red benches, awaiting the
-moment for the debate upon the Resolution in which
-he was to open and move.</p>
-
-<p>In the House of Commons George Mulross
-Demaine, who for the last few days had been coaching
-steadily in the duties of his post, and especially in the
-really difficult technicalities of replying to questions,
-was reading his notes for the last time in the comfortable
-room assigned to his office, and repeating to
-himself in a low tone the words he had so carefully
-committed to memory. Edward was with him to
-give him courage; and he needed such companionship.</p>
-
-<p>At last he was summoned.</p>
-
-<p>The House was very full for question-time, for it
-was known or suspected that something of importance
-would take place that day. The full nature of the
-crisis had been understood by very few, but the disappearance
-of Demaine and his return, his terrible
-adventures in the fishing-boat, his night at sea, the
-dastardly action of the foreign crew, and the heroic
-succour which had ultimately reached him were public
-property.</p>
-
-<p>The silent and little known young member whose
-disappearance from the benches under the gallery
-would never have been noticed, was half a hero<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
-already in the popular mind, and had become
-particularly dear to his colleagues during the anxious
-moments when he was believed to be lost, and when
-the press of London had worked that mystery for all
-it was worth.</p>
-
-<p>The House of Commons knows a <i>Man</i>.</p>
-
-<p>There was, therefore, loud and hearty cheering,
-which, according to the beautiful tradition of our
-public life, was confined to no one part of the assembly,
-when, that happy Friday, George Mulross entered
-rapidly from behind the Speaker&#8217;s chair, stumbled
-over the outstretched foot of the Admiralty, his second
-uncle by marriage, and took his seat for the first time
-among his new colleagues upon the Treasury Bench.</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister accompanied him. Congratulations
-suitable to the occasion were to be seen
-in the gestures of those in his immediate neighbourhood,
-and he himself wore the blest but sickly smile
-of a man who is about to be hanged but who is
-possessed of a fixed faith in a happy eternity.</p>
-
-<p>Only one question was set down to him; he had
-read it and re-read it; he had read and re-read the
-typewritten answer which Mr. Sorrel had furnished
-him and which he had now got by heart beyond, he
-hoped, the possibility of error. The questioner had
-chivalrously offered to withdraw his query in deference
-to the fatigues and anxieties through which the
-new Warden of the Court of Dowry had so recently
-passed, but the Prime Minister, though appreciative of
-that offer, rather determined that his dear young<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
-relative should win his spurs; and trivial as the
-subject was, Question No. 31 was by far the most
-important upon the paper for most of those present.</p>
-
-<p>It concerned (of course) the wreck which still
-banged about, the sport of wind and wave, upon
-the Royal Sovereign Shoals. This aching tooth of
-Empire had cropped up again in yet another aspect.
-The Member for Harrowell, a landowner upon that
-coast, wanted to know whether it was not a fact that
-large planks studded, he was ashamed to say, with
-long rusty nails, had not drifted shorewards from the
-wreck and grievously scratched such persons as were
-indulging in mixed bathing just off the popular and
-rapidly rising seaside resort which lay a little east by
-north of the wretched derelict.</p>
-
-<p>Question No. 29 was answered, Question 30 was
-answered. Demaine&#8217;s ordeal had come.</p>
-
-<p>He heard a low mumbling noise some distance
-down the benches which he would never have taken
-to be the single word &#8220;Thirty-one&#8221; had not his
-mother&#8217;s half-sister&#8217;s husband the Chancellor of the
-Exchequer given him a sharp dig in the ribs with his
-elbow and jolted him onto his feet. His hands shook
-like a motor car at rest as he began his reply.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have nothing to tell my right honourable
-gentleman&mdash;I mean my honourable gentleman....&#8221;
-Here there was a pause, painful to all present with the
-exception of one ribald fellow who cackled twice and
-then was silent.... &#8220;I have nothing to add,&#8221; George
-Mulross began again with a lump in his throat, &#8220;in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>
-reply to my honourable friend&mdash;to what my predecessor
-said in reply to a similar&#8221; (another pause)
-... &#8220;Oh,&mdash;<i>question</i>&mdash;upon the tenth of this month.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He had read all of it out now, anyhow, and he sat
-down, a trifle unsteadily, feeling for the seat.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Arre we to onderrstand,&#8221; boomed the voice of the
-inevitable fanatic, &#8220;that the carrgo of GIN is yet
-aboorrd...?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hey! what?&#8221; said Demaine over his shoulder,
-with a startled air.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Get up and ask for notice,&#8221; whispered a colleague
-very hurriedly. &#8220;Get up and say &#8216;I must ask for
-notice of that question.&#8217; Say &#8216;I must ask for notice
-of that question.&#8217; Get up quick.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Demaine got up, took hold of the box, turned his
-back upon the questioner and looking full at the
-harmless and startled Opposition said, not without
-menace:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I must ask for a notice of that question&#8221;&mdash;and
-sat down.</p>
-
-<p>There were a few more sympathetic cheers and
-all was well. The Warden of the Court of Dowry
-was launched upon his great career.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, beyond the Central Hall, Lord Repton
-of Giggleswick was rising for the first time among
-his Peers.</p>
-
-<p>That House also was full and was prepared to
-give the spare towering figure and the stoical face
-a sympathetic hearing, for the recognition of a man
-who had served his country so faithfully and so well<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
-and who had recently suffered a temporary malady
-of so distressing a nature was universal and sincere.</p>
-
-<p>The House of Lords knows a <i>Man</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Repton, even as plain Sir Charles, had always
-been an admirable parliamentary speaker: not only
-quick at debate but with a grave and lucid delivery
-which, coupled with his intimate grasp of detail and
-the sense of balanced judgment behind his tone,
-made his one of the most effective voices in our
-public life.</p>
-
-<p>It would be difficult to say by what art he contrived
-to give in that large assembly the impression of
-speaking as quietly as though he were in a private
-room, and yet so managed that every word of his&mdash;every
-syllable,&mdash;was heard in every corner of the
-House.</p>
-
-<p>In the Peeresses&#8217; Gallery women in mauve, heliotrope,
-eau-de-nil, crapaud mort, and magenta, made
-a brilliant scheme of colour.</p>
-
-<p>The Lords, who upon occasions of privilege are by
-custom robed, gave to the splendid place the deeper
-tone of red plush and white pelts with small black
-tails which is otherwise reserved for such great
-occasions of state as the Opening of Parliament, the
-Coronation, an Impeachment or a Replevin at Large;
-at the bar a crowd of Commoners pressed, many of
-whom recognised in the faces before them those of
-brothers, fathers, first cousins, debtors, creditors and
-clients in business. It was an animated and an
-impressive scene, and the audience, large as it was,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
-would doubtless have been larger but for an unfortunate
-blunder by which the Eton and Harrow match
-and a particularly interesting rehearsal of the Mizraim
-dance were both fixed for that very afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>As it was, the two hundred or more Peers present
-were finely representative of all that is best and
-worst in the national life. The aged Duke of
-Battersea had made a point not only of coming but
-of speaking upon such an occasion; the Bishops had
-turned up in full force, and the Colonial Peers, now
-happily added to the ancient House, were remarkable
-not only for their strict attention to this historic
-business, but for their somewhat constrained attitudes:
-not one was absent from his seat.</p>
-
-<p>The report of a speech, however excellent, is but
-a dull reflection of the original, as all may judge who
-consider the contrast between the entrancing rhetoric
-which daily holds spellbound the House of Commons
-and the plain prose appearing in the morning
-papers.</p>
-
-<p>It would ill repay the reader for the courtesy and
-charm she has shown throughout the perusal of these
-pages, were I to inflict upon her a mere verbatim
-transcript of Lord Repton&#8217;s famous harangue. But
-the gist of it well merits record here, not only because
-it did much to kill a poisonous spirit which had till
-then been growing in English journalism&mdash;but also
-because it was in itself a typical and splendid monument
-of the things that build up the soul of a
-great man.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>He began in the simplest manner with a review of
-what had determined some of them to bring forward
-this Resolution. It needed no reiteration upon his
-part, and indeed the matter was so painful that
-the mere recalling of it must be made as brief as
-possible.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It has been suggested that places in that House
-are acquired by process of purchase.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There, in plain English, is the accusation.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He would remark in passing that the cowards and
-slanderers&mdash;he did not hesitate to use strong language&mdash;(and
-even the sanctity of the precincts could not
-check a murmur of approval), the cowards and
-slanderers who brought forward that general accusation,
-dared not make it particular.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In one case,&#8221; he said, turning gravely to the place
-where he expected to see but was disappointed not
-to see the very aged frame of Lord Ballymulrock,
-&#8220;in one case which referred to a peer whose health I
-am distressed to say has made it impossible for him
-to be present upon this occasion&#8221; (a protest from an
-exceedingly old man who sat folded up on high&mdash;it
-was Bally himself!), &#8220;in one case a direct accusation
-has been made.... Melords, you know the issue.
-An appeal still lies, and it is not for me to deal with
-a matter which is <i>sub judice</i>; but apart from that
-case, these anonymous hacks who have for so long
-corrupted or attempted to corrupt the public mind
-in respect to this House, confine themselves to
-generalities upon which the law can take no hold.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>It was upon this very account that the general
-resolution of which he had spoken had been framed,
-and he would pass at once from the unsavoury
-recollection of such acts, to that part of his argument
-which he thought would have most weight with his
-fellow-subjects.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This House, including the more recent creations,
-the Colonial Peers, and the ex-officio additions with
-which a recent&mdash;and in my opinion a beneficent
-reform&mdash;has recruited it, still numbers less than
-fifteen hundred men. Of these the ex-officio members,
-the lords spiritual&#8221; (and he bowed to the Bishop of
-Shoreham, who was deaf) &#8220;the elected members from
-the Britains Overseas (among whom I am glad to
-see present the Nerbuddah Yah) between them
-account for no less than forty-two. Two hundred
-and eighty&#8221; (he quoted from a paper in his hand) &#8220;are
-imbeciles, minors or permanent invalids; somewhat
-over fifty are for one reason or another incapacitated
-from attendance at their debates; ten are in
-gaol.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now, Melords,&#8221; he continued, &#8220;of the eleven
-hundred remaining&mdash;they are roughly eleven
-hundred,&mdash;what do we find? We find&#8221;&mdash;emphatically
-striking his right-hand fist into his left-hand
-palm,&mdash;&#8220;we find no less than five hundred and
-twelve to be the sons of their fathers&mdash;or in some
-other way direct heirs: ninety-eight to have
-succeeded to their titles from collaterals of the first
-or of the second degree; sixteen to have succeeded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
-in some more distant manner; eleven to owe their
-position to the revival of ancient tenures; the claims
-of six to have been recently proved through the
-female line; and one by Warranty and Novel
-Disseizin. What remains?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He looked round the eager assembly before him
-with an attitude of the head dignified but wonderfully
-impressive.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Melords, I ask again, what remains? <i>Less than
-four hundred men</i>, the representatives of all the chief
-energies of our national life. We have here the
-great champions of industry, the great admirals of
-our fleets, the great generals of our armies&mdash;and
-I am happy to include the Salvation Army, (the
-head of that great organisation lifted his biretta)&mdash;men
-who have distinguished themselves in every
-conceivable path of public life, who have loyally
-served their country and many of whom after such
-service are still honourably poor.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At this phrase which was evidently the approach
-to his peroration, many Peers who had hitherto been
-sitting with their knees apart, crossed one leg over
-the other; some few who, on the contrary, had had
-their legs crossed, uncrossed them and reposed both
-feet upon the floor; more than one took the
-opportunity to recline his head upon his right hand,
-and the most venerable member of the bench of
-Bishops coughed in a manner that would have wrung
-a heart of stone.</p>
-
-<p>When these slight interruptions were over, Lord<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
-Repton of Giggleswick found it possible to proceed.
-He showed by a strict process of inquiry how those
-to whom the abominable suggestion might conceivably
-apply, could not by any stretch of the
-imagination amount to eighty in number.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Less than eighty men, Melords, in an assembly
-of fifteen hundred! Hardly five per cent.&mdash;hardly,
-if I may use a bold metaphor, thirteen pence in the
-pound! It is by this proportion alone, even did
-these detestable falsehoods contain&mdash;which they do
-not&mdash;a grain of truth, that our whole body is forsooth
-to be judged! But, Melords, who are these eighty
-men, if I do not insult them by permitting my
-argument to approach their names?</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I will not cite my own case; my public career is
-open for any man to examine, and I think I know
-the temper of my own people too well to delay upon
-that score. But there are around me others perhaps
-(I know not) more sensitive, or less experienced in
-the petty villainies of the world, than am I, who
-may have thought themselves especially marked
-out.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I ask, against which of them could such an
-accusation be levelled by name, without the certitude
-of such a result in any Court of Justice as would
-silence the mouth of the libeller for many years?
-Is it, Melords, the man to whom we owe the great
-reservoir at Sing Yan? Is it that world-famous
-Englishman who by his organising ability, his
-untiring industry and his knowledge of men, has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
-built up the United Sausage Company&#8217;s emporiums
-throughout the length and breadth of the land?</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I might extend the list indefinitely: Melords, to
-no one of these, to no one member of this House
-I venture to say, can words of this kind be addressed
-without their falsity being apparent almost without
-need for proof.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I repeat in the words of Burke, &#8216;No, no, no, a
-thousand times no.&#8217; I am not ashamed to recall
-the glorious phrase with which these walls echoed
-to the voice of Ephraim ten years ago: &#8216;Give me such
-principles as these and I will trample them into the
-dust beneath my feet!&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Having said so much, Lord Repton sat down, and
-it is a tribute to the fire and the conviction of the
-man that a young heiress of African Origin but
-recently married, who had been listening intently
-from the Peeresses&#8217; Gallery throughout the latter
-part of the speech, gave a low moan and fainted clean
-away.</p>
-
-<p>Her young form was borne down to the buttery
-by a strong posse of attendants where the air from
-the Terrace soon revived her. I mention the incident
-only as a signal proof of the oratorical powers that
-had illumined Repton&#8217;s great career.</p>
-
-<p>After such an effort Lord Methlinghamhurst
-necessarily somewhat palled, especially as an imperfection
-in his diction, failing eyesight and a certain
-loss of memory compelled him to make long and
-uncomfortable pauses over the large printed slip<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
-which he held in his hand, but it was over at last,
-and the Duke of Battersea rose amid the evident
-interest of such as remained to hear him, no less than
-five of whom were concerned with himself in the
-Anapootra Ruby Mines.</p>
-
-<p>The great financier did well to interpose upon
-such an occasion. His lisp, with which the House
-was now familiar, was the only impediment to a
-sincere and vigorous piece of English. There was
-not a word which the most exuberant would presume
-to add, nor one which the most fastidious would
-dare to erase.</p>
-
-<p>The proceedings had occupied something close
-upon three-quarters of an hour, and the Senate,
-unused to such delays, was impatient to pass to the
-vote, when, to the universal horror of that hall,
-Ballymulrock tottered to his feet. There was almost
-a stampede. Luckily the Aged Man was as brief
-as he was inaudible. It was a couple of squeaks,
-several mutters, and a collapse. They proceeded
-to put the question.</p>
-
-<p>The Peers flocked back again to their places in
-great numbers; others stood ready for the Lobbies&mdash;but
-there was no need.</p>
-
-<p>It was one of those rare moments when many
-hundreds of hearts, to quote a wild and lovely poem,
-beat as one; and with a silent unanimity which eye-witnesses
-declare to have formed the most impressive
-sight since the first great review of Specials upon
-Salisbury Plain, the Resolution was adopted.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>Thus was destroyed, let us hope for ever, what was
-rapidly growing to be a formidable legend and one
-that would have undermined the security of the
-State and the honour of our public life in the eyes of
-rival nations.</p>
-
-<p>It was not the least of the services which Charles
-Repton had rendered to the State, and as we raise
-our grateful hats to Providence for the recovery that
-made his action possible, let us not forget the genius
-of the Young Canadian Doctor who was the author of
-that miraculous moment in a story of a thousand years.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Private Members&#8217; time was ended. The
-House sat on upon the Broadening of the Streets
-Bill, the intense unpopularity of which rendered it
-especially urgent.</p>
-
-<p>When the House of Commons rose, near midnight,
-Dolly and Dimmy went out together by the door of
-the private rooms into the cool air and there in the
-courtyard were the glowing lamps of Mary&#8217;s motor car.
-She beckoned them and they got in.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You got to come to supper to-night,&#8221; she said
-mysteriously. &#8220;They&#8217;ll all be there.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Dimmy was agreeable. Dolly tried to plead something
-but she shut him up, and after them in single
-file raced through London half a dozen taxis and cars
-and broughams all making in a stream for St. James&#8217;s.</p>
-
-<p>It made such a supper-party as Mary Smith alone
-in London could gather!</p>
-
-<p>Her sister-in-law, with the Leader of the Opposition,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
-and his brother; his right-hand man who had been
-Chancellor in the last administration; his nephew,
-the Postmaster General; Dolly himself; Dolly&#8217;s
-brother-in-law, the Secretary for India; his little
-nephew&#8217;s wife&#8217;s cousin at the Board of Trade, and his
-stepmother&#8217;s brother at the Admiralty, sat down,&mdash;and
-so did Dimmy, who was there without his wife,
-and also, I regret to say, without a stud, or rather
-without the head of a stud, in his shirt; for somehow
-it had broken off.</p>
-
-<p>But the reader will have but an imperfect picture
-of that jolly table if she imagines that it was a mere
-family party.</p>
-
-<p>Our public life is a larger thing than that! Of
-the five members of the two front benches who
-were not connected by marriage, two were present:
-the Minister for Education who could draw such
-screamingly funny things on blotting-paper, and
-Beagle, back two days before from Berlin, who could
-imitate a motor car with his mouth better than any
-man in Europe. And there also, by a sort of licence,
-was the Duke of Battersea, brought by Charlie
-Fitzgerald and his wife.</p>
-
-<p>They had already sat down when William Bailey,
-whom no one had invited, came ponderously and
-good-humouredly in, affected to stare at the Duke,
-and made a place for himself as far as possible from
-that controller of hemispheres, who was in his usual
-chair on Mary Smith&#8217;s right hand, with bulbous
-baggy eyes for none but her.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>William Bailey smiled all that evening and smiled
-especially at Dimmy&mdash;but he remained very silent;
-when, a little before two, they began to make a move,
-he had not said a dozen words&mdash;and Dimmy was
-exceedingly grateful.</p>
-
-<p>Nay, his friendship extended further: he saw
-Demaine as they all got up from table nervously
-stuffing a corner of the cloth in mistake for his
-handkerchief into his trousers pocket.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Look out, Dimmy!&#8221; he said.</p>
-
-<p>Dimmy jumped, and the tablecloth jumped with
-him, and then a crash&mdash;a great crash of broken glass,
-and the falling of candles.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Smith was very nearly annoyed, but on such
-an occasion she forgave him.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>North of the Park, for now two hours, Lord Repton
-of Giggleswick had slept an easy sleep.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak"><small>ON<br />
-THE PSEUDOLOGICAL FUNCTIONS<br />
-OF<br />
-CARYLL&#8217;S GANGLIA</small></h2></div>
-
-<p class="center">A PAMPHLET</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><i>WHICH the reader need not read. It is quite as
-easy to understand the book without it.</i></p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p><span class="smcap">Extract</span> from a lecture delivered, for a grossly
-insufficient fee, by a professor of great popular
-reputation at the Royal Institution on January
-26th, 1915:&mdash;</p></div></div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The <i>Review of Comparative Biology</i> in its October
-issue contained a short and modest paper over the
-name of Henry Upton which is destined to influence
-modern thought more profoundly than anything that
-has appeared since <i>Lux Mundi</i> or the <i>Origin of
-Species</i>. Henry Upton has been taken from us.
-Or, to use a phrase consecrated by his own reverent
-quotation of it, he has &#8216;Passed beyond the Veil,&#8217; he
-has crossed the bar; but short as the time is since
-this brief essay was given to the world, his name is
-already famous.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>&#8220;You will have heard the echoes of passionate
-discussions upon his famous theory; it is my business
-this afternoon to put before you in clear and popular
-language that you can easily understand, what that
-theory was; and when I have done so I make no
-doubt that you will see why it has been thought so
-transcendently important.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Briefly, Henry Upton declared himself finally
-convinced that between Man and the Simius Gabiensis
-there existed a differentiation so marked as to destroy
-all possibility of any recent common origin for the
-two species.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When I add that Simius Gabiensis is but the
-technical name for the Ringtailed Baboon of our
-childhood you will at once appreciate what a revolution
-such a pronouncement must work if it can be
-sustained: and it has been sustained!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is common knowledge and will be familiar to
-the youngest child in this room that the Ringtailed
-Baboon is the highest of the Anthropoids, and the
-one nearest approaching the majesty of the Human
-Species&mdash;Homo Sapiens; and if between him and ourselves
-the link of affinity prove far removed, it seems
-indeed as though the whole edifice of modern biology
-and of modern thought itself will fall to the ground.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The superficial differences to be discovered
-between a cleanly and well-bred gentleman and the
-Ringtailed Baboon are common property: the beard
-in the Anthropoid is not so clearly defined as in the
-allied organism of Man, but covers the whole face;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
-the superciliary arch is more prominent, the diaphragm
-tessarated and refulgent, while the Cardiac
-Aneries are at once paler and less vasculate in form:
-the rings upon the tail are of course peculiar to the
-Simian, and almost universally absent in the human
-species, while the speech of the latter is far more
-complex and articulate than that of the former.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I need not detain this cultured audience with
-considerations quite unworthy of physical science.
-All the weight of real evidence pointed to the close
-relationship between the two types, and it was a
-commonplace of the classroom that in all fundamentals
-the two animals betrayed an ancestor less
-remote than that of the dog and the wolf. Now,
-since Henry Upton&#8217;s work appeared, we are certain
-that that ancestor is more remote than the ancestor
-of the hippopotamus and the Jersey cow, and
-probably more remote than that of the mongoose
-and the Great Auk.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In every text-book we read (and we believed the
-statement) that between a really poor man and the
-highest specimens of our race lay a gulf wider than
-that which separated the former from the Ringtailed
-Baboon and even from the Gorilla and the Barbary
-Ape. To-day all that is gone!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now let me turn to the evidence. Briefly, again,
-Henry Upton proved that CARYLL&#8217;S GANGLIA
-were not, as had been imagined, unimportant or
-useless organs, but were organically necessary to the
-full conduct of man.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>&#8220;It had of course been known since Caryll first
-described and mapped these ganglia, that they were
-present in Man and absent in all other animals. But
-they were not unique in this, and the obscure part
-which they seemed to play in our economy attracted
-little attention from the student. Suddenly these
-humble agglutinations of organic matter were lifted
-into the blaze of fame by an Englishman whose
-name will not perish so long as our civilisation
-endures. For Henry Upton showed that in these
-ganglia lay the capital distinction between man and
-his congener; if I, myself, for instance, differ in any
-way from &#8216;Pongo&#8217; in Regent&#8217;s Park, it is to Caryll&#8217;s
-Ganglia, under Providence, that I owe the privilege.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Henry Upton was not the man to proceed upon
-<i>a priori</i> reasoning, or to state as a conclusion what
-was still a bare hypothesis. He had suspected the
-truth ten years before committing it to print: they
-were ten years of anxiety, nay, of agony, during
-which a bolder or less scrupulous man might snatch
-from him the merit of prior discovery; but he felt it
-was his duty to Science to continue the vast labour
-and the patient research, until he could speak once
-and for all.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Upton tabulated in all the enormous number of
-57,752 recorded experiments. He first noted the
-comparative sizes of the ganglia, in children and
-adults, in women and in men, showing them to be
-larger in men than in women, and in children rudimentary
-before the seventh year. He next proved<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
-that in certain professions, notably in those of the
-money-lender, the solicitor and the politician, hypertrophy
-of the ganglia was to be discovered. The
-conclusions to which this pointed will soon be
-evident. His theory already began to take shape.
-Luckily for English science, this great man was
-possessed of private means. He organised a staff of
-enthusiastic young workers who occupied themselves
-in treading upon the toes of people in omnibuses,
-sitting upon top hats, asking direct questions of slight
-acquaintances concerning their financial affairs, and
-coughing violently and with long, uninterrupted
-spasms at the most exciting moments of melodramatic
-plays. The result was in each case
-tabulated, and in over 508 per cent. of the cases it
-was possible with care to discover the position of
-the ganglia in those who responded to the stimuli.
-Without a single exception the importance of the
-ganglia varied directly with the self-restraint exercised
-against such stimuli. Those who struck out,
-swore, or in any other way betrayed immediate
-violence, were found to possess small and sometimes
-partially atrophied C. G&#8217;s. Those who protested
-sullenly or confined themselves to angry glances
-were normal; those who contained themselves as
-though nothing had happened, invariably possessed
-ganglia of a large and peculiarly healthy type, while
-those who actually expressed enjoyment and begged
-for a repetition of the performance had ganglia of so
-astonishing a size as to cause protuberances on either<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span>
-side of the head, for Caryll&#8217;s Ganglia lie (as most of
-you probably know) a little south-east and by east of
-the Aural Cavity.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It might by this time have seemed sufficiently
-proved that Caryll&#8217;s Ganglia were the seat of all
-that restraint and balance upon which human
-society depends; but Upton was not satisfied
-until he had clinched the process of proof by a
-negative experiment upon animals:&mdash;And here let
-me point out in passing that had certain well-meaning
-fanatics their own way, this great revelation
-would never have been made. The horse, the
-pig, the common house-fly, the bee, the dog and the
-wild goose, to give but a few examples, were severally
-tested, and in each case it was discovered that a
-clout, a fillip, or any other simple stimulus was at
-once responded to. In no case was a trace of
-Caryll&#8217;s Ganglia to be found.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You all know the end!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The essay was printed, Upton&#8217;s name had already
-flown to the utmost corners of the globe, when he
-read in some obscure narrative of travel that the
-little armadillo that can sleep without a pillow,
-though possessing no ganglia, was capable of the
-same balance and restraint as man, could control
-himself under all but the most violent stimuli,
-conceal his most poignant necessities, and smile in
-the presence of death.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Upton was a Scientist of the Scientists. One
-single exception and he would retract from his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
-position. He sailed for the Amazon, interviewed the
-armadillo, but at the first pin he thrust into the
-fleshy portion of the animal&#8217;s steaks, a little below
-the armoured belt, it belied the false report by
-turning savagely round and biting off his head. His
-remains were reverently brought home to London.
-He lies in Westminster Abbey, the last and perhaps
-the greatest of martyrs to scientific truth.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If Henry Upton&#8217;s immortal achievement seems
-for a moment to have broken down the very keystone
-in the arch of social progress, and to have
-made null the whole structure of biological truth; if
-it leaves Man no longer propped up by a knowledge
-of cousinship and brotherhood with the beasts of the
-field, but all alone, an exile upon earth, nevertheless
-we must take courage. The Bishop of Shoreham
-has told us (Etc., etc., etc.).&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<i>Printed by</i><br />
-<span class="smcap">Morrison &amp; Gibb Limited</span><br />
-<i>Edinburgh</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<p class="ph2">FOOTNOTES:</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Dollars, not pounds.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> He did.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a>
-
-
-<span class="gap5">... &#956;&#8051;&#947;&#945; &#963;&#952;&#8051;&#957;&#959;&#962; &#8040;&#954;&#949;&#945;&#957;&#959;&#8150;&#959;</span><br />
-&#7948;&#957;&#964;&#965;&#947;&#945; &#960;&#8048;&#961; &#960;&#965;&#956;&#8049;&#964;&#951;&#957; &#963;&#8049;&#954;&#949;&#959;&#962; &#960;&#8059;&#954;&#945; &#960;&#959;&#953;&#951;&#964;&#959;&#8150;&#959;.<br />
-<br />
-[Greek:<span class="gap2"> ... mega sthenos keanoio</span><br />
-Antyga par pymatn sakeos pyka poitoio.]</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> I refer to Mr. Bulge, and I refer to him both as an actor and as an
-author. Amen.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> There are two such farthings in the Heygate family to-day.</p></div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph2">TRANSCRIBER&#8217;S NOTES:</p>
-
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
-
-<p>Archaic or alternate spelling that may have been in use at the time of publication has been retained.</p>
-
-<p>The cover image for this eBook was created by the transcriber and is entered into the public domain.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's A Change in the Cabinet, by Hilaire Belloc
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A CHANGE IN THE CABINET ***
-
-***** This file should be named 60967-h.htm or 60967-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/6/0/9/6/60967/
-
-Produced by Tim Lindell, David E. Brown, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-</body>
-</html>
diff --git a/old/60967-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/60967-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index de32368..0000000
--- a/old/60967-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/60967-h/images/i_title.jpg b/old/60967-h/images/i_title.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index b76523d..0000000
--- a/old/60967-h/images/i_title.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ