summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--75548-0.txt7450
-rw-r--r--75548-h/75548-h.htm11313
-rw-r--r--75548-h/images/cover.jpgbin0 -> 254654 bytes
-rw-r--r--75548-h/images/i_086.jpgbin0 -> 82662 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
7 files changed, 18780 insertions, 0 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/75548-0.txt b/75548-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..adcabb2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/75548-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,7450 @@
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75548 ***
+
+
+
+ TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
+
+In the plain text version text in italics is enclosed by underscores
+(_italics_), small capitals are represented in upper case as in SMALL
+CAPS and the sign ^ before any letter or text, like ^e, represents "e"
+as a superscript.
+
+A number of words in this book have both hyphenated and non-hyphenated
+variants. For the words with both variants present the one more used
+has been kept.
+
+Obvious punctuation and other printing errors have been corrected.
+
+The original cover art has been modified by the transcriber and is
+granted to the public domain.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A
+ TIME OF TERROR
+
+ The Story of a Great Revenge
+
+ (A.D., 1910)
+
+ This England never did, nor never shall
+ Lie at the proud foot of a conqueror,
+ But when it first did help to wound itself.
+
+ _King John_
+
+ _SECOND EDITION_
+
+
+ LONDON
+ GREENING & CO., LTD.
+ 1906
+
+
+ [_All Rights Reserved_]
+
+
+ _Copyright
+ in
+ The United Kingdom
+ of
+ Great Britain and Ireland
+ in the
+ Dominion of Canada
+ and in the
+ United States of America_
+
+ _Dec. 1905._
+
+
+ Dedicated
+ TO
+ MY FELLOW CITIZENS
+ IN
+ “THIS GREAT BABYLON,”
+ AND,
+ IN PARTICULAR,
+ TO MEMBERS OF THE THREE
+ LEARNED PROFESSIONS
+
+ _London: New Year’s Day, 1906._
+
+
+ _CHARACTERS_
+
+ MARCUS WHITE
+ SIR JOHN WESTWOOD
+ BOBBY HERRICK
+ FATHER FRANCIS
+ DETECTIVE-INSPECTOR HENSHAW
+ BILLY OF MAYFAIR
+ THE MARQUIS OF DOWNLAND
+ THE LORD MAYOR
+ RAGGETT THE RAVER
+ JOE THE STABLEMAN
+ P.C. DORMER
+
+ ALDWYTH WESTWOOD
+ MOLLY BARTER
+ BILLY’S GRANDMOTHER
+ MRS JOE
+
+
+ CROWNED HEADS
+
+ _Episcopate_--
+ THE ARCHBISHOP OF LONDON (NEW PROVINCE)
+
+ _Royal Navy_--
+ VICE-ADMIRAL SIR LAMBERT MEADE, K.C.B.
+
+ _Judges and Magistrates_--
+ LORD MALVERN, L.C.J.; MR JUSTICE BARLING;
+ MR HARROWDEN
+
+ _Counsel_--
+ MR DUFFUS JACOBS, K.C.; MR BRILL, K.C.;
+ MR DAWSON DALTON
+
+ _Medical Faculty_--
+ DR WILSON WAKE
+
+ THE LEAGUERS OF LONDON, POLICE, THE UNEMPLOYED, ETC.
+
+ [_Dramatic Rights secured_]
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+ PAGE
+
+ PROLOGUE:
+
+ PART I.--A HERITAGE OF HATE 9
+
+ PART II.--RIVALS IN LOVE 17
+
+
+ CHAPTERS
+
+ I. LONDON IN 1910 21
+
+ II. AT THE NEW BAILEY 29
+
+ III. THE LEAGUERS’ FIRST MOVE 36
+
+ IV. THE CASE THAT FAILED 46
+
+ V. THE LEAGUERS’ SECOND MOVE 54
+
+ VI. THE MURDER OF DR GRADY 61
+
+ VII. LOVE ON THE LEAS 69
+
+ VIII. SIR JOHN BREAKS DOWN 77
+
+ IX. FATHER FRANCIS AT FOLKESTONE 85
+
+ X. MARCUS WHITE RETURNS 97
+
+ XI. THE SIGN OF THE SPIDER 105
+
+ XII. THE “EPOCH” RUNS AMOK 115
+
+ XIII. THE STRANGE OUTBREAK AT QUEEN’S HALL 125
+
+ XIV. BILLY OF MAYFAIR 132
+
+ XV. THE SHRINE OF LUXURY AND PRIDE 142
+
+ XVI. THE MANIA THAT LAID HOLD OF LONDON 152
+
+ XVII. THE GREAT FIRE IN HYDE PARK 160
+
+ XVIII. ALDWYTH ASKS A QUESTION 171
+
+ XIX. THE LORD MAYOR READS THE RIOT ACT 178
+
+ XX. THE LEAGUERS AT THE HOME OFFICE 189
+
+ XXI. THE DEVIL’S OWN ON THE DEFENSIVE 198
+
+ XXII. THE BOMB BRIGADE 208
+
+ XXIII. THE CRANKS’ CORNER 216
+
+ XXIV. THE LOWER CRITIC 222
+
+ XXV. MARCUS WHITE GIVES ORDERS 231
+
+ XXVI. THE CAPTURE OF THE JUDGES 239
+
+ XXVII. THE BLACK CHRISTMAS 251
+
+ XXVIII. IN TRAFALGAR SQUARE 260
+
+ XXIX. BILLY’S MESSAGE 266
+
+ XXX. THE FATE OF PORTSMOUTH DOCKYARD 276
+
+ XXXI. THE NAVAL BATTLE OFF PLYMOUTH 285
+
+ XXXII. MARCUS WHITE AND THE MOB 296
+
+ XXXIII. THE FOREIGN SECRETARY 306
+
+ XXXIV. THE EAGLE IN THE LION’S JAWS 314
+
+ XXXV. THE KING AND THE KAISER 318
+
+ XXXVI. THE BROTHERHOOD OF DEATH 324
+
+ XXXVII. THE GREAT THANKSGIVING 328
+
+
+
+
+ A Time of Terror
+
+
+
+
+ PROLOGUE
+ (A.D. 1885)
+
+ PART I
+ A HERITAGE OF HATE
+
+The Court was densely crowded, and an atmosphere already vitiated
+became doubly poisonous now that the ushers had lighted the gas. The
+flaring jets revealed on every side the flushed and strained faces
+of those who were eagerly waiting for the verdict. A great number of
+women had been present at the Old Bailey throughout the trial--women
+of fashion, eager to be thrilled by the most potent sensation of the
+hour, and women of the lower orders, mostly Irish. A babble of excited
+conversation arose directly the judges and the jury left the Court.
+There were three judges, for this was an alleged case of treason
+felony. In technical language the four prisoners were indicted for
+having feloniously compassed, devised, and intended to depose our Lady
+the Queen from the style, honour, and royal name of the Imperial Crown
+of the United Kingdom, and further that they, with divers other persons
+unknown, did manifest such intent by certain overt acts; all of which
+was set out with the customary amount of verbiage in the indictment.
+
+Reduced to plain English, the actual charge was that the accused had
+purchased arms and ammunition for distribution amongst a revolutionary
+brotherhood; that they had been concerned in storing gunpowder and
+other explosive materials for the purpose of wrecking public buildings
+and overthrowing the Government of the Queen. Chester Castle, with its
+great store of arms, was to be seized. Arms were to be transmitted in
+piano packing-cases by the mail train from Euston, and the express was
+to be held up on the route to Holyhead. Thereafter the rails were to be
+torn up, the telegraph wires cut, and an armed band of two thousand men
+was to take forcible possession of the mail boat and land in due course
+on the Irish coast.
+
+None of these things, beyond the purchase of a limited quantity of
+arms and ammunition, had really come to pass; but, as usual, the
+inevitable informer had revealed the alleged plot to the Government.
+Four arrests had been made, but the principal efforts of the
+prosecution were vigorously employed to obtain the conviction of one
+prisoner in particular--Michael White.
+
+This prisoner was a journalist, hitherto living in one of the suburbs
+of London, and acting as correspondent for certain journals in Ireland
+and in America. Under a search warrant the police had ransacked every
+corner of his house. They found what purported to be an incriminatory
+letter written in invisible ink, also a glass tube containing a liquid
+which, when tested by the Government analyst, was proved to contain
+crystals. These crystals, if dissolved in water, could be used for the
+purpose of making impressions on paper, and such impressions would be
+invisible until copperas or certain other chemicals had been applied.
+Beyond these discoveries and the evidence of the informers, there was
+but little to connect Michael White with the alleged conspiracy.
+
+The prisoner was a handsome, middle-aged man, whose intellectual face
+was in striking contrast with those of the two shifty-eyed and cringing
+informers, on whom from time to time he bent looks of infinite
+disgust and scorn. The sympathy of not a few was with the accused; but
+so strenuous was the conduct of the prosecution, and so adverse the
+judicial summing up, that only one result could be expected from the
+trial.
+
+One member of White’s family was present through the long and agonising
+trial--the prisoner’s only son, and there was a double bitterness in
+the young man’s heart as hour by hour he saw the net being weaved about
+his father, for he, himself, had his own personal reason for hating
+Westwood, the zealous junior counsel for the Crown. When the fierce
+eyes of young Marcus White met the barrister’s, the latter shifted
+his gaze, fumbled with his papers, or made a show of entering into
+conversation with other counsel. The prisoner’s son watched these poor
+devices with a contemptuous smile. A complex, burning sense of wrong
+filled his breast. The private wrong which he believed had been done
+to himself by Westwood, blended, as it were, with the wrong that he
+conceived was being done to his father; and this in turn was interwoven
+with the sense of wholesale wrong inflicted during centuries upon
+prisoners and captives who had come within the iron grip of English
+criminal law.
+
+Marcus White, like his father, was a man of no small intellectual
+power. A journalist who is to write anything worth reading must read
+much before he writes, and the prisoner’s son had read much. At one
+time it had been intended that he should join the army of advocates,
+but he turned away with repugnance after a preliminary survey of the
+law. Later, his father, to whom he was devotedly attached, gave him
+some training in his own profession, the profession of the pen. The
+elder White had long had in hand a book on the subject of barbarous
+punishments, and his son diligently assisted him in looking up and
+collating ancient records of the shocking violence in times past
+done to humanity under the sanction of the law. He knew that the
+English Criminal Code included at one time nearly two hundred offences
+punishable with death; he knew that this dreadful catalogue comprised
+innumerable offences of the most trifling character, while it omitted
+enormities of the utmost atrocity.
+
+A study of these penal statutes and their ruthless application had
+shattered his instinctive reverence for the law and its administration.
+He had learnt to see in the sanguinary monuments of so-called justice
+the oppression of the strong, the cruelty of the cowardly, a terrible
+revelation of “man’s inhumanity to man.” His mind revolted at the
+idea of a divine right in kings to hang, draw, and quarter any one
+who criticised their conduct or advocated another form of government.
+It was, he held, only the _Lex talionis_, supported by force, and all
+the traps and complexities of criminal pleading were but the miserable
+devices of lawyers ever ready to prostitute a calling that in itself
+was noble. History proved it--history of which nearly every page was
+stained with judgments of expediency or the dark crime of judicial
+murder. “The truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth,” was
+supposed to have come from the poisonous lips of such creatures as
+Titus Oates. The judge--he might be a Jeffreys or a Scroggs--was but
+the Government in wig and ermine. The Crown counsel were paid pleaders
+for the party in power. The docile jury, ruled by the judge, were in
+effect the most obedient servants of the Government. This, then, was
+human justice--which in its true essence was supernal and divine. This
+was the Western Baal that men were called on to revere!
+
+Rightly or wrongly, thus he reasoned. From such thoughts there had
+sprung up and still was growing and destined to grow in the mind of
+Marcus White a loathing for the law and a desire for vengeance on
+all who followed it as servitors. Such were the feelings with which
+he had seen his own father caught in these dreadful toils; practised
+advocates, perjured witnesses, and crafty detectives, all combining to
+bring about the climax that was imminent.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There was a cry of “Silence!” The jury were stumbling back into the
+box; the judges returned to the bench. Amid a breathless stillness
+the Clerk of Arraigns put the accustomed questions: “Do you find the
+prisoner, Patrick Desmond, guilty or not guilty?”--“Not guilty.”
+
+“Do you find the prisoner, John O’Leary, guilty or not guilty?”--“Not
+guilty.”
+
+“Do you find the prisoner, Robert Dale, guilty or not guilty?”--“Not
+guilty.”
+
+Then, last of all, “Do you find the prisoner, Michael White, guilty
+or not guilty?” The pale face of the foreman twitched; there was a
+momentary hesitation in his manner. Every ear was strained to catch the
+verdict. Then, in a low voice, it came,--“Guilty.”
+
+There was a swift scratching of pens. The Clerk of Arraigns was
+recording the verdict on the parchment of the long indictment, the
+judge was noting it, the counsel were indorsing the result upon their
+briefs, but the eyes of all others were on the face of the prisoner at
+the bar.
+
+“Michael White,” said the Clerk of Arraigns, “you stand convicted upon
+this indictment. Have you any cause to show why the Court should not
+pass judgment upon you?”
+
+“I have to say,” answered the prisoner, in a clear, strong voice, “that
+I had no hand in this so-called plot. My conviction has been brought
+about by perjured evidence and trickery; but, my lord, do not suppose
+that I shall whine for mercy. I am not the first man to suffer for a
+cause. I love my native land, and I hate those who oppress it. If my
+life could be the price of justice to Ireland and the Irish I would
+gladly lay it down; if the hand that I now raise to heaven could bring
+vengeance on those who have wronged us I should rejoice; and though
+death or prison-house make me powerless, with my last breath I would
+whisper to my son to carry on the work.”
+
+For a moment the prisoner’s face was turned towards his son’s, and
+there were those in Court who saw and afterwards recalled the answering
+look.
+
+Then Michael White received, unmoved, his sentence.
+
+Penal servitude for life.
+
+
+ PART II
+ RIVALS IN LOVE
+
+“Stand aside,” said Westwood, in a voice which he vainly strove to
+steady.
+
+“Not yet,” was the savage answer; “you’ve got to listen!”
+
+The two men faced each other in the calm starlight of the April
+evening. The Embankment was almost deserted save for the huddled,
+heedless outcasts on the benches. A few hansoms rattled westward; a
+few small vessels, with sails spread, moved ghostly and silent on
+the swirling river. Nature’s placidity was in strange contrast with
+the fiery passion that flamed in the eyes of Marcus White and found
+expression in his threatening gestures. Both men were pale; their
+facial muscles tense. But the pallor of the one was begotten of anger
+and hatred. With Westwood it was the outcome of nervous apprehension,
+if not of actual fear.
+
+“This is folly,” he said, with a better effort at self-command. “So far
+as I am concerned you have nothing to complain of----”
+
+“Nothing to complain of,” exclaimed White. “What! You steal the girl
+who was mine. Yes, mine,--until you sneaked in between us----”
+
+“That is not true, White.”
+
+“I say you stole her--she was beguiled away from me. I was poor, and
+likely to be poorer. You had your profession, your respectability,
+and your prospects. Curse you! You’re not fit to touch her hand. Nor
+am I. I know that well enough; but I love her, and always shall. She
+was everything to me--my strength, my hope--till you stepped in; and
+to-night I’d think no more of taking you by the throat and ending your
+mean life than I would of crushing a beetle or any other filthy thing
+beneath my heel.
+
+“I’m sorry if you think----” began Westwood. Then he paused, half
+ashamed of his own propitiatory tone, but debating how he could appease
+the fury of his enemy and escape from a situation which had become so
+threatening.
+
+“And not content with taking her from me,” the other went on, drawing
+a step nearer and speaking with increased intensity, “you stood up
+in Court to prosecute my father. You and the others have helped to
+send him into slavery for life. The prosecution was a lie, I say, and
+you lied as much as any of the witnesses. Not on oath; that wasn’t
+wanted. You saw your chances, and you laid hold of them. You got
+the advertisement you wanted. There was deviltry in your pretended
+moderation. But you know the tricks of your trade--your looks and
+gestures to the jury said what you dared not put in words. He was in
+the dock and you were at the bar, with all its privileges and all its
+honourable traditions! Faugh! You sickened me. Yours was the face I
+watched; not the judge’s; not the foreman’s when he stood up and gave
+the verdict----”
+
+“Let me pass, man; you’re acting like a madman,” said the barrister.
+
+“Ah! You’re afraid of me. Coward! coward! You daren’t deny it.”
+
+Westwood glanced round. He had been kept late at his chambers in Paper
+Buildings, and near the corner of Temple Avenue had come suddenly upon
+this enemy whom, of all men, he least desired to meet. The stream of
+wheeled traffic came steadily across Blackfriars Bridge and branched
+off right and left, but on the footway of the Embankment still scarcely
+a creature was to be seen. Westwood spoke again.
+
+“I only did my duty. The brief came to me because of the illness of
+another man, and I was bound to take it. You ought to understand that
+legal etiquette----”
+
+“Legal etiquette!” exclaimed White scornfully, “etiquette that allows
+you lawyers to libel other men and twist and turn the truth to suit
+your case. Etiquette that justifies your taking fees you don’t earn,
+and neglecting cases when it suits you. For you and your brood there
+is no sort of penalty. You pose as good citizens. You talk yourselves
+into Parliament, and fawn on the Government when there are places to be
+given away. You sit on the Bench and draw a year’s salary for little
+more than half a year’s work, and send to penal servitude men in whose
+presence you ought to stand bare-headed.”
+
+“I can’t stay here and listen to your raving,” said Westwood angrily.
+
+“You’ve got the best of it at present. You’ve had us every way,”
+persisted White. “There’s nothing left for me in England. That suits
+your purpose, too. But, mark my words, Westwood, I haven’t done with
+you. Sooner or later the tables shall be turned. I swear by heaven they
+shall! Some day you’ll hear of me again!”
+
+Ending, he spat on him. Then, with a contemptuous gesture, turned away.
+Westwood, with a movement of disgust and anger, took two steps as if to
+follow him; then hesitated, stopped.
+
+Marcus White did not even condescend to turn his head, but, striding
+eastward, passed into the shadows of the London night.
+
+
+ END OF PROLOGUE
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+ LONDON IN 1910
+
+
+An Englishman returning to his native land after an absence of
+twenty-five years, might not at first discover much difference in the
+look of London. There stood the old familiar landmarks--Buckingham
+Palace, St James’s, the Marble Arch, Apsley House, Westminster Abbey,
+the Houses of Parliament, the National Gallery, the British Museum,
+St Paul’s, the Tower, the Monument, and many another well-remembered
+building. There were new hotels, new theatres, new buildings of all
+sorts, and at least one notable new thoroughfare. In the great arteries
+of business the old familiar thunder of the traffic rose louder than
+ever, with the modern addition of a new smell and a new noise--the
+smell and the whir of the motor-car. The mean streets were as mean
+as ever; the contrast between this and that locality more than ever
+noticeable.
+
+And the people, save for the scarcely perceptible change in fashion of
+dress, at first looked pretty much the same. There were more loafers,
+more wastrels, more sprawling scarecrows of humanity in the parks, and
+along the Embankment. The richest city in the world still had thousands
+and more thousands of homeless, miserable creatures in its midst,
+thousands whom the State knew not how to save for their own sake, or
+for the service of England.
+
+It would be obvious to the returned native that the old country must
+long since have ceased to be a “merry England.” The look on the faces
+of the people was enough to settle that. The intent gaze, the joyless
+expression, told a convincing tale. Here and there might be seen a
+flower of beauty in the gigantic garden of weeds--a stalwart, handsome
+man, a “perfect woman, nobly plann’d.” Eyes of youth, looking eagerly
+upon the page of life, still shone with the glow of hope and happiness;
+young girls and young children, in their freshness and charm, still
+reminded the wayfarer that in the great design human beings were meant
+to be even more beautiful than the flowers of the field. But the vast
+crowd--what had come to it, and what was coming? Was the English race,
+as a race, growing not only plain, but positively ugly?
+
+When the home-comer found time to move about a little, he would
+discover that in many respects the changes wrought in twenty-five
+years were greater than he had supposed. There were, in outlying
+districts, certain new or enlarged buildings of formidable aspect.
+These were the lunatic asylums of the capital. The inquirer had to
+learn that insanity had been advancing by leaps and bounds. Five years
+ago the number of London lunatics was nearly 27,000, and now there
+were nearly 100,000 certified lunatics in London. The workhouses also
+were larger and fuller than ever; and in the City, the scene of the
+trial of Michael White in 1885, the old court-house, haunted with the
+horrors of centuries, had given place to a new and imposing building,
+with greater accommodation for criminals. Solid, handsome, stony, the
+New Bailey frowned down on the new generation of Londoners. The City
+Fathers were justly proud of their modern palace of justice, though the
+question of what motto should be inscribed over its portal gave rise
+to some difference of opinion. A very reverend dean suggested, “Defend
+the children of the poor, and punish the wrong-doer,” or words to that
+effect. In what way the New Bailey was going to fulfil the first part
+of the text did not seem to be quite obvious but certainly the massive
+sessions-house looked quite equal to punishing the evil-doer. It did
+not occur to any one to recommend a text from the Koran, which declares
+that to endure and forgive is the highest achievement for humanity.
+Probably the City Fathers did not read the Koran. Besides, though
+in the interval we had allied ourselves with worshippers of Buddha,
+England as yet had no treaty with the unspeakable Turk. A quotation
+from the sacred book of Islam might have been considered out of place
+in a nominally Christian country.
+
+Such were some of the changes brought about in a quarter of a
+century. A person of cynical mind might well doubt whether they were
+changes for the better. For the rest, the people crowded hither and
+thither--underground, by tubes in all directions; above ground, on
+foot, and by vehicles of every description--mostly “motors.” By means
+of the latter insignificant persons tore through the streets, bound on
+errands of no importance. The private “motors,” of course, were owned
+by the pleasure-seekers of the age, who, for all their hurry, probably
+had nothing more urgent to do than to order luncheon at a fashionable
+restaurant, or purchase a box of cigarettes.
+
+Postal deliveries had been multiplied; telephone facilities increased.
+Everything was essentially modern; the great thing was to be up to
+date. But all the new facilities for saving time and trouble seemed
+to have resulted in leaving very little time for anything. Certainly
+there was no time for studying the past of England and of the British
+race; and as to the future, a great many persons believed that, for
+individuals, it was as mythical as Mrs Harris.
+
+The so-called educated classes, when not following the compulsory
+routine of their daily lives, were primarily engaged, as to the young
+men, in the frenzied pursuit of sport; and as to the young women, in
+the vital study of dress, varied by a steady perusal of their favourite
+authoresses in the domain of fiction.
+
+Newspapers, of course, were scanned--by the male population, at any
+rate; but people were not equal to the intellectual exertion of reading
+an unbroken column. News and notes had to be administered on the
+homœopathic principle, in scraps and snippets. And as the Bible had not
+yet been abridged, it necessarily followed that that was the very last
+book that up-to-date people could find time or interest to study.
+
+Lives of great men were still available to remind the moderns to make
+their lives sublime. But, then, the moderns could not find time or
+inclination to read the ancients. The sublime, in their view, was not
+only close to, but identical with, the ridiculous. Certainly they could
+not concern themselves with any nonsense about leaving footprints on
+the sands of time. Everybody, however, found time to read lengthy law
+reports arising from scandals in high life.
+
+A considerate aristocracy had of late done more and more to gratify
+public taste in that respect. The “upper classes” quarrelled about
+their children, about their heirlooms, about the “other man,” or the
+“secret woman,” about anything and everything. But, in spite of all,
+the average Briton, with inborn snobbishness, dearly loved a lord.
+Kind hearts were at a discount; but coronets fetched heavy premiums,
+especially in the American market. Broadly speaking, “simple faith” was
+non-existent; but Norman blood, however vitiated, covered in a double
+sense the multitude of sins. The Divorce Court had virtually become a
+public laundry, in which judge, counsel, and witnesses were constantly
+engaged in washing the soiled linen of the British peerage, a task
+varied, however, by similar operations on behalf of the ladies and
+gentlemen of the stage.
+
+The business classes, still solid, stolid, and worried, were mostly
+occupied in efforts to put money in the purse to an extent sufficient
+to meet the ever-growing expenses of modern life in England. By reason
+of this problem, there were fewer marriages than of yore; and, yet
+more significant, the birth-rate fell and fell. There was still great
+wealth in England, but it was in fewer hands. The Jew syndicates, the
+drink-sellers, the drapers, and the betting agents largely absorbed the
+nation’s gold. But the poor in pocket were by no means poor in spirit.
+Pampered and petted by political parties, the British working-man
+had realised the uses of the weapons placed at his disposal. He had
+a vote, and he used it, whereas the middle-class man did not. He
+had the weight of numbers behind him, and he meant to use that too.
+Yet, notwithstanding all these indications of decay, there was still
+in every rank a goodly leaven; the problem was, whether there was
+enough of it to leaven the whole lump, and resuscitate the nation.
+If, instead of the return of the native after only twenty-five years,
+the boy-poet, Keats, could have come back (from that bourn whence no
+traveller returns), after nearer a hundred years, it is to be feared he
+still would have found an “inhuman dearth of noble natures,” and still
+gloomier signs--
+
+ “Of all the unhealthy and o’er-darkened ways
+ Made for our searching.”
+
+It was a covetous age, but it did not covet earnestly the best of gifts:
+
+ “Gentleness, Virtue, Wisdom, and Endurance,
+ These are the seals of that most firm assurance,
+ Which bars the pit over Destruction’s strength.”
+
+But Shelley, like Keats, was forgotten, or unknown. The age of
+mediocrity had no concern with intellectual giants; the period of small
+men, with parochial ideas, nothing in common with great conceptions of--
+
+ “Love from its awful throne of patient power,”
+
+looking down upon humanity; or of humanity ready--
+
+ “To suffer woes which Hope thinks infinite;
+ To forgive wrongs darker than death or night;
+ To defy Power, which seems omnipotent;
+ To love, and bear; to hope till Hope creates.”
+
+It was “Everyone for himself,” but not “devil take the hindmost”;
+because belief in the Prince of Darkness, like belief in many other
+things, had largely been discarded.
+
+The signs and the sounds of the times were many and various; but,
+not in England only--perhaps less in England than abroad--the most
+arresting was the diapason note of a steady march. The rolling rhythm
+of a mighty organ; the tramp, tramp, tramp of the many millions,
+drawing nearer and nearer.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II
+ AT THE NEW BAILEY
+
+
+For three days public attention had been riveted on another sensational
+trial that had packed the New Bailey with an excited audience, and
+filled the report columns of the London papers. It was alleged that a
+daring and gigantic fraud had been practised on charitable persons,
+and, what was worse, not merely on persons, but on personages, highly
+placed in Church and State. Many distinguished victims had gone into
+the witness-box, and told their tale; and therein, for the time being,
+lay the main interest of the trial. Again, ladies of social celebrity,
+eager for a new sensation, had importuned city officials and the Judge
+himself for the equivalent of stalls to see the show. The Society
+journals gushingly described their excellent taste--in the matter of
+dress.
+
+Lord Malvern, the Chief Justice, had come down to try the case, and his
+counterfeit presentment in various attitudes of wisdom or weariness
+had figured in the _Daily Graphic_, with those of the prisoners,
+witnesses, and counsel. In this instance the prisoners themselves were
+persons of little interest or importance; for it was well understood
+that they were practically dummies, put forward, and, it was said,
+well paid for running the risk of capture. There was what the papers
+call a brilliant array of counsel. For the Crown, Sir John Westwood,
+Solicitor-General, led three other learned gentlemen, of whom “Bobby”
+Herrick was the least of juniors; and on the other side were ranged
+five advocates, the best the Bar could produce or money retain--the
+leaders being the well-known K.C.’s--Mr Duffus Jacobs, Mr Brill, and Mr
+Dawson Dalton.
+
+The elaborate nature of the conspiracy had only gradually been
+unfolded. It was amazing in its audacity; and yet in the minds of
+those who were specially qualified to read between the lines, there
+was a strong conviction that something much more serious lay behind.
+It was proved, indeed, that many thousands of pounds had passed into
+the coffers of the London Emigration League, but it was whispered that
+not one-tenth of the plunder had been brought to light or traced.
+The actual figures were believed to run into scores of thousands,
+systematically collected under false pretences during a period of
+ten months and more. Dukes and lesser peers, with bishops, deans,
+prominent canons of the Church, and City magnates, had been made the
+puppets of the wire-pullers. As patrons they gave their names as well
+as their money to this well-sounding scheme, which professed to have
+for its object the sending of the loafers, wastrels, hooligans, and
+gaol-birds of the homeland to Canada, Australia, and South Africa. The
+project found favour, to some extent because it appealed indirectly
+to self-interest. The growing turbulence of the unemployed and
+unemployable seriously menaced social order, and the annual expenditure
+on prisons and workhouses had brought about an enormous increase in the
+rates.
+
+The scheme of the League, appealing thus to a spurious philanthropy,
+when once launched, was urged forward day by day under the auspices of
+illustrious names, and boldly pushed by means of page advertisements
+in the leading London newspapers. At the Mansion House the Lord Mayor
+presided over an enthusiastic meeting in support of the League. A
+resolution, moved by a member of the Royal Family, was received
+with plaudits and carried with acclamation. Thereafter, from leading
+assurance offices, and banking houses, and from City men of wealth and
+influence, munificent donations flowed in thick and fast. These gifts
+were freely advertised. The first list drew another list, and so forth.
+The snowball rolled and rolled.
+
+Doubt and suspicion, whispered here and there, were silenced or
+pooh-poohed. The League stood out boldly in the light of day. Its huge
+offices on Holborn Viaduct were filled with an army of clerks and
+typists by day; and by night its name was flashed ceaselessly, like
+that of a catchpenny soap or tobacco, before the eyes of wondering
+passers-by. Reports were issued to subscribers throughout the kingdom,
+who were given to understand that the colonial branches of the League
+were being steadily developed into working order, and that soon
+the farms and industries designed to provide honest labour for the
+outcasts of the crowded mother country would be available for the eager
+emigrants.
+
+The various colonies indicated were not quite keen in their
+appreciation of the project. Colonial journals protested against
+an influx of ex-convicts. Canada wanted population, but it must be
+population of the right sort; and Australia saw in the scheme a
+dangerous likeness to the old transportation system, with all the
+attendant evils of a penal settlement.
+
+An officer of the League complained strongly in the _Times_ of the
+misunderstanding and obstruction that thus hindered the fulfilment
+of their meritorious aims. Influential deputations of patrons and
+vice-presidents went to the Colonial Office, and waited also on the
+Prime Minister. The Crown agents of the Colonies were interviewed; and,
+the League, remaining prominently in evidence day by day, drew in,
+though more slowly as the months went by, additional subscriptions from
+all classes of society.
+
+Then, suddenly, a bolt fell from the blue. Mr Vandelaire, the
+owner-editor of the _Detector_, published an article in which he
+declared in round terms that the whole scheme was an imposture,
+a colossal fraud in root and branch. He boldly named the leading
+officials of the League as participators in a nefarious project,
+and politely informed them that if they considered the article was
+libellous, his solicitors (the much-paragraphed Messrs Ely & Ely) would
+be ready to accept service of legal process. Other articles followed,
+and were eagerly read and quoted. They suggested that there was a rich
+and reckless man behind the League, the prime mover in a mammoth
+project of deception; that the officials in question were, for the most
+part, figureheads; and finally, that robbery was not the real object of
+this daring and dangerous organisation.
+
+Questions were asked in Parliament, and evaded in the usual
+Governmental manner. The _Daily Telephone_ devoted columns to the
+letters of correspondents, some of whom--guileless “constant readers”
+and others--angrily protested against “malicious attacks upon a great
+and meritorious scheme,” while, on the other hand, a few vehemently
+invoked the criminal law and declared that the Treasury Solicitor was
+a useless functionary unless, in such circumstances, he set the law in
+motion. Even the law officers of the Crown, sadly injured men who only
+wanted to draw their enormous salaries in peace and quietness, came in
+for criticism. Presumptuous persons actually wanted to know what they
+did for the money. It became quite manifest that the public demanded a
+prosecution of the League, and meant to have it. Ultimately, and, as it
+were with infinite reluctance, warrants were applied for and granted.
+
+A prolonged magisterial enquiry resulted, after endless remands, in the
+committal of the secretary and chief cashier of the League to take
+their trial at the Bailey. Such was the stage that had now been reached
+in this amazing drama of the day.
+
+On a certain Saturday in April--five-and-twenty years after Michael
+White went down into the silence of imprisonment, soon to pass into the
+greater silence of a yet narrower cell; five-and-twenty years after his
+son had uttered his savage warning to John Westwood, the sequel was
+beginning to take shape.
+
+As yet it was a little cloud, no bigger than a man’s hand; but the
+cloud was destined to grow to vast proportions, blacker and more
+threatening as time went on, shadowing London with a great terror of
+darkness, and begetting fear throughout the length and breadth of
+England.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III
+ THE LEAGUERS’ FIRST MOVE
+
+
+In the Solicitor-General’s chambers, in Paper Buildings, Bobby
+Herrick was fuming, and looking at his watch. At intervals Wilson,
+the head-clerk, fussed in and out with briefs and papers. All the
+bundles were tied together with the inevitable tape; well may it blush
+red for the unholy and mendacious things it has enfolded! Westwood’s
+clerk, however, never blushed. For one thing, he had bargained so
+remorselessly for heavier fees at moments critical for his employer’s
+clients that he had lost the power of feeling shame. For another, he
+had a thick and doughy skin which preserved the same unhealthy hue at
+all times and in all places. He was a prosperous man, belonging, it
+was said, to the ranks of “gigmanity,” for he kept his pony chaise at
+Brixton. There were some who said that Josiah Wilson would sell his
+little soul for gold if only Mephistopheles would care to make a bid.
+He certainly had investments, and his average income from “clerk’s
+fees” (which immemorial usage extracts from the client, instead of from
+the advocate) was quite substantial. Many a struggling junior at the
+Bar would have been thankful to earn a third of that average income.
+Wilson really earned nothing except in the manner indicated; but he
+wore a silk-fronted frock-coat and a massive watch-chain. Nature, in
+its abhorrence of a straight line, had taken care that there should be
+no straight line in the waistcoat which that gleaming chain adorned.
+
+“Sir John’s late this morning,” said Wilson.
+
+“Yes, I know he is,” agreed Herrick impatiently.
+
+“Something wrong, I expect,” suggested Wilson, with a shifty look.
+
+“Good heavens! I hope not.” Herrick started up. “Why, everything
+depends on his being in Court. He’s going to claim his privilege and
+reply on the whole case for the Crown.”
+
+“He can’t if he isn’t there,” said Wilson. “He was a bit queer
+yesterday. Liver--that’s what it is,” he added hesitatingly.
+
+“Confound his liver!” Herrick muttered, under the slight cover of his
+fair moustache. “Look here,” he said aloud, “why don’t you ring him
+up?”
+
+“I might do that,” assented Wilson, but not with enthusiasm.
+
+“He seemed all right in Court yesterday; a bit fagged, nothing more.
+It’s the House that knocks him up.”
+
+“He wasn’t all right last night when I took down that last report from
+Scotland Yard.”
+
+“Well, go and ring them up, man. There’s hardly time to get there
+before the Court sits, and the Lord Chief won’t wait for anyone.”
+
+In a few moments he heard Wilson’s “Are you there?”--the feeble
+stereotyped inquiry of the telephonist--and presently the tinkle
+of the bell in the outer room in answer. Herrick felt nervous and
+excited--moved by an unaccountable apprehension of sinister happenings.
+So far as he knew at the moment, he had nothing to do but prompt his
+leader in regard to dates and details, if Westwood’s memory or private
+notes should fail him. The case had been a professional and financial
+godsend to the young barrister. Of course he knew perfectly well that
+the brief had not come to him as the just due of his talents. He was
+young, untried, and inexperienced--except in his capacity as one of
+the lesser “devils” in the Solicitor-General’s forensic Hades. The
+Treasury Solicitor gave him brief No. 4 because it was officially known
+that it would suit Sir John Westwood to have him in the case. He also
+happened to be a young fellow of good family, with a not very remote
+chance of succeeding to an earldom; finally, he was engaged to be
+married to Sir John Westwood’s only daughter.
+
+While Wilson seemed to be trying to extract intelligible information
+over the wires, Herrick took a turn up and down the slip of a back room
+in which he worked; then he stood awhile with his bulky brief tucked
+under his arm, and hands clasped behind him, gazing across the sunlit
+grass in the gardens. It was a perfect spring morning in point of
+weather, and Bobby, as the Bar called him, reflected how pleasant it
+would be if he and Aldwyth Westwood were up the river, or sauntering
+side by side along the woodland ways.
+
+Suddenly the door behind him was opened, and the staccato voice of a
+boy-clerk announced, “Miss Westwood.”
+
+“Father can’t come! Isn’t it dreadfully unlucky?” she exclaimed,
+entering in a whirlwind of “frock and frill.”
+
+“Unlucky!” echoed Herrick, turning, aghast; “why, it’s the very----
+Well, it’s simply disastrous! I firmly believe that unless he has the
+last word to the jury, they’ll acquit those scoundrels. The prosecution
+will fall through like a house of cards! Is anything serious the
+matter?”
+
+“I don’t know--I can’t make out,” was the girl’s anxious answer. “He
+seems quite----well, almost stupefied this morning. Of course you know
+he’s not been well for some time past, and last night----” She paused,
+her lips trembling, tears in her tender eyes.
+
+“My dear girl, I’m so awfully sorry,” said Herrick, taking her hand.
+“It can’t be helped. Don’t worry; the doctor will pull him round in no
+time. You sent for one, of course?”
+
+“Yes, I telephoned to Queen Anne Street before I left.”
+
+“What message did your father send me?”
+
+“None at all--isn’t it dreadful? He seemed quite indifferent, and, as I
+told you, almost stupefied. When I questioned him, he seemed to have no
+power to answer clearly. When he spoke, his voice was thick and I could
+hardly understand a word he said.”
+
+“Good heavens! It sounds as if some drug had been at work. I suppose he
+never----?”
+
+“I am quite sure he never takes a drug of any sort,” was the girl’s
+emphatic answer to the unfinished question.
+
+“No, of course not, of course not,” said her lover soothingly; then,
+looking once more at his watch: “Well, I ought to see our other leader
+at once, that’s clear.”
+
+“That’s Mr Boulton, isn’t it?”
+
+“Yes, Boulton. Look here, will you come down to the Bailey in my
+hansom, and we’ll talk about this on the way?”
+
+“Yes, I can do that, and then drive home again,” she agreed readily.
+
+“And you must tell Sir John he needn’t worry. I daresay the case will
+work out all right, after all.”
+
+“You don’t think so really,” said Aldwyth, looking with her clear eyes
+into his.
+
+And in his heart of hearts he did not.
+
+Within a few minutes they were driving eastward as fast as the
+congested traffic of the street, alleged to have been specially beloved
+by Dr Johnson, would permit. On Blackfriars Bridge, cabs, omnibuses,
+vans, and vehicles of all sorts, held back by the raised hand of the
+constable on duty, were let loose just as the hansom in which the
+lovers sat had reached the end of Fleet Street. There was nothing
+unusual or remarkable in being blocked. But what struck Herrick as
+distinctly odd was the vast number of low-class pedestrians who were to
+be noticed streaming over the bridge from the Surrey side, and turning
+to the right up Ludgate Hill. The crowd impeded the vehicular traffic
+under the railway bridge, and blocked the narrow turning which gave
+access to that ancient bit of London, still popularly known as the Old
+Bailey. As Herrick stood up to pay the cabman presently, he noticed
+with surprise that other streams of people of the same low order seemed
+to be converging from Holborn, Giltspur Street, and Newgate Street.
+
+What did it mean? When he had sent Aldwyth off in the hansom with a
+lover’s look for herself and a last message of sympathy for her father,
+he turned to Henshaw, the detective inspector, who was standing near
+counsel’s entrance to the Courts.
+
+“Where’s all this riff-raff coming from,” asked the barrister.
+
+“Slums,” said Henshaw briefly.
+
+“But why?”
+
+“Ah! that’s the question! Honourable members of this precious League,
+perhaps. There’s more in this affair than meets the eye, Mr Herrick.”
+
+“The jury won’t know what to make of it.”
+
+“Begging your pardon, I think they’ll be made to know.”
+
+“What!--intimidation? Surely not!”
+
+“P’raps we’ll know more about it after a bit,” said the detective; and,
+with eyes scanning the growing crowd, he moved quietly away.
+
+“Pass along; pass along there, please,” said the uniformed men, with
+monotonous iteration; and Herrick, ere he hurried into the building,
+noticed that half a dozen of the constables were busily employed in
+keeping the fast-gathering multitude in motion.
+
+“Bad news about Boulton,” were almost the first words he heard in one
+of the corridors. The speaker was a circuit chum of his, and one of the
+junior counsel on the other side.
+
+“Why! What do you mean?” he demanded anxiously.
+
+“What! haven’t you heard? Set upon by hooligans near St Pancras station
+last night. Picked up insensible, and taken to the hospital in Gray’s
+Inn Road. We shall be on directly,” and, tilting up his wig, the
+speaker hurried down the corridor.
+
+A sense of planned events, a fatalistic feeling, gripped Herrick at
+the heart. Then, with a deep-drawn breath, he turned into the robing
+room--the armoury of forensic fray. While he robed, he looked round
+eagerly for Arthur Dutton, who held brief No. 3 for the prosecution.
+Dutton was a stuff gownsman of many years’ experience, a master of
+criminal pleading--on paper and parchment--and one of the permanent
+advisers of the Crown. If Dutton were in good form, all might yet be
+well; though, unfortunately, as advocate he did not usually excel. But
+Dutton was nowhere to be seen, and that morning nobody had come across
+him. Of course it might be that he was already in his place in Court,
+and thither Herrick hurried, entering just as cries of “Silence!” from
+the ushers heralded the approach of Lord Malvern, the presiding judge.
+
+“Where’s Sir John?” asked the Assistant Treasury Solicitor in an
+anxious whisper. In a few hurried sentences Herrick informed him of the
+great man’s sudden illness.
+
+“Both our leaders absent! Good heavens! What’s going to happen?”
+
+What actually happened next was the passing of a telegram from hand to
+hand until it reached the Treasury official.
+
+“Read that,” he said, and sat back in his seat, dismayed.
+
+Herrick read the message. It was as follows:--
+
+“_To Treasury Solicitor,
+
+“Central Criminal Court._
+
+“_Have received telegram reporting dangerous illness of my father. Am
+leaving town for Windermere._
+
+“_From Dutton, Euston Station._”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+ THE CASE THAT FAILED
+
+
+Bobby Herrick was sound in wind and limb; healthy in heart and
+brain; but for a moment or two he sat dazed and helpless in face of
+the position that confronted him. The whole thing seemed unreal,
+impossible, and the monotonous calling of the names of the jurymen fell
+upon his ears like a buzzing sound of no intelligible significance. The
+faces in Court blended into a sort of misty phantasmagoria, until out
+of the mist one face immediately opposite him riveted his attention.
+Presently it stood out, distinct and well defined, with a watchful
+look in the dark and piercing eyes, and a sardonic smile on its upward
+curving lips. It was a face to be remembered; a face he was destined to
+see again in the course of those tragic episodes which the history of
+events in London was shortly to unfold.
+
+The Treasury Solicitor, he found, was plucking at his gown. “You
+must ask for an adjournment,” he whispered urgently; “it is the only
+thing to do.” Almost at the same moment the judge’s voice was heard.
+His lordship spoke with eye directed towards the vacant seats of the
+prosecuting counsel.
+
+“Where are your leaders, Mr Herrick?”
+
+Herrick rose amid the silence that succeeded the inquiry, conscious
+that every eye in Court was fixed upon him.
+
+“My lord,” he said, in a voice slightly tremulous at first, “by a most
+unfortunate and remarkable combination of events, my learned friends
+are prevented from being present.”
+
+“Surely not all of them!” exclaimed the judge. “I heard some rumour of
+an accident to Mr Boulton--is it true?”
+
+“He was attacked and maltreated in the street last night, my lord, and
+is now in hospital.”
+
+“Another example of the growing spirit of lawlessness which prevails
+in this city,” said the Chief Justice sternly. “I deplore the absence
+of Mr Boulton, especially for such a reason; but where is the
+Solicitor-General?”
+
+“I regret to inform your lordship that he has been seized with sudden
+and, I fear, serious illness.”
+
+“This is most extraordinary,” said the Chief Justice, leaning back and
+taking off his glasses.
+
+“Silence!” cried the usher, as a hum of subdued comment arose in the
+body of the Court.
+
+“What makes the position still more serious, my lord,” continued
+Herrick, “is the absence of Mr Dutton also, for reasons of a family
+nature.”
+
+“Is there no likelihood of his being here presently?”
+
+“He has been summoned to the north of England, and left Euston this
+morning, my lord, as stated in this telegram.”
+
+“A chapter of accidents, indeed! Well, Mr Herrick, _you_ are here.”
+
+“Yes, but being taken by surprise, I am quite unable to do justice
+to the prosecution, and my instructions are to ask your lordship to
+adjourn the trial.”
+
+“To that the defence cannot possibly assent,” interposed Mr Jacobs,
+on his feet instantly. “I speak at any rate for the prisoner whom I
+represent.”
+
+“I say the same on behalf of my client, my lord,” added Mr Brill.
+
+“Well, Mr Herrick----?” from the judge.
+
+“My learned friend is too modest,” said Jacobs.
+
+“_Timeo Danaos et dona ferentes_,” retorted Herrick, with happy
+inspiration.
+
+Lord Malvern laughed a silent little laugh, and an audible little
+laugh went round the Court from those who understood the tag, and from
+those also who laugh because others laugh; for always man, as Lord
+Beaconsfield truly observed, is mimetic.
+
+Then the brief flash of merriment died out, and the Court came back to
+business.
+
+“It is perfectly clear that the trial must proceed,” said the learned
+judge. “Much public time has already been devoted to the case, and, I
+may add, much public money. The convenience of the jury and of many
+witnesses must be considered. This is the fourth day we have been here,
+and it is desirable on every ground that it should be the last.”
+
+“But, my lord, the Crown will lose the benefit of Sir John Westwood’s
+reply on the whole case.”
+
+“Sir John Westwood is not here, Mr Herrick.”
+
+“And the privilege of a law officer of the Crown in the connection
+mentioned is thought by some to be the more honoured in the breach than
+in the observance,” remarked Mr Jacobs.
+
+“On this occasion you are for the defence, Mr Jacobs,” said his
+lordship. “On another occasion----” His lordship paused, with a
+humorous twinkle in his eye, and the gap was filled with a burst of
+laughter this time; for it was well known that the successful Hebrew
+advocate had his unsatisfied ambitions.
+
+“Are there any witnesses for the defence?” asked the Chief Justice,
+when silence was restored.
+
+“I call none,” said Mr Jacobs; and Mr Brill merely shook his head by
+way of answer for his client.
+
+“Very well, then, it only remains for Mr Herrick to address the jury.
+Counsel for the prisoners will follow, and my summing-up will not
+occupy more than an hour. The jury will understand,” said his lordship,
+turning towards them, “that however unfortunate the absence of the
+leading counsel, and however valuable the speeches of those who are
+present, it is upon the facts, and the facts alone, that their verdict
+must be based, according to the evidence. Now, Mr Herrick.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Thus it came about that greatness of a sort was thrust upon Aldwyth
+Westwood’s lover. Thus did fortune place in his way a golden
+opportunity. But this is no story of a young barrister’s triumphant
+achievement, according to the interesting precedents recorded by
+the lady novelists. Young Herrick, at this stage of the strange and
+terrible game then opening, was little better than a pawn on the
+chessboard of a master-player. Throughout the moves that followed
+on that Saturday in April, he felt half conscious of the fact, and
+the face which had looked out of the mist at the beginning seemed to
+dominate him until the end.
+
+Herrick, thought most of his friends, rose to the occasion, dealing
+effectively with the complex facts and figures of the case. There were
+others who shrugged their shoulders, and merely conceded that he “did
+his best,” considering how heavily he was overweighted. In reality,
+the performance was nothing to be ashamed of; nothing to boast of. The
+older and more experienced advocates on the other side paid him some
+handsome compliments when their innings came. But that did not prevent
+them from making mince-meat of his arguments, and hammering home their
+own. It may be doubted, however, whether the most powerful advocate
+who ever breathed the air of the Criminal Courts of England would have
+drawn a verdict of Guilty from the jury.
+
+The judge, in his lucid summing-up, virtually told them to convict;
+but there were other and more powerful influences at work. As the
+trial proceeded, the voice of a great crowd outside the walls of
+the Court rose in tumultuous sounds at intervals. In spite of the
+efforts of the police, it became only too plain that there was a
+demonstration--organised, determined; and that, for reasons then but
+imperfectly understood, the acquittal of the prisoners was demanded.
+It was, in effect, the first skirmish in that campaign against the
+forces of law and order, of which, presently, London was to be the
+battleground. The voice of the people prevailed. After an hour’s
+absence, and sundry messages of inquiry from the Chief Justice, the
+jury returned into Court with a verdict of “Not guilty.”
+
+“And that is the verdict of you all,” echoed the Clerk of Arraigns in
+the usual formula.
+
+Here and there in the packed Court there was an involuntary exclamation.
+
+“Silence! silence!” came from the ushers and police.
+
+“The prisoners will be discharged,” said the judge, whose manner had
+assumed the utmost gravity, “and,” he added significantly, “the jury
+will be discharged also from further duties in the box during the
+present sessions.”
+
+Lord Malvern left the Bench as the two prisoners disappeared down the
+steps leading from the dock.
+
+A babel of voices arose outside the building, and grew, unchecked,
+until it became a mighty roar of triumph from the mob.
+
+The verdict was known; cheer after cheer broke out, and the accused,
+prisoners no longer, were received as heroes, and borne shoulder high
+from the gates of the prison, through the streets of London.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V
+ THE LEAGUERS’ SECOND MOVE
+
+
+Rumour has many wings, and, though the following day was Sunday,
+rumour fluttered through clubland in the morning, giving rise to many
+languid speculations concerning the true inwardness of the New Bailey
+episode of the previous day. It was regarded, for the most part, as an
+isolated incident, and not as the first link in a chain of significant
+events. It only began to be recognised in the latter character when it
+became known that the telegram which had drawn the well-known Treasury
+counsel, Arthur Dutton, to the north, was an absolute forgery, and
+devoid of any sort of truth or justification. In the light of this
+discovery, the attack which had incapacitated his leader, Mr Boulton,
+assumed a sinister suggestiveness. But even then, there was no one
+in the West End clubs who attributed the inopportune, or opportune,
+illness of Sir John Westwood to any other than purely natural causes.
+
+Some light might have been thrown on that point by his trusted clerk,
+or, indirectly, by Wilson’s wife, who on Sunday afternoon found her
+husband contemplating a bank-note with interest so thoughtful and
+absorbed that he did not hear his better-half approach.
+
+“Bless and save us! what are you staring at there?” demanded Mrs
+Wilson, who always was tart of tone and imperative in manner.
+
+“It’s a Bank of England note,” was Wilson’s reply.
+
+“How much?” demanded Mrs Wilson.
+
+“Five hundred pounds,” said Wilson, slowly; and he straightway lied
+according to his lights, when the wife of his bosom, who had the
+instincts of a cross-examiner, pursued her vehement inquiries.
+
+Meanwhile, the weather being charming, London society had been taking
+its Sunday airing in Hyde Park under surprising and inconvenient
+conditions. Between three and four o’clock great numbers of people of
+the type that had visited the Old Bailey on the previous day assembled
+on the south side of the Serpentine. Here, lining the rails, they
+shouted, yelled, and hooted at the passing carriages, to the surprise
+and alarm of their elegantly-attired occupants. Whistling, groans, and
+discordant noises filled the air. The turbulent throng grew and grew,
+and under the shield of popular excitement, thieves, pickpockets, and
+other disorderly persons employed themselves with their accustomed
+diligence. A hulking youth ran before a carriage and repeatedly struck
+the horse’s nose with his cap. Mud was thrown at some of the brilliant
+sunshades that flashed past, and a gentleman on horseback was almost
+unseated by part of a hurdle thrown at him by a ruffian lurking in the
+crowd. Horses plunged; some fell; while the mob expressed its feelings
+in triumphant jeers and mocking laughter. Presently volleys of stones
+began to fly, and as yet the police were present in such small numbers
+as to be practically helpless in the face of this unlooked-for display
+of ruffianism.
+
+But while the unexpected was happening in the Park, the more or less
+expected had come to pass not far away. Sir John Westwood lived in Hill
+Street, and it had been his fate, as representing the Government, to
+incur the resentment of the masses by bringing into the House a Sunday
+Trading Bill of somewhat drastic character. The people--particularly
+the East-enders--were savage at the attempt to close the public-houses
+on the first day of the week, and jeered at the suggestion that they
+should go to church as an alternative resort.
+
+On the Saturday evening, a handbill was widely circulated in the lower
+quarters of the capital. This was how it ran:
+
+
+ LET US GO TO CHURCH
+ WITH SIR JOHN WESTWOOD TO-MORROW.
+ AFTERWARDS THERE WILL BE A
+ GRAND OPEN-AIR FÊTE AND MONSTER
+ CONCERT IN HYDE PARK.
+ COME AND SEE HOW RELIGIOUSLY
+ LONDON SOCIETY OBSERVES THE SABBATH.
+
+
+Thus it came about that a crowd of many hundreds gathered in front
+of the Solicitor-General’s house, and held their ground obstinately,
+notwithstanding the persuasive efforts of a small body of police to
+move them on. No actual violence was used by the crowd, but their
+groans, yells, and persistent clamour were sufficiently alarming.
+
+To Aldwyth Westwood, a girl of spirit, the demonstration caused more
+indignation than fear. Her chief concern was for her father. Sir John
+had now recovered to some extent from his strange condition of physical
+inertness on the previous day. Silent, but manifestly disturbed, he
+sat in his study at the back of the house, compelled to listen to the
+tumult of execration directed against him in the street. He was for
+drastic measures with the mob, but the divisional superintendent was
+either timid or discreet. He met the angry inquiry whether London was
+to be at the mercy of a hooting mob, by saying that he had no orders to
+resort to force to clear the street, and that patience and time were
+the best remedies, so long as no actual violence was attempted. The
+Solicitor-General acquiesced with a contemptuous shrug; as also in the
+advice that the front shutters should be closed, and the frightened
+servants directed not to show themselves.
+
+Stolid and calm, the police stood on the doorsteps, and in the area,
+while the roughs shouted themselves hoarse. At the end of a couple of
+hours came news that things were growing lively near the Serpentine;
+and thereupon, nearly half the Hill Street crowd hastened to the Park
+in search of something fresh and more exciting. Hastily, but still not
+sufficiently, reinforced, the police now attempted to check the conduct
+of the crowd, which had already driven all but a few of the pluckier
+carriage people homeward. Many of the most disorderly characters had
+now mustered near the Royal Humane Society’s Receiving House. A body
+of police, with truncheons drawn, marched along the drive to clear it
+of pedestrians. Those who would not give way were pushed or roughly
+handled. The same tactics were pursued on the footpath on the south
+side of the Serpentine, and here much confusion and excitement arose,
+many persons being forced ankle-deep into the water. Women, who had
+got mixed with the crowd, screamed with terror. The wail of frightened
+children filled the air, and angry cries were raised against the
+constables, some of whom were struck by stones and clods of earth.
+
+At the same time, some fifty constables, under Superintendent
+Helden, reached Grosvenor Gate. There, the men were formed in a
+column of sections of ten, having a front of five men, and marched
+towards a threatening section of the mob. Instead of retiring, the
+people received the police defiantly and with an angry yell. The
+superintendent shouted to them to give way, but the warning was
+disregarded. Suddenly some one tripped him up. He fell and hurt his
+knee; and, thus provoked, the men with drawn truncheons rushed forward,
+and, without orders, attacked the crowd. A savage _melée_ was the
+result. From that moment there were conflicts of a similar character
+throughout the Park. Reinforcements of police were hurried up, and
+further conflicts followed. So grave did the situation become as the
+evening hours drew on that large reserves of constables were mustered
+at Stanhope Gate, the Triumphal Arch, the Marble Arch, and Walton
+Street, and in Lowndes Square.
+
+Ere darkness fell the Humane Society’s Receiving House became a
+temporary prison; a riotous mob demanded the release of their friends,
+and there were many ugly rushes, repelled with difficulty by the
+police. Cabs now were sent for, and seventy persons, charged with
+assaults, disorderly conduct, and resisting the police, were removed,
+amid a storm of angry cries, to the Police stations. By nine o’clock
+the Park was cleared.
+
+Thus ended the first skirmish in the campaign of the Leaguers of London
+against the forces of law and order.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+ THE MURDER OF DR GRADY
+
+
+The weather prophets declared that it was to be one of the driest and
+hottest summers on record; and, for once, the prophets seemed in a fair
+way to be justified. The strain of the long, bright, rainless days
+began to tell upon Londoners. Two or three terrific thunderstorms shook
+the nerves of the feeble. Sundry earthquake shocks, though remote from
+these islands, imparted a sense of apprehension, and concurrently with
+these stern manifestations of Mother Nature, there were other hints
+of dread events--suggestive of a moral cataclysm, a war of classes, a
+volcanic outburst that would rend the bounds of social life.
+
+In this state of disquietude, sensational revivalism moved many
+neurotic persons to grotesque manifestations in the name of religion.
+And, on the other hand, it was well known that vice was rampant in
+every class of society, the eagerness of the pleasure-seekers for some
+new excitement, however vulgar or debasing, assuming the proportions of
+a mania.
+
+“Scenes” in Parliament were of almost weekly occurrence, and signs
+of hysteria became manifest, even in the speech and conduct of
+men who held office as cabinet-ministers or as judges. Though the
+Government was tottering to its fall, the Opposition, torn with
+internal jealousies, was not in a position to take advantage of its
+opportunities. Difficult problems of international law had arisen,
+but the Attorney-General, who had for some time been suffering from
+a mortal disease, was practically unavailable as an adviser, while
+the second law officer, Sir John Westwood, was said to still be
+incapacitated by what eminent doctors described as complete “nervous
+breakdown.”
+
+In the midst of this debilitated condition of political and social
+life, there was one movement which day by day seemed to gather strength
+and audacity. The London Emigration League still stood forward to claim
+attention and collect funds. White-washed, in a sense, by the verdict
+at the Central Criminal Court, the Leaguers of London, as they were now
+generally called, published appeals to the charitable, and organised
+marches and demonstrations, which, without committing actual breaches
+of the law, made known the ever-increasing numbers of the League, and
+its strangely cosmopolitan membership.
+
+It was the foreign element in the League that gave rise to special
+uneasiness at the Home Office and Scotland Yard. Ere long the sense
+of insecurity already germinating in the public mind was greatly
+accentuated by a startling discovery, rumoured, though not yet proved,
+to be connected with the Leaguers’ campaign. This was nothing less than
+the unmasking by Detective-Inspector Henshaw of a dynamite factory,
+only seventeen miles from London. In all probability the discovery
+would never have been made but for a murder of revenge, almost
+unexampled in its cold and calculated deliberation, and in all respects
+notable in the annals of criminology. It was a story of the ruthless
+edict of a secret society within a society, and that society was
+believed to be none other than the League; it revealed, when the story
+became fully known, the remorseless execution of a mysterious mandate,
+which yet again illustrated the truth that, however subtle and well
+considered the plan of crime, murder, in the end, will out.
+
+The victim of the crime was one Grady, a doctor, who, after spending
+some years in New York, had come to England and acquired a fifth-rate
+medical practice in the purlieus of Holborn. His house and surgery
+were in Red Lion Street, not far from Red Lion Square. Grady was a
+man of ill-balanced mind, and given to intemperance. For some reason,
+never fully explained, he quarrelled with his friends. And, justly or
+unjustly, was suspected of betraying their plans to the police.
+
+The doctor became an object of hatred and fear in the eyes of his
+former associates, and the inner circle--or “actives,” as they were
+euphoniously styled--deliberately sentenced him to death. Early in June
+a man passing under the name of Featherstone took a room in the house
+facing that in which the ill-fated doctor carried on his miserable
+practice. Some articles of furniture and other things, including
+a large packing case, were bought by Featherstone and sent to his
+lodgings. At about the same time Featherstone, under the name Rolf,
+became the tenant of a house at Rickmansworth, which was let with a
+builder’s yard containing sundry sheds and outbuildings. Ostensibly
+these premises were to be used for the purpose of manufacturing
+Portland cement. At the end of the garden and yard ran the Grand
+Junction Canal. Close at hand was the River Colne; and in this way
+facilities were available to convey chalk and clay from a neighbouring
+estate to the “factory,” and to send the cement, when manufactured, on
+barges to London.
+
+Rolf, the “innocent manufacturer,” who was bent on developing this
+useful industry, advertised for a medical man to attend his workmen in
+case of illness or accident, and a marked copy of the paper containing
+the advertisement was sent to Grady. The doctor, compelled, doubtless,
+by his needy circumstances, swallowed the bait, and without much delay
+a contract was made with him on “club terms.”
+
+The significance of this was that cement-making is not really a
+dangerous trade, and that there were many doctors practising nearer to
+Rickmansworth.
+
+One night, a few weeks later, a man drove up in a cab, presented Rolf’s
+card to Dr Grady, and said his services were required at the cement
+works for one of the workmen, who had met with an accident. Grady at
+once put his instruments together and drove with Rolf’s representative
+to Baker Street. The unnamed agent then accompanied him by rail to
+Rickmansworth. In the darkness of the sultry night, he was conducted
+to his doom. The house of which Rolf was the tenant was approached by
+a lonely lane on the outskirts of the little town. The two men were
+seen to enter by the front door, and a labourer who was approaching
+at no great distance declared that he heard a smothered cry, followed
+by heavy blows, and then a fall. His statement was not made known
+until some time had elapsed, as almost immediately after hearing these
+ominous sounds, he was knocked down and stunned by a motor-car.
+
+Meanwhile the packing-case had been brought from Red Lion Street to
+Rickmansworth. The day after the crime, it was removed in a wagon. The
+wagon was seen again later, but in the interval the packing-case had
+vanished. It was found, empty, on the following day near Northwood.
+Grady’s clothes were found in a portmanteau in a neighbouring
+sewer, and the portmanteau was afterwards identified as one that
+Featherstone--_alias_ Rolf--had bought and taken to his rooms in
+London. Finally, the naked body of poor Grady was discovered in a
+backwater of the River Colne. The head of the unfortunate man showed
+cuts and wounds in quite a dozen different places. He had been brutally
+and determinedly done to death.
+
+The police now overhauled the house at Rickmansworth, and there found
+other signs of an awful struggle and a cruel crime. Futile efforts had
+been made to paint out the blood-stains on the floor.
+
+From the house, the examinations were extended to the sheds and
+workshops, and though there were signs of removal and attempted
+concealment, enough remained to show that the place was in truth
+designed for the manufacture of bombs and other murderous explosives.
+There were invoices, letters, and receipts imperfectly destroyed
+by fire, that showed the harmless “cement-maker” to be a buyer of
+sulphuric acid, mercury, picric acid, saltpetre, and other ingredients
+of explosive compositions. These and other facts the inquest brought
+to light, partly owing to the self-importance of a fussy coroner, who
+disallowed the efforts of the police to keep back certain features of
+the ghastly story. Meanwhile the murderers, who obviously had command
+of ample funds, had fled the country.
+
+Sensational journals were not slow to unfold the tale of terror under
+startling headlines. Something akin to panic seized the country and
+coerced the Government into action. The Solicitor-General, though out
+of town, received earnest communications from ministers, and it was
+afterwards known that he had framed some of the most drastic clauses
+in the Bill which was forthwith introduced in the House of Commons.
+This measure obtained a Parliamentary record by passing through both
+Houses in a single day. It provided legal machinery for the suppression
+of conspiracies. It was part French and part Irish in its origin, and
+designed in effect to prevent the illegal manufacture and possession of
+explosives.
+
+The country, it was pointed out in Parliament, had been lulled into
+a false sense of security by the absence of dynamite outrages for a
+considerable time. But not so very far back, in a period of eleven
+years, there had been no less than sixty-nine crimes and attempted
+crimes by means of infernal machines, bombs, and other engines intended
+for the wholesale destruction of life and property. No wonder there
+were dark and agonised forebodings; for none could feel assured that
+history was not about to repeat that grim and blood-stained page in
+England’s capital.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+ LOVE ON THE LEAS
+
+
+“Thank heaven!” sighed Herrick. He tossed a bulky brief on a
+side-table, and rose to his feet. The heat was stifling in his narrow
+room in Paper Buildings. Outside in the gardens the brown grass, dry
+and baked, bore witness to the long-continued drought. London was
+becoming an inferno.
+
+But for a week-end, at any rate, he was going to escape from it. The
+Westwoods were at Folkestone, and within twenty minutes the train would
+be carrying him sea-wards, to clean, pure air, to a smokeless sky--and
+to Aldwyth Westwood.
+
+The boy-clerk entered with two letters. “For you, sir,” said the youth,
+known to his Temple intimates as “Awthur.”
+
+“Right,” answered Herrick, thrusting them into a pocket. “Here, take my
+bag--look sharp! a hansom for Charing Cross.”
+
+“Awthur” showed himself alert, and within four minutes the jaded
+barrister was being driven westward through the thronged and sweltering
+Strand.
+
+“Poor devils, _they’ve_ got to stay in town,” he muttered. It struck
+him that the great artery of London life looked strange and sad in the
+afternoon glare of the summer sun; on every face was a set look of
+weariness and strain.
+
+High up on Exeter Hall, a huge placard attracted his attention:
+
+ ON WEDNESDAY NEXT!!!
+ MEETING FOR MEN ONLY.
+ ADDRESS BY
+ FATHER FRANCIS.
+
+Father Francis was well known to him by reputation. They had been
+contemporaries at Oxford, but the “Father” was then known as Lord
+Francis Purbrook, fifth son of the Duke of Portsdown--a wild and
+dissipated youth. His follies and debaucheries had been continued in
+the wider world, outside the University; until a strange and sudden
+change had come to him. He simply said that he had been converted. His
+old companions sneered, and asserted that he had turned “goody-goody.”
+But this transformation of his, call it what you will, was obvious to
+all. Then he had taken Holy Orders, and now was the priest-in-charge of
+St Stephen’s mission church--a chapel in a side street of Mayfair. His
+courtesy title had been wholly abandoned, and he was always spoken of
+as Father Francis.
+
+With so much of the past, Herrick, like most Londoners, was well
+acquainted; but it was not given him to foresee the tragic scene in
+which the young priest was soon to play a foremost and a fatal part.
+Herrick, at the moment prosaically absorbed, was mainly bent on
+catching his train in time for a corner seat in a “smoker”; and here in
+a few minutes was the station, busy and bustling as ever. Here, too,
+was Henshaw of Scotland Yard, keenly eyeing continental arrivals from
+Boulogne _via_ Folkestone.
+
+“A lot of foreigners,” said the barrister, as he passed him with a nod.
+
+“And a bad lot, too,” was the detective’s comment. There was no time
+for more; late arrivals were scurrying down the platform. Herrick
+rushed with the rest; he found a seat; the guard’s whistle and extended
+hand signalled the departure of the train. They were off and away,
+wriggling over the railroad network of London, until presently the grim
+and hideous streets and outskirts of the Surrey side were left behind.
+The pleasant fields and woods of Kent succeeded to scenes of sordid
+toil, and still more sordid recreation. The murk and stew of the great
+town, the hoot of its motors, the hoof-hammer of its jaded horses, the
+dominant note of its thousands of weary feet--all were left behind.
+
+Within three hours the westering sun had set. Eastward, lighthouses
+sent their first flashing rays across the heaving sea. Westward, the
+rose and amber of the clouds deepened into purple. The stars came out
+brighter and brighter in the darkening sky, thousands upon thousands,
+and tens of thousands--the steps of Allah’s wonderful throne!
+
+Herrick and Aldwyth Westwood paced slowly on the Leas. The influence
+of the magical hour had stolen upon their spirits. They spoke but
+little, but their hearts were full--full of the tenderness of kindred
+spirits in harmony with each other and in touch with the infinite. For
+this wonderful night seemed to reveal the infinite in all the ordered
+beauty of earth and sky and sea, breathing a message to poor humanity,
+whispering of ultimate emancipation and high destiny.
+
+Later on, they came down, as needs must, from the stars.
+
+Herrick, who had brought down important papers from the Temple, asked
+when he could discuss them with Sir John.
+
+To his surprise, Aldwyth showed some doubt.
+
+“Father is not quite himself,” she said hesitatingly. “But perhaps----
+Well come in and I’ll ask him.”
+
+They walked across the grass and re-entered the hotel. The band--of
+violins and harps--was playing its final waltz, and the guests, who
+were lounging here and there, gazed with interest at the tall and
+comely couple. The well-knit figure and bearing of the young barrister
+won some approval; but the critical faculty of the lady onlookers
+expended itself chiefly in observing the evening dress and general
+style of his companion. Let no man expect that he will make any
+particular impression when there is a woman at his side whose costume
+calls for criticism, or the sincere flattery of imitation.
+
+Aldwyth went upstairs to the suite of rooms reserved for Sir John
+Westwood and herself, and Herrick, waiting her message, turned into
+the smoking-room, where only two men were sitting, and those engaged
+in earnest conversation. In the light of after events Herrick often
+recalled much of what they said. It was an open conversation in a
+public room. The speakers were unknown to him. Later on, he learnt
+that one was Dr Wilson Wake, a nerve specialist, to whose consulting
+rooms in Harley Street patients crowded. The other was a writer, whose
+essays in the weightier reviews had attracted much attention.
+
+“It happened before, and it will happen again,” the doctor was saying.
+“It was simply a sequel to the ravages of bubonic plague.”
+
+“You mean the Black Death of the fourteenth century?”
+
+“That, of course, was the popular name of the disease. The Italians,
+in their more musical language, called it ’_la mortalega grande_’--the
+Great Mortality.”
+
+“But you surely don’t anticipate----?”
+
+“A similar visitation?--certainly not. We were only speaking of the
+after effects; and similar effects might, and, in my judgment will,
+be produced in modern times by some less appalling form of physical
+disease. The _Chorea_, or Dancing Mania of the Middle Ages was the
+outcome of the Black Death, and the Dancing Mania itself was simply the
+expression of disordered nerves.”
+
+“But, my dear sir, this is the twentieth century.”
+
+“History always repeats itself, though with interesting variations. My
+dear fellow, the nervous system of the nation is out of order.”
+
+“You ought to know.”
+
+“I do,” said the specialist, drawing at his cigar.
+
+“But the extent of the mortality from plague was greatly exaggerated,”
+protested the other.
+
+“Of course, of course; nevertheless, in London upwards of fifty
+thousand corpses were buried in layers in a single district, and we
+know the burial pits even to this day.”
+
+“And, after all, the Dancing Mania was mainly a Continental
+development.”
+
+“No doubt; but scientifically it was only a form of epilepsy, and St
+Vitus has had his votaries in all countries, at all times. It was not
+until the sixteenth century that the faculty ventured to question the
+demon theories of the priests. Look up Paracelsus, my friend. His
+diagnosis was correct, but his remedies were ridiculous.”
+
+“I suppose the tarantism of Italy was only a form of the same nervous
+disorder?” queried the other.
+
+“Precisely; the spider’s bite was a delusion--though, no doubt, the
+Apulian Tarantula was a _bona fide_ insect. Hysteria can always invent
+a spider, or a mouse. As recently as 1787, two or three hundred girls
+in a Lancashire cotton mill were seized with violent convulsions,
+because one girl put a mouse into the bosom of another girl. They
+all declared that they had been treated in the same way. The insane
+delusions of the Convulsionaires in France lasted till near the end
+of the eighteenth century, and of course we have had our own Jumpers,
+Shakers, and Pentecostal Dancers here in England.”
+
+“And you think we haven’t seen the last of them?”
+
+“Nor yet the worst,” said the specialist, rising. “Shall we finish our
+cigars outside?”
+
+As the two men ended their odd dialogue and left the room, a waiter
+brought Herrick a pencilled note.
+
+“_Father will see you.--Aldwyth._”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ SIR JOHN BREAKS DOWN
+
+
+John Westwood was the son of a solicitor, and paternal influence gave
+him his first start at the Bar. A patient, strenuous, and able man,
+he missed no chance. The crest of a political wave carried him into
+Parliament, and, unlike most lawyers, he became a House of Commons
+success. Successful in love, as in forensic war and party politics, he
+won a wife who was wooed at the same time by a lover mad in his worship
+and passion, wholly different in all respects from the cold and more
+calculating rival, whose methods and success the rejected lover never
+forgot nor forgave.
+
+Marcus White, after the episode already chronicled, took his headlong
+way beyond the ken of all his English associates. He was heard of as
+having made a huge fortune in Mexico, a country offering far more scope
+for a man of such drastic methods and daring enterprise. Westwood
+stayed at home and plodded on. After his marriage, and when, as
+yet, briefs were far from plentiful, he and his wife lived in quite
+a quiet middle-class way at Norwood. He came to London every day,
+and took his meagre luncheon daily like any other grubbing barrister
+at a stuffy restaurant in Fleet Street. To find on his table a brief
+marked ten and one was quite a rare and gladdening event. In the
+general way prices ruled considerably lower in his chambers. But it was
+otherwise after he had entered Parliament. Ten years later there was
+a shuffling of parties, and John Westwood, who had taken silk, shot
+into the very bull’s-eye of political life. The prophets said that
+he would reach the Woolsack; but, meanwhile, sundry faithful if dull
+members of the bar and of the party blocked the way. The Chancellor
+clung to life and office with a tenacity which upset all calculations.
+The Attorney-General, too, refused to recognise the grave complaint
+from which he suffered as an equivalent to notice to quit. Other
+Government appointments were, in omnibus language, “full up,” and John
+Westwood, K.C., M.P., had to be content with a knighthood and the
+office of Solicitor-General. But his income and fees amounted to some
+ten thousand a year, and he was a man of thrifty habits, and saved
+considerably.
+
+Yet a price has to be paid by the man who burns the candle at both
+ends--in Parliament and in the Law Courts. It is the kind of double
+life that kills all but the toughest, and Sir John was far from tough.
+Affairs of state were critical, and at this crisis his “sword hung
+rusting on the wall,” while he was urgently wanted at Westminster.
+He was still lingering at Folkestone when delicate problems of
+international law demanded all the acumen that his brain could bring
+to bear. The Prime Minister almost implored his assistance, but, the
+specialist who had come down to the Métropole to see him asserted
+bluntly that it would be more than his sanity, or perhaps his life,
+could stand if yet awhile he plunged back into the quagmire of
+jurisprudence or the sea of party strife.
+
+Such was the man who paced with restless steps the room of the hotel
+that summer night. On the table were despatch boxes, blue books, blue
+draft papers, and bulky volumes that had been sent down from London.
+These were his tools, and he could not handle them! Aldwyth, his only
+child, and the one being in the world for whom his heart beat with
+affection, sat by the window anxiously watching him. Her love and
+tenderness, as she was beginning to realise, were powerless to assuage
+his mental suffering.
+
+Alone, we come into the world; alone, we tread the winepress of life;
+alone, we leave it by the darkened door.
+
+Herrick, as he entered, was painfully struck with the changed
+appearance of his chief. His restless movements, lined cheeks, and
+twitching facial muscles, told a saddening tale.
+
+“It’s no good,” said Sir John, after the first few words, “I can’t
+work, I can’t think; worse than all, I can’t sleep. I ought to resign.”
+
+“Father!” exclaimed Aldwyth, appealingly. Herrick was silent. What
+could he say? It relieved him when, after a few moments of silence, the
+Solicitor-General drew a long breath and showed a greater self-command.
+
+“By the way,” he said suddenly, “I’ve had a threatening letter. I don’t
+suppose,” he added, “that any one need feel alarmed.” It was obvious
+that he regretted having said so much before his daughter.
+
+“The cowards!” she cried indignantly; “the cowards!”
+
+“What did you do with it?” asked the younger man.
+
+“Burnt it,” was the terse reply.
+
+“Wasn’t it a pity to destroy the evidence of handwriting?”
+
+“There was no handwriting; it was typed.”
+
+“And no signature?”
+
+“Only a sign; the embossed outline of a metal disc.”
+
+“Curious,” said Herrick.
+
+“But hardly a curiosity,” was Sir John’s comment. “I understand that
+various members of the Government have been favoured in the same
+way, besides all the judges of the King’s Bench Division, and every
+magistrate in London.”
+
+“Then there’s no special threat so far as you’re concerned, father?”
+said Aldwyth, watching him uneasily.
+
+“Perhaps not,” said Sir John, speaking slowly, doubtfully.
+
+“I see you have some further information,” said Herrick.
+
+“Plenty of information, and nothing that would stand a moment’s test
+according to the laws of evidence.”
+
+“And yet there seems to be an attempt at wholesale intimidation. Surely
+the Government--the Home Secretary----”
+
+“The Home Secretary,” retorted Westwood angrily, “is not the man for
+times like these. England is face to face with an organised conspiracy.
+This so-called League, which grows in numbers and power every day,
+is really an army of anarchy recruited from the criminal classes at
+home and abroad. It seeks to paralyse the penal law of England. If the
+State does not crush it, it will overthrow the State. This gang of
+miscreants, with its weapons of terrorism and bribery----”
+
+“Bribery!” exclaimed Herrick, astonished.
+
+“Yes; bribery on a colossal scale, and expended mainly in corrupting
+the police, by whom alone the public can be safeguarded; and, mark you
+this, bribery doesn’t stop so low as that. The wire-pullers know their
+men--threats for some, and money for others; a ten-pound note for a
+police sergeant, and so upwards on a sliding scale, until the maximum
+may reach to thousands.”
+
+Herrick and Aldwyth listened with increased amazement.
+
+“I know it; I have proofs,” Sir John continued.
+
+“At any rate,” interposed Herrick, “the Home Secretary has issued a
+circular to every local authority offering a hundred pounds’ reward to
+any person who makes known the illegal manufacture of explosives.”
+
+“Useless!” said Westwood, throwing up his hands. “Police officers
+are excluded from the offer; they are the only people who could give
+such information. After the case at Rickmansworth, even if there are
+traitors in the League, who is likely to seal his own doom as Grady
+did? Besides, where the Home Office would pay a hundred pounds for
+betrayal, the men behind the metal disc would pay five hundred pounds
+for complicity and concealment.”
+
+“The public ought to demand the enforcement of the new Act,” argued
+Herrick hotly.
+
+“The public don’t understand how to enforce anything; they leave
+the weapons of agitation in the hands of the lawless, and trust to
+the executive for the protection of life and property; while the
+executive----” He shrugged his shoulders, and for a moment stood
+moodily staring at the wall. “The Government hope the crisis will be
+averted,” he resumed. “It needed the Phœnix Park murders to bring the
+Prevention of Crimes Act into force in Ireland. What price in horror
+and bloodshed will have to be paid in London before this campaign of
+outrage and dynamite is brought to an end, God only knows. I tell
+you, Herrick, that to pause or parley while these men perfect their
+plans is madness, and a betrayal of the nation!” He spoke with force
+and vehemence. For a moment his growing weakness had been shaken off.
+Carried away by his subject and his convictions, his voice and gestures
+gave some indication of the intellectual force that such a man could
+bring to bear in forensic argument and in debate.
+
+Then, suddenly, there was a swift and shocking change in Westwood’s
+manner and appearance. His rushing thoughts and excited utterance had
+produced a terrible reaction. Aldwyth and Herrick were at his side
+in a moment. They led him to a chair. He sat there, staring, with
+ghastly cheeks and twitching muscles, manifestly unable to control the
+convulsive motions of his lower limbs, or the movement of the hands,
+which kept rising and falling with involuntary gesticulations. Herrick,
+horror-struck, recalled the conversation he had overheard in the
+smoking-room below.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+ FATHER FRANCIS AT FOLKESTONE
+
+
+When Herrick awoke on the following morning, after a night of
+restlessness and troubled dreams, the summer sunshine seemed to be
+almost mocking in its brilliancy. For, in spite of the gladness of
+Nature, the times were out of joint. There was something wrong with
+life. With a sigh of depression, as he recalled the occurrences of the
+previous night, he set about facing the problems of the day--his own
+problems and Aldwyth Westwood’s in particular.
+
+His coat lay over the back of a chair, and two unopened letters had
+slipped from a pocket to the floor. They were those he had received
+from the alert “Awthur” in the Temple, left unopened in the hurry of
+his departure from town, and until now entirely forgotten. He picked
+them up with no great interest. He knew from the envelope what one
+would be about. It was a regimental notice from the headquarters of
+the “Devil’s Own” in Lincoln’s Inn. Until lately he had been a keen
+volunteer officer, but the systematic snubs administered by the War
+Office to the citizen soldiery had greatly discouraged him and a great
+many others. He opened the other letter mechanically and with a morning
+yawn. But what he read--typewritten on half a sheet of thin quarto
+paper--instantly fixed his attention. He stood up, stared at the words,
+and read them again:
+
+“_Give up the law (if you value your skin). It will soon be a dangerous
+trade._”
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+There was no date. The impression, which took the place of a signature,
+corresponded with that produced by the familiar seals of public
+companies. It was in the form of a disc, and had the outline of a
+spider in the centre.
+
+Was this some silly practical joke, or could it be a genuine and
+malignant threat? But for what Sir John Westwood had told him on the
+previous evening, he would have concluded unhesitatingly in favour of
+the first theory. But now he pondered.
+
+After a solitary breakfast in the coffee-room, and pondering still,
+he waited about the hotel, hoping to see Aldwyth, but she was unable
+to leave her father’s side. When he came out on to the Leas, the
+Folkestone Church Parade had already begun. Here, among the crowd
+in the sunshine, a serious reading of the threatening letter seemed
+impossible.
+
+The seaside world was decked with light as with a garment, and the
+butterflies of fashion fluttered their laces and laughed at the little
+jokes of the wearers of Panama hats as if life could hold nothing
+more serious than the choice of a graceful “confection,” and the art
+of wearing it with good effect. At the west end of the Leas there was
+nothing suggestive of the seamy side of life, nothing to hint at the
+possibility of social earthquake. He wondered vaguely, as he walked
+eastward with hands clasped behind him, whether in olden time the good
+people who then looked out upon that sparkling sea had truly realised
+the danger, horror, and humiliation of the threatened invasion of a
+powerful enemy of England. It struck him that the British race, which
+has “worried through” so many awkward crises, obstinately cherished the
+conviction that, as a nation, it bore a charmed life; that the slings
+and arrows of outrageous fortune could never bring it to the proud
+foot of a conqueror. A dangerous faith! For here on this very coast,
+much less than two hundred years ago, invasion had been imminent. The
+French were mustered at Dunkirk, Calais, and Boulogne. The Pretender’s
+youngest son was with them, and there was an Irish Brigade to aid the
+enterprise. The English, too, had furnished a contingent of traitors
+to assist the enemy, for the Folkestone smugglers had sold themselves
+to act as pilots for the invading force. But for the vigilance of
+that tough old sailor, Admiral Vernon, invasion would have become an
+accomplished fact. By his order, the miserable fleet, placed at his
+disposal by a blundering government, patrolled the Channel unceasingly.
+Warning beacons blazed along the coast from Beachy Head to the South
+Foreland. There was one even on Hurricane House, as the sailors styled
+the parish church of Folkestone--the church which Herrick was passing
+at the very moment of recalling those far-off troubled times.
+
+But to-day, in the old town as in the new, people knew or cared for
+none of these things, nor even dreamed of the possibility of any
+untoward events that might make Folkestone an ineligible resort for
+week-end trippers. On every side ’Arry and ’Arriet rejoiced, and
+were glad in the glorious weather. The ’Arry collars and shoes were
+entirely and manifestly satisfactory to their wearers; and the blouses
+of ’Arriet and her sisters, cousins, and aunts, blazed violently in the
+dazzling sunshine. The yachting caps the maidens wore were all that
+unbecomingness could possibly demand, and the hats of the mothers and
+aunts fully exemplified that marked unsuitability for which the British
+female of mature years is so renowned.
+
+Herrick, as he made his way through the cheerful and perspiring throng,
+decided that, as an advocate, he could make out a strong case for the
+survival of our ancient sumptuary laws.
+
+Though Folkestone, west and east, already was pretty full, here were
+other visitors, within a stone’s-throw of the shores that welcome such
+hosts of undesirables from foreign lands. One of the much advertised
+steamers of the South-Eastern line was rapidly nearing the harbour
+with a crowded human cargo. Of late years the Boulogne and Folkestone
+route had increased in favour. It was not surprising, for it made the
+journey between Paris and London shorter by twenty-eight miles than the
+Calais-Dover line.
+
+Herrick, who knew something of the signals adopted on these boats,
+was aware that each ball on the foremast represented a hundred
+passengers; a ball on the mainmast vouched for another twenty; a flag
+on the foremast stood for fifty passengers; a ball at the peak over
+the ensign represented ten. It was plain to him that the _Queen of
+the South_, whose figurehead gleamed in its brand-new gilt above the
+dancing wavelets, was as full as the Board of Trade would allow--and
+perhaps a little fuller. While the steamer was being berthed, he stood
+upon the long platform and watched the passengers as they came ashore.
+The number of foreigners was quite astonishing. Swarthy, dark-haired,
+ill-favoured fellows, most of them, they hurried to the London train
+already in waiting, while there were a few whom the after-stress of
+what Thackeray called the “marine malady” drove in eager search of
+refreshment.
+
+What, however, struck Herrick even more forcibly, and, indeed,
+with something akin to shock, was the fact that each one of those
+ill-favoured visitors wore upon his breast a metal disc. Yet more
+amazing, the disc--unless his eyes deceived him--resembled the
+impression on the threatening letter he had carefully placed inside his
+pocket-book only an hour or two ago.
+
+While this staggering circumstance held him wondering, the through
+passengers entrained; the warning whistle sounded, and they were off.
+A man, who had landed in leisurely fashion from the boat, stood near
+him, also watching the departing train. Presently he turned. Their eyes
+met, and in them came a look of recognition. Somewhere, Herrick felt
+assured, he had seen that face before--but where? The man passed him, a
+slight smile on his lips, and entered a well-appointed motor-car. Then,
+in an instant, conviction flashed on Herrick’s mind. It was the face
+that had affected him so strangely at the Central Criminal Court, when
+he stood up as Counsel for the Crown in the memorable case that failed!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That evening, in the ancient parish church, so beautifully restored,
+Aldwyth and her lover stood side by side. Sonorous and impressive,
+organ, choir, and congregation together voiced a hymn of faith:
+
+ “Beneath the shadow of Thy Throne
+ Thy Saints have dwelt secure;
+ Sufficient is Thine Arm alone
+ And our defence is sure.”
+
+The sadness of fleeting life found deep expression towards the end:
+
+ “Time like an ever-rolling stream,
+ Bears all its sons away;
+ They fly forgotten, as a dream
+ Dies at the opening day.”
+
+Then, with gathering strength, came again the cry for help and hope:
+
+ “O God, our Help in ages past,
+ Our Hope for years to come,
+ Be Thou our guard while troubles last,
+ And our eternal home.”
+
+And all the people said “Amen.”
+
+A rustle of expectancy, a settling movement, and, over the heads of the
+sitting congregation, Herrick and his companion could see the preacher.
+They exchanged quick glances of pleased surprise. The tall priest
+looking down with wistful eyes upon the many faces was Father Francis.
+
+There were others in the church besides themselves who, in the shadowed
+after-time, recalled the preacher’s look and words that night.
+
+In this narrative, though Father Francis has an honoured place, only
+the gist of what he said need be recorded.
+
+“_Watchman, what of the night?_” There were those, he said--having
+given out the text--who saw a dark night gathering over England.
+The growth of luxury and self-indulgence, the follies of the rich,
+the miseries of the poor, the insatiable thirst for pleasure and
+excitement, the struggle between capital and labour, and the faltering
+of national faith in the eternal verities--these converging causes were
+shaping the materials for a great catastrophe. If righteousness exalted
+a nation, assuredly unrighteousness would lay it in the dust. In the
+book of this same prophet Isaiah it was written: “For the nation and
+kingdom that will not serve Thee shall perish; yea, those nations shall
+be utterly wasted.”
+
+Again and again such prophecies had been fulfilled. The once mighty
+empires of the East, honeycombed with sensuality and corruption, had
+long since fallen into decay. The Roman eagle, beneath which the whole
+world had cowered in awe, no longer soared aloft; Carthage had fallen;
+Athens and Alexandria, and many another ancient capital of arms or
+learning, had lost their power and proud pre-eminence. The ruins of
+Nineveh lay buried beneath the sands and dust of centuries; Babylon the
+mighty, with its idols of silver and gold, had been laid low. “Come
+down and sit in the dust, O virgin daughter of Babylon, sit on the
+ground; there is no throne, O daughter of the Chaldeans; for thou shalt
+no more be called young and delicate. Take the millstones and grind
+meal. Sit thou silent, and get thee into darkness ... for thou shalt
+no more be called the lady of kingdoms.”
+
+The women of old had not differed greatly from the women of to-day,
+said the preacher, looking down upon the many women who listened to his
+words. The prophet had marked their ways; they walked with stretched
+forth necks and wanton eyes. They were haughty in the bravery of their
+tinkling ornaments, their chains and their bracelets, the changeable
+suits of apparel, the mantles, the wimples, and the crisping pins, the
+fine linen, the hoods, and the veils. Wherein, he asked, did those
+women of old differ in their vanity and arrogance from the women of
+that great modern Babylon which they all knew so well--the centre and
+capital of the stupendous empire on which the sun never set?
+
+There would yet, he believed, be a further fulfilment of that stern
+prophecy of the eastern seer, and in that dark and terrible time what
+part would be played by the women of England--the women of London?
+They were destined to faint and fail! The luxurious, jewel-decked
+women of ease and fashion would be swept like rotten leaves before
+the storm! Only a woman such as Solomon described in the last chapter
+of the Book of Proverbs could ever fulfil the high destiny of her
+sex, whether in times of peace or in times of trouble. “Who can find
+a virtuous woman? for her price is far above rubies ... strength and
+honour are her clothing, and she shall rejoice in time to come, ...
+she openeth her mouth with wisdom, and in her tongue is the law of
+kindness.... Her children arise up and call her blessed; her husband
+also, and he praiseth her.... Many daughters have done virtuously,
+but thou excellest them all. Favour is deceitful and beauty is vain;
+but a woman that feareth the Lord, she shall be praised.” You and I,
+said Father Francis, may never meet in this church again, but in this
+solemn evening hour, in this still and wonderful summer night, forget
+not the storms which sometimes beat upon this ancient building, and
+remember, too, the storms of life, the terror and distress of nations.
+Whither shall we flee in that dread hour? There is and can ever be but
+one refuge--the Rock of Ages, with its calm, cool shadow in a weary
+land; its strength and steadfastness amid the tempestuous passions of
+the human race. At the last, he said, in solemn tones, pointing to
+the “Tree of Jesse” in the north transept of the church, all nations
+and peoples of the earth would be brought to see that in Him of whom
+the prophets and the angels testified, and in Him alone, was hope,
+salvation, and tranquillity. “I am the root and offspring of Jesse, and
+the bright and morning Star.”
+
+For a moment the preacher paused. Suddenly, with a thrilling
+intonation, he repeated the question of his text--” _Watchman, what of
+the night?_” Then, with hand pointing eastward--an action dramatic but
+not theatrical--he gave the prophet’s answer in triumphant tones--”
+_The watchman saith, The morning cometh._”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER X
+ MARCUS WHITE RETURNS
+
+
+The usual Monday morning movements had kept the hotel in a bustle for
+some little time, and Herrick’s cab was waiting at the door. There
+was a motor-car waiting also, and one that the barrister promptly
+recognised. An impulse led him to return from the hotel steps to the
+office in the vestibule. Here a lady-clerk with frizzy hair was bending
+her eyes and her glasses over the visitors’ register. She looked up as
+he asked his question: Oh yes, she knew; the car belonged to Mr Marcus
+White, the rich gentleman from Mexico.
+
+Suddenly the girl turned scarlet, as she saw that some one was standing
+by Herrick’s side. “Oh, I beg pardon,” she said confusedly.
+
+“Perhaps you are interested in motors?” The enquiry was addressed
+to Herrick, and the speaker was the man of the New Bailey, the man
+who had landed at the harbour on the previous morning. The sarcastic
+intonation, the half contemptuous look, and the quiet way in which the
+stranger had drawn near, all served to cause embarrassment.
+
+Herrick, angry with himself, blurted out a “Yes.”
+
+“If you would like to test the speed of mine,” said White, nodding
+towards the hotel entrance, “I could perhaps give you an opportunity. I
+return to town to-night.”
+
+“Thanks, but I return this morning,” answered Herrick, recovering his
+self-possession.
+
+“Ah! you return to the pursuit of your interesting profession!”
+
+“I hope yet to render some service to the cause of law and order,” said
+Herrick, thinking of a certain letter.
+
+“You mean to make hay while the sun shines. Perhaps you are wise.”
+
+“Plenty of sunshine at present.”
+
+“Yes; but it won’t last,” was the reflective retort.
+
+“Prophecy is dangerous.”
+
+“Yes, but not so dangerous as the law.”
+
+“You mean to the clients?”
+
+“On the contrary, I was thinking of the lawyers.”
+
+“I’m afraid I can’t stop to argue that.” The younger man lifted his
+hat--very slightly. Marcus White raised his--with a bow and gesture of
+such exaggerated respect as almost to constitute an insult. He stood
+for a moment watching the departure of the other, then turned his gaze
+upon the puzzled clerk.
+
+“Sir John Westwood is staying here?”
+
+“Yes, sir.”
+
+“Will you send some one up with my card?”
+
+“I am afraid----,” began the girl.
+
+“You will be good enough to send up this card.”
+
+She took the card nervously, but mustered courage for another effort to
+withstand this masterful man. “Sir John Westwood is ill, sir.”
+
+“We are old--acquaintances.”
+
+“I’m afraid he can’t see you.”
+
+“I shall be waiting here for an answer.”
+
+He strolled slowly through the vestibule, with a calm but patient air,
+which seemed to imply that to him it was the most natural assumption in
+the world that his behests should be complied with.
+
+Five minutes later Marcus White was ushered into a handsome room on the
+first floor, and at the same time Aldwyth entered by another doorway.
+The manifest and immediate effect produced in him by her appearance
+bewildered her. The dark-skinned face of the visitor paled, his eyes
+narrowed, and gazing at her face intently, he grasped the back of
+a chair as if for support. They stood and gazed in silence. Then,
+mastering his emotion, White spoke, as if by way of explanation:
+
+“It was some resemblance,” he said; “I was hardly prepared, and it
+startled me.”
+
+“You mean a resemblance to my father?”
+
+“No, to your mother.”
+
+“You knew my mother?” She looked at him, wonderingly.
+
+There was something in his face and bearing which made her look and
+look again. Lately she had been reading the life-history of Balzac,
+and fragmentary accounts of his appearance, and also of that of Armand
+de Montriveau--in whom the great romancist reproduced some of his own
+characteristics--came swiftly to her mind, as she watched the face of
+Marcus White. “He seemed to have reached some crisis in his life, but
+all took place within his own breast, and he confided nothing to the
+world without.... He was of medium height, broad in the chest, and
+muscular as a lion. When he walked, his carriage, his step, his least
+gesture, bespoke a consciousness of power which was imposing; there was
+something even despotic about it.” Then, again, another passage: “The
+black hair, shining and radiant, receding from the temple in bright
+waves ... the eyes steeped in a golden penumbra with tawny eyeballs ...
+send out a glance of astonishing acuteness.”
+
+“You knew my mother?” she repeated quietly.
+
+The question was not answered. White had turned his eyes towards the
+window and seemed to be gazing at a distant sail.
+
+“Of course you expected to see my father,” Aldwyth began, after an
+awkward pause. “I am sorry it is impossible. But if there is anything
+that I can tell him----”
+
+He turned his eyes upon her swiftly. “Miss Westwood, there are some
+things that must be discussed between men alone.”
+
+“My father is ill. So, unfortunately----”
+
+“Is he really ill?”
+
+“I don’t understand you,” she said stiffly.
+
+“I beg your pardon, but, as I daresay you know, there are such things
+as legal fictions, political fictions, illnesses of expediency.”
+
+“Is it on political business that you are here?”
+
+“In a sense, yes.”
+
+“The doctor has given the most positive orders that my father is to
+have complete rest from every sort of worry and anxiety.”
+
+“Desirable, but impossible. Then he does not know that I am here?”
+
+“No,” coldly.
+
+“I should say that there is only one way in which your father can
+make sure of carrying out the doctor’s orders.” She looked at him
+with gathering resentment, but he continued calmly: “He would do well
+to throw up the appointment he holds under the Crown”--she listened,
+amazed; but she was obliged to listen--” and resign his seat in
+Parliament.”
+
+Her face flushed angrily.
+
+“He must also abandon his profession.”
+
+“Must!” she repeated, indignantly and wonderingly.
+
+“I can assure you I am giving you excellent advice.”
+
+“We are not asking for advice.”
+
+“There are reasons which lead me to volunteer it.”
+
+“My father has been threatened by some cowardly writer of anonymous
+letters,” she said impulsively, “but the police will soon stop that.”
+
+His smile checked her. “Ah, the police,” he said quietly. “But of
+course Sir John Westwood is not afraid?”
+
+There was an implication in his words, a subtle intonation, that stung
+her to the quick. She moved across the room with outstretched hand, to
+touch the bell.
+
+“One moment,” he interposed.
+
+“My time is not my own to-day,” said Aldwyth.
+
+“You think me brutal and presumptuous?”
+
+“Extremely presumptuous.”
+
+“It is necessary for Sir John Westwood to be warned. He shall have a
+fair chance.”
+
+“What you say is quite unaccountable to me,” she answered, and looked
+at him again. It flashed upon her that only madness could be the
+explanation of this extraordinary conversation. And yet the man was
+manifestly calm and resolute.
+
+“As to the time of warning him----” he continued.
+
+“Of what?”
+
+“Of the necessity for doing what I have suggested. As to the time of
+telling Sir John Westwood what I have said this morning, something may
+be left to your discretion.”
+
+“You are very kind!” with scornful emphasis.
+
+“I don’t claim to be kind, but I am candid, and I think that when, at
+your discretion, you tell your father of this interview, he will see
+the futility of hurling himself against the rocks.”
+
+“What rocks?” she demanded.
+
+“He will discover in due time, if he does not know already.”
+
+She rang the bell, and walked towards the window.
+
+“I am sorry,” she heard him add. There was a short pause. “I am sorry
+for _you_.”
+
+She turned her head, with an angry retort upon her lips; but the door
+was closing, and she found herself alone.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+ THE SIGN OF THE SPIDER
+
+
+The London season languished. Even the cult of the great god Pleasure
+found few genuinely zealous votaries. Trade, said the managers of the
+big West-end drapery establishments, had never been so bad. Manifestly
+there was something radically wrong when crowds of women-folk no longer
+blocked the pavement in front of Simon Robertson’s great plate-glass
+windows. The king lay ill at Windsor Castle, and such social functions
+as might ordinarily have counted on the presence of royalty roused but
+little interest. Arid, parching days, and sultry, suffocating nights,
+made ball-rooms and places of entertainment almost unendurable. The
+booking-offices of the theatres told a convincing tale of bad business,
+and the art of advertisement in manifold forms, so well understood
+by stars of the stage and actor-managers (and so zealously promoted
+by the writers of dramatic gossip in the papers) took forms which
+suggested the desperation of despair. In the world of music it was
+just the same. People yawned or sighed wearily when their eyes met the
+puff preliminary concerning the latest freak in musical precocity.
+Even the emotional women who usually worshipped as near as might be
+the bushy-haired violinists exploited by concert agencies, fanned
+themselves languidly and stayed at home. In the city there was but
+little difference in the look of things. Men appeared to be busy,
+but their seeming energy was largely due to the mere habit of hurry,
+acquired through the influence of surroundings. Every morning, as
+usual, the swarm of stockbrokers, dealers, and hangers-on of the House,
+came bustling out of the stations at Liverpool Street, Broad Street,
+and Cannon Street. Between nine-thirty and ten-thirty the accustomed
+crowds might be seen hurrying over London Bridge. But when the brokers
+reached the Stock Exchange there was next to nothing to do. American
+rails refused to lend themselves to any sort of manipulated excitement,
+and in the mining market, shares were thrown about at rubbish prices,
+or could not be made to change hands at all. The financial journals
+still came out, but their advertisement pages lacked those big
+announcements of new issues from which their profits were mainly
+derived. They eked out a precarious existence by publishing carefully
+edited reports of company meetings at so much per column, supplying
+copies at special rates for transmission to confiding shareholders. The
+daily columns of market prices became shorter and shorter, for, in such
+times, the smaller companies could not pay to have their dead or dying
+stock quoted as if it still possessed the elements of vital movement.
+
+Of course, the galvanic efforts of the “great dailies” still continued;
+but the latest attempt of the _Times_ to introduce a new and important
+series of instructive works on almost give-away terms into the homes
+of the public (including a beautiful bookcase in fumed oak) met with
+practically no response at all.
+
+But the papers, with editorial finger on the pulse of London, now
+took up a theme to which increasing space was devoted day by day.
+The leading journal showed that it still knew how to thunder. Its
+latest warnings, its most booming utterances, were directed against
+the growing power and audacity of the Leaguers of London. It told the
+nation plainly what had been hinted at before in the _Detector_--in
+effect, that there was a great conspiracy on foot, and that unless the
+Governmental powers bestirred themselves, the safety of the capital, if
+not of the whole nation, would be imperilled.
+
+This conspiracy, it was stated, had ramifications and objects far more
+dangerous than those that had been exposed in the famous series of
+articles on “Parnellism and Crime.”
+
+Tudor Street and Carmelite Buildings were not to be outdone by
+Printing House Square or Fleet Street. The League figured constantly
+in the bold headlines and contents bills of the halfpenny journals,
+and one of them--the _Epoch_--whose prosperity was not so great as
+was commonly supposed, bent on a bid for fame, now boldly alleged
+that the head centre of the mysterious League was none other than the
+Anglo-Mexican millionaire, Marcus White. The result was looked for
+with anxiety and interest. When it was known, the devout believers in
+the disinterestedness of the _Epoch_ received something of a shock;
+for one morning it was announced that the paper had changed hands, and
+the journal which so recently had denounced the Leaguers of London and
+all their works, was now the accredited organ of the League, and the
+champion of its objects. There was something sinister and cynical in
+the transaction.
+
+The price paid for the _Epoch_, its goodwill, its plant, its
+printing houses and stock, was said to be enormous, but in its sale
+as a commercial property the commercial instinct was by no means
+eliminated. It became at once a powerful collecting agency for the
+League. A coupon-form, with the imprint of the spider-disc, appeared
+in every copy, and it was intimated that those readers who subscribed
+a stated sum to the funds of the League, would have their names and
+addresses carefully registered, thereby securing immunity from further
+applications for financial support. In effect, such subscribers
+would obtain the protection of the League itself, in case of public
+disturbance, or that risk to life and property which, according to
+the contemporaries of the _Epoch_, the police of London were not in
+sufficient strength to avert.
+
+Coupons, with names and addresses, and remittances often largely
+exceeding the minimum amount invited, now poured into the offices of
+the _Epoch_ by every post. The receipt sent in every case was a metal
+disc, which now met the eye of astonished Londoners in every street,
+railway carriage, omnibus, tram-car, and place of public resort. It was
+worn prominently on the left breast by an ever-increasing multitude,
+men and women, and even by children, belonging to all ranks of life.
+
+Lists of the disc-holders were published in batches in the _Epoch_
+from day to day, and were read with extraordinary and ever-growing
+eagerness. In vain the _Times_ and other sober journals denounced the
+folly and danger which these ever-lengthening lists exemplified.
+
+It was of no use to declare that people of high character and good
+position, were blindly, even madly, allying themselves with the scum
+of London and the off-scourings of the Continent; that their action
+would infallibly paralyse their only reliable protectors, and promote
+the cause of social disruption by giving the League the semblance of
+respectability. There was nothing to show, said the leader-writer,
+that this so-called Emigration League took any practical steps to give
+effect to its ostensible programme. On the contrary, there was ample
+evidence that it organised immigration of anarchists and miscreants
+of all sorts into England. Never before had the foreign element been
+so much in evidence in London. The tardy and much vaunted legislation
+against the influx of aliens had proved little better than a fiasco.
+Foreigners still swarmed to Grimsby, Hull, Newhaven, Southampton, and
+Harwich, though ineffectual steps were taken to check the influx at
+those ports; while no similar machinery had been fairly tried at Dover
+and at Folkestone. Aliens were everywhere, not only on English ground,
+but also on British ships. In vessels belonging to the port of Cardiff
+alone, the crews were foreigners in the proportion of fifty per cent.
+Thus the mercantile marine, which should be the great feeder of the
+Royal Navy--our first line of defence against Continental enemies--was
+become an actual source of danger, instead of strength, to the nation.
+
+But warnings fell on deaf or indifferent ears. Personal safety had
+become the dominant idea. Panic was in the air, and the purchase, for
+such in truth it was, of the little metal disc, was now widely regarded
+as the only means of securing a magnet by which the alarmed population
+could hope to steer clear of the vortex towards which the tides of life
+were tending.
+
+The _Daily Telephone_, in desperation, started a correspondence under
+the title: ARE WE AFRAID? Letters from all sorts and conditions of
+people descended like a postal avalanche upon the editorial offices;
+and while the selected correspondence was published from day to day,
+a series of special articles dealt with Crazes of the Past--Law and
+his Mississippi Scheme; Blunt and the South Sea Bubble; the Jabez
+Balfour fiasco; the Whitaker Wright boom, with many other examples of
+chicanery, folly, and consequent disaster, receiving elaborate notice.
+The moral was illustrated, the application was solemnly rubbed in; but
+all to little purpose. The sale of the metal disc still increased by
+leaps and bounds. Inborn inclination to abbreviate asserted itself,
+in accordance with abundant precedent, and one person would ask
+another: “Are you a Spider?” and the answer would be, “Yes,” “No,”
+or “I mean to be.” Thus the League, though having, it was believed,
+many inner circles or subdivisions, became sectionised into two great
+classes--the Leaguers proper (or improper) unemployed, unemployable,
+and hosts of discharged prisoners; and those others--the respectable
+“spiders,” holders of the metal disc as a species of insurance against
+the terrorism and depredation which were expected from the original
+Leaguers.
+
+What, precisely, the “Spider” meant was the subject of much
+controversy. But what purported to be an explanation was given in one
+of the leading articles in the _Standard_; a totally different theory
+being put forward with equal prominence in the _Daily Chronicle_,
+in an article headed, “The Mystery of the Metal Disc.” At about the
+same time, in the _Morning Post_, the pen of a well-known author
+and journalist, whose versatile talents were constantly employed in
+surveying the world from St Andrews to the Antipodes, airily instructed
+the public concerning the Real Significance of the “Spider.” The
+writer, being of that nation which an English writer has declared
+“unspeakable,” naturally enough commenced with an allusion to the
+famous spider of a famous king of Scotland. He pointed out, however,
+that that particular spider was not of Scottish origin, because the
+insect really appeared to Robert Bruce in the little island of Rathlin,
+which is off the coast of Ireland. The writer then went on to treat of
+the spider at Sans Souci, which fell into the cup of chocolate prepared
+for Frederick the Great, whose life it was instrumental in saving. From
+Sans Souci he passed lightly to Mecca, and told of the spider that spun
+the web that hid Mahomet from his enemies. From that to the murder of
+Sir Thomas Overbury was only a step, and the theory of poison made
+from spiders’ bodies was aptly illustrated by a quotation from the
+_Winter’s Tale_. More pertinent, perhaps, was the reference to the old
+wives’ fable, which held that certain physical ills might be averted by
+wearing a spider in a nutshell round the neck. Finally, the versatile
+contributor raked in the legend connected with the “Shambles” shoal
+off Portland, at the bottom of which, according to tradition, are the
+wrecks of many ships seized and dragged down in far-off times by the
+giant spider, Kraken.
+
+ “Below the thunders of the upper deep;
+ Far, far beneath in the abysmal sea,
+ His ancient, dreamless, uninvaded sleep
+ The Kraken sleepeth.”
+
+There to remain--
+
+ “Until the latter fire shall heat the deep;
+ Then once by man and angels to be seen,
+ In roaring he shall rise, and on the surface die.”
+
+Such articles, perhaps, were calculated to spread, rather than restrict
+the general feeling of uneasiness. They served to fix the public mind
+upon what was already sufficiently in evidence, and by suggesting
+elements of the uncanny and occult, promoted the hysteric tendencies
+which were becoming so distressingly conspicuous among the people.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+ THE “EPOCH” RUNS AMOK
+
+
+In those never-forgettable summer weeks in the mammoth city the
+converted _Epoch_ published a series of denunciatory articles without
+parallel in the history of the modern press. The _Epoch_ was now an
+organ of opinion, indeed, but not of opinion made to order, or governed
+by the exigencies of political party. Its independence was a fact,
+and not a polite fiction. It dealt with men as men and as members of
+specialised professions. It ranked politics as one of the professions,
+and not the most honourable, and it tarred the “ins” and the “outs”
+with one and the same prickly brush. The new departure made it clear
+that the freedom of the press, as hitherto understood, was itself a
+mere fiction.
+
+In law the newspaper had no greater freedom than the individual critic.
+Political opponents might, indeed, be attacked and misrepresented
+with an impunity begotten of necessity, and the pot-and-kettle system,
+inherited from the journalistic organs of Eatanswill; but beyond that,
+the only freedom consisted in the right to publish what a jury of
+twelve tradesmen might not consider libellous. Journalism, in fact, was
+analogous to advocacy. The pot called the kettle black, and the kettle
+declared that the pot was blacker. Both pot and kettle, meanwhile,
+had an eye to business. That was perfectly legitimate and natural,
+but the radical mistake of the public lay in its view of the press
+as a philanthropic institution bent only on maintaining the cause of
+peace and happiness, truth and justice, religion and piety throughout
+the realm. It was obvious to the reflective worldling that no journal
+could be run on truly ethical lines with ultimate advantage to the bank
+balance of its proprietors; just as it was plain to the world-fearing
+Christian that practical Christianity would never “pay.” No journalist
+or Christian admitted these facts. They knew them quite well, but they
+ignored them, and placidly drew around themselves the comfortable robes
+of organised hypocrisy.
+
+The very last thing that any well-conducted journal would have dreamed
+of would be the printing of a slashing and remorseless attack upon the
+great Middle Class--the backbone of the country and the mainstay of
+modern journalism. Censures of the “smart set,” foolishly so called,
+and of their social descendants, of course had been administered _ad
+nauseam_, thereby giving to a limited body of showy persons (with
+more money--or credit--than brains) an exaggerated sense of their
+own interest and importance. The lower orders, too, had met with
+stern rebuke (for their thriftlessness, their laziness, and their
+self-indulgence) but only in journals which the lower orders never
+read. The _Epoch_, however, assailed with tooth and nail the denizens
+of the great middle country, the buffer state in which dwelt all the
+respectables--the clergy, the doctors, the lawyers, brokers, dentists,
+accountants, surveyors, merchants, shopkeepers, active and retired, who
+“made England what it was,” and what the _Epoch_ roundly declared it
+ought not to be.
+
+As a journalistic programme this was considered part and parcel of
+the midsummer madness that had fallen on the distracted capital.
+Fleet Street, Printing House Square, Bouverie Street, Shoe Lane, and
+Whitefriars, as embodied in the persons of representative journalists,
+shook their heads. “It was playing the fool”; it was “not cricket”;
+it was “quarrelling with your bread-and-butter,” or killing the
+goose that laid the golden--or at least the gilded--eggs; it was “the
+reckless destruction of a splendid commercial property”--in short, such
+bad “biz,” that no editor would pursue it unless under orders to ride
+deliberately for a fall. In particular, to assail the Church! the Law!!
+the Medical Faculty!!! in one fell charge! Midsummer madness, indeed!
+To fall foul, not merely of one learned profession--especially when the
+_Epoch_ might have gone for one of them (the clergy for choice), and
+with impunity; but to attack all three was--well it was pure, absolute,
+and undiluted lunacy. Thus quoth Fleet Street. But the onslaught
+continued. From the archbishops down to the deacons, none was spared.
+
+It was admitted that there were good and true soldiers in the clerical
+ranks--some such pitiful minority of righteous men as those for
+whose sake Abraham, in his prayerful and pathetic apology, entreated
+that the Cities of the Plain might be spared. But for the rest?--the
+time-serving right reverends on the path of promotion, with one foot
+in the sanctuary and the other in the temple of Mammon; the deans
+and archdeacons who clung to high benefice, and forgot the solemn
+ordination vows of their early manhood; the canons whose intellectual
+vanity found vent in sermons and pamphlets that argued faith in the
+cardinal doctrines of Christianity to be only a delusion and a snare;
+the holders of rich livings who had waxed fat and kicked against all
+the labours of parochial duty; the popular preachers who did not
+practise what they preached; the faithless stewards of the mysteries
+who declared there were no mysteries at all; and the flaccid curates
+who feebly bleated in the pulpit to a congregation of martyrs in
+the pews--for these, and all of these, the _Epoch_ let loose the
+chastisement of journalistic whips and scorpions.
+
+Somewhat less sweeping was the treatment dealt out to the profession
+of the healing art; but here, too, condemnation was not spared. The
+claptrap of the calling was its blight; the “abracadabra” of its Latin
+prescriptions; the bestowal of long names on short ailments; the fetich
+of the medicine bottle; the hoodwinking of the patient’s friends; the
+solemn-faced acquiescence in the patient’s mendacious explanations of
+his or her symptoms; the decorous delusions indirectly fostered in the
+best “bedside manner”; the pandering to the egoism and self-importance
+of opulent “sufferers”; the frequent farce of “second opinions”; the
+puff paragraphs countenanced by eminent practitioners in relation to
+their visits to eminent patients; the etiquette that supported the
+“lumping” of fees, and the continuation of “professional services” long
+after such services had ceased to be necessary: these, perhaps, were
+but the stereotyped faults which unthinking men regard as justified
+by custom or their own necessities. The rank and file of the medical
+brotherhood, the _Epoch_ admitted, had much work and scanty wage. But
+the sins of their leading men were more heinous. The selfishness which
+made them contend for the retention of great hospitals in unsuitable
+localities; the enormous fees exacted from private patients on the
+strength of hospital reputation; the too ready use of the operating
+knife on the human subject, and the tortures of vivisection inflicted
+in the abused name of science upon the dumb creation: these, indeed,
+were sins that cried aloud for reproof and repression.
+
+But the _Epoch_ was more scathing still in its bombardment of the
+system of judicature, and the legal ministers thereof. It began with
+the House of Lords as a legal tribunal--” the gilded asylum in which
+judicial patients suffering from the incurable disease of old age
+delivered very occasional judgments in exchange for princely salaries
+and exalted rank.” The Royal Courts of Justice were characterised as a
+gigantic honeycomb in which clerkly drones got as much as they could
+for doing as little as possible; a mighty mill in which the machinery
+stood still during vacations which lasted about a third of the working
+year; a vast temple in which the servers were ever engaged in piling
+fuel on the altars of precedent and practice.
+
+Then the writer, or writers, went on to deal with the legal
+practitioners, whom he or they described as “Locusts of the Law”;
+but here, again, there was no condemnation for the honest rank and
+file--the barristers in their chambers and the solicitors in their
+offices, who were fair and square in their dealings, and manfully
+struggled to keep their footing under almost impossible conditions.
+But for the brilliant leaders of the Bar--the advocates who walked
+in silk attire and siller had to spare--there was no gentleness.
+“Scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites!” For them, said the _Epoch_, the
+whole pretentious fabric of our legal system was maintained; for their
+advantage the monstrous delusion of honorary services; for their
+immunity the supposed dissociation of forensic labour from forensic
+fees; and the helpless position of suitors whose causes they mismanaged
+or neglected.
+
+Contempt was poured on the “representative bodies” which misrepresented
+the forensic profession--the General Council of the Bar, with its
+policy of tithe, mint, and cumin, and its neglect of the weightier
+matters of the law; the Benchers, with their limpet-like clinging to
+ancient funds and obsolete traditions; the circuit messes, with their
+petty jealousies and selfish trade-unionism.
+
+But here, in the middle-class multitude, if anywhere, lay the true
+strength and stay of the nation. With all their faults, these men were
+mainly of the right sort. But they were selfish, supine, indifferent,
+save to their own immediate comfort and advantage. In politics they
+were swayed by purely party cries, or else not moved at all. In
+municipal affairs they allowed themselves to be swamped by noisy
+social democrats; in religion, if not actually hostile to the Church,
+they maintained a cautious “non-committal” attitude. They placidly
+acquiesced in government by permanent secretaries--men of clerkly mind,
+the clustering, clinging barnacles on the great ship of State. But when
+conscription was talked of--when the idea of devoting a few years to
+military training, and, in some dire emergency, their lives, if need
+be, to the service of king and mother-country--they held up their hands
+in pious horror at the bare thought of anything so “un-English,”--and
+so very inconvenient!
+
+Thus may be very briefly summarised the outspoken and unflinching
+attacks on bodies of men and institutions which it had always been
+considered right to pat on the back, and on the leading members
+thereof, (to whom, as they already had much, it was servilely
+considered that more should be given). It certainly was manifest
+that the _Epoch_ writers had been given a free hand, and had used
+it, with _magna est veritas_ for their war-cry. Naturally, protests,
+remonstrances, denials, poured in from the attacked; for to few is it
+given to see ourselves as others see us.
+
+Yet, after all, it was but a twentieth century echo; a rough and
+trenchant postscript to a certain sermon preached long, long ago on a
+Syrian mountain-side to listening multitudes who were astonished at the
+Preacher’s doctrines.
+
+Whether this stirring of the dry bones would ultimately make for
+greater righteousness time alone could show. Dark are the workings of
+destiny; and in the path of reform immediate results can rarely be
+recorded. Undoubtedly the proximate outcome of the _Epoch_ campaign was
+a strengthening of the cause of the malcontents. The numbers of the
+Leaguers still grew and grew. They had, in fact, become an army on half
+pay; for every Leaguer, unemployed and unemployable, drew something
+from the coffers of the organisation, and thus the body of Adullamites
+drew in every one that was in distress, and every one that was in
+debt, and every one that was discontented. In effect, the rate-payers
+of London, who were for buying peace at any price, had provided their
+enemy with the sinews of war, and thereby hastened the approaching
+climax.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+ THE STRANGE OUTBREAK AT QUEEN’S HALL
+
+
+The recrudescence of the Dancing Mania first took notable form on a
+certain Sunday evening. At Queen’s Hall the Sunday League--which is
+in no way to be associated with the Leaguers of London--had organised
+one of those frequent and excellent concerts which, presumably, are
+intended to provide a suitable substitute for religious worship in our
+churches. A famous conductor, whose brilliant services to the cause of
+the higher music had brought him a world-wide reputation, was there
+to sway with his bâton the finest orchestral band ever known to the
+music-lovers of London.
+
+The great hall and the vast galleries were densely packed, and as the
+programme proceeded, the heat, generated by hundreds upon hundreds of
+listening humans, became intense and overpowering. There was a marked
+sense of overstrain during the wonderful rendering of Tchaikovsky’s
+lengthy Symphony (No. 6 in B minor). The music itself was full of
+subtle emotion. Deep melancholy alternated with swelling excitement.
+The passionate pessimism of the Russian character communicated itself
+through the medium of the score to those among the great audience who
+were predisposed to share it. The tragic gloom and fatalism of the
+movement hung like a thunder-cloud in the stifling atmosphere, and
+the wailing sadness of the subdued finale was succeeded by a tense
+silence. Then, as the audience was about to burst into the accustomed
+applause, a woman rose in the body of the hall, and gave a piercing
+shriek. The effect was electrical. Hundreds of people started to
+their feet. Another shriek, still more weird and piercing, drew a
+like response from scores of throats. In an instant confusion reigned
+throughout the hall and corridors, and in the balconies. Attempts to
+restore silence and order were drowned in the general tumult. Here and
+there, men and women, unable to reach the aisles, tried to climb over
+the closely ranged lines of movable stalls. Many of these seats fell
+with a crash, and horrified spectators in the balconies saw masses of
+people heaped and struggling on the ground. The bandsmen had risen
+excitedly, instruments in hand, unheeding for once the gestures of the
+conductor, who turned with pallid face, the perspiration in great drops
+on his forehead, and made imploring gestures to the audience. Bruised
+and bleeding, distraught with terror, some of those who had fallen in
+the effort to escape struggled to their feet and fought viciously and
+desperately to reach the exit doors.
+
+The officials of the Sunday League, with many persons in the audience,
+now made great and partially successful efforts to prevent a general
+rush. Shouts of “Sit down! sit down!” came from all parts of the
+building. The bandsmen were the first to resume their seats, and while
+the outgoing crowd was checked and marshalled into some sort of order,
+others set a good example, and, realising that there was absolutely no
+reason for panic, settled down as if intending to remain throughout
+the programme. But by a wise discretion on the part of the conductor,
+the concert was abandoned. At a signal, the familiar first bar of the
+National Anthem brought all to their feet again; then, turning to the
+audience, the wielder of the bâton invited them to join; and, with
+extraordinary volume and fervour, “God Save the King” brought the
+concert to a close. A terrible catastrophe had been averted; for, by
+marvellous good fortune, no life was lost in the frantic effort of a
+section of the audience to escape. Those who were injured were being
+hurried, half-fainting, into cabs, and those who were merely suffering
+from shattered nerves sat on chairs in the corridors, while anxious
+friends tried to restore them to some degree of self-control.
+
+The swift reaction, born of unexpected safety, may perhaps account
+in some measure for what followed. The woman whose scream had given
+the first impulse to disturbance--afterwards recognised as a Spanish
+dancer at the Empire music-hall--was suddenly seen to be moving down
+the corridor in a wild, fantastic dance. Bursts of laughter greeted the
+extraordinary and unlooked-for display. An avenue was made for her,
+and on she danced. Her hat was gone; her long black hair had fallen to
+her waist, and her eyes were blazing with the look of a demoniac. The
+crowd closed after her, with fresh laughter, which presently gave place
+to excited and wondering exclamations. Now she was in the entrance
+hall, and one of the officials laid his hand upon her shoulder. She
+shook herself free with a scream of foreign words. Another moment, and
+those peering eagerly from the entrance steps and pavement, saw the
+Bacchantic figure whirling in the street. The cries and tumultuous
+shouts which arose among the crowd around the dancer, and the warning
+shouts of the drivers of approaching vehicles, brought hosts of
+visitors to the open windows of the Langham and the neighbouring
+houses. Presently, those who could look down from these vantage points,
+and others who now packed the steps of All Souls’ Church, saw with
+bewilderment that the magnetism of example had drawn some six or seven
+young girls and women into a kind of dance which imitated the movements
+of the Spaniard.
+
+Thus the glare of the electric lights revealed one of the strangest and
+most lamentable scenes ever witnessed in the streets of London. It was
+brief, but pregnant with painful possibilities. Two or three policemen,
+as soon as they realised in some measure what was happening, assisted
+by some resolute men who had now emerged from the hall, brought the
+dancers to a forcible standstill. Their resistance was cat-like,
+savage; but exhaustion aided the efforts of the constables, and within
+twenty minutes the roadway was cleared, the crowd dispersed, and
+Langham Place had almost resumed its normal aspect.
+
+For ten days after these occurrences there was nothing to indicate that
+they were likely to be repeated. Then, in another quarter of London,
+there was a somewhat similar outbreak, and, unhappily, on a more
+extensive scale. It took place among the girl-pupils attending a large
+school of shorthand in Southampton Row. Rumour had it, and probably
+it was true, that some of them had been present at Queen’s Hall on
+the occasion already chronicled. After the long, hot afternoon hours
+in the class-rooms, the shorthand pupils--girls and youths--poured
+out in the usual throng into the streets. There was a good deal of
+gossiping, as usual, and here and there a little innocent flirtation.
+The flower-sellers, who drive their trade near Cosmo Place on the
+pavement of Southampton Row, as usual eagerly drew attention to their
+baskets. Then one, whose basket was first emptied, executed a wild
+pirouette of triumph. Some of the young men applauded vigorously. Here
+and there a girl was pushed forward, and some of the more reckless
+danced a few steps, in imitation of the flower-seller. The spark was in
+the bonfire! and before any one realised what was happening, a score of
+dancers, male and female, filled the pavement, and by force of numbers
+moved into the roadway. To escape the horse traffic and motors, they
+whirled across at an angle into Russell Square. The cabmen on the stand
+applauded them derisively, bursting into coarse guffaws. Incoherent
+cries came from the parched throats of the dancers. Some of them now
+joined hands and swept over the broad southern roadway of the square;
+others, with grotesque gestures, danced alone, leaping into the air at
+intervals. A cornet-player, who was standing near the north corner of
+Bedford Place, raised his instrument to his lips, and the clear, sudden
+notes that followed seemed to act upon his hearers as a trumpet-call.
+It served to quicken to an almost appalling degree the epidemic
+character of the amazing outbreak; for passers-by, moved as by an
+irresistible impulse, joined in the maddened movement of the dancers.
+They overflowed into the quiet thoroughfare of Bedford Place. From the
+residential hotels and boarding-houses on either side people rushed to
+the doorways and windows. Servants, with shrill cries, hurried up area
+steps to witness, with loud comment, the stupefying display, until many
+of the watchers themselves were drawn into the widening circles of the
+excited dancers.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+ BILLY OF MAYFAIR
+
+
+There was one, and only one, section of society in London that found
+unalloyed pleasure in the abnormal features of the period. The youth of
+the lower orders revelled in the absence of the restraint that hitherto
+had qualified the natural joy of life. The Boy in the Street in all his
+varied experiences had never had so good a time before. He made the
+most of it. He came, not as a single spy, but in battalions. His shrill
+voice rent the air day and night; his cockney smartness found new and
+glorious opportunities for exercise; the badinage of the pavement was
+heard on every side. The march of the Leaguers, or the whirling rush
+of a band of Dancers, never failed to stir him to loud delight or
+tumultuous excitement.
+
+There was one small youth, here entering the pages of this chronicle,
+who participated with the keenest relish in the unfolding drama of
+the day. This boy was Billy of Mayfair. Not always had he found his
+headquarters in that highly rented and exclusive district. Like the
+Wise Men, and like many clever boys, he came from the East. But his
+travels westward began at an extremely early age, and in regard to
+the migrations of that period Billy’s mind was quite a blank. His
+grandmother, a woman of no importance, and given, when means permitted,
+to inebriety, sometimes mentioned Poplar as the place of his nativity,
+and on other occasions asserted that in the Isle of Dogs Billy’s pink
+eyes first opened on the murky world down East. There was not much
+difference, and nothing to choose between those grimy regions, and
+Billy himself never troubled his white-thatched head about the past.
+He was in the West Central district when first he realised that he was
+anywhere, and he accepted his surroundings just as he accepted his
+physical peculiarities. Billy was quite accustomed to the special, if
+unflattering, notice which his appearance attracted, and showed no
+surprise or resentment when addressed contemptuously as a “blooming
+Halbino.”
+
+If a skin specialist had explained to him that his abnormal skin and
+hair resulted from an absence of the minute particles of colouring
+matter usually found in the lowest layer of the epidermis, he would
+have listened respectfully and then departed with the skimming step
+and whooping yell familiar to his young companions of the gutter.
+But nobody explained him to himself, and it was an accepted, and not
+perhaps unwelcome, fact that he was not like other boys.
+
+When Billy reached the age of ten he was still residing in a “third
+floor back” in an unsavoury court of which the narrow entrance is in
+Chapel Street, a short thoroughfare running from Lamb’s Conduit Street
+to Milman Street. But Billy was not much at home; nor was Billy’s
+grandmother aforesaid,--a prematurely aged and doddering person who
+earned precarious pence by perfunctorily sweeping crossings in an
+adjacent square. At night the two shared the shelter of the third floor
+back, and breathed till morning light, or darkness, the poisonous air
+of the miserable apartment. In warm fine weather Billy kept late hours.
+Sometimes, like the people who were “seeing life”--Heaven save the
+mark!--the boy did not go home till morning. Billy, like many another
+gutter child in London, knew much of its night side--the side known to
+the policemen, to hansom-cabmen, and to hospital nurses on night duty,
+who look out of window when cabs rattle up to certain neighbouring
+houses. Editors and journalists know also of that night side, but all
+things are not for publication. Half the world is ignorant of the
+deadly canker eating into the vitals of the nation; and the other half
+keeps silence.
+
+It was through being out late at night that Billy lost his leg. It
+fell out thus: Billy, dead tired, was sleeping in a doorway at the top
+of Bedford Row, when the vigilant eye of P.C. Dormer espied his small
+and huddled form. The law, through the eyes of the constabulary, looks
+with sternness on such lapses from well-ordered life and habits. The
+open-air treatment must not be adopted on your own responsibility. If
+you have no home--well, you ought to have. You may walk the king’s
+highway, but if that grows fatiguing and you slumber on a doorstep, it
+is the plain duty of P.C. Dormer to rouse and move you on. In effect,
+to be homeless is to be criminal, and to wander abroad without any
+visible means of subsistence, brings man or boy within the purview of
+the law. Lucky for you if P.C. Dormer does not see reason to conclude
+that incidentally you are loitering with intent to commit a felony.
+
+So Billy was shaken, and slumbered again; he did not rise, but the
+policeman’s temper did. So the grip of a mighty hand came upon Billy’s
+bony little shoulder, making him call out sharply and then whimper.
+
+“Get out o’ this,” growled the constable. So Billy got out, into
+Theobald’s Road. There, at what he believed to be a safe distance, he
+found another lurking-place, and having had a fatiguing day in the
+streets, he fell asleep again. But the law was on his trail. P.C.
+Dormer’s bull’s-eye, searching nooks and doorways, discovered once
+again the insignificant rebel against social order. Dormer was greatly
+ruffled. At the corner of Gray’s Inn Road, half an hour earlier, he had
+encountered a band of hooligans, who, strong in numbers, had jeered
+at his authority. In such circumstances it was but police nature that
+he should take it out of somebody. And here was Billy, defying or
+ignoring the majesty of the law! With a howl of pain and terror the
+boy came out of his dreams to find himself once more in the grip of
+a superior force. He wriggled to the pavement and lay there sobbing.
+Then P.C. Dormer gave him a vicious kick and Billy screamed with agony.
+It was no good now to tell him to be off. To “move on” was a physical
+impossibility. He lay and writhed.
+
+The next day he was in hospital in Great Ormond Street. He was supposed
+to have been knocked down by a fire engine in a hurry. Billy knew
+better, but he held his peace. His bibulous grandmother told the
+matron that “there’d always been summat wrong with his ’ip.” There was
+something very wrong now; and presently they transferred the injured
+child to the Alexandra Hospital in Queen Square, where hip disease
+was a speciality. Surgeons came and went, and now and then there were
+operation days at intervals. There came a day when the operating knife
+was brought to bear on Billy, and when it had done its necessary work,
+Billy’s right leg was his no more, and for a time he had that weird
+experience of feeling pain in a member that was non-existent.
+
+Sister, staff-nurse, day nurses and night nurses--they were all kind
+and tender to the little one-legged patient. They assured him he would
+be all right now, and that he was going to have a beautiful little
+crutch to get along with presently. His grandmother came to see him on
+visitors’ days, blear-eyed and pendulous of lip. On those days, indeed,
+many impossible parents and guardians went up the stone stairs of the
+Alexandra, bringing cheap and noisy toys, and refreshments of a wholly
+inappropriate character. With the general throng came on one occasion
+a stalwart man who walked like a policeman. He was a policeman. It was
+P.C. Dormer. He was a good fellow in the main, and he had children
+of his own. At first Billy did not recognise him out of uniform. Then
+remembrance dawned, and to his amazement his quick pink eyes noted
+tears in the eyes of P.C. Dormer. Clumsily, ashamedly, the constable
+put a painted toy upon the bed, and Billy smiled. Then the big man,
+with hasty glance around, bent his great red face over him.
+
+“You ’aven’t spilt, ’ave you?” he asked in a hoarse whisper.
+
+“Not me,” said Billy, speaking very low, but very scornfully.
+
+“My Gawd! but you’re a good plucked ’un!” said P.C. Dormer. “I’m damned
+sorry, that I am.” His great fist closed upon the small boy’s tiny
+hand. It was the proudest, happiest moment Billy had ever known.
+
+Sometimes, though the Alexandra was devoted to the hip-diseases of
+children, other diseases found an entry; and one day, Billy, who
+had shown disquieting symptoms, found himself, as the nurses said
+“in isolation.” In other words, he was placed in a detached ward,
+approached by a short bridge, under the care of a nurse specially told
+off to watch and tend him, and perchance to catch the same disease
+herself. The word went round that it was “dip.” And “dip” it was. When
+the doctor was sure of that, Billy was treated with anti-toxin for
+diphtheria, and the telephone was quickly set to work. An ambulance
+came round--a beautiful carriage, the nurse in charge explained; and
+Billy--nurses nodding and smiling at a distance, with eyes that had a
+tearful, frightened look--was borne down the staircase and so away to
+Hampstead. There, in the “dip” ward of the Fever Hospital, he fought
+the fight with death--the students in their quaint garb looking on;
+and, to the surprise of all, came out victorious.
+
+Seven weeks later he was discharged, and back again in the three-pair
+back. There was the old grandmother, doddering still, the same, yet
+not the same. One grey morning, when Billy awoke, something in her
+appearance startled him. The poor old thing was dead; and so unsightly
+and alarming in his eyes that straightway he arose and fled, hopping
+and tapping with his crutch along the grey, deserted streets--anywhere,
+anywhere away from that awesome sight.
+
+How the boy lived, or starved, throughout the next few days he
+never realised. When at length he mustered courage to return, all
+that remained of “this our sister” was there no longer. The parish
+authorities were accustomed to these cases. The room was swept and
+garnished after a fashion. Already other tenants were in possession,
+and Billy was admonished to go about his business. Having no business,
+he hopped vaguely into the streets again. He had a horror now of walls
+and rooms. Over there in the Alexandra he had had his experiences, and
+outside the National, on the opposite side of the square, in the night,
+he had sometimes heard blood-curdling screams from epileptic patients.
+He shuddered--shook, as it were, the dust from his remaining foot, and
+hopped off towards the unexplored regions of the west.
+
+Along Great Russell Street he made his way, gazing at the grim mass
+of the great museum, and wondering if it were another hospital or
+a prison. There were pigeons and policemen inside the formidable
+railings. The former attracted; but the latter repelled. So he turned
+his back on the mighty store-house of antiquities, caring and knowing
+nothing about the forty-three miles of the bookshelves, and all the
+cheerless wonders of its different sections. Onward he hopped, across
+Tottenham Court Road into Oxford Street. The district pleased him.
+Presently the waving of big boughs attracted notice, and exploration
+led him into Grosvenor Square. Further investigation resulted in the
+discovery of Berkeley Square, and finally, very weary and hungry, he
+sat down to rest on the doorstep of Sir John Westwood’s house in Hill
+Street.
+
+From that day forth the boy became and remained Billy of Mayfair;
+destined to play his little part in national events.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+ THE SHRINE OF LUXURY AND PRIDE
+
+
+Thus the wind of the world, which bloweth whither it listeth--or
+whither the Great Spirit that rules the world directs--had wafted
+Billy, a fortuitous atom of humanity, into touch with Aldwyth Westwood
+and Father Francis of St Stephen’s. Billy, however, fought shy of
+Father Francis, who had speedily run across him. The boy was not very
+keen on the clergy; being rather disposed to class them with the
+police--and that, indeed, in a moral sense is what they are, or ought
+to be. But with Aldwyth, who discovered him one early morning on the
+doorstep, he speedily developed friendly relations. He soon learnt to
+look up to her with reverently admiring eyes, as a beautiful being
+belonging to another sphere; one who smiled with an enchanting smile,
+and bestowed sixpences as other people bestowed halfpence.
+
+Not that the boy lived wholly on charity. Sometimes he invested his
+little capital in a stock of newspapers, and persistently thrust that
+luminous organ, the _Planet_, under the notice of the wayfarer. But
+there was not much sale for the _Planet_ in Mayfair. The truth is,
+that Billy never realised the greatness of his surroundings, and the
+Birth and Wealth of other residents in that favoured district of the
+peerage and the plutocracy; nor would any one know the importance of
+Mayfair merely from personal observation. The _cliché_ of locality is
+not a matter of instinct, but of manufacture. In Mount Street, close
+at hand, a good deal of the manufacturing was done by the eminent
+firms of auctioneers and estate agents, the bank-like qualities of
+whose establishments appealed to the rich and the refined. Plate-glass
+windows, burnished mahogany, polished brass--plenty of brass--soft
+carpets, and delightful chairs, allured the seekers after mansions
+in town or country. Not here did vulgar posters in thick and sticky
+ink offend the eye. Bills of all sorts, including the little bills
+for commission and miscellaneous services, were kept out of sight.
+Beautifully executed photographs of desirable properties for gentlemen
+of position were to be seen in these handsome offices, and expensively
+got-up Particulars and Conditions of Sale were freely issued through
+the medium of the post. They could let you a cramped little dwelling in
+Mayfair for as low a rent as £450 a year, but, of course, for a really
+commodious residence, a much higher figure was demanded.
+
+It was a much higher rent that Sir John Westwood paid for his house in
+Hill Street. Long past and gone were the days of suburban residence.
+The rising man, like the man who is born on the heights, must have
+the right address. It was good enough for the once obscure barrister
+to journey daily from Norwood Junction, reminded _ad nauseam_ by the
+railway porters of the interesting regions of Anerley, Penge, Brockley,
+and New Cross. But a law adviser of the Crown, a parliamentarian
+battling for a foremost footing, must live in the right quarter.
+Mayfair is the place for the mighty, just as Harley Street--the
+valley of the shadow--is the place for the eminent doctor. The
+specialist knows that the people who come to him will measure his value
+less by his treatment than by the locality in which he writes his
+prescriptions. Such is the wisdom of the world.
+
+So Aldwyth Westwood had the satisfaction of feeling that round and
+about her resided, when in town, the fine flower of British rank and
+fashion. But rank and fashion as yet showed no eagerness to embrace
+her with effusion. Her friends were few; perhaps the best of them was
+plain Molly Barter, the nursery governess of her early days, who had
+stayed on indefinitely as quasi-companion, needlewoman, and general
+factotum of the house. Miss Barter was a person of the happiest
+disposition; calm and unimaginative, untroubled by the problems of
+life; sound, not to say solid, in her views of things in general;
+unvarying in appetite and modes of expression, and devoted to Aldwyth
+with a sort of dog-like fidelity.
+
+Miss Barter did not understand Aldwyth. There were many things she did
+not even try to understand. She had never read Voltaire; but to her
+it seemed, even in those troubled months, that nearly everything was
+for the best, in the best of all possible worlds. That was by no means
+the opinion of Aldwyth Westwood. None the less, she found comfort in
+the mental altitude of the faithful Molly, who feared neither ghosts
+nor mice, and remained quite unmoved in the presence of a blackbeetle.
+Miss Barter, through Aldwyth, also made the acquaintance of Billy. To
+her it seemed not unreasonable that he should be homeless and ragged.
+Sometimes she asked him, with slight signs of severity, what he had
+done with his cap, and Billy had to explain that “the chaps”--meaning
+other boys, two legged and aggressive--had deprived him of that
+article. The same thing happened whenever a new cap or an old was given
+to Billy; the “chaps” seemed to think that a “blooming little Halbino”
+ought to show the colour of his hair. So Billy’s cap was “chucked” over
+a wall, or down an area, and there was an end of it.
+
+Another friend of his--one Joe, a stableman at the mews in Hill
+Street--told him that it wasn’t respectable to go capless in those
+parts. But what could a boy do, much as he would have liked to give
+satisfaction to the stableman, for Joe was good to him.
+
+On chilly nights he sometimes allowed the small vagrant to hop into a
+coach-house or harness-room, and sleep like a little lord in warmth
+and comfort. In return, Billy allowed Joe to scan the racing tips and
+learn the latest odds without investing in the purchase of a _Planet_.
+The coachmen and footmen of the locality were much more haughty. Men
+of their position knew what was due to it, and had no sympathy with
+intrusive ragamuffins from the far East. The Mayfair flunkey still
+lived up to the lofty traditions of “Jeames de la Pluche of Buckley
+Square”:
+
+ “He vel became his hagwillets,
+ He cocked his ’at with _such_ an hair;
+ His calves and viskers _was_ such pets,
+ That hall loved Jeames of Buckley Square.”
+
+While as to the butlers, they, indeed, were dignitaries to be viewed
+and revered from a distance. Once, in his inexperience, Billy
+volunteered to assist a Hill Street butler, who brought forth his
+bicycle to place on a four-wheeler. The man swore at him. But as Joe,
+who saw the episode, observed to Billy, “It warn’t no good to expect
+anything from that sort. A chap like that never did a day’s work in
+his (sanguinary) life. He was too d----d artful.” With which, Joe,
+bare-armed and hot, resumed his “hissing,” and vigorously cleaned down
+his “hoss.”
+
+There were a great many little tips to be picked up in Mayfair during
+the early summer months following Billy’s coming to the district. He
+arrived after the first demonstration of the Leaguers in Hyde Park, and
+therefore missed the Sunday visit of the mob to the Westwoods’ house
+in Hill Street. But after that there was such a stampede from the big
+houses, that the ubiquitous cab-tout, especially the tout who wore a
+“spider,” reaped quite a harvest thereabouts. He took care, however,
+that so weak a competitor as the crippled boy should keep his distance.
+So Billy, to some extent unintentionally, developed a means of raising
+money in which no tout could rival him. The pace at which he learnt
+to hop along was quite amazing; but, not content with that, he took to
+making high leaps in the air, coming down upon his foot and crutch for
+the most part without disaster. Then he essayed to dance a little on
+one leg, after the manner of Donato, a one-legged man who, once upon a
+time, drew all London to Drury Lane to see him in a pantomime.
+
+The passers-by, seeing these perilous displays of agility, paused
+with horror, and then produced a coin. One day, outside a mansion on
+the east side of Berkeley Square, a thin pale-faced gentleman, with a
+worried look, stared aghast for a moment while the unconscious Billy
+was rehearsing. And when the worried man passed into the house, the
+young acrobat found a shilling, actually a silver shilling, in his
+hand. He asked who the gentleman was, and Joe informed him that he was
+none other than the most noble the Marquis of Downland. No wonder he
+was worried; for, apart from the domestic agitation of the capital,
+the pulse of other capitals had to be felt through the medium of the
+wires in Downland House. All the inner workings of the Chancelleries
+of Europe were known within those walls; all the devious devices of
+diplomacy; all the international collisions avoided by a hair’s
+breadth; all the movements of foreign fleets; all the ambitions of
+foreign potentates and the disposal of continental armies. For the
+Marquis was Minister for Foreign Affairs, and they gave him sleepless
+nights. To Downland House came ambassadors and envoys at critical
+junctures in the lives of States. They came after the great naval
+battle of the Dogger Bank, in which a powerful fleet of trawlers, armed
+with fishing nets, was utterly routed by a Russian Squadron; they came
+again, but less conspicuously, when a German Squadron paid a surprise
+visit to Tangier. And there were many conferences there when certain
+Powers proposed to close the Baltic Sea to British men-of-war.
+
+When the Foreign Secretary suffered from nightmare, it generally took
+the form of a thing with wings. It was a creature which sought to
+imitate the Apostle Peter by walking on the sea--a web-footed, oceanic
+bird, with a rudimentary hinder toe, and the upper mandible very
+strongly hooked. This restless bird liked to visit every sea, skimming
+the surface and gobbling the small fishes, crustaceans, molluscs, and
+the rest of them. It always came in view in stormy weather. When the
+Foreign Secretary awoke from these bad dreams, he never felt quite
+sure whether the bird were a gigantic stormy petrel or the German
+Emperor.
+
+But of course his lordship did know that, in the Kaiser’s view, “the
+twentieth century belonged to Germany,” and that his Majesty also
+considered Britannia had ruled the waves too long. Wherefore, Hoch!
+and again, Hoch! for the rights of the Vaterland. How glorious an
+achievement--as foretold by the German romance-writer--to drive the
+British Squadrons from the North Sea; to disembark without difficulty
+sixty thousand German warriors at Leith; to march southward, while
+accommodating French allies landed another army at Hastings and closed
+in on London; to dictate terms of peace at Hampton Court; and then
+to enter London with all the pomp and circumstance of war--imperial
+victor--not merely William the Second, but William the Second Conqueror
+of England. Hoch! and again, Hoch! and Hoch! once more.
+
+A dream? the baseless fabric of a vision? Probably; but the German
+navy was a stern reality; they were very busy over there at Kiel,
+Heligoland, and elsewhere, and realities must be reckoned with. The
+shipwrights’ hammers resounded persistently in the German dockyards,
+and the clangour crossed the sea.
+
+So Lord Downland had a good deal to think of in Berkeley Square, as
+well as at the Foreign Office; though, even so, he little dreamed of
+what the Royal Petrel would be about before the year was out.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+ THE MANIA THAT LAID HOLD OF LONDON
+
+
+When London became fully alive to the weird occurrences in its midst,
+the first feeling was one of contempt, but it was quickly followed by
+the dawn of consternation. An article in the _Lancet_, widely quoted by
+the lay newspapers, dealt gravely with the problems that the revival
+of the Dancing Mania presented. It foreshadowed possible developments
+in terms which led husbands to look at their wives, and fathers at
+their daughters, with an uneasy feeling that they, too, might become
+victims of what the _Lancet_ described in technical terms as chorea,
+and in popular language, as a form of St Vitus’s dance. Like lawyers
+searching for precedents, the press-men of the day delved diligently
+for the history of the Dancing Plague. The best contribution on the
+subject was contained in an anonymous article which appeared in the
+_Fortnightly Review_. The writer pointed out that these convulsionary
+manifestations were more or less prevalent during a period of quite
+two hundred years, dating from the end of the fourteenth century,
+and that, human nature being the same in all ages, there was nothing
+inconceivable, or even improbable, in a revival of such distressing
+symptoms in modern times. The difference would be in treatment rather
+than in the disorder itself. In former times chorea was regarded as
+curable only by those--the priests--who had the cure of souls. People
+who were hurried body and soul into the magic circle of hellish
+superstition needed to be rescued by supernatural agencies. The
+screaming, foaming men and women who in the Middle Ages swept with wild
+gyrations through the towns of Germany and the Netherlands, therefore,
+were made the subject of priestly exorcisms. They were forcibly dragged
+to the shrines of St John or St Vitus, where, by means of masses and
+religious ceremonies, the evil spirits were believed to be cast out. In
+regard to St Vitus in particular, the priests invented a legend that
+the holy youth had prayed to be protected from the Dancing Mania, and
+lo! an answer from heaven--” Vitus, thy prayer is accepted.” Thus, for
+all time, had the martyred St Vitus become patron saint of all who were
+afflicted with chorea, just as St Martin of Tours was the patron of
+all who suffered from small-pox.
+
+It was not until the sixteenth century, the writer said, that the
+physicians had made any attempt to take the dire disease scientifically
+in hand. One thing was absolutely certain--the deep-seated inclination
+of morbidly imaginative persons to imitate the afflictions of others.
+In the language of the _British Medical Journal_, “Such attacks
+themselves were, as in all nervous complaints, the almost necessary
+crises of an inward morbid condition which was transferred from the
+sensorium to the nerves of motion.”
+
+On the medical aspect of the modern outbreak it is unnecessary to
+dwell. Two significant circumstances, however, may be noticed. Ample
+authority was given for the statement that in the Middle Ages the
+Dancing Plague had always been most prevalent in the month of June;
+and, secondly, had wrought its greatest ravages among shoemakers,
+tailors, and others who led a confined or sedentary life. Thus it came
+about that those Londoners who were under no compulsion to remain in
+town, reading these articles, developed the greatest urgency in leaving
+it. Ere midsummer day had passed, scenes at the great railway stations
+became quite amazing. Piles of luggage blocked the platforms, bribes
+to secure seats were offered freely to the railway men, and though
+enormous exertions were made to cope with the outgoing traffic, the
+congestion became almost unmanageable. The scenes enacted at Victoria,
+Waterloo, and London Bridge in particular were such as had not been
+known in the whole history of English railways.
+
+The haste and extent of these departures involved incomplete
+arrangements for the protection of vast numbers of London houses and
+of the property that they contained. Burglaries, and even daylight
+robberies became frequent and daring. It was observed that the victims
+of these impudent thieves were mostly those whose names were not in
+the lists of subscribing members of the League; and, whether justly
+or unjustly, most of the burglaries and robberies with violence
+chronicled in the daily press were connected with the operations of
+that much-feared and ever-increasing association.
+
+In such circumstances it was inevitable that much abuse should be
+showered on the police. But, as a body, the Metropolitan force remained
+loyal and zealous. The same must in justice be said of the City police,
+on whom depended the safety of the enormous wealth garnered in the
+vaults and strong-rooms of the City banks and warehouses.
+
+But the police at each end of the town now had to reckon with
+unprecedented problems. The Leaguers were far too numerous to
+be suppressed, even if a hesitating Government had given the
+mandate--which, it seemed, they dared not do. Moreover, it was found
+practically impossible to secure convictions or even to complete
+prosecutions. The magistrates and judges were prepared to do their
+duty, but witnesses were afraid to come forward, and jurymen who
+could not manage to get medical certificates to excuse their absence,
+nevertheless stayed away from the criminal courts, and submitted,
+as a choice of evils, to the payment of heavy fines. Throughout the
+long and blazing summer days, bands of Leaguers marched through the
+streets, ringing at doors or hoisting collecting boxes on long poles
+to the first-floor windows. Shops were invaded in like manner. At the
+hotels and clubs defence corps were organised, but so menacing was the
+aspect of the wearers of the metal disc that in most instances peace
+had to be bought rather than insisted on. Then suddenly the cry would
+be raised, “The Dancers are coming; the Dancers: the Dancers!” The
+sound of bagpipes, drums, or of accordions, blended with the hum of
+many voices and the rush of feet, and bands of girls and men swept into
+view, dishevelled, heated, but whirling with fantastic steps through
+street and square, dancing and dancing still, while some in the climax
+of delirium sank in exhaustion to the ground.
+
+The places of those who fell out of the Dancers’ ranks were constantly
+filled with new recruits. Many bystanders, who began by watching and
+wondering, felt themselves drawn into the repulsive vortex. Women, more
+especially, were thus allured. Girls came rushing from behind shop
+counters. The doors of private houses were suddenly thrown open, and
+in spite of the efforts to prevent them, unhappy women fought their
+way into the street to be absorbed in a moment in the ever-moving
+circles of the maddened Dancers. It was noticed that there were certain
+instruments and certain types of music which developed the tendency to
+join in and exaggerate these deplorable public exhibitions. Night was
+rendered hideous by the noise that filled the streets. Indeed, during
+the short hours of darkness, the quiet stars looked down on many a
+sight that well might make the angels weep. London was become in a more
+painful sense than ever a City of Dreadful Night. The Dancing Mania had
+got a strengthening grip upon its people. At one time it seemed only
+too likely that it would become an epidemic of appalling extent and
+characteristics throughout the kingdom.
+
+Regarded thoughtfully, there were many causes that tended to bring
+about such an outbreak of hysteria in that exceptionally hot and
+rainless summer, (bringing as it did a dearth of water for domestic
+use and street cleansing). The state of things was summed up thus
+by an able German writer: “Imitation--compassion--sympathy--these
+are imperfect designations for a common bond of union among human
+beings--for an instinct which connects individuals with the general
+body, which embraces with equal force reason and folly, good and evil,
+and diminishes the praise of virtue as well as the criminality of
+vice.... Far be it from us to attempt to awaken all the various tones
+of this chord, whose vibrations reveal the profound secrets which lie
+hid in the inmost recesses of the soul.”
+
+But, assuredly, it was to this mysterious instinct of imitation that
+one must look for explanation of that loss of will power, of which,
+in that distressing time, so many Londoners were either examples or
+witnesses. The first morbid condition produced was that of a bird
+fascinated by a serpent, and the outcome was surrender to the violent
+excitement of the Dancing Plague. There was another feature of the
+times, more or less connected with the administration of justice, that
+began to cause dismay. The police found it practically impossible to
+enforce the provisions of the Licensing Acts. Riotous scenes occurred
+when attempts were made to close the public-houses at statutory hours.
+Customers, amongst whom the disc-holders figured prominently, refused
+to go. They demanded more drink, and they got it. Isolated examples of
+this lawlessness could have been put down, but it was so general that
+enforced obedience became as impossible as the vindication of criminal
+justice in the law courts.
+
+Only when the stage of exhaustion or helpless intoxication had been
+reached, did the foul-mouthed and turbulent customers of the publicans
+come forth into the streets.
+
+Often they fought and screamed in the grey sadness of the dawning day;
+some staggered off in search of home or resting-place; others rolled
+in the gutters, and where they rolled they lay, while frightened faces
+peered from the upper windows of the neighbouring houses, and startled
+children in their cots broke into cries of misery and terror.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+ THE GREAT FIRE IN HYDE PARK
+
+
+Greatly moved by the evil things that had befallen London, and stung
+in some measure by the trenchant attacks appearing in the _Epoch_, a
+small band of London clergy who had recognised in this grave crisis
+a challenge to the Church, set themselves earnestly to alleviate
+the growing sufferings of their people. Among the most active and
+unconventional of this little band was Father Francis. His church--St
+Stephen’s--was the first that was made available for the definite
+purpose of checking the spread of the Dancing Mania by special prayer
+and meditation. The unhappy subjects of this repellent affliction were
+invited to seek the calm of the sacred buildings, and find in the
+contemplation of the sanctuary rest for their perturbed spirits, peace
+from the contagious excitement of the stifling streets. Strange scenes
+were sometimes witnessed in these churches--frequented as they came to
+be not merely by those who, already, had been drawn into the whirlpool
+of the mania, and vehemently desired to be preserved from a relapse,
+but thronged also by girls and women who, though hitherto unaffected,
+felt and feared they, too, could not long escape.
+
+Outside, in the glare of day or in the shadow of night, tumultuous
+sounds would reach the ears of priests and suppliants. Nearer and
+nearer came the clangour of crude instruments of music; broken cries
+and bursts of hysterical laughter filled the outer air; the scuffling
+of the Dancers’ feet became more and more audible. Perhaps the direful
+medley came and passed without any of the Dancers entering the church.
+At other times they crowded in with loud discordant noises. But almost
+always these were soon subdued by the solemn stillness of the building,
+and the unmoved calm of kneeling men and women, already earnestly
+engaged in intercessory prayer. No set services were attempted after
+the first few experiments. It was found that sermons or addresses often
+stimulated feelings already over-excited, and that hymns produced
+uncontrollable emotion. But the church organs were put to constant use
+when it was discovered that music, especially music of a certain type,
+was marvellously potent in stilling the overwrought nerves of the
+Dancers and allaying the tendency to hysterical outbreaks.
+
+This remarkable result of musical sounds recalled to many the recorded
+effects of the Italian tarantellas in counteracting the effect of
+poisonous spider-bites. Not only so, but it was whispered by the more
+credulous that spider-bites actually were the cause of the mania in
+its modern form, and that in this connection, the spider symbol of
+the Leaguers possessed a special and malignant meaning. That there
+were numerous instances of self-deception and of fraud was beyond
+all question. That, indeed, is a common experience among hysterical
+persons, and in this instance, as already intimated, the Dancers
+were largely recruited from classes predisposed to excitement and
+delusion--factory girls from the East End, workers in close, unhealthy
+surroundings, and great numbers who belonged to the painted sisterhood
+of the streets. Practically it was a form of insanity, and now for the
+first time the curative effect of music in the treatment of mental
+disease received something like systematic application. Music, of
+certain kinds, it was certain, excited to exhibition of the mania;
+music at the same time provided for many the virtue of an antidote.
+Unfortunately, though these combined influences of religion and
+melody were so well employed for the benefit of large numbers, there
+were still greater numbers untouched by any sort of remedy, whose wild
+paroxysms were constantly drawing new adherents into the ranks of the
+Dancers. Any attempt at forcible suppression only resulted in displays
+of increased violence. Practically the evil had grown in a few weeks
+to such a head that the authorities had to stand by in the hope that
+it would wear itself away. Already the police were vastly overweighted
+by the task of maintaining any semblance of public order. There were
+hosts of designing men and women who aided and abetted the grotesque
+excesses of the Dancers for no other purpose than to take advantage of
+opportunities for conduct violating every principle of public decorum.
+
+Thus the fateful summer wore away. The railway termini presented
+conditions more chaotic than ever. All outgoing trains were densely
+packed by Londoners fleeing with their families from the multiplying
+terrors of the capital. But though scores of thousands escaped,
+millions necessarily remained--the helpless puppets of time and
+circumstance.
+
+When at length the August Bank holiday came round, the disorganised
+condition of the railway service led to the abandonment of any
+adequate provision for the usual excursion traffic; as a consequence,
+vast crowds, that in the ordinary course would have got away from
+London, were practically kept prisoners within its bounds. The reek
+of the wood and asphalt of the streets, the glare of the pavements,
+and the pitiless rays of the relentless sun, drove them in herds into
+the public parks. There, under the parched foliage of the trees, some
+measure of shelter could be had, and on the brown and dusty grass
+holiday keepers--Heaven save the mark!--threw themselves down in
+weariness and sullen discontent, while hosts of women and children,
+indifferent to the feeble remonstrances of the frightened park-keepers,
+paddled in the dwindling waters of the Serpentine, the Round Pond, and
+the ornamental lakes. As the long and joyless day drew to its close,
+news came to Scotland Yard that mobs had forced their way into the
+private gardens of the large squares. It proved to be true as regards
+Berkeley Square, Grosvenor Square, Belgrave Square, Tavistock Square,
+and many others. Temple Gardens and Gray’s Inn Gardens also had been
+invaded, but urgent messages for police protection were only met with
+the answer that it was impossible to spare the number of men required
+for such a purpose. In Grosvenor Square, indeed, a body of police did
+manage to clear the gardens of a gang of turbulent intruders, after a
+violent resistance. To repeat the expulsion in a score of other squares
+was quite impracticable. It was an hour of alarm that brought home
+to peaceable citizens the conviction, long dawning, that a combined
+force of Metropolitan and City police, which did not exceed 17,000
+men--and could provide only about 5000 for duty every eight hours--was
+absolutely inadequate to safeguard London day and night in times of
+exceptional disorder.
+
+The mob in various quarters had scored a triumph. By the simple
+expedient of forcing a lock or clambering over some low railings it had
+gained possession of many acres of fresh country. Well-mown grass and
+carefully cultivated flower-beds were at their service. Noisy revellers
+shouted indecencies in the growing shades of evening. Unwashen and
+verminous creatures in rags and tatters sprawled on the garden seats
+and prowled amongst the shrubs.
+
+In the parks fresh contingents arrived, and jeered at the orders to
+clear out at closing time. Under the trees they drank and shouted in
+the gathering darkness. Here and there bits of candles and matches
+were lighted, and ribald laughter and drunken yells burst forth at the
+sights the flickering flames revealed.
+
+Rumour of what was going on brought many persons to the Park, and among
+them Herrick. Quite suddenly he ran up against Henshaw the detective.
+
+“Nice game, isn’t it?” said the latter. “This sort of thing’s going on
+all over the place. I’ve just come down from Kensington Gardens, and,
+if anything, it’s worse there than it is here.”
+
+“Well, here comes a breath of air,” sighed Herrick, baring his head to
+the faint puff that rustled the leaves.
+
+“Yes, and from the south-west, too. It’ll do us good if it brings the
+rain at last.”
+
+They sauntered on--they were on the south side of the
+Serpentine--listening and looking. Presently they reached a widened
+space.
+
+“Hullo! do you see that?” exclaimed the detective, halting.
+
+“See it? Yes! What does it mean?”
+
+“Fire!”
+
+“A house?”
+
+“No, a tree. It must be in Kensington Gardens. That’s what comes of
+this match and candle business. If I’d had my way the troops should
+have hunted the whole pack of them out of this an hour ago.”
+
+“Look! look!” cried Herrick excitedly. Westward a tongue of flame had
+shot into the air, and then another, and another.
+
+“My God!” said Herrick, horrified. Then he set off at a run, the other
+keeping at his heels. On every side recumbent forms were scrambling
+to their feet. Oaths, obscene jests and blasphemous shouts broke upon
+their ears, and far and near sounded the shrill persistent whistles
+of the constables. A lurid light now illumined the western sky, and
+here and there ahead of them great cones of flame shot up, while huge
+columns of smoke bent and spread before the rising gusts of wind.
+
+The two men paused, exhausted for the moment, letting the rush of dim
+and stumbling figures eddy round them.
+
+“Kensington Palace must be on fire,” panted Herrick.
+
+“If so the League’s at the bottom of this business,” said the
+detective. “Hullo! you there----”
+
+Away to the left in a bed of flowering shrubs his quick eye had caught
+a stealthy movement. Almost as the words escaped him there was a little
+flame low down near the ground. It revealed a glimpse of a white, hot
+face, glistening with perspiration. The cheeks were inflated, the mouth
+was blowing at a little heap of straw, dried chips, and leaves.
+
+“You devil!” shouted Henshaw; “that’s your game?” He dashed into the
+bushes, but the incendiary was too quick for him. He wriggled clear on
+the other side and was lost to view in the wild on-rushing crowd.
+
+When they reached the road dividing the Park from Kensington Gardens,
+it was seen that the refreshment châlet just within the rails of the
+gardens was burning fiercely. In the midst of the crackling of the
+furnace could be heard crash after crash of crockery, as the piled cups
+and saucers, plates and jugs, came tumbling from their charred and
+splintering shelves.
+
+In the glare that lit up the broad roadway, a maddened,
+half-intoxicated mob of Dancers, breaking out into screams and maniacal
+laughter, circled in full view of the burning châlet, until the
+galloping horses of the fire engines, approaching from the north, drove
+them, still leaping and gyrating, southward towards Kensington. Fire
+engines now approached from every quarter, but it was obvious that
+little could be done to save the trees. Every thirsty bush served as
+a conductor for the greedy element. The furnace spread from bough to
+bough; below, the fire fastened on fragments and twigs lying on the
+parched surface of the grass, curling its way snake-like to the nearest
+trunk; then, with a sharp hiss, climbed to the lower branches, licking
+them eagerly until, with one united and terrific hiss, the brown and
+shrivelled foliage combined to make a pyramid of fire. Tree after tree
+became thus outlined in a mighty burst of flame, then lapsed into smoke
+and blackness, still revealed here and there with glowing branches.
+Sometimes the fire commenced its work high in the loftier foliage; for
+now the upper air was filled with charred and glowing embers borne
+north and eastward by the rising wind. In the rush of sparks and smoke
+above the swaying tree-tops, it seemed as if the weird Valkyrie sisters
+rode triumphant. Bushes and branches were hastily torn down where
+possible, and bands of people made frantic efforts to beat out the fire
+ere it obtained an unconquerable hold.
+
+But deviltry was loose that night, and, however the first fire may have
+been occasioned, the distances at which new outbreaks were discovered
+pointed conclusively to deliberate acts. In all, seven men were
+seized--taken red-handed in the act of causing separate fires. Four of
+the prisoners wore the symbol of the League.
+
+Towards morning, a heavy downpour of rain extinguished the last sparks
+of the conflagration. It had come too late to save the trees, and all
+that the fire brigade had been able to achieve was the preservation of
+Kensington Palace from more than partial destruction.
+
+Dawn crept, frowning, over the dreary scene, the black ghost of its
+former beauty--a wilderness of ashes; above which the charred branches
+of denuded trees waved mournful arms to greet the mournful day.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+ ALDWYTH ASKS A QUESTION
+
+
+Less than thirty miles from the monster city, now festering and
+malodorous under the September sun, high in a breeze-swept garden,
+Aldwyth Westwood, with a book upon her knees, sat gazing at the fleecy
+clouds. Slowly they sailed across the sky, casting deep shadows on the
+fields and woods. Anon the darkened tracts of country again were bathed
+in brilliant sunshine, and, far as the eye could reach, the face of
+Nature smiled.
+
+“Sunshine and shadow--in Nature and in life,” she thought. A sigh
+succeeded--a sigh that sprang like tears “from the depth of some divine
+despair,” a girl’s tribute to the burden and the mystery
+
+ “Of all this unintelligible world.”
+
+Here, if anywhere, near the summit of Leith Hill, was a refuge from the
+outward stress of life, a place of peace and quiet breathing. Sir John
+had benefited greatly from the pure air and calm of the retreat. The
+high gardens were a glory, and the house--bought ready furnished from a
+wealthy man’s executors--contained a well-stocked library, in which the
+jaded refugee from Parliament and Law Courts renewed with some zest the
+varied reading of his earlier years.
+
+Westwood was fifty-four--an age when, if a man allows himself to think
+at all, the length of life’s journey and its destination are thoughts
+that recur to him with deepening gravity. Behind him--the years that
+the locust had eaten; before him--what? Great numbers of men still feel
+young and vigorous at fifty-four, and much later, but the fact remains
+that it is the wrong side of the fifty. To some, but to few, celebrity,
+success, promotion, may come later; but if so, it lacks the heart-flush
+of early triumph; in some indefinable way the prize, so long fought for
+and looked forward to, proves something less than solid gold. Rewards
+tardily won savour of a short lease--an annuity bought late in life, an
+eleemosynary provision.
+
+At fifty-four the artist’s finest picture has been hung; the author’s
+best book has been published; the great surgeon has performed his
+greatest operation; the great advocate has scored the most brilliant
+of his forensic victories; the engineer has built his biggest bridge;
+the parliamentarian, sick and savage with hope deferred, then sees
+the biggest prize of all eluding him, or, if it comes at last, it is
+bestowed hesitatingly, not because of what he is and can accomplish,
+but of what he was, and tried to do, when at the zenith of his powers.
+
+Westwood had been wonderfully successful, as success is reckoned by
+the man in the street; but success is only relative. You have got
+something, but it sharpens the appetite for the “little more,” and so
+the chase continues.
+
+The prospect of a judgeship offered him few attractions; _that_ meant
+finality on five thousand a year. His aims were higher, but politically
+and professionally his position was complex. The parliamentary
+situation, and the state of parties and sub-parties, made further
+progress, even if his health permitted it, quite impossible for the
+time being. He was alive to that, and conscious oftentimes that
+probably he had already secured the best that life was likely to offer
+him.
+
+What were his spoils? Abundance of this world’s goods, the envy of
+hosts of less successful men, and the affection----? He paused at that;
+affection of whom? It was not a pleasant thought that there were only
+two beings in the whole world genuinely attached to him; an old and
+faithful servant, a woman whose fidelity withstood the outbursts of
+his petulance, and his daughter. Aldwyth was fond of him--yes, he was
+sure of that. But there was a lurking feeling that she would have been
+fonder still if he had only given her a chance. His cold reserve had
+kept her at a needless distance. He had denied her nothing that she
+asked for, but he had volunteered little for which she had not asked.
+He had shown no real concern in her interests or pursuits. Yet he had
+reason to know hers was a warm, impulsive nature like her mother’s,
+quick to believe and love, swift to be rebuffed and chilled. The
+possibilities of closer intimacy were now remote. Young Herrick, as
+was natural, would have the first place in her thoughts. Presently she
+would marry, and he, the envied and successful man, would be--alone.
+
+Of that strange interview with Marcus White, Aldwyth had told her
+father nothing. The condition of his health forbade it at the time; but
+now that the mysterious nervous attack which had caused her so much
+alarm seemed to have been wholly shaken off; now that his step was firm
+and his colour healthier, her mind was exercised as to her duty.
+
+Westwood, at his table, looked up as his daughter, with reflective
+face, walked past the open window of the library.
+
+“Deep in thought?” he said, inquiringly.
+
+She stopped, and returned a pace or two.
+
+“I was wondering where we should go when we leave here,” she answered.
+
+“Back to town,” her father replied, with raised eyebrows; “but of
+course it won’t be until the third week of October.”
+
+“The House won’t be sitting then, will it?”
+
+“No, but the judges will.”
+
+“Father,” she said impulsively, “need you go back to the Bar?”
+
+“I need not, but I shall,” he answered rather coldly. “Why do you ask?”
+
+“Is it--is it wise?” she stammered.
+
+“Wise!” he exclaimed, amazed.
+
+“Why need you do it?”
+
+“In the first place, I shall have to prosecute those scoundrelly
+incendiaries, who have already gone for trial.”
+
+“But, surely, that will be dangerous?”
+
+“For whom?”
+
+“For you, father; you know that you were threatened.”
+
+“Threatened men live long,” he answered, with a lightness that perhaps
+was a little strained. “You surely would not have me neglect an obvious
+duty because some unknown blackguard sends me an empty threat?”
+
+“The threat may not be empty. At Folkestone you told us others had been
+threatened, that there was a real conspiracy, and if so----”
+
+“If so, one must do one’s duty all the same. My health was broken down
+at Folkestone. I was not myself. Why, my dear girl, if I kept out of
+this case they would end by calling me a coward. I should be virtually
+driven into private life.” There was a pause.
+
+“Perhaps there is something I ought to tell you,” she said slowly.
+
+“Well, what is it?”
+
+“When we were at Folkestone, and you were ill, some one came to see
+you.”
+
+“Go on, go on”--impatiently.
+
+“His name was Marcus White.”
+
+Westwood made no comment, but his face grew paler.
+
+“What he said was a sort of warning. I was to tell you when I
+pleased--that you had better give up everything--Parliament, the
+Bar,--father, what does it mean?” She advanced swiftly to the broad
+table on the other side of which he sat, his eyes bent upon the
+blotting pad and balancing a paper knife between his fingers. “Won’t
+you tell me what it means?” she repeated, entreatingly.
+
+“It only means that this man is an old enemy of mine, and, it seems,
+one who does not forgive or forget.”
+
+“But is there any reason--any ground? If you never wronged him in any
+way--father, say you never did!”
+
+“No, I never did”--the words were somewhat laboured. “But I married
+your mother, Aldwyth. That was the cause of quarrel.”
+
+“Ah!” she exclaimed; “he spoke of her. Were they to have been married,
+if you----”
+
+“Something of the kind,” he answered, rising, then turning to the
+window. “It was many years ago; we need not talk of it.”
+
+“But he has not forgotten.”
+
+“No, it seems he has not forgotten.”
+
+“What shall you do?”
+
+“I think there is nothing to be done.” He sat again, and drummed on the
+table with his fingers.
+
+“Do you believe this man would really harm you if he could?”
+
+“You saw him. You can judge as well as I,” he said, evasively.
+
+“He must be mad.”
+
+“Mad with the long-nourished passion of hate, mad with the
+long-cherished desire for revenge--mad in that sense, yes.”
+
+“Then God help you, father,” said Aldwyth solemnly.
+
+“Yes, God help me,” and he buried his face in his hands.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIX
+ THE LORD MAYOR READS THE RIOT ACT
+
+
+The Long Vacation having dragged its monotonous length to a finish,
+the Courts re-opened in the third week in October. The day was dull,
+and dull foreboding seemed to oppress the Temple, Lincoln’s Inn, and
+all the other haunts of law. Fewer people, and less cheerful than of
+yore, mustered in the Great Hall to witness the customary procession of
+the judges. The Lord Chief Justice bore himself with dignity, but wore
+the marks of feeble health. The other judges were ordinary, estimable
+men. They had served their clients and themselves with more or less
+satisfactory results, and now discharged their monotonous functions
+in a duly monotonous manner. The nominal leader of the Bar--his
+Majesty’s Attorney-General--was absent again through illness, and the
+Solicitor-General, Sir John Westwood--whose looks were criticised
+curiously--led the army of the long robe. One and all, with silks and
+stuffs by way of tail to the procession, the King’s justices passed
+through the long hall of the florid Gothic structure, that cost the
+nation a million and a half of money, and still is in process of
+absorbing millions more in salaries, fees, and costs.
+
+The function was soon over, and then, in the thousand chambers of the
+building, the formal business of the day was dealt with. Once again
+the pieces of machinery were got into their appointed places. Once
+again the creaking, cumbrous, monstrous thing began to work. Amongst
+the unemployed members of the Bar--which is to say, the majority of
+barristers--there was much conjecture as to the business outlook.
+The cause-list was thin to the point of attenuation, but still there
+was a list. But those who were interested in criminal practice in
+the magisterial Courts, and at Sessions and the Bailey, were deeply
+concerned at the state of affairs which the history of the past few
+months foreshadowed. How far were the Leaguers going to carry their
+supposed programme? What was to happen if the British juryman failed
+his country? Was it possible that our boasted _palladium_ was breaking
+down? Britannia might need no bulwarks, but criminal law could not get
+on without a fearless jury, to say nothing of fearless witnesses,
+undaunted by open or veiled intimidation.
+
+It was confidently believed that in his approaching speech at the
+Mansion House, the Prime Minister would make an announcement of the
+first importance in reference to the subjects that were agitating the
+public mind. Since the great fire in Hyde Park, and the committal of
+the seven accused men for trial, the Leaguers had been comparatively
+quiet, but their numbers and their funds had further increased, and
+there were those who saw in the present quiescence only the lull that
+precedes a storm; merely an autumn pause before the oncoming of a dark,
+tempestuous winter.
+
+The ninth of November brought with it the accustomed features of
+that date, including the presentation of the new Lord Mayor by the
+Recorder at the Law Courts in the inevitable speech, replete with
+pompous stereotype. The Chief Justice took occasion to comment on the
+increasing signs of popular unrest, and various other indications
+of the times, which made it of paramount importance that the chief
+magistrate of the City of London should possess very special
+qualifications for his ancient and important office. His lordship added
+that so far as his Majesty’s judges were concerned, the country might
+be well assured that the fabric of social safety would be resolutely
+maintained, depending as it did on the vindication of justice and the
+punishment of evil-doers.
+
+With that significant allusion to what every one was thinking of,
+the civic party was dismissed. The puerile pageant, traditionally
+associated with the occasion, once more appealed to the contempt of
+gods and men, and the Lord Mayor’s show, having wound its way home
+through the miry and melancholy streets, was lost to sight in the foggy
+City.
+
+At the mayoral banquet in the evening, the First Lord of the Treasury
+made his eagerly expected speech, which, however, contained nothing
+that had been expected on the burning subject of the hour. The right
+honourable gentleman was an oratorical acrobat of no mean talent. He
+winged his flight from trapeze to trapeze with marvellous agility,
+turned oratorical somersaults at unexpected moments, and came down on
+his feet whenever it was expected he would arrive on his hands. The
+whole performance was extremely dexterous and carefully non-committal.
+When the Prime Minister sat down, of course there were thunders of
+applause. Criticism of such speeches comes on the following day. Less
+cautious, but also well applauded, were the utterances of my Lord
+Mayor. Inspired with the ambitions of the new broom, and encouraged
+by the counsel of the Chief Justice delivered earlier in the day, the
+unfortunate gentleman made a doughty onslaught on the Leaguers, and
+hinted at drastic action if any of them came before him in the justice
+room.
+
+With a sense of having risen to the occasion, the chief magistrate
+retired late to his couch, fully confident that he had struck the right
+note. But next day, when rising from his bed with a slight headache and
+other symptoms of discomfort, his lordship speedily discovered that
+there was something wrong without, as well as within. From an early
+hour small groups of men were observed in the neighbourhood of the
+Mansion House, whose gestures and looks indicated no friendly feeling
+towards its official resident.
+
+The Lady Mayoress, whose training had been provincial, and whose nerves
+were flustered by the responsibilities of her new position, felt much
+alarm at the appearance and manner of these men. One of them, moved on
+peremptorily by the City police, was seen to hurl a large stone, which
+crashed through a window over the portico on the Walbrook side of the
+Mansion House. The fellow was promptly arrested and held prisoner,
+though an attempt to rescue him on the part of his associates almost
+proved successful.
+
+Throughout the day there was much difficulty in keeping the streets
+converging at the Mansion House available for the normal traffic.
+The streams of vehicles from Cheapside and Queen Victoria Street
+here had to be regulated so as to allow free passage for the other
+tides of traffic ever pouring in from Cornhill, King William Street,
+Threadneedle Street, and Princes Street. Yet at this very pivot-point
+of the congested City traffic, there were persistent attempts to block
+the way. Again and again the roadways had to be forcibly cleared by
+the police, and several accidents occurred. Removed from one position,
+groups formed again at another, scowling defiance at the constables who
+strove to keep them moving.
+
+For some hours after the first stone was thrown there was no other
+overt act of violence. But suddenly, as the sombre afternoon was
+merging into darkness, a pistol shot was heard. The report seemed
+to come from the corner of Bucklersbury. The crash of falling glass
+immediately followed, and over the head of a group of people a revolver
+was tossed high into the air and fell upon the shoulder of a constable.
+Some eight or ten policemen immediately made a rush in the direction
+from which the weapon appeared to have been thrown. A violent struggle
+ensued, in the course of which several persons were severely injured,
+but the actual offender escaped capture.
+
+A desperate attempt now was made to clear the space on the west side
+of the Mansion House, but the difficulty was enormous. A great block
+of vehicles and foot-passengers spread right across the end of Queen
+Victoria Street and the Poultry. The mob could only be driven southward
+or westward through the two narrow necks of Walbrook and Bucklersbury,
+and those thoroughfares were so packed already that the attempt to
+clear them was ineffectual. The position was rendered doubly grave by
+the sudden arrival of another body of police from Cloak Lane, with the
+result that the people herded in Walbrook found themselves attacked
+in rear as well as in front. Those who sought to escape via the short
+curve of Bucklersbury were driven against another force of police at
+the Queen Victoria Street end, behind whom was a phalanx of omnibuses
+and cabs, wedged together, and rendering escape impossible. Caught
+thus, like rats in a trap, the crowd fought desperately. The glass door
+of a stick and umbrella shop, which had been insufficiently secured,
+was forced by a band of Leaguers, and with such weapons as the stock
+afforded the police were furiously belaboured and forced to act on the
+defensive.
+
+At this crisis the electric lights flared out, and those who were near
+the Mansion House were able to discern the figure of a deformed man
+standing on the parapet of the book-seller’s shop behind which rises
+the tower of St Stephen’s church. He was bare-headed, and the blue
+light shone upon his grizzled hair and strong, pale features. By a
+movement of the arm he appeared to convey a signal to the outskirts of
+the crowd where Queen Victoria Street and the Poultry form an angle. At
+any rate, as if by concerted action, sudden volleys of stones rattled
+against the north and west fronts of the Lord Mayor’s residence, and a
+terrific crash of broken glass immediately followed.
+
+Within the Mansion House itself, the Chief Clerk, as adviser of the
+Lord Mayor in criminal matters, had been in attendance for some hours,
+and with great difficulty the City Solicitor and the Town Clerk had
+also been brought together to attend a conference. The narrow passage
+at the rear of the building was strongly guarded by police, and any
+approach to it from the west had long been impracticable. The legal
+officials and superior police officers had obtained ingress _via_
+George Street on the east, the entrance used being that at which the
+“Black Maria” usually set down its prisoners for the justice-room.
+
+The Lord Mayor, pale and nervous, had appealed for advice, and was told
+that the police would soon be able to restore order; but the organised
+volley which sent stones and glass into the interior of the official
+residence showed how futile was that expectation. It was now hastily
+decided to read the Riot Act, or, strictly speaking, the warning
+proclamation which the Act contains. This Act--passed some two hundred
+years before--is intended to meet the case of tumults and riotous
+assemblies. If twelve or more persons remain assembled for one hour
+after the reading of the proclamation, all are guilty of felony. The
+offence formerly was punishable with death.
+
+Not within the memory of living man had the Riot Act been put into
+force in the City of London, and for a moment a sense of curiosity
+and expectation silenced the swaying and excited crowd, when the Lord
+Mayor, in robe of office, came forward, flanked and supported by
+officials and police, to signal for attention. The little group stood
+on the stone terrace of the building facing north, and his lordship’s
+voice sounded singularly thin and weak as he began the proclamation,
+having first held up his hand to secure attention:
+
+“Our sovereign lord and king chargeth and commandeth all persons
+assembled immediately to disperse themselves and peaceably depart
+to their habitations, or to their lawful business, upon the pains
+contained in the Act----”
+
+The rest was lost in a swift yell of derision and defiance, and the
+concluding words, “God save the King,” were quite inaudible save to
+those who were around or immediately below the speaker.
+
+The civic group now retired with such haste that a great burst of
+laughter came from thousands who observed the retreat. It gave just
+that touch of humour to the proceedings that saved the situation. The
+police, marking the sign of better temper, stayed their hands, and when
+it became known that “God save the King” were the final words of the
+proclamation that had been read, here and there in the throng a voice
+started the National Anthem, and vast numbers began to chime in. It was
+discordant, but hearty, and bore indisputable witness to the personal
+popularity of his Majesty. The mob, perhaps, had done all that it had
+intended to do; but, at any rate, the crisis was passed, and in less
+than the hour’s grace allowed by the Act, the great crowd had marched
+away in sections, leaving only the broken windows of the Mansion House
+as evidence of the recent onslaught.
+
+It was not generally known until later that a military force had been
+hastily got in readiness to aid, if need were, the repressive action
+of the police. The outcome, however, was, in one sense, disastrous,
+for it led the authorities to conclude that the worst was over; a
+miscalculation that facilitated the moves that followed in the daring
+campaign of the Leaguers.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XX
+ THE LEAGUERS AT THE HOME OFFICE
+
+
+A shadow had fallen upon the engagement of Herrick and Aldwyth
+Westwood. The Westwoods were back in Hill Street, and Herrick also had
+returned after a long yachting cruise with his cousin, Lord Eastmere.
+But although he went frequently to see Aldwyth at Hill Street, and
+was disposed to be more than ever a devoted lover, something had come
+between them. It puzzled and troubled him. He kept hoping from week
+to week that the chill would pass away. He hoped, so far, in vain.
+Aldwyth, of course, was conscious that the chill existed. She blamed
+herself, and tried to persuade her heart that it ached for nothing more
+than the rather ordinary tribute that a rather ordinary young man had
+to offer; was not it her plain duty to be happy in her engagement and
+in the prospect of marriage that lay not far ahead?
+
+But the fact remained that she was not happy. Hers was a far more
+subtle temperament than her lover’s. What satisfied him left her with
+a sense of something wanting. She found herself--somewhat to her own
+surprise--comparing young Herrick with two other men with whom she had
+been brought in contact. One of these was Marcus White, whose powerful
+personality had been vividly remembered after that strange interview
+at the Folkestone hotel. She had seen no more of him, but his name
+was constantly whispered in connection with the demonstrations of the
+Leaguers; moreover, she could not forget that there was, as her father
+had confessed, an old-standing and ominous antagonism between himself
+and this strange man, who had told her that he knew her mother. It
+was not that she had any definable feeling for her father’s enemy,
+except that his was a strong, exceptional, and interesting personality.
+Thus he was often present in her thoughts, and she had an intuitive
+conviction that he and she would meet again.
+
+Meanwhile there was Father Francis--his, also, was a personality that
+was powerfully influencing her life and feelings. This priest, ascetic
+in life as in appearance, in truth was exercising an extraordinary, an
+almost hypnotic influence over great numbers of women who belonged to
+West End society. At every service at which he officiated, St Stephen’s
+Church was packed. His sermons, often appealing, but more frequently
+denunciatory, were listened to with rapt attention by crowded
+congregations. He, pre-eminently among the clergy of London, had shown
+an inspired capacity to deal with the sins and sorrows of the times.
+He fiercely attributed the latter to the former, and declared that the
+greatest sinners in all the sinful city were those--a multitude of men
+and a still greater multitude of women--who lived selfish, idle, and
+luxurious lives, untouched with divine compassion for the masses, and
+deaf to the prophetic warnings of evil to come.
+
+From the nucleus of the congregation of St Stephen’s, a new society
+of women, nearly all of whom were delicately nurtured, was called
+into being, and drew vast numbers of adherents. It was called the
+Sisterhood of the Kindly Life. There was no conventual establishment
+and no monastic rule. The sisters still lived in their own homes; they
+were at liberty to marry, and they dressed, if it pleased them, in the
+fashion of the hour; but the vast majority discarded the finery and
+ornaments which cost so much and had once seemed so essential to their
+happiness. A bonnet and cloak as simple as those worn by hospital
+nurses became widely adopted as the uniform of the Sisterhood. There
+were no actual vows, but two injunctions were solemnly impressed upon
+the Sisters by Father Francis, as their warden--self-denial in everyday
+life, and the service of others in every way that each Sister’s
+circumstances permitted. Every day each Sister was to perform at least
+one act of kindness. Of this Sisterhood Aldwyth Westwood became a
+member, and, with others of the order, she found much practical scope
+for helpfulness in ministering to the great number of unemployed men
+who in the early winter weeks marched into London from great distances
+in the vain hope of enlisting help from the ruling powers in Church and
+State.
+
+These marches from provincial centres had assumed most remarkable, and,
+indeed, dangerous proportions. The great bulk of those who joined in
+such demonstrations from the provinces were sober, well-conducted, but
+unlucky beings. Footsore and weary, they tramped through the suburbs
+into London, and were charitably provided for in halls and schools,
+where the Sisters attended to their wants; only to leave the capital
+after a few days with no improvement in their prospects. Long ago
+the foreigner had been allowed to get a grip on our industries. So
+complex had the position become that England could no longer support
+her own sons on English soil. Even the old soldiers, always numerous
+in these provincial contingents--men who had fought and bled for their
+country on far-off battlefields, where pluck and endurance had been
+lauded in the hour of triumph--were now forgotten and unprovided for
+in their maturity or old age. The bitter feeling engendered by the
+failure of successive Governments to grapple with the problem of the
+unemployed, on statesman-like lines of national policy, now bore fruit.
+For, while patient endurance was the characteristic of most of the
+provincial demonstrators, there was a considerable minority ripe for
+resentful action against the ruling classes. Great numbers of these men
+having come to London, stayed there, and the magnetism of a powerful
+organisation attached them practically, if not admittedly, to the
+forces of the League. The old soldiers, in particular, were welcomed
+and well paid on account of their experience in discipline, and the
+qualifications which many of them possessed for marshalling bodies of
+recruits.
+
+After the riotous proceedings at the Mansion House there was a short
+respite; but when the Leaguers next loomed prominently into public
+notice, it was obvious that, instead of being more or less of a
+disordered rabble, their ranks partook of the character of an organised
+force.
+
+Fearful of public disturbance on a more extensive scale, the Government
+now arranged for a postponement of the trial of the Hyde Park
+incendiaries. A public application was made at the Central Criminal
+Court and granted as a matter of course. As soon as this was known,
+the Leaguers showed their hand. Five thousand strong, they marched
+to Whitehall and peremptorily demanded an interview with the Home
+Secretary. That timid functionary was, or was said to be, absent from
+the building, and a more courageous official--an under-secretary--was
+put forward to receive a deputation from the serried ranks that filled
+the thoroughfare. Never since an unhappy king stepped forth from
+Whitehall Palace, to meet, in the face of an awed and awful multitude,
+the death to which he was condemned by regicides, had the great street
+of England’s Government witnessed so convincing a manifestation of
+popular power.
+
+The demand of the deputation was plain and unmistakable. The prisoners
+awaiting trial must be released. A like claim was made on behalf of
+those who were still in custody on various charges arising out of
+the riot at the Mansion House. The under-secretary, with carefully
+prepared notes in his hand, did his best to temporize. He was wordy
+but indefinite. It was not in his power to interfere with the course
+of justice. If a case for special intervention could be made out in
+writing it should be duly considered. The clemency of his Majesty the
+King could only be exercised in a constitutional manner on the advice
+of the Home Secretary. The Home Secretary, in a matter of such grave
+import, would have to consult the whole body of Cabinet ministers, but
+Ministers were out of town. Meanwhile, if he could tender advice, he
+would strongly urge the deputation to use all possible influence in the
+interests of peace and quietness----
+
+“Are you going to set ’em free?” roughly interposed a shoemaker named
+Raggett, one of the spokesmen--the same who had been seen on the roof
+near the Mansion House.
+
+“I?--impossible!” stammered the under-secretary.
+
+Raggett turned his back contemptuously upon the Government official,
+and held a whispered colloquy with the other members of the deputation.
+He was extraordinary, alike in his physical deformity and in intellect.
+He nourished, it was said, the bitterest hate against the State, for
+having confined him, improperly as he alleged, in a lunatic asylum.
+
+“Gentlemen----” began the under-secretary, but his appeal for
+attention was unheeded. Raggett and his colleagues finished their
+whispered conversation, and without another word or sign marched
+out of the Government building. There was a call for silence in the
+street, instantly obeyed, and then the half-crazed shoemaker, mounted
+on the topmost of a flight of steps, reported in a few terse and
+savage sentences the failure of the deputation. Revolutionary action
+invariably brings to the front men who are prepared to out-Herod Herod,
+followers who become leaders, cranks who establish an ascendency which
+no one could have foreseen at the outset of the movement. Such a man
+was Raggett, whose power with a large section of the Leaguers was
+immediately manifested by the response to the keynote of his brief
+harangue. A sullen growl arose from those nearest to the demagogue;
+it spread and swelled in volume, until, from the great concourse
+stretching southward along Parliament Street, and northward towards
+Trafalgar Square, a terrifying roar of wrath went up from some five
+thousand throats. It rose and fell, and rose again, reaching its
+culminating savagery when suddenly each Leaguer raised both arms above
+his head. Then, as at a signal, ten thousand fists, many grasping
+cudgels and other rough-and-ready weapons, were shaken in the air.
+This united menace, that seemed to include the Home Office, the
+Treasury, Downing Street, and the very Houses of Parliament, was
+terrible in its volume and intensity.
+
+So appalling was the tumult, and so electrifying the excitement, that
+the horses of the troopers in the Horse Guard Shelters reared and
+plunged forward into the close ranks of the Leaguers who were standing
+on the pavement. Shouts of anger and fear now rent the air. One horse
+slipped upon the flagstones and threw its rider heavily among the
+crowd. The other, entirely beyond the trooper’s control, tore wildly
+through the fleeing mob towards Westminster.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXI
+ THE DEVIL’S OWN ON THE DEFENSIVE
+
+
+The acute alarm now felt in Government circles led to a hasty decision
+to embody a large auxiliary force of special constables. A source of
+much anxiety was found in the rumoured designs of the Leaguers on
+certain important buildings connected with the Law. The Temple church,
+and the halls and libraries of the Inns of Court, both north and south
+of the Strand, were believed to be in jeopardy, and arrangements were
+made with the Inns of Court Volunteers to protect the prized and
+ancient buildings from attack or incendiarism. Both within and without
+the Law Courts a strong force of police was kept on duty day and
+night, and London solicitors furnished from among their number a large
+contingent of special constables to safeguard the Law Society’s hall
+and library in Chancery Lane.
+
+Even these precautions were not such as to satisfy the urgent demands
+of the timid “better classes” in London, and a cry was raised for
+more troops. At this juncture, however, the Secret Service agents of
+the Government were sending in reports that negatived the possibility
+of reducing the military strength of outlying districts, and pointed
+to the paramount necessity of maintaining efficiency and vigilance
+at the naval ports and arsenals. It was beyond question that at this
+critical moment of domestic history there was a subtle shifting of
+international cards that was fraught with danger to the country. A
+revived Russia, it was well known, only waited an opportunity to wound
+or humiliate Great Britain. The German Emperor, while adroitly masking
+his real attitude, was believed to be anxious to test the metal of his
+strengthened navy. Against what country other than Great Britain could
+the ceaseless activity in the German dockyards be directed? Armoured
+cruisers, of about 15,000 tons; battleships of from 17,000 to 18,000
+tons, with armour ever thicker and guns ever more powerful! All this
+increased tonnage, sanctioned under the German Navy Act of 1900, meant
+an expenditure of something like £800,000 upon a single battleship.
+In 1906, £12,000,000 had been expended on Kaiser William’s navy; in
+1912, at this rate, German naval expenditure would have climbed to
+£16,000,000. And, in the interval, or after, what appalling test of
+strength and watchfulness might not be put upon the navy of Great
+Britain?
+
+France, though disposed to be friendly, was fettered by treaties with
+other Powers; and Japan, whose fleets were no longer confined to
+Eastern seas, was by some suspected of having a secret understanding
+with Russia, her former enemy, that involved ultimate designs upon
+Britain, her present ally. That alliance had not proved so advantageous
+to the youngest of the Great Powers as the Mikado’s government
+had expected it to be. The shilly-shallying of successive British
+ministers had at last disgusted the Japanese. Those hardy, patient, and
+self-controlled Eastern islanders, steadily increasing their marvellous
+powers, while the islanders of the West were showing marked signs of
+physical and moral deterioration, had no intention of submitting to a
+one-sided international bargain. Japan knew her own strength on the
+high seas, and now prepared to use it ultimately, anywhere and against
+all comers for her own advantage. Russia had not forgiven and never
+would forgive the disasters and defeats inflicted on her navy and her
+troops, but Russian revenge can bide its time. Meanwhile there were
+grudges of far older standing against Great Britain, and if, while the
+treaty of peace with Japan held good, the Japanese would help the new
+Czar to inflict an indirect injury on England, it was fairly certain
+that any opportunity would be eagerly seized.
+
+A sinister circumstance, in this connection, was the undoubted fact
+that the new navy built or bought by Russia was largely officered by
+men who had been trained and instructed by Japanese experts. A few
+years before, it would have been deemed inconceivable that a Russian
+should have submitted to tutelage from the once despised “little yellow
+men.” But the bitter lessons of experience had made their impression
+even in Russia. The deep-seated desire for restored prestige and power
+outweighed the national pride; and the Japanese, on their part, were
+not unwilling to make certain Russian ships and crews efficient for
+naval warfare, provided such ships remained thousands of miles from
+Japan and her possessions in the East. Thus it had come about, in the
+whirligig of time’s revenges, that Japan, which had learnt her naval
+lessons from Great Britain, and had splendidly carried them into
+practice against Russia, was now supposed to be Russia’s secret guide,
+philosopher, and friend in inculcating the art and science of naval
+warfare.
+
+These, however, were matters of which the British public in general
+had but little knowledge. For them the shoe pinched nearer home. So
+dangerous and uncertain were the conditions of life in London, that
+hosts of prosperous people, who had returned in the autumn, hoping that
+the tyranny would be over, left town again with their families when it
+was discovered that the winter months might hold something yet worse in
+store. But these departures, numerous as they were, made but a small
+gap in the enormous aggregate life of the capital. Scores of thousands,
+or hundreds of thousands might go, but millions remained, and must
+remain; for here was their lot cast; here in the misery and murk of the
+season of fog and slush and drizzle the railroad of life was laid down
+for them, and to leave the rails was hopeless and impossible.
+
+With the idea of calming the apprehensions of residents and tradesmen,
+and at the same time in the hope of overawing the Leaguers, the civil
+and military authorities now organised a patrol of the streets by
+bodies of police and special constables. At the same time it was
+noticed that musters and marches of the regular troops and volunteers
+were of frequent occurrence. It was in connection with the renewed
+activity of the “Devil’s Own” that Herrick now had an exciting personal
+experience of the perils of the times.
+
+The unexampled slump in legal business had left him, and great numbers
+of his brother-barristers, with next to nothing to do. Many of them, in
+common with himself, had received threats under the sign of the spider,
+but so far there had been no actual fulfilment of the warning. It was
+noticeable, however, that fewer men in wig and gown were seen in the
+streets in the vicinity of the Law Courts, and those who did wear their
+forensic armour were sure to encounter gibes and insults from some
+contemptuous tongue. Events were to prove, however, that in the first
+place the Leaguers were maturing their plans to fly at higher game than
+the ordinary stuff gownsman.
+
+So altered were the relations between himself and Aldwyth Westwood
+that Herrick, wisely, perhaps, had deemed it best not to worry her
+with continued remonstrances, or requests for explanations. The times
+were out of joint, but the shadow could not last for ever, and his
+temperament led him to believe that all would yet be well. Meanwhile,
+his zeal as a volunteer officer was reawakened by concurrent events,
+and the occupation that drills and marches afforded him was very
+welcome.
+
+On a memorable afternoon, about a week after the Leaguers’
+demonstration at Whitehall, the “Devil’s Own” were mustered for a
+march. Groups of officers and men stood talking in Stone Buildings,
+Old Court, and New Square, waiting for the complement of rank and file.
+The men came in from various directions--some by the archway from
+Carey Street, some through the passage at the south-west corner of
+New Square, others from the various Chancery Lane approaches. Herrick
+himself turned in at the large west gateway. Thus it was that he
+noticed that a muster of another character was at the same time taking
+place in Lincoln’s Inn Fields, probably as preliminary to another and
+formidable street demonstration on the part of the Leaguers.
+
+Herrick immediately made a report to his commanding officer, and from
+observations then taken it was seen that the Leaguers were assembling
+rapidly and in great force. They, on their part, noted the muster of
+the volunteers, and presently sundry jeers and insults were shouted
+at the citizen soldiers. Groups of men, who were seen to be wearing
+the metal disc, gathered close to the open gates and watched the
+formation of the battalion. The possibility of a collision at once
+became apparent, for it was intended to march the volunteers through
+Lincoln’s Inn Fields, and, _via_ Long Acre, to the West End. There
+was no other exit from the Inn suitable for marching order in the
+intended direction; and, on the other hand, it was pretty obvious
+that to cross Lincoln’s Inn Fields would certainly involve a collision
+with the Leaguers, whose numbers already largely exceeded those of
+the battalion. The disc-men, growing more aggressive, now showed
+a disposition to enter New Square itself, and a hasty council of
+officers was held, and the order given to close the gates. Instantly
+angry groans were raised by the Leaguers, and a shrill voice yelled:
+“Down with the lawyers!” At the same time a rush was made for the
+wall separating the gardens from the east side of the Fields, and,
+with no great difficulty, large numbers of the Leaguers clambered to
+the top and descended on the other side. In this way the flank of the
+battalion was menaced by a gathering mob. In effect, it looked as if
+the volunteers were now on the defensive, and derisive laughter greeted
+the hurried orders of the officers.
+
+Mortified and puzzled at this development, the colonel decided to march
+immediately. As soon as this was realised, a crash of timber was heard,
+and it became known that the Leaguers were tearing down the hoarding
+that enclosed the foundations of an extension of the Land Registry
+buildings close at hand. The levelled hoarding at once exposed to view
+great balks of timber, ladders, and stacks of pickaxes and shovels. It
+was an unexpected armoury, ready to hand, and the Leaguers immediately
+availed themselves of its resources. Several heavy pieces of timber
+and ladders were now dragged towards the Lincoln’s Inn archway,
+triumphant and excited cries bursting from the mob. The next moment
+these improvised battering-rams were brought to bear with terrific
+violence upon the gates and brickwork. The unarmed contingent that had
+scrambled into the gardens urged on their comrades with wild applause,
+and hurled defiance at the humiliated battalion. “Rats! Rats in a trap!
+Down with the lawyers!” burst hoarsely from a thousand throats. The
+colonel turned pale as death, and his horse, terrified by the uproar,
+plunged dangerously in proximity to his men. Above the din, the order,
+“Open the gates!” was shouted. But, before it could be obeyed one of
+them came crashing to the ground. The other was torn aside, and the
+Leaguers and the “Devil’s Own” stood face to face. There was a pause.
+Then, hurtling through the air, came a pavior’s rammer, followed by a
+stonecutter’s mallet, and two privates with anguished faces limped out
+of the ranks of the volunteers. At the same instant the growing force
+of Leaguers on the flank made a determined effort to tear up the iron
+railings bordering the grass.
+
+“Fix bayonets!” roared the colonel angrily. A howl of rage went up
+from the Leaguers; then, suddenly, as if at the crack of doom, every
+voice was silenced, every face was blanched. The thunder of a great
+explosion filled the air, followed by crash on crash, and multitudinous
+reverberations.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXII
+ THE BOMB BRIGADE
+
+
+The appalling explosion which checked the impending conflict between
+the volunteers and the Leaguers, causing the latter to melt away
+from Lincoln’s Inn and rush in surging hordes in the direction of
+Clerkenwell, was the most terrible outrage that had yet befallen the
+alarmed capital. It was not without precedent; indeed precedent was, in
+some respects, carefully followed by the organisers of this desperate
+attempt to release the imprisoned incendiaries. Nearly fifty years
+earlier the prison wall had been blown down for a somewhat similar
+purpose by a desperate gang of Fenians. The effect of that diabolical
+outrage on the policy of Mr Gladstone is matter of history. On that
+occasion many houses in Corporation Lane were partially wrecked, four
+persons were instantly killed, and some forty others were maimed or
+injured in various degrees. The immediate object of the prisoners,
+however, was not attained, for, though a considerable breach was made
+in the prison wall, none escaped.
+
+On the present occasion the damage to life and limb was somewhat less;
+only two were killed, and thirty-one injured, but the destruction to
+property was far more extensive than before. The latter fact was, to
+some extent, explained when it was ascertained that there had been in
+reality two explosions, different in character, but rapid in succession.
+
+Early in the afternoon all the prisoners had been taken into the
+prison-yard for exercise, as usual. Raggett, one of the alleged
+incendiaries (son of the half crazy shoemaker), was observed to fall
+out shortly after a small indiarubber ball was thrown over the wall.
+The ball was supposed to have been thrown by a street boy, and a warder
+threw it back, not dreaming that it was in reality a pre-concerted
+signal. Raggett was ordered to join the ranks, but made some excuse
+about a nail in his boot hurting him, and obstinately kept aloof.
+
+Meanwhile, on the other side of the wall, two men, having the
+appearance of chimney-sweeps, and whose faces were covered with soot,
+were observed in the act of wheeling a hand-truck on which was a
+large barrel. Fitted in the barrel was a funnel, or tun-dish, which
+undoubtedly held a fuse. The supposed chimney-sweeps, having wheeled
+the truck rapidly but carefully to a selected position in close
+proximity to the prison wall, suddenly deserted it, and disappeared
+immediately and without question in the adjacent slums. A few people,
+moved by a fatal curiosity, stopped and gazed at the truck; and a
+policeman, noticing first the loiterers and then the barrel, approached
+slowly, and perhaps with some suspicion. Before he could reach the
+spot, a terrific flame burst from the ignited gunpowder, and with a
+rending crash a large section of the prison wall fell outward into the
+street. The unfortunate constable, struck on the temple by a broken
+paving-stone, fell dead, and by his side a woman, whose face was
+covered with blood, stumbled with outstretched arms into the gutter
+and lay there prostrate. Bricks, stones, and fragments of masonry fell
+in all directions, beating down the shrieking, panic-stricken people
+as they fled through the adjacent streets. Crash after crash followed,
+as the walls of other buildings tottered and collapsed; then, as a
+crowning climax of the outrage, another distinctive detonation came
+from the Sessions-house, designed, no doubt, to distract attention
+from the prison. It served, unquestionably, to facilitate the escape
+of Raggett and three of his fellow-prisoners, who scrambled over the
+fallen masonry and got free before the dazed and stupefied warders
+could realise what was happening. Two warders and three prisoners lay
+wounded and bleeding in the prison-yard.
+
+In the neighbouring Sessions-house at the time there were only three
+cleaners and a man who was employed as usher when the Court was
+sitting. This man subsequently described what he saw. Awed by the
+gunpowder explosion and the nerve-destroying sounds that followed it,
+and ere he had time to rush into the street, he suddenly heard a crash
+of broken glass, as some hard object was hurled through one of the
+windows of the Court. As it fell on the floor a blue flame shot into
+the air; there was an ear-splitting report. The building seemed to
+rock, huge beams gave way and fell, and every window with its framework
+was blown outwards. A cloud of dust and powdered mortar filled the air.
+The women lay huddled and screaming in a heap, and the usher, with a
+gash in his cheek caused by splintered wood, staggered back against the
+wall, gazing helplessly upon the shattered seat of justice.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the midst of the welter that followed the foregoing catastrophe, the
+Cabinet, at a hastily-summoned meeting, at last decided on something
+in the nature of drastic action. Since the suppression of the Leaguers,
+for the time being at any rate, was quite impossible, it was resolved
+to raid the offices of the _Epoch_, which had become more and more
+revolutionary in its articles, and was held by the police to have
+indirectly incited the recent outrage. It certainly was significant
+that this very moment was chosen for publication of a sketch of the
+career of Jack the Painter, who was extolled by the _Epoch_ as a hero
+and martyr for his attempts to destroy certain of the royal dockyards
+in the time of the American war with the mother country. The _Epoch_
+dwelt on the brutality of the punishment dealt out to this man, who
+was convicted at Winchester in 1777, and sentenced to be executed at
+the gate of Portsmouth dockyard. There the wretched man was drawn up
+by pulleys to a gibbet sixty-four feet high, made of the mizzenmast of
+the frigate _Arethusa_, higher than Haman hanged on the gallows he had
+meant for Mordecai. His body afterwards hung in chains at the entrance
+to the harbour for several years. This, and many another barbarous
+punishment, said the _Epoch_, was ruthlessly carried out in the sacred
+name of Justice. “Let Justice be purified by the shedding of blood--an
+eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, exacted by a counter-claim which
+no statute of limitations should avail to bar.”
+
+Further articles containing like passages were found ready in type
+when the police in great force made a sudden descent on the offices of
+the journal; but, apparently, the contingency had been anticipated. No
+resistance was offered by the staff, but after only a day’s interval
+the _Epoch_ reappeared, published at another printing-office, and
+printed this time in blood-red ink.
+
+The Christmas holidays were drawing near; and, impressed by the
+lamentable condition of his province, the newly-created Archbishop of
+London issued a pastoral, which was read from hundreds of pulpits to
+the assembled congregations. His lordship called upon all faithful
+children of the Church to keep the approaching Bank holiday, not as a
+day of feasting and pleasure, but as one of solemn prayer and national
+humiliation, to the end that the divine mercy might be vouchsafed
+and the tyranny of the time be ended speedily. He reminded Churchmen
+that, though too much ignored, the 26th December was the great
+commemoration-day of the first Christian martyr--Stephen, a man full
+of faith; Stephen who fearlessly denounced a stiff-necked generation,
+uncircumcised in heart and ears, rebels against the Just One, of whom
+they had been the betrayers and murderers. Christians, so-called,
+said the Archbishop in this modern time were not less betrayers and
+murderers of the Just One. They had received the law by the disposition
+of angels and had not kept it. “Because there is wrath, beware lest
+he take thee away with his stroke; then a great ransom cannot deliver
+thee.”
+
+This episcopal admonition made a deep impression. At St Stephen’s
+Church in particular special services were arranged, and a great
+street procession was organised for the approaching Bank holiday. But
+while the pastoral counsel was adopted in many of the metropolitan
+churches, a spirit of rebellion sprang up in other quarters, and there
+was much resentment at what was described as an act of ecclesiastical
+dictation. The publicans, in particular, were furious at the idea of
+their custom being diminished on one of the great drinking days of
+the Christian year. In all these past months of stress and trouble
+the trade had reaped huge gains from the disorder that prevailed. The
+swing-doors of their Temples of Bacchus at nearly every street corner
+were never still. Men and women thronged the showy bars; they drank,
+and drank again, the flaring lights shining on their dulled eyes and
+sodden faces. They talked, maundered, shouted choruses, quarrelled,
+fought; the beer engines poured forth unending streams into innumerable
+“pewters” and the money poured into the tills. Humanity sank deeper and
+deeper into the slough of despond and the slime of self-indulgence;
+and the brewers and publicans reaped their rich reward as licensed
+purveyors of poison for the people.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+ THE CRANKS’ CORNER
+
+
+In the sombre days of December a double gloom settled down upon the
+sacred precincts of Mayfair. But little incense was being heaped on the
+shrine of luxury and pride. The fire of fashion burnt low, smouldering
+and smoky beneath the lowering clouds. Even Billy of Mayfair, who was
+usually as light of heart as he was agile of leg, felt the oppressive
+influence of things. His friend Joe had become an absolute pessimist
+for the time being, and even had high words with the wife of his bosom
+concerning the proposed baptism of his third-born child. Then Mrs Joe
+craftily enlisted the aid of Father Francis. Joe had a reasonable
+respect for the clergy, and a still profounder reverence for the
+peerage. Father Francis, he knew, was the Duke of Portsdown’s son;
+he had been to Dorking for an excursion, and had some acquaintance
+with the ducal grooms. So, though he showed fight, he touched his
+bare forehead, quite prepared for a theological crusher, though not
+necessarily to be convinced.
+
+“Look ’ere, sir,” said Joe, “what’s the good of it, that’s wot I want
+to know. Wot’s the blessed good of pouring a little water on a baby’s
+’ead?”
+
+It was an inspiration that enabled Father Francis to give the very
+answer that appealed to Joe.
+
+“Well, my friend,” said he, “we’ve all got to obey somebody’s orders,
+haven’t we?”
+
+“That’s right enough,” agreed Joe, tightening his belt.
+
+“Well, our Lord commanded it.”
+
+Joe brightened instantly; it simplified the position wonderfully.
+
+“Blest if that ain’t the best answer I’ve ’eard,” said the stableman
+cheerfully. And the child was called Francis Joseph--not after the
+Emperor of Austria, of whom the parents knew nothing, but after the
+curate in charge of St Stephen’s Church, and Joseph, the infant’s
+father.
+
+It was about this time that Billy also began to feel that Father
+Francis was a friend, though he still avoided church and schools,
+just as he had learnt to dodge the school attendance officer and
+Policeman X. In summer weather he had spent most of his Sundays in
+the Green Park which was close at hand, or watching the wild-fowl on
+the ornamental water of St James’s, but about noonday on these winter
+Sundays, he might generally be found at the Cranks’ Corner in Hyde
+Park, listening with more or less wondering looks to the wild and
+whirling words of the competing speakers. Here, on the battleground won
+for free speech in many a contest with authority, the cranks let off
+the steam according to the measure of their crankiness. The pitches
+were so close together that the groups of listeners almost blended,
+and an auditor quick of hearing had presented to him a sort of mosaic
+of oratory that was, to say the least, bewildering. One speaker would
+be raving against the worthlessness and wickedness of vaccination,
+while another volleyed and thundered against the Education Act. But,
+mostly, the changes were rung on Religion, Atheism, and Socialism. Each
+cult had its champion every Sunday. There was a crank who had his own
+peculiar interpretation of the Book of Revelation, undertaking to tell
+his hearers what was signified by the beasts with many eyes, the vials
+of wrath, and the sealing of the servants of the Lord. He knew who were
+the horned kings of the Apocalypse, or, at least, some of them,--the
+Kaiser, the Czar, and the Mikado. He knew, or thought he did, all
+about the battle of Armageddon, that terrible conflict, transcending
+in its terrors every bloody war that men had waged on earth. The war
+of Michael and his angels against the dragon and his angels, “who
+prevailed not, neither was their place found any more in heaven. And
+the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent called the devil and
+Satan which deceiveth the whole world.”
+
+“And where was the great dragon sent?” cried the speaker, “and where
+had he been at work ever since? ’Woe to the inhabitants of the earth
+and of the sea: for the devil is come down unto you, having great
+wrath, because he knoweth that he hath but a short time.’ Perhaps
+they didn’t think it was a short time,” said the speaker, who could
+be shrewd and logical at times, “but time must not be measured by the
+little span of a man’s earthly life. What was a thousand years in
+the boundless depths of eternity? And why need there be so much talk
+about eternity when time itself was so immeasurable--the time of the
+geological periods, the time of the solar system,--unthinkable, like
+the distances from star to star.
+
+“And yet some people,” the speaker went on, “said that it was all a
+fable; that there was no such being as the Prince of Darkness. If men
+looked around they would see plenty of his handiwork. If there were
+good spirits, why shouldn’t there be evil spirits; spirits not all
+alike in power or characteristics, but rank and file, with leaders and
+commanders--Satan, Beelzebub, Moloch?” Then he quoted from _Paradise
+Lost_:--
+
+ “First Moloch, horrid king, besmear’d with blood
+ Of human sacrifice, and parents’ tears,
+ Though for the noise of drums and timbrels loud
+ Their children’s cries unheard, that past through fire,
+ To his grim idol.”
+
+And Billy, amongst others, heard and trembled. It was a comfort after
+that to hear another preacher yonder telling his hearers of One in
+whose presence the devils, believing, could not but tremble; of One who
+cast out devils from the souls of men and boys; who loved to have the
+children round Him, and rebuked those who would have kept them from Him.
+
+When Billy found that this same lover of men’s souls was put to death
+by those whom He had sought to serve, that the Jews had shouted
+“Crucify Him!” and the Roman soldiers had nailed Him to a cross, the
+boy’s heart was hot within him, and his eyes were wet with tears. He
+had met with many Jews--the dirty, unkempt Jews of Petticoat Lane and
+Whitechapel, and the rich Jews of the West End, heavy of nose and
+watch-chain, silk-hatted, frock-coated, owners of splendid horses,
+which Joe cleaned down in the mews. And in his childish imagination
+there sprang up a strange, fantastic picture of a mixed and savage mob
+of these Jews of modern times assailing with cries and blows their
+lonely and forsaken King.
+
+“I don’t like them Jews,” he said one day to his friend Joe.
+
+The stableman rubbed his bullet-head reflectively.
+
+“There’s good Jews and there’s bad ’uns,” he remarked, as one speaking
+with authority, “just the same as there is in t’other lot. When a Jew’s
+good, he’s uncommon good. When he’s a bad ’un, he’s a cove as can get
+the blood out of a stone; he’s a chap as’ll squeeze ye dry, like that
+there sponge”--throwing one into his zinc bucket. “And, mark my word,
+Billy, there’s plenty of Christians as’ll do the same. Six of one and
+half a dozen of t’other, that’s what it is, my lad.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+ THE LOWER CRITIC
+
+
+All the week there had dwelt in Billy’s mind that, to him, new and
+terrible story of the murdered King of the Jews. On Sunday--a bleak,
+dull day, when the charred trees in the Park stood out grim and black
+against the heavy sky, he hopped across to the Cranks’ Corner, hoping
+to hear more; but this time there were other voices and other subjects
+for the crowd. He saw two faces above the clustering people. One
+speaker was a man whom he had heard before, but failed to understand;
+the other was Father Francis. The man unknown to the boy by name
+was Raggett, the rabid social democrat. Even without the torrent of
+his venomous invective, attention would have been arrested by his
+appearance.
+
+Stiff black hair stood up on his oddly-shaped head; and the face,
+behind a bristly grey moustache, reminded Billy of a savage
+half-Persian cat that haunted Hill Street mews. The man was fluent,
+and his high-pitched voice almost rose into a scream as he declaimed
+his speech to a band of Leaguers mixed with a miscellaneous mob.
+
+“Yes, that’s what the parsons tell you!” he yelled, derisively. “You’ve
+to bless the squire and his relations, and always keep your proper
+stations. That’s Christianity in the country, and it’s pretty much the
+same up here in London. They’ll tell you a lot about the many mansions
+up in heaven. Well, we don’t know about that. We haven’t seen ’em; but
+we know right enough about the mansions here below. The only mansions
+they provide for you and me are the workhouse, the prison, or the
+asylum. The rich men keep the others for themselves. There are some
+pretty good mansions over yonder beyond the Marble Arch, and there
+are plenty more, and fine ones too, along Park Lane. We don’t get
+invitations to dinner, do we? But there is plenty of food there, and
+good wine, and spirits and beer for their cursed stuck-up servants; and
+rich furniture, and soft beds to sleep on, too; and jewels and precious
+things of all sorts. Oh! they do themselves pretty well, depend on it.
+But why don’t they share out a bit? Not they! Hold fast!--that’s their
+motto. And it is the same with the land. Don’t believe ’em when they
+say there isn’t room in England. There is room, but they won’t let you
+have it. They want the land for their parks and gardens; they want the
+woods for their pheasants and their sport. The working-man may slave
+in their fields all day, and sleep in a hovel at night; and if he gets
+tired of it and comes to London, it’s the slum or the doss-house that’s
+his portion. That’s good enough for him. Oh yes, Holdfast is a good
+dog; but I’ll tell you something--Grab’s a good dog too!”
+
+He paused, almost breathless, and there was a dull mutter of assent
+throughout the crowd. Above the angry sound the clear voice of Father
+Francis was heard, a voice of delicate timbre, in striking contrast
+with the raucous tones of the demagogue. It was the first time he had
+come amongst the cranks as a competitor for notice, and he had only
+done it after great misgiving concerning his own powers and the utility
+of trying them under such conditions. Yet, he asked himself, what right
+had the clergy of England to shrink from the ordeal? Why should the men
+under whose lips was the poison of asps, why should the blasphemer, be
+allowed to hold the field? If the people would not come to the church,
+ought not the church to go to the people? Was not the Master Preacher
+of all time an open-air preacher. Was not the greatest of all sermons
+preached from the hill-side to the common people, who heard Him gladly?
+The fields of corn, the trees, the flowers, the common objects of the
+country-side, had ever furnished simple but convincing themes for One
+who spake as never spake mortal man before or since. No, he _would
+not_ be a coward! So the young priest put his Bible under his arm and
+walked across Park Lane to the Cranks’ Corner. Was discretion always
+the better part of valour, or was it really a synonym for cowardice?
+He went with no idea of entering into argument or controversy with
+others. He knew that amid much mendacity there was blended not a
+little truth, though perhaps partial and perverted, in some of those
+inflammatory speeches. No one knew better the sins of his own order.
+He himself, in his younger days, like Augustine of old, had drunk
+deep of the knowledge of evil. Like Tannhäuser, he, too, had lingered
+in the Venusberg, and gone back to it again and yet again; but ever
+in his ears--sometimes near and sometimes from afar--had sounded the
+wonderful chant of the pilgrims; the rhythm of their steadfast march
+always reproached him; until, suddenly, shame and remorse had wrought
+a miracle, and, stumbling and mistrustful of himself, he joined the
+pilgrims’ ranks, and understood the music of that mighty march as he
+had never done before.
+
+Here, on this unique spot in London, men were always pouring out their
+own ideas, intoxicated with the exuberance of their own verbosity; but
+he himself had resolved to try another plan. What could he, or any man,
+offer better worth hearing than the words of the book under his arm,
+which contained the lively oracles of God Himself!
+
+He knew he should not meet any of the Higher Critics in the Park. The
+German professors and the English divines, who sit comfortably in their
+book-lined studies and pen presumptuous onslaughts on the faith once
+for all delivered to the saints, work their mines of infidelity from a
+safe distance. These theological dynamitards do not come into the open
+with their bombs. Their machines--not less infernal--take the form of
+neatly bound volumes on the bookstalls, sold at popular prices, handy
+to explode the faith and hope of thousands of their fellow-creatures,
+leaving them torn and mangled in soul upon the rocks of desperation and
+despair. But the Lower Critics, he knew, found in the Park their happy
+hunting-ground. Why should they have it all their own way in Christian
+England?
+
+“_And the Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that heareth say,
+Come. And let him that is athirst come. And whosoever will, let him
+take of the water of life freely.... And if any man shall take away
+from the words of the book of this prophecy, God shall take away his
+part out of the book of life, and out of the holy city, and out of the
+things that are written in this book._” That solemn record gave him
+courage. So, standing up beneath the murky sky, with the din of the
+traffic on one side and the screaming voice of Raggett the Raver on the
+other, Father Francis, pale but calm, read aloud some passages from one
+of the oldest and most wonderful books in the Bible. How marvellous was
+the contrast between the words of the iconoclast and the words echoing
+down from the far-off centuries to the fool who had said in his heart,
+“There is no God!”
+
+ “_No doubt ye are the people, and wisdom shall die with you!...
+ But ask now the beasts, and they shall teach thee; and the
+ fowls of the air, and they shall tell thee: Or speak to the
+ earth, and it shall teach thee, and the fishes of the sea shall
+ declare unto thee. Who knoweth not in all these that the hand
+ of the Lord hath wrought this? In whose hand is the soul of
+ every living thing, and the breath of all mankind._”
+
+Raggett was speaking again. “If we don’t look after ourselves,” he
+shouted, “who do you think is going to help us? Tell me that!”
+
+ “_With him is strength and wisdom_,” read the priest, “_the
+ deceived and the deceiver are his. He leadeth counsellors
+ away spoiled, and maketh the judges fools. He looseth the
+ bonds of kings, and girdeth their loins with a girdle. He
+ leadeth princes away spoiled, and overthroweth the mighty.
+ He discovereth deep things out of darkness, and bringeth out
+ to life the shadow of death. He increaseth the nations and
+ destroyeth them. He enlargeth the nations, and straiteneth them
+ again._” ...
+
+“Yes,” roared Raggett, harping on his theme, “when they talk to you
+about heaven, tell them heaven helps those that help themselves. You’ve
+got to make your own heaven, and now’s your time to do it!” ...
+
+ _” But ye are forgers of lies, ye are all physicians of no
+ value. O that ye would altogether hold your peace! and it
+ should be your wisdom.... Will ye speak wickedly for God? and
+ talk deceitfully for Him? Will ye accept His person? Will ye
+ contend for God? Is it good that He should search you out? Or
+ as one man mocketh another, do ye so mock Him?”_ ...
+
+“... Seeing’s believing, to my mind, and possession’s nine points of
+the law....”
+
+ “_Who is this that darkeneth counsel by words without
+ knowledge? Gird up thy loins now and I will demand of thee, and
+ answer thou me. Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of
+ the earth? Declare if thou hast understanding ... whereupon are
+ the foundations thereof fastened? or who laid the corner-stone
+ thereof, when the morning stars sang together, and all the sons
+ of God shouted for joy?... Or who shut up the sea with doors
+ when it brake forth.... And said, Hitherto shalt thou come, but
+ no further, and here shall thy proud waves be stayed? Hast thou
+ commanded the morning since thy days; and caused the dayspring
+ to know his place?... Have the gates of death been opened unto
+ thee? or hast thou seen the doors of the shadow of death?_” ...
+
+Raggett had paused and was glaring at the priest over the heads of the
+people. “There’s a lot of texts going about,” he said, pointing. “I’ll
+give you one: ’Down with them, down with them, even to the ground!’”
+
+A surging murmur of approval ran through the crowd, and menacing faces
+were turned towards Father Francis. His calm, clear voice went on, and
+only two red spots glowing on his pale cheeks showed that he was even
+aware of the pointing finger and the savage faces.
+
+ “_Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose
+ the bands of Orion?... Knowest thou the ordinances of heaven?
+ Canst thou set the dominion thereof in the earth?_” He paused a
+ moment.
+
+ “_Shall he that contendeth with the Almighty instruct Him? he
+ that reproveth God, let him answer it._”
+
+Raggett’s arm was raised, but he faltered. Nearly all the faces were
+turned towards the man at whom he had pointed, and the crowd was
+strangely still.
+
+Father Francis shut his Bible, and stepped down.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXV
+ MARCUS WHITE GIVES ORDERS
+
+
+On the twenty-first of December the Law Courts “rose” for the Christmas
+vacation. It was the end of the gloomiest and slackest term within the
+memory of living lawyers. The abnormally disturbed condition of social
+and business life had reacted on the whole profession, in both its
+branches. Suitors shunned the Courts; jurymen persistently absented
+themselves in spite of threats and fines; witnesses would not come
+for love, money, or subpœnas; and here at the Royal Courts, as at the
+Bailey, case after case broke down for want of evidence. The whole
+machinery of the law was out of gear. The outrage at Clerkenwell gave
+rise to anxious fears lest it should be repeated in the chief Palace
+of Justice, and day and night strong relays of police, concealed as
+far as possible from sight, kept vigilant observation and guarded
+all approaches to the building. Nearly half the detective force of
+Scotland Yard was employed on this special duty, for it was known that
+the leader, or leaders, of the League felt special enmity against all
+officials and professional followers of the law; while some believed
+that here, at the centre of the legal system, in some dark way a deadly
+attack might be expected.
+
+Such was the critical condition of affairs, and so grave, in
+particular, the problem of repressing crime and protecting life and
+property, that all the judges of the King’s Bench Division were
+officially requested to remain in town, or near to it, during the
+vacation. Communications of an urgent character reached the Chief
+Justice from the Lord Chancellor and also from the Home Office. Eager
+questions and wild surmises were whispered on every side by members
+of the Bar, but no one seemed to know what was going to happen, and,
+apparently, least of all his Majesty’s Government.
+
+Herrick, as he sauntered down the great hall towards the Strand, was
+overtaken by his old informant, Henshaw, whom he had only occasionally
+seen since the Hyde Park conflagration.
+
+Henshaw touched his hat. “A merry Christmas, Mr Herrick.”
+
+“Looks like it, doesn’t it?” said the young man, gloomily.
+
+“I expect we’ll be worse before we’re better,” opined the detective.
+
+“What are they going to do?”
+
+“Lord knows, sir. Everything’s at sixes and sevens. But one thing’s
+pretty certain--we shall soon be in the dark.”
+
+“What do you mean?”
+
+“The gas-workers are coming out on strike, and the electric-lighting
+men are pretty sure to follow suit.”
+
+“I suppose these cursed Leaguers are at the bottom of it?”
+
+“Ah! ask their General--that’s what they call him among
+themselves--though they do say some of his men have got so out of hand
+he can’t stop ’em now, even if he wants to. That man Raggett, for one;
+why, he’s as mad as a March hare, and he means to let hell loose on
+London before he’s done with it.”
+
+“Is Marcus White really their so-called General?”
+
+Henshaw nodded, and glanced round to see that no one overheard them.
+
+“Is he in London?”
+
+“Certainly he is, living as bold as brass not five minutes’ walk
+from here. He’s got a great flat down at the end of Surrey Street,
+overlooking the Embankment.”
+
+“Then, man, why, in heaven’s name, don’t you lay him by the heels?”
+said Herrick, vehemently.
+
+“Ah! why don’t we? I’ll tell you. Because the Home Secretary is afraid
+of the music; and there are other reasons, too. We can’t prove anything
+against him, and he is stronger than we are, just at present; and
+if we did get him, no jury would dare find him guilty. What’s more,
+Mr Herrick, no counsel would dare stand up in Court to prosecute
+him--unless you would,” he added.
+
+“Indeed, I would,” said Herrick, grimly.
+
+The detective stood back and looked at the young advocate’s face. “I
+believe you,” he said, admiringly. “Well, you won’t get the chance, I’m
+afraid.”
+
+“Perhaps that depends on the police.”
+
+“We’re nearly done; I know that. Mortal men can’t stand the worry
+and the work of it day and night, and everybody swearing at us all
+the time. They’ll have the Force on strike if this game lasts much
+longer--then God help London!” He nodded and passed on; but returned
+again. “I’ll tell you one thing,” he said, in a lowered voice: “There’s
+going to be a meeting here”--he jerked his head towards the Courts and
+offices behind them--” all the K.B. judges.”
+
+“Ah! I knew _that_,” said Herrick.
+
+“To be sure; your friend Sir John Westwood would know. He’ll have to
+come too, of course. And there’ll be a good many more.”
+
+“Who else?”
+
+“All the police magistrates, the Clerkenwell and Middlesex judges, the
+Recorder and the Common Serjeant, and our boss, the Chief Commissioner.”
+
+“A multitude of counsellors!”
+
+“And not much wisdom, I expect,” was the detective’s comment.
+
+“When do they meet?”
+
+“Christmas Eve--the 24th. Good-night.”
+
+They parted at the southern entrance, and Herrick walked over to the
+Temple, pondering. He still had in his pocket the threatening missive
+he received at Folkestone; but though ever since then he had had a
+sense of being shadowed, no actual evil had yet befallen him. It was
+not so, he knew very well, with many others who had been similarly
+warned. Disasters of various sorts had overtaken them--street assaults,
+mysterious accidents by day, and onslaughts by masked robbers in the
+night. He had a feeling that he himself had not been spared through
+oversight, but by design.
+
+Not far away from Paper Buildings, to which he took his way rather
+from habit than because he had anything to do there,--in a big room
+overlooking the river, there sat a man who could have told him all
+about it.
+
+In the appearance of Marcus White a marked change had been wrought
+since Herrick had left him at the Folkestone hotel. The swarthy
+look had given place to a peculiar pallor; the veins stood out upon
+the temples, and beneath his eyes were purple shadows. But the eyes
+themselves still burnt with the fire that had so impressed Aldwyth
+Westwood five months ago.
+
+The firelight played upon his face, as he sat with head thrown back,
+his eyes seeming to study the scroll-work on the handsome ceiling.
+
+A foreign-looking man who stood a few feet away waited patiently for
+his attention--a man whose sun-tanned, wind-roughened skin told plainly
+of the sea. His style of dress confirmed the impression, and there were
+sailor’s earrings in his great red ears.
+
+“You understand?” said Marcus White, his gaze coming down to the man’s
+face.
+
+“Yes, General, but----”
+
+“There is no ‘but.’ You understand?”
+
+“Yes, General.”
+
+“Everything is on board?”
+
+“Yes, General.”
+
+“You can trust your men?”
+
+Pedro showed his white teeth in what was intended for a smile. The
+answer was sufficiently convincing.
+
+“Steam is to be kept up day and night, in case you are wanted.”
+
+“That will be so, General; but--pardon--if one might know when we are
+likely to clear out of the river?”
+
+“On the twenty-fourth, after dark--probably about this time”; he
+glanced back through the great blindless window at the darkened sky.
+“It will be dark enough?” he asked.
+
+“Quite dark enough, General.”
+
+“What is the weather likely to be?”
+
+“One must expect squalls at this time of the year, General; but your
+quarters will be well protected, and you do not fear the sea, though in
+a boat like that----.” He paused significantly.
+
+Marcus White stared into the fire. The other waited awkwardly, then
+said:
+
+“All shall be ready when it suits you to come aboard, General.”
+
+“I stay here.”
+
+The man’s surprise was manifest.
+
+“But, my General, I understood----”
+
+Marcus White waved his hand. “There will be other passengers.”
+
+“Where are they to be landed, General?”
+
+“You will come here for sealed orders on the twenty-fourth, at noon.”
+
+“Sealed orders? Yes, General, but when am I to open them?”
+
+“When you sight the Channel Islands.”
+
+A questioning look came to the man’s face, but there was a glint in the
+eyes of Marcus White that checked him.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+ THE CAPTURE OF THE JUDGES
+
+
+The weather had suddenly turned to bitter cold, and, in spite of
+prevailing alarms, every one had something more or less obvious to say
+on the unfailing subject. Disaster may impend, kingdoms may totter to
+their fall, but through all the steadfast Briton harps on the text of
+the barometer. “Dry and much colder; freshening north-easterly wind,”
+was the record of the morning, and the afternoon abundantly confirmed
+its truth. His Majesty’s judges, for the most part elderly gentlemen,
+and necessarily leading sedentary lives, felt, and liked not, the
+eager, nipping air. They reached the Law Courts in the dusk of the
+afternoon for their projected conference, feeling not a little ill-used
+that, on Christmas Eve of all days in the year, such a conference
+should be needed.
+
+Most of them drove by roundabout routes to the judges’ entrance in
+Carey Street; others deemed it safer to approach on foot, and entered
+the great building either east or west, from Bell Yard, or Clement’s
+Inn. None but the police were using the great main entrance in the
+Strand, which had been closed and strongly guarded ever since the
+rising of the Courts for the vacation. The street scenes of the past
+few days, and the threatening conduct of the people towards those who
+drove in private carriages or motors, had produced a notable effect
+upon the traffic. Many of the omnibuses had been taken off the streets.
+Numbers of the cabmen, long discontented with their lot, had joined
+the Leaguers, and people who did hire a hansom or four-wheeler had
+to submit to what the driver considered the fare should be in the
+special circumstances of the moment. But the Strand, like other main
+thoroughfares, was thronged with foot passengers, roadway as well as
+pavement, and any sort of wheeled traffic could only be carried on
+under slow and apologetic conditions. All of which tended to prevent
+punctuality on the part of the functionaries of the law, and to
+increase their sense of hardship and uneasiness. The Law had so long
+ridden rough-shod over the people, that it seemed especially surprising
+that things were taking such a different turn.
+
+By a quarter past four, however, all but three of the judges and
+magistrates and Sir Robert Hill, Chief Commissioner of Police, had
+arrived, and in the big room selected for the discussion, scattered
+groups stood in earnest conversation on the urgent questions of the
+hour.
+
+It was a memorable gathering. The Master of the Rolls was supported
+by all the Lords Justices of the Court of Appeal. The Lord Chief
+Justice had as his judicial satellites a dozen judges of the King’s
+Bench Division--all, in fact, save those who were incapacitated by
+serious illness. Both the Judges of the Probate, Divorce, and Admiralty
+Division were present, and also those important but lesser lights of
+the law, the three City judges, and the Chairmen and deputy-Chairmen
+of Sessions for the Counties of London and Middlesex. The Lord Mayor
+had been invited to attend, but a serious nervous disorder from which
+he had suffered ever since the riotous scenes at the Mansion House on
+the tenth of November, made his presence impossible. Twenty of the
+stipendiary magistrates from the Metropolitan Police Courts had come
+in obedience to the summons, two having recently died, and the others
+being confined to their beds through illness.
+
+Sir John Westwood, who was known to have been suffering from insomnia,
+stood, haggard and silent, by one of the windows, while Lord Malvern
+expounded to him and a few others his personal views as to the drastic
+measures required to meet the crisis. His lordship was of opinion that
+the King, who unfortunately still lay ill at Windsor Castle, should be
+advised to summon a special session of Parliament for the purpose of
+passing an Act for the suppression of the League, after the precedent
+adopted many years earlier in dealing with the Land League in Ireland.
+
+“I doubt whether we want more legislation, my lord,” said Westwood.
+“But we do need a stronger executive.”
+
+“I agree with Sir John,” said one of the group--Mr Justice Wigham, a
+man of downright type and resolute manner. “The plain fact is that
+the civil power has broken down. When that happens order can only be
+restored by the military arm.”
+
+“Hear, hear!” chimed in several; for the group was now growing larger.
+
+“Kitchener would be the man, if he were back from India,” said the
+Master of the Rolls.
+
+“He is back, my lord; he arrived yesterday; but he’s ill,” said the
+Solicitor-General.
+
+“Everybody’s ill,” observed Mr Justice Barling. “Illness has its
+advantages at the present time. I think I shall be ill myself.” The
+pleasantry was received with coldness.
+
+The learned judge was known to be a judicial joker of an inveterate
+type, but his brethren of the bench considered there was a “time for
+all things.” Similarly, Mr Harrowden, the well-known merrymaker of the
+magisterial bench, talking to some colleagues at the other end of the
+room, received no encouragement when he essayed to launch a little
+witticism and support it with a laugh.
+
+“Order, order!” exclaimed the Chief Justice, raising his voice. “This
+is quite unseemly.”
+
+“My brother Barling shouldn’t set such a bad example,” whispered Mr
+Justice Hartmill to his neighbour.
+
+“Things are pretty bad, but I suppose you know there is a possibility
+of something worse behind?” The speaker was Sir Gwilliam Ranthorn,
+a well-known judge, amongst whose excellent qualities a discreet
+reticence could not be numbered. “I had it on excellent authority,”
+said his lordship.
+
+“Had what?” asked some one.
+
+“Why, Germany is working at the wires, as usual. All this domestic
+disorder in England is being utilised abroad. Don’t be surprised at
+anything you hear within the next few days.” He nodded wisely.
+
+“Of course we’ve all heard rumours,” said Sir George Wigham, rather
+bluntly. “But even if they mean war, England can’t be attacked without
+some reasonable pretext.”
+
+“A pretext, if you like, but not necessarily a reasonable one,”
+returned Sir Gwilliam, warmly. “When will their army be stronger;
+and hasn’t the Kaiser got all the ships he wanted while we’ve been
+twiddling our thumbs?”
+
+“That is not the worst of it,” chimed in Sir Borrall Carnes, who, as
+President of the Admiralty Division, knew more about shipping and
+seamen than all the rest. “German seamen swarm in our mercantile
+marine, and German pilots can do as they please with hundreds upon
+hundreds of British vessels.”
+
+“It’s monstrous! It’s madness!” declared Sir Gwilliam.
+
+“Yes, yes,” assented the Chief Justice. “I am disposed to endorse
+all you say. But that’s the business of the Admiralty and the Board
+of Trade. We, as guardians of civil order, and bound to preserve the
+King’s peace, must confine ourselves to our proper functions.”
+
+As his lordship ended, the electric light went out, and loud
+exclamations were followed by a curious silence, broken in a moment by
+the voice of Mr Justice Barling. “Why are his Majesty’s judges like the
+heathen?” he was asking. From a shadowed corner came the prompt reply
+of Mr Harrowden: “Because they sit in darkness.”
+
+“Lights, please; lights of some sort,” demanded Lord Malvern, testily.
+
+Alert attendants soon procured them--lamps and candles, always in
+readiness for an emergency, were brought in and placed on the great
+baize-covered table. At a sign from the Chief Justice there was a
+general move to the surrounding chairs.
+
+“The business of the meeting must not be delayed any longer,” said
+his lordship, looking round before he took the presidential chair.
+“Probably all who were summoned are now present?”
+
+“All but Sir Robert Hill,” said an attendant, who had checked the
+arrivals at the door.
+
+“It is very desirable that the Chief Commissioner should be here,”
+remarked the Master of the Rolls.
+
+A knock came on the door, and the attendant, opening it, had a
+whispered conversation with some one who could not be seen from the
+table. The attendant looked round: “My lord, Major Rollin, one of the
+Assistant Commissioners, is here.”
+
+“Let him come in,” said the Chief Justice, dropping wearily into his
+chair.
+
+The Assistant Commissioner advanced into the room, and it was noticed
+by all that, though self-possessed, he was extremely pale.
+
+“I regret to say, my lord, that Sir Robert cannot possibly be here.”
+The judges exchanged glances. Major Rollin hesitated a moment, and
+then continued: “The fact is, we have had a very urgent message over
+the wires from Windsor. A large demonstration of the Leaguers is being
+organised near the Castle, and every man that we can spare must be
+despatched there. The Chief Commissioner is now making the necessary
+arrangements. Your lordship will perhaps excuse me?”
+
+The Assistant Commissioner bowed and was gone almost before his hearers
+realised to the full the ominous information he had given them.
+
+At that moment the telephone bell began to ring. The face of the
+attendant, as he listened to the message, was watched by all with some
+anxiety.
+
+“Well?” demanded Sir Gwilliam. “What is the message?”
+
+“Apparently from the Home Office, my lord--One moment.
+Yes?”--listening--” Very well.” Then turning towards the table: “They
+wish to communicate with the Lord Chief Justice.”
+
+Lord Malvern rose at once and went across to the instrument. “Well,
+what is it? Yes--I am Lord Malvern. What? Now--immediately?” The hum
+and buzz of the machine continued, ringing the changes of question and
+answer in the usual fashion. Then his lordship came back to the table,
+looking very grave.
+
+“Matters of great urgency have arisen, and our presence is desired
+immediately to confer with the Lord Chancellor and the Home Secretary,
+who are busily engaged on affairs of State. I am to request all who are
+here to accompany me at once.”
+
+“Where?--to Downing Street or Whitehall?” asked several voices.
+
+“To the House of Lords--the Home Secretary is there with the Chancellor
+at this moment.”
+
+“Westminster!--easier said than done,” murmured one of the judges.
+
+The telephone bell rang out again, and once more the Chief Justice
+hurried to the instrument and listened. “Yes, I hear. Do you say at the
+Temple Pier? What vessel?--the _John Milton_? Yes.”
+
+He turned to his anxious colleagues. “It is considered unsafe and
+impracticable to drive to Westminster, but a paddle-steamer--the _John
+Milton_--has been sent to the Temple Pier to convey us to Westminster.
+Come, gentlemen, we are the servants of the State and there is no time
+to lose.”
+
+And no time was lost. All rose from their seats, pushing the chairs
+back in noisy haste. Very few of those present had taken off their
+overcoats, owing to the coldness of the room. Hasty messages were
+given to the attendants for the coachmen who were waiting in Carey
+Street, and in a few minutes, split up into small parties, the whole
+judicial company emerged by various doors on the Clement’s Inn side of
+the building. They hurried across the crowded, turbulent Strand, with
+a few constables acting as an escort, and made their way, some _via_
+Essex Street, and others through Arundel Street, to the Temple Pier. A
+cutting wind greeted them on the Embankment, and scattered snowflakes
+heralded a coming storm.
+
+The hiss of the escaping steam was heard, and the masthead light, with
+here and there a lantern on the decks, showed them the outline of the
+_John Milton_, lying alongside the pier, her bow towards Westminster.
+
+“I thought the County Council had sold the _Milton_.”
+
+“Well, here she is, and the sooner we’re on board and out of this the
+better,” said one of the magistrates as they hurried down the steps.
+
+The captain was already on the bridge, and one of his great earrings
+gleamed in the faint light of a lantern. “All below, please,” he called
+out sharply.
+
+One of the seamen led the way to the saloon, and in a few moments the
+complement of passengers was completed. The rattle of the movable
+gangway was heard, as the men upon the pier withdrew it; then, as the
+paddle wheels slowly began to revolve, the taut ropes strained and
+throbbed ere they were thrown loose. The doors of the saloon were
+closed.
+
+“Prisoners for the first time in our lives. They’ve turned the tables!”
+ventured Mr Justice Barling, but no one took any notice of the joke.
+The sway of the steamer and churning of the water told them that she
+was clear of the landing stage. But presently looks of inquiry and
+surprise were exchanged amongst the passengers. “By Jove! Westwood,”
+said one of them, “they’ve put the boat about!”
+
+Sir John Westwood rushed to the doors of the saloon and tried to open
+them. The doors were locked and barred.
+
+“Great Scott! we’re heading for London Bridge!” exclaimed some one
+else. “What does it mean?”
+
+They made a dash to the portholes and tried to open them; but they were
+fixed and firm.
+
+The clang of a well-known signal from bridge to engine-room reached
+their ears. “_That_ means ’full speed ahead!’” said the last speaker;
+and they stood aghast and helpless as the _John Milton_ raced down the
+river towards the open sea.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At his window, overlooking the Embankment, Marcus White was watching.
+A grim smile played across his features as the lights of the steamer
+rushed eastward, and soon were lost to view in the black and bitter
+night.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+ THE BLACK CHRISTMAS
+
+
+The elements ignore, and thus subdue, the rage of men. Wind alone
+would not have cleared the streets, but wind and snow together drove
+loiterers and roisterers alike to shelter. And in the midst of
+the snowstorm Henshaw’s prediction was fulfilled. The lighters of
+London--the men at the gasworks and electric lighting stations--threw
+down their tools; the lamplighters “struck,” and presently a great
+horror of darkness fell on the distracted citizens. The hours went on,
+and the snow still fell, deadening the sounds of night, muffling the
+city in a mighty shroud. This gradual hush of London seemed to many far
+more appalling than its familiar roar.
+
+But towards midnight, here and there, custom asserted itself, in spite
+of adverse influences, and the church bells reminded residents, at any
+rate those in the central districts, that this, in very truth, was
+Christmas Eve.
+
+Over the broad squares south of St Pancras the deep-toned bells chimed
+out the ancient hymn:
+
+ “Glad tidings of great joy I bring
+ To you and all mankind.”
+
+Yet darkness and distress weighed on the silent dwellings, and the
+“shining throng” of angels that once appeared to Eastern shepherds
+brought no message to the British Babylon, nor showed a glimmer of
+their glorious wings. The last chime died away; and soon the snowfall
+ceased. Then London slept, or tried to sleep, till, once again, after a
+long night of moaning wind, wan daylight stole across the white-draped
+roofs. Once more the bells were heard, but this time not in chimes;
+and through the streets, upon the frozen snow, dim muffled figures
+hastened to the churches. Mostly these worshippers were girls and
+women--courageous keepers of the Christian feast! Thus was it aforetime
+in that mysterious Easter dawn, when a woman, first of all,--a woman of
+the town--came hurrying to the Holy Sepulchre.
+
+It was not till the grey dusk of the afternoon that the first warning
+of most portentous happenings reached the ears of London citizens.
+Suddenly shrill-voiced newsboys came yelling through the gloom; and
+then the croaking note of hoarse-toned men was heard--at first far off;
+then nearer, nearer, coming and going through the streets and squares.
+
+ _Epoch! Epoch!! Epoch_, SPECIAL!!!
+
+Puzzled faces peered from behind blinds, and eager people rushed out to
+their doorsteps.
+
+ _Epoch! Epoch!_ SPECIAL EDITION!
+
+ GERMAN FLEET OFF PLYMOUTH!
+ PORTSMOUTH DOCKYARD ON FIRE!
+ HOSTILE SQUADRON IN NORTH SEA!!!
+
+Thus, on the anniversary of the day that centuries ago had brought the
+glorious greeting, “Peace on Earth,” came the dire news that England’s
+foe, the Prussian Eagle, at last was going to make the long-intended
+swoop. The bugles sounded over land and sea, “War, son of hell” was
+loose--
+
+ “Contumelious, beastly, mad-brained war.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It seemed incredible! Talk of invasion there had been from time to
+time, but long immunity had made men disbelieve in such a possibility.
+In like manner it had seemed inconceivable that such upheavals as had
+recently convulsed many a continental town could be repeated here in
+England. Yet London was bearing reluctant witness to the fact.
+
+And now--
+
+ “There is a sound of thunder afar,
+ Storm in the South that darkens the day,
+ Storm of battle and thunder of war.”
+
+Would English hearts respond this time to the old war-song? Would
+English grit once more avail to hurl back the advancing enemy?
+
+Even now, in many minds, after the first shock of such intelligence,
+there was a disposition to discredit it as based on exaggerated or
+sensational reports. Yet here in black and white the _Epoch_ gave the
+circumstantial story. In brief, it was as follows:
+
+German spies had discovered, or pretended to discover, an intrigue
+between the Duke of Saxe-Cobourg Gotha and the British Government.
+The Duke’s sympathies, as well as the ties of relationship, it was
+said, allied him to the royal house of England. English by birth, and
+Prussian only by adoption, on succeeding to the Duchy this grandson of
+Queen Victoria had found his position one of exceptional difficulty.
+Political controversy in the Duchy had been revived or manufactured.
+The Premier had found occasion to resign, and rumours of a stormy
+interview between the Kaiser and the Duke had got abroad.
+
+At the same time the Emperor, whose navy had now attained most
+formidable proportions, found himself checkmated by Lord Downland in
+respect of a long-cherished German scheme for acquiring Madeira from
+the Portuguese. It was supposed to be a purely commercial project, but
+the British Foreign Secretary knew better. The island of Madeira, lying
+only four hundred miles from Morocco, and not remote from England,
+possessed much to recommend it in German eyes. It was, in truth, a
+Naboth’s Vineyard. The owners of Madeira could not only cultivate the
+vine, but they could find plenty of accommodation for a coaling station
+for the German navy. All of which was well understood, though politely
+disguised, in diplomatic circles. Lord Downland’s management of the
+situation had been supplemented by the invaluable influence of his
+royal master, with whom the King of Portugal and the King of Portugal’s
+ambassador at St James’s had a complete and cordial understanding.
+From all of which it came to pass that, like Ahab of old, the
+monarch of united Germany was vexed in spirit. A powerful German
+fleet appeared one day off Lisbon, but nothing untoward occurred.
+The surprise visit was not a lengthy one, and the great engines of
+destruction--battleships, armoured cruisers, and destroyers--vanished
+as suddenly as they had arrived, in the enfolding mists of the Atlantic.
+
+Then over the cables came intelligence of the indisposition of the
+Kaiser, and of a projected sea voyage as the remedy recommended by the
+royal physicians. The excellent advice of the faculty was promptly
+followed. The magnificent Hamburg liner, _Schiller_, was made available
+for his Majesty’s accommodation, and the cruise was said to afford
+opportunity for testing certain remarkable improvements in turbine
+engines, which keenly interested the Emperor.
+
+Nor was this all. The Kaiser’s influence with the new Emperor of all
+the Russias had become quite paramount, and concurrent rumours of a
+combined movement of Imperial squadrons in the North Sea had added to
+the already serious uneasiness of the British Lion. The Eagle and the
+Bear were on the pounce!
+
+Time and the hour had been well chosen. The British capital was in the
+throes of internal discord, fomented by the industrious agencies of
+foreign powers; and Christmas, with its holiday closure of all public
+departments, admirably served to emphasise the opportunity.
+
+Long ago the risks of invasion had been publicly discussed by a prime
+minister of England, who had dismissed the idea as quite impracticable.
+But there were naval and military experts and others who thought
+otherwise. The unmasked landing of from 60,000 to 100,000 foreign
+troops on these shores certainly would be a hazardous achievement
+which many things might combine to defeat. But, assuredly, it was not
+impossible; especially if the way should be cleared for such a landing
+by the disablement of the naval ports, and the defeat of one or more of
+the squadrons charged with watch and ward over our extended coast-line.
+
+It was known to the naval authorities that Portsmouth and Portland
+were peculiarly exposed to the form of attack which Admiral Togo had
+so persistently tried at Port Arthur, and which, a few years earlier,
+the Americans had adopted at Santiago. To bottle a harbour by sinking a
+merchant ship in its mouth was a device that might be tried in England,
+as it had been tried abroad. If such an attempt succeeded, invasion
+in military force might become a comparatively easy task. Granted the
+feasibility of an invasion, and then what France had suffered in the
+annexation of Alsace-Lorraine, England might have to endure by ceding
+Kent or Yorkshire to the strong man armed. What happened to the
+Kingdom of Hanover might happen--preposterous though it seemed--to the
+Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
+
+The Germans, almost insolently, had shown their hand for years. They
+had said to Britain: “You cannot keep the sea for ever. We mean to take
+it from you; the trade first, and then--the flag.” There were thousands
+of Germans in our forecastles, scores of German masters and mates on
+the bridges of our merchantmen, and German pilots had been allowed to
+know all that charts and practical experience could tell them of our
+coasts and harbours. One and all, they had an unconcealed aim--to make
+the Teuton sea-lord of the world. Yet, knowing all this, England, like
+a giant drugged with deadly wine, had slumbered in apathy.
+
+Had the fateful hour really struck at last? Here, indeed, was a
+Naboth’s Vineyard worth coveting, for England and the English-speaking
+States on the other side of the Atlantic controlled between them
+four-fifths of the gold production of the world; England and the
+United States held a third of the dry land, owned four-sevenths of the
+shipping, two-thirds of the coal, and more than half of the world’s
+iron and steel. A splendid prize! A glorious heritage! Could Germany
+wrest it in part from the Anglo-Saxons, or would Britain, aided or
+unaided, rouse herself at last and hold her own?
+
+ “Of old sat Freedom on the heights,
+ The thunders breaking at her feet,
+ Above her shook the starry lights,
+ She heard the torrents meet.”
+
+But now? Could Freedom sit unmoved?
+
+ “Grave mother of majestic works,
+ From her isle-altar gazing down,
+ Who, God-like, grasps the triple-forks,
+ And King-like wears the crown.”
+
+But now? Could Britain’s navy hold the triple-forks against her foe?
+
+It was a solemn question, which, in that dark Christmastide, many asked
+themselves, in doubt and fear.
+
+The old national spirit, proud and patriotic, that, spite of blood and
+toil, had carried Freedom to the splendid heights, had lapsed from its
+virility. What could England hope from the hordes of stunted, ill-fed,
+debilitated men and youths who for months past had been thronging
+the streets of her capital, and taking ransom from its nerveless and
+submissive middle-class citizens?
+
+The hour had come. The drugged giant must awake and fight for life, or
+lie at the proud foot of a conqueror!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+ IN TRAFALGAR SQUARE
+
+
+The daring _coup de main_ of Marcus White had met with the most amazing
+and complete success. With the exception of the Chancery judges, who,
+for purposes of criminal law, were a negligible quantity, every judge
+and magistrate entrusted with the maintenance of law and justice in
+the capital of England had been swept into one net. There could be
+no summons, warrant, or indictment, in the absence of these judicial
+officers, anywhere outside the City boundary. Arrests would be idle,
+for no magisterial hearing or trial could follow. The strong arm of the
+law, already greatly weakened, now was wholly paralysed! One and all,
+the judges and magistrates had disappeared, carried by a cockleshell
+steamer into the mystery of the darkness and the sea.
+
+People were full of their own affairs, “fear was in the way,” and
+apprehension for themselves and their families left men but little
+power or wish to think about the functionaries of State. Moreover, on
+Christmas Eve the colossal outrage became known to only a very few, and
+knowledge came too late for any attempt to arrest the steamer in her
+reckless rush into the night.
+
+Heads of departments had gone out of town--eager to escape the
+depression of the looming Christmas holiday in London. The War Office,
+the Admiralty, and the Home Office were in charge of messengers
+and caretakers. These circumstances, carefully counted on by the
+wire-pullers of Germany, had also played into the hands of Marcus White
+in his long-cherished, revengeful war against the representatives of
+the law of England.
+
+The police were the first to learn what had happened. The startling
+story of the capture at first was scoffed at; but when the truth was
+made quite sure, the effect upon the Force was staggering. The police
+had long felt that there was a power arrayed against them which could
+not be subdued by ordinary means. They knew the extent to which the
+normal machinery of the criminal law had broken down. And now it was
+completely shattered! The men were powerless, and realising the fact,
+they felt like straws borne on the waves of a tumultuous river towards
+an unknown sea.
+
+The general public were entirely ignorant of what had happened, and the
+news that came from the naval ports late on the afternoon of Christmas
+Day was too absorbing to permit of much inquiry about what was taking
+place nearer home.
+
+Whatever families of other judges and magistrates might be asking or
+wondering, Aldwyth Westwood, as yet, knew of no reason for special
+anxiety about her father. For the past few weeks he had scarcely
+been at home. Weary of the police escort which had been told off to
+accompany him daily from Hill Street to the Law Courts, he had taken
+up his quarters at the Inns of Court Hotel, going not at all to his
+chambers in the Temple, but traversing, as he thought unnoticed, the
+short distance between Lincoln’s Inn Fields and Carey Street. There,
+in the room allotted to him as one of the law officers of the Crown,
+and burdened with his colleague’s official work as well as his own, the
+Solicitor-General had passed the days, forcing his brain to work, and
+haunted ever with the dread of a physical relapse.
+
+The eager people who rushed to the news-agents’ shops on the morning
+of Bank Holiday were not seeking news concerning his Majesty’s judges,
+but were hoping to learn more of the movements of the hostile fleets
+and the reported conflagration at Portsmouth dockyard. News there
+was none. Not a single journal had been published. The great body
+of compositors had followed the example of the gas-workers; and the
+_Epoch_, which alone among London journals could have commanded the
+services of the men, had published nothing since its special edition of
+the previous day.
+
+Baulked at the shuttered newspaper shops, hosts of people made for
+the railway stations in the hope that the bookstalls might have been
+supplied with special news. But here, too, everything was blank.
+Nothing authentic was ascertainable; but rumours were going round of
+interrupted communication with the provinces, of wires cut in all
+directions, and, worse still, of mysterious explosions in several
+tunnels, which blocked certain of the railways, and severed the links
+between London and the coast. An air of awe and anxious expectancy
+appeared on the faces of the bewildered people, and, too excited to
+remain in their houses, as the day wore on they came in ever-increasing
+numbers into the streets, until the snow on road and footway was
+churned into black and penetrating slush.
+
+Multitudes flew to drink, at once their heaven and hell. There was
+no organised march or demonstration of the Leaguers, but everywhere
+they were seen in knots and groups. The sign of the Spider was more in
+evidence than ever, just at the moment when Kraken, monster-spider of
+the deep, seemed to have risen to the surface of the sea to crush the
+naval strength of England.
+
+In the early afternoon, thousands of people assembled in Trafalgar
+Square, and rabid speakers, raucous in voice, breathed fire and fury
+into the frosty air.
+
+Raggett, on the steps near the National Gallery, raved to a multitude
+of hearers, and no one dared to say him nay.
+
+Presently, above his screaming tones, there came the sound of many
+voices chanting in the open air. Those who were standing on the steps
+on the west side of the square then saw a strange procession advancing
+slowly along Pall Mall East. A cornet-player, wearing a surplice,
+walked at the head of the procession, and the clear, strong notes of
+his instrument led the voices of a multitude of singers. A surpliced
+choir of quite a hundred men and boys was followed by the Sisters of
+the Kindly Life, and behind and around them came a mixed company of all
+classes, all ages, and both sexes--young men and maidens, old men and
+children. One and all rolled to the wintry skies a hymn of hope and
+triumph that filled the people in the square with wonder and amaze.
+
+At first there were some jeers and vulgar cries, and here and there a
+burst of scornful laughter in the crowd. But the quaint hymn of the
+ancient Church had such a lilt and cadence in its setting, that tender
+chords were touched in the hearts of thousands, and scorn and blasphemy
+were silenced. The people were irresistibly drawn into the flood of
+the melody. They caught eagerly at the cards which every one in the
+procession held out to those who wanted them.
+
+“’Ere, let’s ’ave a card, lady,” said a husky voice at Aldwyth
+Westwood’s elbow.
+
+“Ain’t yer got a card for me, guv’nor?” came from every side.
+
+Thus the volume of the song of triumph--discordant here and there,
+but earnest and full-throated--grew and strengthened as the band of
+singers advanced towards St Martin’s Church. Two banners floated in the
+air; the banner of the day--St Stephen’s, emblematic of his martyrdom;
+and the banner of the Holy Grail, emblazoned with the mystic Cup of
+Sacrifice. A jewelled cross gleamed high over all heads, and behind it,
+with clasped hands, walked Father Francis.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+ BILLY’S MESSAGE
+
+
+There were few London households in which Christmas had been “merry,”
+and the lack of festive doings had necessarily extended to those who
+are of the roofless household of the streets. Billy of Mayfair, in
+his brief career, had had some “well-fed” Christmases--the roast beef
+of old England, solid slabs of plum pudding, with oranges and nuts to
+follow. Thanks to the spasmodic attention of kindly people, the boy’s
+digestive machinery, which usually had very little to work upon, on
+those special occasions had been taxed to its utmost capacity. He had
+had one specially happy Christmas in hospital, and there lingered in
+his memory a song of goodly fare which all the little patients had been
+taught to sing in unison:
+
+ “Apple pies in Autumn,
+ Currant pies in June;
+ Mince pies at Christmas,
+ Coming very soon!”
+
+The poetry of pie!
+
+The staff-nurse said Billy had the sweetest voice in the ward. It
+had won him--coupled with his one-legged agility--great popularity
+with the young family of Joe the stableman, and he was the sole guest
+at their Christmas gathering in their rooms at the end of the mews.
+There was a goose for dinner--provided by Aldwyth Westwood--and other
+fare both rich and succulent. The savour thereof filled the small and
+inconvenient apartment, and with it was blended the odour proper to the
+mews itself. The preparation of such a meal taxed Mrs Joe’s time and
+temper to the uttermost. She cooked the repast with an infinite amount
+of clatter, and then sat down to share it, nursing the while their
+youngest born, one Francis Joseph, of whom mention has been already
+made. Francis Joseph was fretful, and dominated the whole company--a
+truly imperial and imperious infant.
+
+Joe, in his shirt-sleeves--he was never happy in a coat--expounded to
+Billy his strong objections to the motor-car. “Give me ’osses,” he
+growled; “when you’ve got an ’oss to deal with you know how to go to
+work; but them machines, snortin’, and smellin’, and tearin’ all over
+the place--why, it’s disgustin’!” Billy cordially agreed. “What’ll
+happen when there ain’t no ’osses left in London, that’s what I want to
+know,” said Joe. Billy was unable to say. He didn’t know, and he said
+so.
+
+But they were in full sympathy these two, always the best of friends.
+They were out together on Bank Holiday, and in the procession to
+Trafalgar Square were to be seen marching side by side.
+
+None in that miscellaneous multitude sang more lustily than Joe and
+Billy. The stalwart stableman, card in hand, roared forth the glories
+of the Better Land, and Billy also, hopping through the snow and slush,
+trilled out in his clear boyish voice the wonders of the Golden City.
+Here, in the grim and sombre wilderness of bricks and mortar, they sang
+of heaven-built walls and pearly gates, of halls of Zion jubilant with
+praise, of mansions bright with saints and angels and all the martyred
+throng. Here, in the fading afternoon of London streets, they sang of
+a land where daylight is serene. Here, with no glimpse of the fadeless
+flowers of Paradise, they sang of the pastures of the blessed. Here,
+in the miserable garments of the poor, they sang of robes of white and
+crowns of glory.
+
+Raggett, momentarily silenced by the swelling notes of the triumphant
+hymn, turned round and glared upon the priest as the procession passed
+between him and the National Gallery. Half his meeting melted away,
+but, with gleaming eyes and fantastic gestures, he renewed his harangue
+and poured abuse and scorn upon the Church and all her works.
+
+His violent language and gesticulations met with some success in
+stirring up the latent hostility of the baser sort among his hearers.
+Faces full of hate and brutality looked towards those who were gathered
+round the shining cross upon the steps of St Martin’s. The fire was
+smouldering, and Raggett fanned it into flame.
+
+“There’s one of them,” he shouted, with left hand extended; “one of
+’the unco’ guid!’ Plenty to eat and drink; purple and fine linen to
+wear--all the good things of life to call his own. What does he care
+about Lazarus and his sores! They come into the streets singing about
+the heavenly kingdom. But, as I’ve told you in the Park, it’s the rich
+who are to have it both ways--a good time here and the best places up
+above. Where do you come in? They give you stones, my friends, instead
+of bread--the stones of London. They’ve got their cellars full of wine,
+but they want to rob a poor man of his beer; yes, even on Bank Holiday.
+That’s one of them that wants to do it. Why don’t you go and tell him
+what you think of him?”
+
+A storm of groans and hisses burst from his hearers. A sodden-faced
+woman, passing a black bottle to her companion--a towering navvy, whose
+eyes were glazed with drink--yelled to Raggett between her raised
+hands: “Right you are, mate! right you are!” The navvy took a great
+pull at the bottle, and then swore freely and at large.
+
+The hymn was ended with a sonorous “Amen,” and only one voice was
+heard from the church steps--the voice of Father Francis, vibrant and
+clear. He was not preaching; he was simply speaking to the people. The
+peculiar timbre and modulation of his voice made him audible to great
+numbers of the crowd, which now was growing denser and denser over the
+square and the converging streets. In simple language he carried on
+the theme of the finished hymn, telling the multitude of the Celestial
+City, the house not made with hands eternal in the heavens. There,
+he said, the tired traveller would find a sweet and blessed country,
+the home of the elect; the pastures of that country lay in glorious
+sheen, amid still waters and eternal bowers. There men would rest from
+their labours. Ended would be the dull, deep pain of earthly life and
+its constant anguish of patience. But the happy people of that land
+would have high service to perform, tasks suited to an ennobled human
+nature. The land of the saints had its capital, a great, a glorious
+city, and the existence of a city implied community of life, activity,
+achievement. They, if they so willed, might become citizens of that
+wonderful capital. The gates were open and all might enter in whose
+names were written in the book of life. The nations of them that were
+saved would walk in the light of it. On the banks of the crystal river
+that flowed through the city there was the tree of life, and the leaves
+of that tree were for the healing of the nations. Healed by the leaves
+of that most blessed tree, the mortal would have put on immortality,
+henceforth to be a perfect being with a perfect life triumphant over
+sin and hell and death. That would be life indeed!--life for evermore;
+gladness without sorrow, health without a pang, light without darkness.
+The vigour of age would know no decay; beauty would not wither, nor
+would love grow cold. Such was the inheritance that humankind might
+enter into or reject--incorruptible, undefiled, never to fade away.
+
+He paused, and with enraptured face gazed into the western sky,
+where now the sun was sinking amid vast ragged clouds. The towering
+masses, fringed at first with silver, slowly broke and parted, taking
+the shapes of ramparts, towers, and pinnacles. A rose-red glow was
+spreading over all, and shafts of amber light seemed to stretch onward
+in the infinite, towards heavenly gates of pearl.
+
+Aldwyth Westwood, gazing upward from the lower steps, saw in the face
+thus lighted from the west a look that awed her--a look she never could
+forget. Well might the witnesses of St Stephen’s death have seen the
+face as of an angel when the Eastern mob ran with one accord upon the
+proto-martyr and took the life he valued but as dross. And, in some
+sort, the same passions that animated the people of two thousand years
+ago found expression in the London mob to-day. Raggett had not spoken
+in vain. Scowling men and unsexed women had been steadily forcing their
+way towards the church while Father Francis was speaking. Some of them
+threw stones and bits of mortar at the priest, and opprobrious cries
+came from every side. The crowd surged and swayed in fierce excitement.
+But Father Francis, his eyes still fixed upon the western light, seemed
+quite unconscious of attack or danger.
+
+Joe steadied Billy as the pressure increased around them, and both
+looked round indignantly when the man and woman with the bottle came
+pushing and lurching through the crowd behind them. Once more Father
+Francis was speaking.
+
+“The promise,” he cried, “is to you and to your children, and to all
+that are afar off.”
+
+“’Ere, Bob, you have a shy,” said the reeling woman to her companion.
+She handed him the now empty bottle, and the man, grasping it by the
+neck, in a half drunken frenzy whirled it round his head. Women began
+to shriek and men to swear.
+
+“It is written here--in this Book,” cried the priest in thrilling
+tones, as he held a Bible high above his head; “_and this is the Word
+of God_!”
+
+Then the huge navvy, urged by the woman, “had a shy”; the bottle flew
+from his hand with deadly force; the Bible fell, and the face of Father
+Francis, ghastly and bleeding, sank back amongst those who stood
+around him on the steps. Billy saw it all, and, in an access of fury,
+balancing himself unaided for an instant, raised his crutch and struck
+the shoulder of the ruffian with all his force. With a savage oath the
+man half turned, and grasping the boy’s neck, hurled him forward with
+terrific violence upon the steps. In haste to escape, the people close
+at hand made a sudden rush. Some fell, their dead weight crushing the
+unhappy child against the granite edge. Joe, with a tiger’s swiftness
+and a loud cry of wrath, had sprung upon the boy’s assailant. They
+wrestled, swayed, and fell, the woman clawing at the stableman, the
+crowd parting right and left in terror at the fury of the struggle.
+
+But Billy of Mayfair lay very still at Aldwyth Westwood’s feet.
+
+Some one raised the boy a little, and they laid him gently on the
+stones. His face was pale with a pallor that Aldwyth had never seen
+before; his eyelids fluttered very faintly.
+
+“My Gawd!” said a woman, peering forward, “the boy’s done for. Where’s
+a doctor? Ain’t there no doctor here?”
+
+“Stand back, can’t you,” cried another. “Give ’im some air.”
+
+Some one elbowed his way through the people, and bending over Billy,
+made a swift examination of his injuries. “Lungs,” he said, tersely.
+“He’s bleeding internally. Nothing to be done.”
+
+“Take ’im to the ’orspital,” shouted a voice.
+
+“He’ll die before you get him there,” muttered the doctor.
+
+Aldwyth was kneeling now. Her left arm supported Billy as he lay; her
+right hand held his twitching fingers.
+
+Azrael, Angel of Death, was drawing near.
+
+“Billy,” she said softly, “Billy.” The boy’s eyes opened, and he
+smiled a startled smile.
+
+Then, stooping, her face almost as white as his, she whispered in his
+ear the Sacred Name. The child gazed at her fixedly, questioningly.
+
+“He died for you, Billy, and you are going to live with Him.”
+
+“Say it again,” he panted, eagerly. Once more she said it.
+
+The child sighed faintly. Had he heard? Azrael, Angel of Death, was
+very near.
+
+“Dear Billy,” she whispered once more, “He died for you, and you are
+going to live with Him.”
+
+Again his face was eager. “Please thank Him for me, mum. Please----”
+
+The voice had died away.
+
+Billy of Mayfair would speak no more. But, perchance, the Angel heard,
+and bore the message to Him who loves the children of our race.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXX
+ THE FATE OF PORTSMOUTH DOCKYARD
+
+
+On the night of Bank Holiday, Londoners did not lack illumination. Gas
+and electric light had failed, but north and south, and east and west,
+the lurid glare of burning buildings filled the sky. Cries of “Fire!
+Fire!” in every quarter of the town brought pale, affrighted people
+from their houses to the roadways or the roofs. This added terror of
+wholesale arson stupefied the luckless householders. The fires--some
+said there were forty, fifty, sixty--had free play, for the extreme
+section of the Leaguers--now known as Raggett’s Men--by concerted
+action, after dark, had rushed nearly all the stations of the Fire
+Brigade and forcibly removed the horses. The most destructive of these
+fires occurred in Bartholomew Close, where closely packed warehouses
+in yards and tortuous streets gave free scope to the spreading flames.
+At one time it was feared that the great hospital itself would be
+involved, and the troops were ordered out to aid the civil power and
+keep some order among the excited crowds.
+
+Brave deeds were done that night; rescues effected in the face of
+almost certain death; buildings pulled down and cut away to check
+the spreading of the conflagration. But without means of utilising
+the water supply, what had once been seized by fire burnt out to its
+cindered end. Strong military guards were ordered by the general
+commanding the Home District to the railway stations. Euston, St
+Pancras, and King’s Cross remained intact. Paddington escaped with some
+damage to the goods department. Both the hotels and stations at Charing
+Cross and Cannon Street burst into flames almost simultaneously. The
+royal palaces suffered no injury. Incendiaries were caught red-handed,
+just in time, at the British Museum, and the better sort of people, now
+roused to retaliatory fury by these malignant acts, almost tore the
+offenders limb from limb.
+
+London in its desperation found some courage. The quiet, orderly
+inhabitants had borne almost as much as could be borne. They realised,
+moreover, that yet worse things might happen unless the hydra-headed
+monster of disorder could be crushed. London might starve. Meat,
+milk, vegetables would fail; all the necessaries of daily life might
+be cut off, if the railways should be blocked. Six millions, young and
+old, would be the almost helpless victims of the Leaguers. Those who
+had gone about the streets wearing the Spider as a talisman suddenly
+found that it was a dangerous sign. Right and left were heard loud
+curses on the League. Men began to see the full significance of the
+long-tolerated movement--a growing canker at the heart of the nation,
+which gave the nation’s enemies without the very opportunity they had
+planned and watched and waited for. There was still some tough material
+in Englishmen; and if the authorities could not help them, they would
+help themselves. The tide began to turn. The giant was stirring. It had
+needed a galvanic shock to rouse his brain; and verily, the shock had
+come at last. It was, indeed, time to wake from sleep, and throw aside
+“the drowsy syrups of the world.”
+
+In that fiery, sleepless night, in many districts great numbers of the
+younger men of the better class banded themselves together, beating
+up recruits from house to house, and posting watchers to give warning
+of incendiary attempts. Armed with whatever weapons they could find,
+they systematically patrolled the streets. Shouts of “Down with the
+Leaguers!” burst out from time to time, and women and children, peeping
+and cowering behind the window-blinds, gathered hope and courage. At
+last the men of London had been roused!
+
+But the flames were still licking and curling round many a house
+and public building. All night the wind was rising to a gale; the
+cloud wrack flew across the reddened sky. As the tardy hour of dawn
+drew near, strange pallid people with fantastic gestures--hatless,
+oddly-clad--came wandering through the streets. Raggett had freed his
+friends. The Leaguers had let loose hundreds of the lunatics of London!
+
+Seventy miles away a yet more deadly wound was being inflicted on the
+British nation. About five o’clock on the morning of Christmas Day
+two terrific explosions in quick succession roused the inhabitants
+of the little Hampshire town of Havant and the surrounding villages.
+Great numbers of Portsmouth people also heard it, but, of course, more
+faintly. When, later on, it became known that a fire had broken out in
+the Royal dockyard it was assumed by many that the sounds of explosion
+must have come from the same quarter. Every thought was concentrated on
+this appalling catastrophe, the full extent of which was only to be
+gradually realised. But, all the time, the great naval yard, Britain’s
+pride and strong tower against the enemy, was fast becoming one
+gigantic furnace. The grip of all-devouring fire grew deadlier every
+hour. This many-acred hive of naval industry, the factory of the wooden
+walls of England, dating from King John, and now the birthplace and the
+nursery of the armoured giants of the deep, was crumbling into dust and
+ashes. The docked ships, ships’ stores, and armament, that stood for
+millions of the nation’s money, needed for national defence, roared
+into flame and blackened into cinders.
+
+The seven thousand dockyard men of course were keeping holiday. Many
+of the high officials were away on leave, and those few guardians of
+the yard who were supposed to be keeping watch and ward regarded their
+duty as perfunctory. What was likely to happen there, or anywhere,
+on Christmas Day? Perhaps some of those intelligent foreigners who
+had been permitted to inspect the yard from time to time--intelligent
+emulators of Jack the Painter--could have answered the question.
+By-and-by, of course there would be a most strict and searching
+Government inquiry--expert evidence, red tape, blue-books, and all the
+rest of it. Meanwhile, the great fire burned on--freely and furiously.
+Soon after the alarm was given the seamen from the Whale Island
+Barracks, and many from the ships in harbour, with a strong force of
+marines from Forton, came pouring into the dockyard, but only to make a
+terrible discovery. Of what avail a thousand willing hands--of what use
+all the activity and resource of British seamen, when the one element
+with which the fire could be fought and conquered was not available?
+The water supply had failed! At first, and, indeed, for some time,
+the real reason was not understood, for the pumping station of the
+Havant water-works was eight miles away. Then the appalling truth was
+realised--the explosions explained; the great engines, those in use and
+those in reserve, had been shattered by dynamite in the darkness of the
+previous night. The Royal dockyard was left to the mercy of the flames.
+All day, and all the night that followed, they raged and roared. Red
+ruin and destruction--almost without restraint--spread on every side.
+
+The Portsmouth Hard was packed with horrified spectators. The
+townspeople in excited throngs ran to all the dockyard gates, and in
+the poorer districts surrounding the great wall enclosing the extension
+works, every roof was loaded with awe-stricken watchers of the
+conflagration.
+
+The church steeples of the town stood out to view in blended clouds
+and smoke, illumined with a fiery glow; the gilded ship on the tower
+of Portsmouth parish church seemed to be sailing in a sea of fire.
+Disaster followed on the heels of horror. In the midst of the great
+calamity a rending explosion took place in the vast powder magazine at
+Priddy’s Hard,--on the Gosport side.
+
+The harbour was now so unsafe for shipping that orders were given to
+remove all ships as far as possible. Among the large vessels alongside
+the dockyard jetty was the _Carisbrooke Castle_, a South-African
+liner which had lately been chartered by the Admiralty to serve as an
+auxiliary scout with a Flying Squadron then lying at Spithead. The
+_Carisbrooke_ had been brought round from Southampton and was taking in
+a quantity of stores; but the danger of her position made it advisable
+to get her clear of the harbour without delay. Just when she was
+abreast of Blockhouse Fort an explosion--accidental or designed, none
+knew--occurred on board. The great ship, viewed by the flashlight from
+the fort, was seen to heel over. In half an hour she had settled down,
+blocking the fairway, and effectually bottling the harbour against all
+craft of heavy tonnage.
+
+On the Gosport side the shore was lined with lookers on. From this
+side, indeed, looking across the water, the sight was exceptionally
+striking, for the far-spread glow lit up the towering masts and rigging
+of the _Victory_ and all the ships in port.
+
+From the tower of the old Norman castle at Portchester, away beyond
+the mudbanks of the harbour, and on the crumbling walls that flanked
+its water-gate, the villagers gazed spellbound at the awesome sight.
+Farther away, on the long ridge of Portsdown Hill, the rural population
+of the district had a yet more impressive view of what was happening.
+To them it seemed as if the whole town of Portsmouth must be wrapped in
+flames.
+
+Here, on the chalk down, stood a solitary pillar, erected long years
+ago to the memory of Nelson. Grey, moss-grown, and mournful, it looked
+down on scenes with which the great sea-captain once had been so
+familiar.--Southsea Common, where a “blackguard horse” ran away with
+him; the Sally Port, where his sailors always were coming or going; the
+old nooks and alleys of “Point,” where the press-gang did its work;
+the old George Inn, in which he breakfasted on the morning of his
+last embarkation; the spot on the beach, marked by the anchor of the
+_Victory_, where the people grasped his hand and, weeping, bade him a
+final Godspeed; and there, in the light of the burning dockyard, rode
+the brave old ship in which he died for England.
+
+More than a hundred years had passed away, and now the Royal dockyard,
+that had equipped so many fleets for the greatest of Britannia’s
+admirals, lay engulfed and wrecked in a tremendous, rolling sea of
+flame and smoke.
+
+Portsmouth, for all purposes of naval warfare, was out of action.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+ THE NAVAL BATTLE OFF PLYMOUTH
+
+
+Thus the chronicler: “The Spanish Invasion being brought to a crisis,
+after the most assiduous application of three whole years to fit out
+that fleet vainly named by the Pope the great, noble and invincible
+Armada and Terror of Europe.... King Philip gave orders for its sailing
+on the 19th of May 1588. It consisted of 134 sail of tall towering
+ships, besides gallies, galliasses and galleons.” The fleet carried
+8766 mariners, 21,855 soldiers, and 2088 galley slaves; together,
+32,709 men, irrespective of Spanish Dons and their attendants, priests,
+surgeons, and servitors of all sorts.
+
+First, and before all things, it was to be understood that the motives
+of his Spanish Majesty were truly religious--” to serve God, and to
+return unto his Church a great many contrite souls ... oppressed by
+heretics, enemies to our Holy Catholic Faith.”
+
+Britain, as usual, was unready; but a fleet was got together in only
+50 days. The City of London being desired to furnish 5000 men and 15
+ships, provided 10,000 men and 30 ships, and at this great crisis in
+our national life there was “such a zealous love and duty throughout
+the nation towards the Queen as is inexpressible.” Britons were Britons
+in the spacious days of Queen Elizabeth; “an uncommon joy and alacrity
+appeared in the face of every one. They were pleased with the thought
+of contributing, every man in his way, towards the defence of their
+country, their liberties, and their Queen.”
+
+The English fleet consisted of 80 ships manned by 9000 sailors, and not
+all those were available when the Armada was sighted off the Lizard,
+disposed in a crescent seven miles long from horn to horn; but when the
+Spanish admiral got back to Spain in late September he had but 60 sail
+out of his 134. Thus, with the loss of only one small ship and about a
+hundred men, England remained the mistress of the seas. Shame, loss,
+and dishonour had befallen her treacherous enemy. _Venit, Vidit, Fugit!_
+
+And now, three hundred and twenty-two years after the winds and the
+waves had come to the aid of England, another fleet of vastly different
+character had been sighted from the Lizard--insignificant, relatively,
+in point of numbers, but immeasurably more powerful in type and
+armament. And once again a British fleet came out from Plymouth, to
+watch and, if need were, to fight the foreigner.
+
+After the first and unexpected appearance of the German battleships
+and cruisers off Plymouth--made known to London by the special _Epoch_
+on Christmas Day--certain mysterious manœuvres followed. But when
+eager observations were taken early on the morning of Bank Holiday,
+not one German ship remained in view. Phantom-like the fleet had come,
+phantom-like it had vanished in the dark and stormy night.
+
+Meanwhile, to the intense relief of Plymouth, another British Squadron
+hove in sight. Signals and messages were rapidly exchanged, and certain
+cruisers and destroyers were at once detached for scouting work--their
+duty being “to track the Germans, shadow them cautiously, and send back
+news by wireless telegraphy of their latest movements.” The scouts, in
+turn, were lost to view. Their orders were to cruise along an east and
+west line some fifty miles from land, to meet twice a day, exchange
+reports, and then return in opposite directions to the limits of their
+beat.
+
+At sunset the battleships and cruisers remaining at Plymouth went to
+general quarters, and the crews were kept at their guns during the
+night. Every officer and bluejacket felt the tension of the hour. None
+knew what test of courage, skill, endurance the night or the morning
+might exact from them. The honour of the Flag, the responsibility of
+upholding great traditions, the safety of their country might suddenly
+be entrusted to their keeping. The scene might well inspire English
+hearts. For all remembered that hither came in those far-off days the
+mighty fleets of Spain in the period of her power; and, again, it was
+out yonder in the misty sea that once upon a time the Dutch admiral,
+Van Tromp, flaunted his flag--jacks and pennants flying--in the face
+of the fiery Blake, who accepted the defiance and at once attacked and
+beat the Dutchman’s ships. The older navies of the kings and queens
+of England had known how to exact the salutation of the Flag. And
+Cromwell, too, had known. For in a treaty of his time it was provided
+“that the ships of the United Provinces, as well those fitted out for
+war as others, which should meet in the British seas any of the ships
+of war of England, should strike their flag and lower their topsail
+in such manner as had been any time practised before under any former
+Governments.” Sir Cloudesley Shovel and Sir George Rooke--they, too,
+had exacted homage to the Flag when Queen Anne was on the throne; and
+no foreign navy had ventured to withhold the first salutation in the
+long reign of Queen Victoria.
+
+To the navy of King Edward VII., in this supreme moment, was committed
+the maintenance of our marine supremacy.
+
+Yet experienced officers were well aware that, with all the foresight
+and sagacity that could be brought to bear, the fortune of war at sea
+depended very much on what men still called chance. “Right or left,”
+said Nelson, “it is all a matter of guess, and the world attributes
+wisdom to him who guesses right.” Nelson himself had to hunt for the
+French fleet many a time and oft; the American fleet had no news of
+the Spanish ships for something like a fortnight in the fight for
+Cuba; and in the war between Russia and Japan, the fleet of the former
+was “a dark horse” to Admiral Togo for considerable periods. The game
+of wits at sea, for which the other term is naval strategy, depends
+on distances, the elements, the unforeseen. Specific programmes are
+impossible, and the best-laid plans of admirals “gang oft agley.” Thus
+it came about that in this critical juncture the British scouts failed
+to get in touch with the potential enemy,--a failure almost attended
+with dire results for England.
+
+The Germans having given our scouts the slip (whether by luck or skill
+was never known) crept back in the dark hours towards Plymouth. Then,
+suddenly, their whole flotilla of destroyers, with lights out, and
+steaming at full speed, made a desperate attempt to force an entrance
+to the harbour. The rush was admirably planned. Anticipating partial
+detection, and by means of clever feints, the torpedo craft sought
+to attract the search-lights of the defence works to one particular
+destroyer, hoping that the main division might thus be enabled to
+make a successful dash, under the shadow of the shore, to the eastern
+and western channels of the breakwater. But the manœuvre failed. In
+the very nick of time the flashlights exposed the real and formidable
+nature of the onslaught. The roar of the battery guns burst forth upon
+the night, continuing with unabated fury until all but one of the
+flotilla--which ran headlong upon the breakwater--were sunk or driven
+off, damaged and defeated. The projected supplementary action of the
+German battleships, now looming into view, thus became hopeless, if not
+impossible.
+
+A mighty cheer went up from all the British ships when this was
+realised. It was their turn now to take the warpath, and the
+Admiral,--Sir Lambert Meade,--saw that they took it instantly. In the
+hearts of all, if not upon their lips, was the spirit of the stirring
+English war-song:
+
+ “Who fears to die? Who fears to die?
+ Is there any here who fears to die
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Shout for England!
+ Ho! for England!
+ George for England!
+ Merry England!
+ England for aye!”
+
+Daylight was near at hand, and when it came, grey and mournful, over
+the sullen sea, the tactics of the British admiral left the enemy in
+doubt. An elaborate feint made with certain British battleships and
+armoured cruisers led the Germans to suppose the intention was to drive
+them back into the Atlantic; and ere they realised their error, the
+greater number of the British ships steamed diagonally outside the
+enemy, enclosing them within an imaginary line drawn from the Eddystone
+to Lizard Point. The light cruisers were told off to harass the German
+auxiliaries, and seeing the probable effect of this manœuvre, the enemy
+opened fire, wasting powder and shell long before they were within
+effective range. The British guns, however, remained silent until
+the distance between the fleets was only four miles or less. Then the
+British admiral gave the signal, and straightway four battleships and
+eight armoured cruisers hurled shell after shell against the nearest of
+the German ships. The detached section of the fleet that had steamed
+westward along the coast, attacked with equal fury the other wing
+of the invaders’ line. The Germans at first replied with spirit. In
+every battle the winning cock must lose some feathers, and sorrow and
+mourning were on their way to many an English home.
+
+Presently there were signs of disaster and disablement among the
+enemy’s ships. Caught between two fires, and deprived of the aid of
+their destroyers, the position produced a demoralising effect upon
+their men. The German plan of campaign had miscarried, and the crews
+and gunners were at first disconcerted and then thrown into panic by
+the concentrated and mathematical precision with which the British
+guns riddled the leading ships of their column. Here and there, in
+both fleets, the bursting shells produced wholesale slaughter and
+mutilation. The worst disasters to the enemy’s ships, however, were
+caused by the repeated shocks of the terrific projectiles, which
+displaced the steel plates of their armour. Thus the rivets sprang,
+and water crept in at a hundred holes. Two of the finest German
+battleships, through the gaining weight of water, had their centre
+of gravity gradually shifted. They foundered, and all hands were
+lost--officers and men going bravely, calmly, to their doom.
+
+The battleship _Wilhelm II._ became unmanageable and left the line,
+and, at the same time it was seen that desperate attempts were being
+made to give protection to one in particular of the auxiliaries--a
+liner of great speed, that presently broke away and headed for the open
+sea, hotly pursued by two light cruisers and one destroyer from the
+British line.
+
+Both remaining sections of the defending force now closed in upon
+the Germans, their great guns doing more and deadlier work as the
+range was lessened. One of the German battleships was now on fire,
+and the great clouds of smoke that rose for a time so hid the ships
+that firing was suspended. When the smoke cleared the British admiral
+gave another signal, and then the deadly wasps of naval warfare--the
+torpedo flotilla--swarmed in upon the enemy to complete the havoc and
+destruction commenced by the great guns of our battleships.
+
+England, sovereign of the seas, had won another victory. Her flag was
+still supreme!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The scattered units of the German fleet had not only to seek safety
+from their pursuers, but also, as the short day closed in, to battle
+with a formidable gale. For the _Schiller_ and other ships that had
+steamed westward, the position was one of appalling jeopardy. They had
+to reckon with the terrors of a wild and rocky shore.
+
+Less than three hundred miles from London, the westerly extremity of
+England, grey and granitic, frowns on the roaring seas that beat in
+vain upon its rocky bastions. Here the channels mingle with the mighty
+ocean, and stupendous billows, tumbling shoreward, break on the cliffs
+with a terrific roar that sometimes daunts the hardened miner at work
+in the galleries that stretch beneath the ocean-bed. A little more
+than a mile from the cliffs the Longship’s Lighthouse throws its rays
+upon the spume of the tremendous waves, and away to the west lies the
+granite group of the Scilly Isles.
+
+The wind and the rain are twin rulers of these islands; and the yeasty
+currents have swept many a gallant ship upon their jagged reefs. The
+“Bishop” and his “Clerks” are always on the watch to shrive the souls
+of shipwrecked mariners. It was here on the Gilstone Rock (near the
+small islet of Roseviar) that Sir Cloudesley Shovel, returning from
+the siege of Toulon, met with his tragic end. Driven off his course by
+storms, his ship, the _Association_, was forced upon the rock, and in
+a few minutes fell to pieces. In that night of dreadful memory, the
+_Phœnix_, the _Romney_, and the _Firebrand_ met a like fate. The _St
+George_ only narrowly escaped. Upwards of 2000 lives were lost in that
+dread night, and since that far-off time many another ship has gone to
+pieces in those hungry jaws.
+
+It was around these ragged westerly islands that the storm raged with
+especial fury on the night that followed the scattering of the German
+fleet.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+ MARCUS WHITE AND THE MOB
+
+
+With that mocking perversity which confutes the weatherwise, the frost
+and bitter wind had given place to heavy rainstorms. The wind, veering
+round to south-west late on Boxing Day, blew with an ever-growing force
+and fury, and made the night of December 26th one of terrible memory
+for many years to come. In London and Westminster alone a million
+pounds’ worth of damage resulted from the tempest, and the tale of
+ships wrecked and lives lost all round the coast was only to be told
+later on and by instalments.
+
+The traffic on nearly every railway was now disorganised, and a strike
+of the railway men had become imminent. The cutting of telegraph wires
+by the Leaguers had already gone far to keep Londoners in ignorance of
+momentous events happening outside the metropolitan area, and the great
+storm almost completed the work the Leaguers had left unfinished.
+But the partial isolation of the great town in other respects, and
+particularly the threatened dearth of food supplies, constituted a yet
+further cause of apprehension. Early on the morning of the 27th, the
+provision shops were besieged by people of all ranks, eager to lay in
+stores of every description--meat, vegetables, groceries, bread, and
+every kind of household necessaries. In many cases it became a raid,
+in which some paid monstrous prices, while in the scramble others
+secured provisions without paying for them at all. Great numbers of
+shops and stores were wholly cleared of stock, tradesmen and their
+assistants being overpowered, while customers hurrying homewards
+were frequently waylaid, maltreated, and robbed of their purchases.
+The tumult and excitement in the streets became appalling. Military
+patrols were now seen in some of the principal thoroughfares, but not
+in sufficient numbers to maintain good order. Here and there a band of
+hooligans, who smashed all the street lamps as they passed, were chased
+by troopers, but they generally escaped into side streets and alleys,
+and resumed their work of destruction in another quarter. Shutters
+were closed, and boarded windows met the eye in all directions. Wild
+rumours went round. There were, it was said, barricades at the West
+End. Martial law would be declared before the day was out. Stories were
+told of disaffection among the troops at Aldershot; of a night muster
+on Ascot Heath and a march through Windsor Great Park to the Castle.
+Another organised mob was reported to have assembled at Grange Wood,
+near Croydon, marching thence, with increasing swarms of adherents,
+through Camberwell, Walworth, and Lambeth, making, as some said, for
+the Archbishop’s Palace, or, as others declared, for the Houses of
+Parliament.
+
+The truth, and the whole truth could not be ascertained, but in all the
+passion and excitement of the hour, scarcely a word of disloyalty was
+breathed of the King individually. On the contrary, the vast majority
+believed that, but for the illness which lately had prevented his
+Majesty from taking an active part in the affairs of State, his tact
+and courage would have remedied existing evils before they had come to
+such a dangerous head.
+
+The dangers of civil conflict were greatly augmented by the strong and
+avowed resentment that had at last broken forth against the tyranny of
+the Leaguers; and this peril in turn was accentuated by splits in the
+ranks of the Leaguers themselves. The proximate cause of the schism
+was found in the _Epoch_, which, appearing in the streets about midday,
+contained a remarkable article, printed prominently in leaded type. In
+effect, the writer declared in forcible language that though he had
+no cause to love England, he would fight side by side with Englishmen
+rather than see her trodden under the iron heel of Germany or any other
+continental nation. Eschewing the cautious language of the average
+leader-writer, he roundly stated that there was a deadly conspiracy
+developing in certain of the chancelleries of Europe. He warned Great
+Britain to beware lest her enemies, by a swift and sudden stroke,
+should lay her, fettered, in the dust. There would soon be news, he
+said, of the doings of the powerful German squadron in the south and
+west, and of a dual fleet, Russian and German, in the North Sea. These
+were but the vanguard of an enormous fleet of transports, prepared in
+sections in various German ports, and designed to land 100,000 foreign
+soldiers on our shores.
+
+Then came a great surprise. This, said the writer, was the last time
+the _Epoch_ would appear.
+
+The article was signed, “Marcus White,” and his last warning words to
+the nation were those written by a laureate of England half a century
+before:
+
+ “Form! form! Riflemen form!
+ Ready, be ready to meet the storm!”
+
+The article produced at first a staggering effect upon the Leaguers,
+and the extreme section, led by Raggett, but consisting mainly of
+foreign anarchists, vowed vengeance on the leader who they swore had
+betrayed and hindered them in the moment of impending triumph. A vast
+and threatening mob gathered on the Embankment, and crash after crash
+of broken glass startled the neighbourhood. A beast-like roar went up
+when Marcus White came forward to a window and looked down upon the
+crowd.
+
+It was as he stood thus, with folded arms, that Aldwyth Westwood
+and Herrick entered the room, unannounced in the confusion of the
+moment. But Marcus White turned instantly, and the same swift look of
+recognition that Aldwyth remembered noticing in the Folkestone hotel
+came into his eyes as he gazed at her. Her own eyes were strained and
+sad; but, though her face was very pale, there was courage and firmness
+in its expression.
+
+She spoke at once: “I have come to ask you about my father’s safety.”
+
+For a moment Marcus White gazed from her face to her companion’s,
+answering nothing.
+
+“Why should it be supposed that I am Sir John Westwood’s keeper?” he
+asked quietly.
+
+Herrick broke in: “It is known that you had a strong personal hostility
+to Miss Westwood’s father, and that a monstrous outrage has been
+committed, in which you----”
+
+Marcus White raised his hand. “You are not addressing a Court of Law,”
+he said scornfully.
+
+“I wish to Heaven I were!” answered the barrister hotly. “And, more
+than that, I wish you were standing in the dock, where you ought to be.”
+
+Aldwyth laid her hand entreatingly on her lover’s arm.
+
+“What has this to do with Sir John Westwood?” asked Marcus White,
+almost indifferently.
+
+Aldwyth stepped forward. “I ask you this question: Is my father alive?”
+
+“Miss Westwood,” was the slow answer, “I cannot tell you.”
+
+“You will be called to account for this,” said Herrick sternly.
+
+A roar arose from the mob below the window.
+
+“I am being called to account for many things,” said Marcus White,
+listening, with a slight shrug of his shoulders.
+
+“Are you mad?” cried Herrick.
+
+The other laughed bitterly. “Perhaps I am. I have played for a great
+stake and I won the trick, but”--glancing towards the broken windows--”
+I may not win the rubber.”
+
+“Do you refuse to give us any information?” It was Aldwyth who spoke
+now.
+
+“No, I don’t refuse. Your father and those who were with him were left
+to the mercy of that God in whose name they administer law and justice
+in this country. Can you complain of that?” He looked at Herrick as he
+spoke.
+
+“What do you mean?” asked Aldwyth breathlessly.
+
+“Miss Westwood, can those who are entrusted with the quality of mercy
+towards their fellow-creatures--can they complain if they are left to
+the mercy of the elements?”
+
+“It is madness and worse than madness--murder!” said Herrick, stepping
+forward.
+
+“You have courage,” answered Marcus White, regarding him. “Perhaps,” he
+added significantly, “that is why you have been spared.”
+
+“But my father!” interrupted Aldwyth. “What is to be done?”
+
+Heedless of the tumult without, Marcus White advanced to the table
+and sat down. He wrote a few lines rapidly. “If you take this to the
+Admiralty,” he said, “they may be able to get you a report; or, better
+still, go to the Foreign Secretary. He is more likely to be able to
+give you information.” He folded the paper and gave it into Aldwyth’s
+hands.
+
+“Let us go at once,” she said, turning to Herrick.
+
+As she spoke a great stone came hurtling through the window and smashed
+the mirror over the mantelpiece. Heavy blows were heard upon a door
+below. A white-faced, breathless clerk burst into the room. “The mob
+are threatening to break down the outer door,” he said.
+
+“I am afraid,” said White quietly, looking at Herrick, “you have
+brought Miss Westwood at an awkward moment.”
+
+But she answered for herself. “It was I who insisted on coming.”
+
+“I will see that you are not molested,” was White’s reply. He paused a
+moment. More stones came flying through the windows. There was a sharp
+crack of firearms, and a bullet shattered the great chandelier in the
+middle of the ceiling. Marcus White crossed quickly to the door; the
+frightened clerk drew aside and watched him anxiously.
+
+“Great heavens! where are you going?” asked Herrick.
+
+“Outside, to face these curs.”
+
+“It is not safe, sir; there’ll be murder done,” cried the affrighted
+clerk.
+
+But White ignored him. “Keep Miss Westwood here for a few moments,” he
+said to Herrick, speaking in clear, emphatic tones. “Then you will be
+able to get away in safety. When you hear me fire,” he drew a shining
+revolver from his pocket, “go--at once!”
+
+Without another word, and bare-headed as he was, he passed out of
+the room. They stood in breathless suspense until a hoarse yell of
+execration came from the street, attaining increased violence and
+menace as it was taken up by the greater crowd on the Embankment.
+
+An irresistible impulse hurried them to the window. Surrounded by a
+small bodyguard of adherents, Marcus White was seen, forcing his way
+across the road. Fists and sticks were shaken at him on every side, and
+vile epithets in half a dozen languages fouled the air as the human
+wedge drove through the clamouring, struggling mass and reached the
+pavement on the river side of the Embankment. The next moment he was
+standing on the parapet, looking down with dauntless eyes upon the sea
+of furious faces that was now turned towards him. His voice rang out
+above the uproar.
+
+“Fools! fools, that you are, listen!”
+
+The mob responded with a howl of wrath.
+
+“Traitor!” cried Raggett, shrill above the din; “Traitor!” and the
+vast excited multitude took up the cry, yelling it with indescribable
+ferocity.
+
+The gleam of a revolver caught the eye. There were those who thought he
+fired above their heads. Others believed the shot was meant for Raggett.
+
+At any rate it was the promised signal; but Aldwyth and Herrick stood
+for a moment, held by the overmastering excitement of the scene. Then,
+with savage curses and screams of fury the mob rushed at the parapet,
+reckless in their rage. Some clambered up; others fell and were
+trampled under foot. Swaying and reeling, gripped and torn on either
+side, Marcus White for a moment held his ground.
+
+Covering her eyes, and with a low cry of horror, Aldwyth turned from
+the window now, and in a moment, supported by Herrick, she had reached
+the street.
+
+Close at hand, in Howard Street, the Westwoods’ carriage, a closed
+landau, was waiting.
+
+“Quick, to Berkeley Square,” cried Herrick.
+
+Aldwyth sank back against the cushions, almost fainting, as the horses
+plunged forward under the sharp lash of the driver’s whip.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIII
+ THE FOREIGN SECRETARY
+
+
+Lord Downland’s private secretary shook his head.
+
+“My dear fellow, it is impossible,” he said. “I’d manage it for _you_
+if it could be done for any one; you know that well enough.”
+
+Herrick did know it, for the speaker and he were first cousins, and
+good friends.
+
+“It’s of vital importance,” he said earnestly.
+
+“A matter of life and death,” urged Aldwyth.
+
+“Look here, Langdale”--Herrick laid his hand on the other’s arm--” we
+come from Marcus White.”
+
+“Marcus White!” The secretary drew back, amazed, and looked from
+Herrick’s face to Aldwyth’s. “You mean the head-centre of the Leaguers?”
+
+“Yes; but they’ve rounded on him.”
+
+“Only a few moments ago, when we left him, he was fighting for his
+life,” said Aldwyth.
+
+“It’s horrible, but it’s a fact,” added Herrick; “they were on him like
+a pack of wolves.”
+
+“That’s news, indeed!” Langdale looked very grave.
+
+“We have here something that he wrote for us to give into Lord
+Downland’s hands. It bears on the safety of Miss Westwood’s father, and
+perhaps on special foreign news which his lordship ought to know.”
+
+“I’ll see what can be done,” said Langdale briskly. “The French
+ambassador is with the marquis just at this moment; and, as you see,
+the brougham is at the door. There’s no harm in saying”--he lowered
+his voice slightly--” that the chief’s on the point of starting for
+Windsor, by the King’s command. But I’ll try to manage it for you.” And
+he quickly left the room.
+
+Over the window blind they could see the electric brougham, ready and
+waiting to start. Two or three uniformed policemen stood near at hand.
+Farther off, Herrick caught sight of his old acquaintance, Henshaw;
+and, at the same time, the rattle of accoutrements attracted his notice
+to a cavalry escort waiting at the north end of the square.
+
+Suddenly Henshaw moved quickly out of view. There was whispering among
+the uniformed men, who wore a watchful, anxious look.
+
+Something untoward was happening, and the barrister looked round
+intending to attract Aldwyth’s attention; but she was sitting at the
+table, her elbows resting there, and her face covered with her hands.
+He did not speak to her. Tact taught him that she was better left
+alone. He believed that in the complex trouble she was suffering she
+was no longer indifferent to his deep and constant affection; and it
+was true. Thus does the shaking of our lives sometimes restore the
+balance. A strong man’s love; a life-companion, tender, true, and kind!
+Happy the woman who can win the prize. Aldwyth, at least, was learning
+to be grateful; and gratitude, like pity, is akin to love.
+
+When Herrick glanced through the window again, Henshaw, usually most
+deliberate in his movements, was hurrying past; but his quick eyes had
+caught sight of the barrister, and the next moment he rang the bell.
+There was a hurried conversation with the hall porter; then a footman
+brought in a hasty note written on a leaf torn from a pocket-book:
+
+ “_Can I see you for a moment? Urgent._”
+
+Herrick, with a word to Aldwyth, who still seemed to be stunned by
+recent events, went out, and was shown into a small anteroom, to which
+the detective quickly followed him.
+
+“What is it?” he asked, wonderingly.
+
+“Well, it may be much and it may be nothing; I can’t explain now--but,
+look here, sir, that carriage out there is waiting for you and the
+lady, isn’t it?”
+
+“Yes; they’re Sir John Westwood’s horses.”
+
+“Do you mind if the Marquis goes off in that carriage instead of in the
+brougham that’s waiting for him?”
+
+“You must have some special reason for suggesting that!”
+
+“I have,”--emphatically.
+
+“I’ll ask Miss Westwood,--it’s not my carriage.”
+
+“One moment--need you ask? Ladies want explanations, and there isn’t
+time to give them.”
+
+“My good sir, you can hardly expect----”
+
+“Take it upon yourself, sir,” interrupted the police officer,
+impressively. “It may save life--a valuable life, too. I know what I’m
+talking about, and if any harm comes to Sir John’s horses, you may be
+pretty sure it is a case in which the Government will make the damage
+good.”
+
+“Very well; do what you think right. I see there is something serious
+in the wind.”
+
+“Right you are, sir”; and the detective was out of the room and the
+house before another word could be said.
+
+As Herrick crossed the hall to return to Aldwyth Westwood, the private
+secretary met him.
+
+“Ah, here you are! The ambassador’s gone. Now if you want three words
+with the marquis before he leaves, come this way. But where is Miss
+Westwood?”
+
+“Here,” said Herrick, opening the door.
+
+Aldwyth rose instantly, and the two followed the secretary to Lord
+Downland’s library. The Foreign Secretary stood upon the hearth-rug.
+A valet was helping him to put on his travelling coat. At a sign the
+man retired, and Langdale, after a low-toned word or two to his chief,
+placed a chair for Aldwyth and also left the room.
+
+It was obvious that his lordship was in great haste to get away.
+
+Herrick, without a word, put Marcus White’s written message in the
+minister’s hand. Lord Downland glanced at it rapidly, then read it
+carefully again. A shade of colour came into his pale, thin cheeks.
+
+He looked up. “This news was partly known to me,” he said, “but not
+quite all. The rest may be very valuable.” He glanced for a second at
+the fire, then added: “This leader of the Leaguers seems to have some
+love for England, or, at any rate, some scruples, after all. But he
+will have to pay a heavy penalty for his misdeeds.”
+
+“Lord Downland,” said Aldwyth quietly, “I think he has paid the last of
+all penalties already.”
+
+The Foreign Minister looked at her quickly, with grave inquiring eyes.
+
+“My lord,” said Herrick, “the Leaguers have turned on him. We left
+Marcus White at the mercy of the mob.”
+
+“Ah! is that so? A terrible experience for Miss Westwood. But I have
+intelligence that will relieve her of a great anxiety--Sir John
+Westwood is safe.”
+
+“Safe! thank God for that!” cried Aldwyth, with clasped hands.
+
+“All on board were safe. It was almost a miracle. The steamer could
+not have floated for another hour, and,” he added, significantly, “she
+was discovered drifting towards the Race of Alderney, deserted by her
+captain and the crew. A monstrous outrage!--monstrous!”
+
+“Then Sir John--all of them--must be on their way to London now,”
+exclaimed Herrick.
+
+“No,” said the marquis quietly. “They are safe, but at present they are
+not on their way to England. They were picked up by a German cruiser;
+and our relations with Germany at the present moment are not friendly.”
+A faint half-smile flickered over his face. “It is what a former
+colleague of mine would call ‘a sort of a war!’” Lord Downland took up
+his hat and moved towards the door.
+
+“Your lordship means that they are prisoners?”
+
+“Yes, Mr Herrick. But there is no need for alarm,” with a reassuring
+glance towards Aldwyth. “England also has a prisoner--one of very great
+distinction. At this moment he is on his way by special train from
+Penzance to Windsor Castle.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On each side of the entrance to Mount Street, as the carriage
+approached with the Foreign Minister on his way to Paddington, small
+groups were loitering. The men, for the most part, had the look of
+foreigners. Three things were vividly recalled later on--one of them,
+that the officer in command of the cavalry escort sent two troopers
+ahead; secondly, that, on seeing this, Henshaw ran forward with a
+loud cry of warning; thirdly, that a shrill whistle was heard as the
+troopers, followed rapidly by the carriage, approached the turning into
+Mount Street.
+
+Then, swiftly following on the whistle, there was a blue flash in
+the air, and a sharp, cracking detonation. The leading troopers were
+scattered, one of the horses plunged and fell with a crash upon the
+pavement, throwing its rider heavily against a doorstep. The troopers’
+horses in rear of the carriage reared and plunged; a scream came from
+some women who were near, and a young girl, shockingly mutilated, fell
+bleeding to the ground.
+
+The bomb had struck the roadway between the leading troopers and the
+carriage horses, but, as if by a miracle, the latter, though terrified,
+were uninjured, and tore through Mount Street at a gallop.
+
+Behind them, on the right-hand pavement a struggling group was seen.
+Henshaw, whose device had been defeated by the misconceived movement
+of the troopers, had darted on a sallow-faced man with a short black
+beard. The man fought like a wild beast in the detective’s grip, but
+the uniformed police had hurried to the scene, and one of the most
+powerful--it was P. C. Dormer--enveloped the dynamitard in his arms,
+while others went in hot pursuit of his fleeing confederates.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIV
+ THE EAGLE IN THE LION’S JAWS
+
+
+The strike of compositors which had maddened the conductors of daily
+journals proved to be a blessing in disguise. Such stirring news had
+come to hand that a few hours’ delay in publishing the morning papers
+were worth all the terms that trades unions could exact--and more also.
+The morning papers of December 27th became afternoon papers, and they
+went off like wildfire.
+
+Indeed there was news that staggered humanity:
+
+Item One:--The death of Marcus White by drowning in the Thames--with
+the murderous clutch of Raggett and another Leaguer still on his
+throat. And this, it was recognised, meant not only the death of three
+men--it was the death-blow of the League itself.
+
+Item Two:--The direful catastrophe at Portsmouth dockyard, with all
+that it meant, and might have meant, for England.
+
+Item Three:--The treacherous night attack of the Germans at Plymouth,
+so happily detected, and the subsequent victory of the British fleet.
+
+Item Four:--Failure of a projected joint movement by the German and the
+Russian fleets in the North Sea.
+
+The stars in their courses had “fought against Sisera.” The concerted
+action of the combined squadrons had come to naught, partly because of
+the delay and blundering of the Russian admiral; mainly by reason of
+the terrible storm which swept the sea and thundered on our shores on
+that eventful night.
+
+Battered and beaten by the tempest, the invading ships had made all
+haste to return to port. Once again, as in the days of Queen Elizabeth,
+“God blew, and they were scattered!”
+
+But the heaviest stroke of misfortune suffered by the enemy was not
+inflicted in the North Sea. The remnant of the German Squadron of
+the south, seeking to escape from its pursuers, had found the flying
+squadron despatched from Spithead completely barring their passage in
+the Straits of Dover. The British crews were fresh and fit, burning
+for battle. But once again in the history of nations discretion was
+acknowledged to be the better part of warfare. The Germans were not
+now in force or condition to show fight. Every ship fell into the hands
+of the British admiral, and was promptly interned in Dover harbour.
+
+There yet remained a startling postscript to this tremendous news. The
+_Schiller_, pursued by the British cruiser _Cadmus_ and the destroyer
+_Hornet_, on the 26th had made desperate efforts to escape capture.
+Driven to the west in the darkness and the storm, the liner made a rash
+attempt to double back between her pursuers and the Scilly Islands. The
+result was fatal. Too late, the commander of the _Schiller_ discovered
+his dangerous proximity to the “Bishop and his Clerks.” A terrific wave
+swept the great liner like a plaything on the deadly rocks. There came
+another mighty, shattering rush of water that drowned the captain and
+swept a passenger, who stood beside him in that awful moment, clear of
+the ship and far up on the tangled seaweed of the rocks.
+
+So hot and close was the pursuit of the _Cadmus_ and the _Hornet_ that
+they, too, narrowly escaped similar disaster. The _Cadmus_ was not
+half a mile to windward when the _Schiller_ went ashore. The _Hornet_,
+nearer in, only escaped by being refloated on the first great wave that
+drowned the _Schiller_’s lights.
+
+Of all on board the German liner only the one passenger was saved. This
+passenger, bruised, exhausted, with a broken arm, received the prompt
+and kindly attention of the coastguard. Little did these rough but
+sympathetic folk suspect the exalted rank and dignity of the sufferer.
+He seemed to be a foreigner, but knew much more of the King’s English
+than was known to the humble islanders themselves. When the stranger
+gave them a massive gold ring, set with a brilliant stone, by way of
+parting gift, these good folk began to think they had entertained an
+angel unawares.
+
+In truth they had ministered, not to an angel--but to an emperor.
+
+The skipper of the Trinity steamer that conveyed the stranger to St
+Mary’s Island for temporary surgical treatment was a man who had seen
+many illustrated newspapers. Though at first incredulous, he thought he
+recognised the illustrious foreigner. He was quite sure of it before
+the steamer left St Mary’s for Penzance with the passenger on board.
+
+Lord Downland, as the reader is aware, knew who the stranger was before
+his lordship left Berkeley Square--to run the gauntlet of the bomb
+brigade--on his way to Windsor Castle.
+
+The prisoner of England was none other than Kaiser William, King of
+Prussia, German Emperor.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXV
+ THE KING AND THE KAISER
+
+
+London went mad when all the news was known--mad with amazement,
+relief, anger, joy: amazement at the deadly reality of the national
+danger that had been averted; relief at the safety of England; anger
+with the
+
+ “New majesties of mighty States”--
+
+that, with “great contrivances of power,” had sought to encompass our
+inviolable island.
+
+And there was joy--delirious, exuberant--that the hydra-headed mob no
+longer held the field in London.
+
+The main thoroughfares were densely packed with shouting multitudes. In
+the sharp reaction of the moment, in the complex excitement occasioned
+by the news, people laughed and wept and sang. Social distinctions were
+broken down; the gloved hands of cultured women were given gladly into
+the grip of the grimiest workmen. Men and women of every rank exchanged
+greetings and congratulations. Everywhere it was “Rule Britannia!” “God
+save the King!” “England for ever!”
+
+Those who recalled the street scenes on Mafeking night declared they
+were as nothing compared with the wild and jubilant excitement of the
+present hour. Banners were slung across the streets; nearly every
+upper window displayed a flag of some sort; and, when darkness came,
+Chinese lanterns, lamps and candles, supplied the want of public
+lighting--which, however, was speedily restored.
+
+Any sailor who was met with casually was hoisted shoulder-high and
+carried through the thoroughfares amid cheering crowds. Thousands stood
+bare-headed before the Nelson Column in Trafalgar Square, while a young
+girl, with rapt face and glowing eyes, standing on the masonry, recited
+Tennyson’s National Song:
+
+ “There is no land like England
+ Where’er the light of day be;
+ There are no hearts like English hearts--
+ Such hearts of oak as they be.”
+
+A vast concourse also assembled before the broad façade of Buckingham
+Palace; and, undeterred by its silent emptiness and the myriads of
+white blinds, all drawn down, shouted lustily and again and again for
+King and Queen. “Three cheers for the Navy!” roared a stentorian voice,
+and with a swift and mighty response the crowd gave not three cheers,
+but nearer thirty.
+
+The next day, and the day after, and the day after that, the noise and
+the excitement were continued almost without abatement.
+
+Meanwhile there had taken place at Windsor Castle, amid surroundings of
+quietude and regal dignity, an interview fraught with great import to
+England, to Germany, and to the whole of Europe.
+
+Two mighty monarchs, constitutional rulers of great empires, came face
+to face, in circumstances of unexampled interest and embarrassment. It
+was a supreme moment, stupendous in the main problem that it presented,
+subtle and painful in the side-issues which that problem involved.
+For these were men, as well as monarchs. Not only were they men with
+like passions as we ourselves have, but the blood of a common ancestor
+flowed through the veins of each. The two were kith and kin.
+
+Nothing mean or petty could be said or done by King or Kaiser in that
+trying hour. The salutation of royal personages must be exchanged
+after the custom of the Courts. The ritual of State observance must
+be followed in all its detail. Yet, notwithstanding these formalities,
+each exalted personage was acutely conscious of the rough, the tragic,
+underlying elements of the unexampled situation.
+
+Neither could forget in that ironic moment the bombastic utterances of
+the royal captive, the vapouring allusion to the “mailed fist,” the
+“dry powder,” the “taut muscles,” and all the rest of it. Graver still
+were the recollections of the inspired press campaign against Great
+Britain, the manufactured grievances, the falsely imputed intrigues,
+all sequent to the unfriendly spirit shown in the memorable telegram
+to the President of the South African Republic. Worse than all was the
+evidence of enmity and jealousy afforded by the persistent increase
+of the German navy, the injurious uses to which Heligoland had been
+put, the enlargement of the Kaiser Wilhelm Canal, and the partial
+construction of a new naval base for the German fleet in the North Sea.
+
+Vaulting ambition had inspired these things, the overmastering
+obsession of a supposed divine right of empire. The proud possessor of
+a giant’s power had sought, and found, some pretext for gigantic deeds.
+
+And now the cup of humiliation had been presented to those proud lips.
+Like the great emperors of the past, whose dynasties had long lain in
+the dust, the modern monarch had to learn that kings propose, but One
+alone disposes; that He alone, above the water floods, “remains a King
+for ever.” This, indeed, was no triumphal entry into England’s capital.
+Not as William the Conqueror, but as William the Conquered, Kaiser
+William stood on English soil.
+
+But if there was humiliation on the one side, there was on the other
+not only righteous wrath, but kingly magnanimity.
+
+Of what precisely passed between the two august sovereigns no written
+record was preserved. They spoke as man to man. Nor was there any
+occasion for a formal treaty between the high contracting parties. King
+Edward, with the advice of his ministers, had already decided on the
+minimum of his requirements as representing the just demands of a great
+nation. Those requirements--absolutely inflexible, and not to be varied
+in any one particular--were as follows:
+
+Heligoland was to be restored to the British Crown. The captured
+warships were to be incorporated in the British Navy. If the new naval
+base on the North Sea were not forthwith dismantled and abandoned, the
+British fleet would bombard every German port in Europe.
+
+It was said that the Kaiser listened with knitted brow, and, after a
+brief pause, asked quietly:
+
+“What assurances does your Majesty require?”
+
+“Your Majesty’s word of honour,” was the answer.
+
+“It is not intended to treat me as a hostage?”
+
+“Your Majesty is free.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVI
+ THE BROTHERHOOD OF DEATH
+
+
+Far from the madding crowd of London, beyond sound of all the shouting
+and the tumult, they laid to rest, “each in his narrow cell,” Father
+Francis and Billy of Mayfair. The priest, after lingering for two days,
+had died in Charing Cross Hospital from heart failure, resulting from
+the injuries he had sustained in the memorable meeting in Trafalgar
+Square. For the moment, and to all seeming, the Bottle had triumphed
+over the Bible; but the preacher of the higher truth, being dead, yet
+spoke to the hearts of thousands, and many journeyed down from London
+to attend his funeral.
+
+It was the Duke, his father, who, hearing of Billy’s boyish impulse
+to avenge the murderous attack on his favourite son, decided that the
+London waif, who had paid for his temerity with his life, should not
+sleep his last sleep in a pauper’s grave. In life these two had been
+separated by an enormous social gulf. Rank and culture belonged to the
+son of the ducal house. In his veins flowed the blood of royalty--the
+blood of a lecherous monarch of the House of Stuart. But Billy?--Well,
+what mattered now? Death, the great leveller, had made such questions
+quite superfluous. Duke’s son and ragged outcast of the streets, they
+had entered into the same rest, and in death they were not divided.
+
+On Ranmore, one of the loveliest of the Surrey hills, they ended
+together the little journey of their mortal lives. The sun shone
+brightly on the churchyard; far overhead great billowy clouds, slow and
+majestic, sailed across the illimitable blue. The snow had vanished
+from the rolling hills. It might have been a day in early spring.
+
+“I am the resurrection and the life, said the Lord: he that believeth
+in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live; and whosoever liveth and
+believeth in me shall never die.... We brought nothing into this world,
+and it is certain we can carry nothing out. The Lord gave and the Lord
+hath taken away; blessed be the Name of the Lord.”
+
+When they came to the graveside, aristocrat and pauper came with the
+same promise of life and immortality. As each had borne the image of
+the earthy, so each should bear the image of the heavenly. The boast of
+heraldry availed nothing. The pomp of power was as an idle tale. This
+was “the inevitable hour” for one and all!
+
+The old duke, white-haired and tremulous, lifted his tired eyes to the
+far-off sky when they committed to the earth the body of his much-loved
+son. The old man was trying to grasp the “sure and certain hope!” He
+could not weep, as others wept, for “these our brothers.”
+
+But two stalwart men, standing close at hand, could not keep back their
+tears. There was a great lump in the bull throat of P. C. Dormer that
+nearly choked him when he looked on the last home of the child in the
+tragedy of whose life he had played a cruel and much-repented part. The
+strong, rough man had found a place for sorrow and remorse, and it was
+sanctified with tears.
+
+And Joe the stableman, he, too, passed his huge red hand across his
+smarting eyes, sorrowing much that he would see his little friend no
+more.
+
+“Man that is born of a woman hath but a short time to live and is full
+of misery. He cometh up and is cut down like a flower; he fleeth as it
+were a shadow and never continueth in one stay.”
+
+Yet, there remaineth a rest....
+
+“I heard a voice from heaven, saying unto me, Write, From henceforth
+blessed are the dead that die in the Lord: even so, saith the Spirit;
+for they rest from their labours.”
+
+In little groups, or one by one, the mourners went away; Aldwyth and
+Herrick together, passing down the church path--and onward down the
+path of life. The tottering duke, leaning on his eldest son, went home
+to his great, dull mansion; P. C. Dormer returned to night duty in the
+London streets; Joe the stableman went back to his horses in the mews.
+All, all the living left the lonely dead. Thus, one day, will you and I
+be left, alone in our long last sleep.
+
+The glow of the sun would wane; darkness would shroud the graves; the
+pale beams of the moon would rest there, and, in turn, the steely light
+of winter stars; the strong spring breeze would bend the grass, and the
+daisies would cluster there; the song of happy birds would come and
+go; the tender bud of hope, and the red ripeness of the autumn leaf;
+daybreak and sunset over the hills; summer and winter, seed-time and
+harvest,--till that great day of ripened grain, when the angels will be
+the reapers, and the harvest the end of the world.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVII
+ THE GREAT THANKSGIVING
+
+
+On the last day of the year there was a national service of
+thanksgiving in St Paul’s Cathedral. The rushing river of national
+feeling, at first tumultuous like the sound of many waters, had found a
+channel, deep and broad. The waters, being deep, were therefore still.
+It was a joyful and a pleasant, but also a solemn thing to be thankful.
+
+Vast numbers came from every quarter to attend the service; the highest
+and the lowest; the King and the Queen; the civic rulers; the restored
+judges of the land; the rich and the poor.
+
+Here in the vast cathedral church in by-gone years the voice of praise
+and thanksgiving had been raised on memorable occasions; a thanksgiving
+for the King when, as heir to the throne of England, he had come back
+from the very jaws of death; a thanksgiving for the long and prosperous
+reign of a Queen dear to the hearts of her people; but never before a
+thanksgiving such as this--so complex and so sudden in its causes, and
+following so swiftly on the perils from which the nation had been saved.
+
+The newly appointed Primate of London--a former Bishop of Stepney--was
+the preacher; but it was no set sermon that he preached. His Grace gave
+out no text, but every heart was thrilled by what fell from his lips:
+
+ “Love thou thy land, with love far-brought
+ From out the storied Past, and used
+ Within the Present, but transfused
+ Thro’ future time by power of thought.”
+
+He spoke of the patriotism that is sublime, and of the pride that goes
+before a fall: of
+
+ “True love turn’d round on fixed poles,
+ Love that endures not sordid ends,
+ For English natures, freemen, friends,
+ Thy brothers, and immortal souls.”
+
+True patriotism was instanced by the banished Jew, made cup-bearer to
+a heathen king, the man who sat down and wept when he learned that the
+walls of his beloved capital were broken down and the gates thereof
+burned with fire: the man who worked as well as wept; who inspired his
+compatriots and rebuilt the walls and gates of the city--trowel in one
+hand and sword in the other. “So built we the wall ... for the people
+had a mind to work.”
+
+Then the Primate turned to the wonderful story of the first Babylon. He
+spoke of the king who dreamed dreams wherewith his spirit was troubled,
+dreams that could only be interpreted--not by court magicians and
+astrologers--by the servant of One who changeth the times and seasons,
+removeth kings, giveth wisdom to the wise, and knowledge to them that
+know understanding. He alone “revealeth the deep and secret things and
+knoweth what is in the darkness.”
+
+Who should dare to say, demanded the Archbishop, that even now, in the
+twentieth century, the vision of the eastern king was not receiving
+fresh fulfilment--that mystical vision of the kingdom of gold, the
+kingdom of brass, and the kingdom of iron--iron that was mixed with
+miry clay?
+
+The king whose dreams troubled him had many warnings. When he set
+up his golden idol on the plain of Dura, he was warned. In his rage
+and fury with the Jews who dared to disobey him, he cast the three
+righteous men into the seven-fold heated furnace, and lo! he saw four
+men walking loose in the midst of the fire, unhurt; and the form of the
+fourth was like the Son of God. Thus was he warned again.
+
+So when the heart of Nebuchadnezzar was lifted up, and his mind
+hardened, he was deposed from his kingly throne, and they took his
+glory from him.
+
+And Belshazzar his son, he, too, was warned by that mysterious writing
+on the wall. In that same night was he slain and Darius took the
+kingdom.
+
+And the prophet himself had visions of the future, visions of nation
+fighting against nation; of the four winds of heaven striving upon the
+great sea; of the four great beasts that came up from the sea, diverse
+from each other--the first like a lion, the second like the bear, the
+third like a leopard, and the fourth dreadful and terrible and strong
+exceedingly, with teeth of iron. Who, again asked the preacher, should
+dare to say that the vision of the great sea and the great powers might
+not have further fulfilment among the nations and navies of to-day?
+
+You Englishmen and Englishwomen, the Primate went on, leaning forward
+and looking into the myriads of upturned faces, should lay these
+thoughts to heart. The prophetic vision is not concerned with the kings
+of the earth alone. No king can stand without national support, and the
+nation is made up of individuals. Stands England where she did? Was
+Great Britain worthy of continued greatness, and able to maintain it?
+Think of her history! “England, bound in with the triumphant sea, whose
+rocky shore beats back the envious siege of watery Neptune.” Would this
+dear England ever be “bound in with shame, with inky blots and rotten
+parchment bonds?” This England, that was wont to conquer others! If
+we loved England, then in a just quarrel we must fight for England,
+holding the “water-walled bulwarks still secure, and confident from
+foreign purposes,”--pulsing the “little body with a mighty heart.” Each
+man must bear his part, a part worthy of his nationality, inspired with
+the belief of the English statesman whose statue stood in the heart of
+London--that life is a great and honourable calling, not a mean and
+grovelling thing to be shuffled through.
+
+In some sense they had regarded themselves as a chosen people. Let
+them remember that older nation once chosen, but now scattered and
+oppressed. High above the towering dome of that cathedral where they
+worshipped, the cross stood out year after year--a warning, a symbol,
+an inspiration. It meant self-sacrifice. Self-sacrifice was the
+watchword, and the example, of the great Captain of their salvation.
+Nothing would avail an England, or an Englishman, ashamed to confess
+the faith of Christ crucified, a deserter of the banner under which
+Christians were pledged to continue faithful soldiers and servants
+until their lives’ end. A Christ-less England would be an England lost!
+
+And how would England stand without the witness of the ancient Church
+in England? The Babylonian king set up a god of gold on the plain of
+Dura; but had not a god of gold been set up in many an English heart?
+“Born a man, and died a grocer!” Could epitaph be more withering in its
+contempt and irony? Yet an honest grocer was better than a dishonest
+Christian. If we were a nation of shopkeepers and our only shrine
+was the till, let us at least be honest shopkeepers--not a nation of
+hypocrites as well; let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we die! Yes,
+better an honest pagan than a bogus Christian.
+
+A thrill went through the vast congregation, eagerly listening to the
+preacher’s words; and, as he paused, a pallid man, dressed in the
+fashion of the day, started to his feet, his hands outstretched, and
+cried with a loud voice, “What shall we do to be saved?”
+
+The effect was magnetic. At least five hundred persons instantly rose
+in like manner. It was manifest that they, too, in the awakened
+anguish of their souls, sought an answer to that momentous question.
+The Archbishop, looking down on them, was greatly moved. For they
+were as sheep having no shepherd. Then he gave the answer, strong and
+vehement:
+
+“If you would be saved, away with shams and false pretences! There
+is only one hope for humankind; only one star to follow--the Star of
+Bethlehem. Guided by that blessed star, you can reach the port of
+peace.”
+
+With hands covering their faces, the people, sobbing here and there,
+sank back into their seats.
+
+The preacher continued in a ringing voice:
+
+“I demand, therefore, dost thou renounce the devil and all his works?
+Dost thou renounce the vain pomp and glory of the world, with all
+covetous desires of the same, and the carnal desires of the flesh? Dost
+thou, in very truth, renounce these things, or in thine heart of hearts
+dost thou mean to follow and be led by them?”
+
+This time at least a thousand voices gave the answer: “I renounce them
+all.”
+
+“Dost thou believe in the remission of sins; the resurrection of the
+flesh; and everlasting life after death? What is your answer?”
+
+The answer came from all the worshippers: “All this I steadfastly
+believe!”
+
+“Remember,” said the preacher, “Christianity was a revelation; not a
+rule of thumb. We must begin at the beginning, and remember our Creator
+in the days of our youth. Beware of sectarian quarrels, which keep the
+one Book worth all the others in the world from the children of the
+nation. How shall they learn without a teacher?
+
+“And you who are no longer children, beware of intellectual pride. If
+in this life only you have hope you are of all men most miserable.
+Do you refuse to believe in everything you cannot understand? What
+stupendous folly! What mad presumption! Readers, scholars, writers,
+some of you, wise in your own conceits, you say you cannot credit
+anything outside the laws of Nature. But you and I and all of us as
+yet are only children crying in the night, and with no language but a
+cry. Only one man ever born into this world could understand Nature’s
+laws in all their fulness, and that Man was divine. Thus far shalt thou
+come, and no farther! What men call supernatural may only be natural
+law on a plane beyond our ken. Nature works slowly and in evolutionary
+cycles. Yes; but Nature also works--so far as human eyes can see--in
+a moment, in the twinkling of an eye--in tidal waves, the lightning
+flash, the earthquake; in volcanic outbursts, in the overwhelming
+avalanche. Humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God, and let no
+creature dare to limit the immeasurable powers of his Creator.
+
+“Do you who disbelieve want your wives and children to be unbelievers?
+You don’t; but you leave it to them to worship in our churches.
+And you yourselves, if not unbelieving, at least half hearted, are
+holding feebly to the Faith with one hand, and with the other greedily
+grasping the pleasures of the world. Men of England, whither are you
+drifting? You cannot serve God and Mammon. Choose!--make your calling
+and election sure. Believe, as that man of towering intellect to whom
+this great church is dedicated, believed; as your own great countryman,
+William Ewart Gladstone, believed; as the great Lord Salisbury
+believed, and many another brilliant thinker who loved our England and
+her Church. Believe, as he believed who said, there are more things in
+heaven and earth than are dreamed of in our philosophy.
+
+“Those who walk in pride, He is able to abase. Never suppose that in
+this little world, this ante-chamber of life, where our own armchairs
+outlive us, we shall see otherwise than darkly through a glass. Not
+yet would be revealed the deep and secret things, and what is in the
+darkness. Patiently must we work out our national and our individual
+salvation, and with fear and trembling, lest what happened to the
+idolatrous nations of old should happen to ourselves. Wherein is London
+greatly better than Nineveh? Our idols are silver and gold, the work
+of men’s hands. Fire from heaven fell upon the Cities of the Plain. Is
+London free from what is earthly, sensual, devilish? Repent! Repent!
+lest this great Babylon, like that other Babylon, pass into nothingness.
+
+“Never forget! The faith and the works of Christianity are indissolubly
+bound up with the strength and greatness of England. What God hath
+joined together let no man put asunder.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Before the high altar, archbishop, bishops, dean, canons, and
+choristers, with glittering cross raised high, the organ pealing,
+raised the great song of praise. The long-drawn aisles and fretted
+vaults echoed the music of a nation’s worship. The people knelt in
+humble adoration as they sang: “We acknowledge Thee to be the Lord: All
+the earth doth worship Thee: The Father Everlasting.”
+
+It was a landmark in English history, a national acknowledgment
+that the Most High ruled in the Kingdom of Men, appointing over it
+whomsoever He would.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Twelve hours later the Old Year lay a-dying. Within the cathedral all
+was dark and silent. The voice of praise was hushed; the worshippers
+were gone. But the incense of adoration might be rising still, far
+above the mighty, shadowed dome, far above the night-encircled cross.
+
+ “Have you read in the Talmud of old,
+ In the Legends the Rabbins have told
+ Of the limitless realms of the air--
+ Have you read it--the marvellous story
+ Of Sandalphon, the Angel of Glory,
+ Of Sandalphon, the Angel of Prayer?”
+
+Erect--the Rabbins pictured the glorious angel, at the outermost gate
+of the City Celestial:
+
+ “And he gathers the prayers as he stands,
+ And they change into flowers in his hands,
+ Into garlands of purple and red;
+ And beneath the great arch of the portal,
+ Through the streets of the City Immortal
+ Is wafted the fragrance they shed.”
+
+And now outside the cathedral another multitude had gathered; saints
+and sinners, revellers and vulgarians. All sorts and conditions of
+men; the drunk and the half-drunk; the senseless bawlers of silly
+jokes; the maudlin bellowers of “Auld Lang Syne.” But, after all,
+these noisy people were but the tide-tossed scum and flotsam upon the
+surface of a broad, strong stream. The crowd, like the nation, had had
+a lesson--stern, convincing--and it was sound at core.
+
+As the solemn hour drew near, a scarcely-broken silence fell upon the
+multitude. From the hearts of many rose unspoken prayers.
+
+High in the winter night the London bells were chiming, ringing the Old
+Year out, ringing the New Year in.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hark to the bells!...
+
+ “The year is dying in the night,
+ Ring out, wild bells!...
+
+ The year is going, let him go;
+ Ring out the false, ring in the true.”
+
+Hark, they are chiming still!...
+
+ “Ring out the feud of rich and poor
+ Ring in redress to all mankind.”
+
+Chime on, chime on!...
+
+ “Ring out old shapes of foul disease;
+ Ring out the narrowing lust of gold;
+ Ring out the thousand wars of old,
+ Ring in the thousand years of peace.”
+
+Ring out! Ring in!...
+
+ “Ring out the darkness of the land,
+ Ring in the Christ that is to be.”
+
+The “faithless coldness of the times,”--was that, too, dying with the
+Old? Were “sweeter manners, purer laws” to dawn with the first daybreak
+of the New?
+
+No answer came from earth or heaven. The deep and secret things were
+not revealed; none knew what was in the darkness of the future.
+
+The ringers paused. Hush! the hour is striking.
+
+The last vibration quivers on the air. Deep silence falls.
+
+Then once again the bells ring out--clear-toned, hopeful, strong:
+
+ “_There’s a new foot on the floor, my friend,
+ And a new face at the door, my friend,
+ A new face at the door!_”
+
+
+ THE END
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ PRINTED BY M^{c}LAREN AND CO., LTD., EDINBURGH
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75548 ***
diff --git a/75548-h/75548-h.htm b/75548-h/75548-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..cfef8fe
--- /dev/null
+++ b/75548-h/75548-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,11313 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html>
+<html lang="en">
+<head>
+ <meta charset="UTF-8">
+ <title>
+ A time of terror | Project Gutenberg
+ </title>
+ <link rel="icon" href="images/cover.jpg" type="image/x-cover">
+ <style>
+
+body {
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+}
+
+ h1,h2,h3 {
+ text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
+ clear: both; font-weight: normal;
+}
+
+h2 {margin-bottom: 2em; margin-top: 4em; }
+
+p {
+ margin-top: .51em;
+ text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .49em;
+}
+
+.p1 {margin-top: 1em;}
+.p1b {margin-bottom: 1em;}
+.p2 {margin-top: 2em;}
+
+.p4 {margin-top: 4em;}
+.p6b {margin-bottom: 6em;}
+
+
+.big1 {
+ font-size: 110%;
+ }
+
+.big2 {
+ font-size: 130%;
+ }
+
+.big3 {
+ font-size: 140%;
+ }
+
+hr.tb {width: 30%; margin-left: 35%; margin-right: 35%; margin-top: 1.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;}
+
+
+
+div.chapter {page-break-before: always;}
+h2.nobreak {page-break-before: avoid;}
+
+.indent50 {margin-left: 50%;}
+
+.autotable {
+ margin-left: 25%;
+ margin-right: 25%;
+ width: 50%;
+}
+
+.x-ebookmaker .autotable {margin-right: auto; width: auto; margin-left: auto;}
+
+table.autotable { border-collapse: collapse; }
+table.autotable td,
+table.autotable th { padding: 0.25em; }
+
+.tdl {text-align: left;}
+.tdr {text-align: right;}
+.tdc {text-align: center;}
+
+.pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */
+ /*visibility: hidden;*/
+ position: absolute;
+ left: 92%;
+ font-size: small;
+ text-align: right;
+ font-style: normal;
+ font-weight: normal;
+ font-variant: normal;
+ text-indent: 0;
+} /* page numbers */
+
+
+
+
+.center {text-align: center;}
+
+.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+
+.allsmcap {font-variant: small-caps; text-transform: lowercase;}
+
+
+/* Images */
+
+img {
+ max-width: 100%;
+ height: auto;
+}
+img.w100 {width: 100%;}
+
+
+.figcenter {
+ margin: auto;
+ text-align: center;
+ page-break-inside: avoid;
+ max-width: 100%;
+}
+
+
+/* Poetry */
+/* uncomment the next line for centered poetry */
+ .poetry-container {display: flex; justify-content: center;}
+.poetry-container {text-align: center; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em;}
+.poetry {text-align: left; margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 5%;}
+
+
+/* Transcriber's notes */
+ .tnote {border: dashed 1px; margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%; padding-bottom: 1.5em; padding-top: 1.5em;
+ padding-left: 1.5em; padding-right: 1.5em; margin-top: 4em; margin-bottom: 4em; }
+
+/* Illustration classes */
+.illowp15 {width: 15%;}
+.x-ebookmaker .illowp15 {width: 100%;}
+.illowp45 {width: 45%;}
+.x-ebookmaker .illowp45 {width: 100%;}
+
+ </style>
+</head>
+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75548 ***</div>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp45" id="i_cover" style="max-width: 106.6875em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="cover" title="bookc">
+</figure>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="tnote">
+ <p class="center p4 big1">TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:</p>
+
+<p>In the plain text version text in <em>italics</em> is enclosed by underscores
+(_italics_), <span class="smcap">Small Capitals</span> are represented in upper case as in SMALL
+CAPS and the sign ^ before any letter or text, like ^e, represents "e"
+as a superscript.</p>
+
+<p>A number of words in this book have both hyphenated and non-hyphenated
+variants. For the words with both variants present the one more used
+has been kept.</p>
+
+<p>Obvious punctuation and other printing errors have been corrected.</p>
+
+<p>The original cover art has been modified by the transcriber and is
+granted to the public domain.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="tb x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+
+<div class="chapter"><h1>A<br>
+TIME OF TERROR</h1>
+
+<p class="center big2">The Story of a Great Revenge</p>
+
+<p class="center">(A.D., 1910)</p>
+
+<p class="indent50 p2">This England never did, nor never shall<br>
+Lie at the proud foot of a conqueror,<br>
+But when it first did help to wound itself.</p>
+
+<p class="indent50" style="padding-left: 10em"><em>King John</em></p>
+
+<p class="center p4"><em>SECOND EDITION</em></p>
+
+<p class="center p4">LONDON<br>
+GREENING &amp; CO., LTD.<br>
+1906</p>
+
+<p class="center p1">[<em>All Rights Reserved</em>]</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="center p4"><em>Copyright<br>
+in<br>
+The United Kingdom<br>
+of<br>
+Great Britain and Ireland<br>
+in the<br>
+Dominion of Canada<br>
+and in the<br>
+United States of America</em></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="indent50 p2" style="padding-left: 4em;"><i>Dec. 1905.</i></p>
+
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="center big2 p4">
+<small>Dedicated</small><br>
+<br>
+<small>TO</small><br>
+<br>
+MY FELLOW CITIZENS<br>
+<br>
+<small>IN<br>
+<br>
+“THIS GREAT BABYLON,”<br>
+<br>
+AND,<br>
+<br>
+IN PARTICULAR,<br>
+<br>
+TO MEMBERS OF THE THREE</small><br>
+<br>
+LEARNED PROFESSIONS</p>
+<br>
+<p class="indent50 p6b"><em>London: New Year’s Day, 1906.</em></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="center p4 big3"><em>CHARACTERS</em></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center p2 big1"><span class="smcap">Marcus White</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">Sir John Westwood</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">Bobby Herrick</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">Father Francis</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">Detective-Inspector Henshaw</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">Billy of Mayfair</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">The Marquis of Downland</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">The Lord Mayor</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">Raggett the Raver</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">Joe the Stableman</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">P.C. Dormer</span></p>
+<br>
+
+<p class="center big1"><span class="smcap">Aldwyth Westwood</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">Molly Barter</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">Billy’s Grandmother</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">Mrs Joe</span></p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p class="center big2"><span class="smcap">Crowned Heads</span></p>
+
+<br>
+<p class="center big1"><em>Episcopate</em>—</p>
+
+<p class="center big1">
+<span class="smcap">The Archbishop of London (New Province)</span><br>
+
+<br>
+<em>Royal Navy</em>—<br>
+
+<span class="smcap">Vice-Admiral Sir Lambert Meade</span>, K.C.B.<br>
+</p>
+
+<br>
+<p class="big2 center"><em>Judges and Magistrates</em>—</p>
+<p class="center big1">
+<span class="smcap">Lord Malvern</span>, L.C.J.; <span class="smcap">Mr Justice Barling</span>;<br>
+<span class="smcap">Mr Harrowden</span><br>
+</p>
+<br>
+<p class="big2 center"><em>Counsel</em>—</p>
+<p class="center big1">
+<span class="smcap">Mr Duffus Jacobs</span>, K.C.; <span class="smcap">Mr Brill</span>, K.C.;<br>
+<span class="smcap">Mr Dawson Dalton</span><br>
+</p>
+<br>
+<p class="big2 center"><em>Medical Faculty</em>—</p>
+<p class="center big1">
+<span class="smcap">Dr Wilson Wake</span><br>
+<br>
+<span class="smcap">The Leaguers of London</span>, <span class="smcap">Police</span>, <span class="smcap">The Unemployed</span>, <span class="allsmcap">ETC.</span><br>
+</p>
+<br>
+
+<p class="center">[<em>Dramatic Rights secured</em>]</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="big2 center p4">CONTENTS</p>
+
+
+
+
+<table class="autotable">
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="tdl">&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="tdr">PAGE</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="tdc"><span class="smcap">Prologue</span>:</td>
+<td class="tdl">&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Part I.—A Heritage of Hate</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_9">9</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Part II.—Rivals in Love</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_17">17</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="tdl">&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="tdl">&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl">&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="tdc"><span class="smcap">Chapters</span></td>
+<td class="tdl">&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">I.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">London in 1910</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_21">21</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">II.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">At the New Bailey</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_29">29</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">III.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Leaguers’ First Move</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_36">36</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">IV.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Case that Failed</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_46">46</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">V.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Leaguers’ Second Move</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_54">54</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">VI.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Murder of Dr Grady</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_61">61</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">VII.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Love on the Leas</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_69">69</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">VIII.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Sir John Breaks Down</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_77">77</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">IX.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Father Francis at Folkestone</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_85">85</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">X.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Marcus White Returns</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_97">97</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XI.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Sign of the Spider</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_105">105</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XII.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The “Epoch” Runs Amok</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_115">115</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XIII.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Strange Outbreak at Queen’s Hall</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_125">125</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XIV.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Billy of Mayfair</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_132">132</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XV.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Shrine of Luxury and Pride</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_142">142</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XVI.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Mania that Laid Hold of London</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_152">152</a> <span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XVII.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Great Fire in Hyde Park</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_160">160</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XVIII.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Aldwyth Asks a Question</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_171">171</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XIX.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Lord Mayor Reads the Riot Act</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_178">178</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XX.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Leaguers at the Home Office</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_189">189</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XXI.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Devil’s Own on the Defensive</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_198">198</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XXII.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Bomb Brigade</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_208">208</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XXIII.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Cranks’ Corner</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_216">216</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XXIV.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Lower Critic</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_222">222</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XXV.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Marcus White Gives Orders</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_231">231</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XXVI.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Capture of the Judges</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_239">239</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XXVII.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Black Christmas</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_251">251</a> </td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XXVIII.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">In Trafalgar Square</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_260">260</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XXIX.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Billy’s Message</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_266">266</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XXX.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Fate of Portsmouth Dockyard</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_276">276</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XXXI.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Naval Battle off Plymouth</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_285">285</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XXXII.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Marcus White and the Mob</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_296">296</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XXXIII.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Foreign Secretary</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_306">306</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XXXIV.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Eagle in the Lion’s Jaws</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_314">314</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XXXV.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The King and the Kaiser</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_318">318</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XXXVI.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Brotherhood of Death</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_324">324</a> </td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1.0em;">XXXVII.</td>
+<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Great Thanksgiving</span></td>
+<td class="tdr" style="padding-right: 1em;"><a href="#Page_328">328</a> </td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="center p4 big3" >A Time of Terror</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >PROLOGUE<br>
+<small>(A.D. 1885)</small></h2>
+
+
+<h3>PART I<br>
+<small>A HERITAGE OF HATE</small></h3>
+
+
+<p>The Court was densely crowded, and an
+atmosphere already vitiated became doubly
+poisonous now that the ushers had lighted
+the gas. The flaring jets revealed on every
+side the flushed and strained faces of those
+who were eagerly waiting for the verdict.
+A great number of women had been present
+at the Old Bailey throughout the trial—women
+of fashion, eager to be thrilled by
+the most potent sensation of the hour, and
+women of the lower orders, mostly Irish.
+A babble of excited conversation arose directly
+the judges and the jury left the Court.
+There were three judges, for this was an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span>
+alleged case of treason felony. In technical
+language the four prisoners were indicted for
+having feloniously compassed, devised, and
+intended to depose our Lady the Queen
+from the style, honour, and royal name of
+the Imperial Crown of the United Kingdom,
+and further that they, with divers other
+persons unknown, did manifest such intent
+by certain overt acts; all of which was set
+out with the customary amount of verbiage
+in the indictment.</p>
+
+<p>Reduced to plain English, the actual charge
+was that the accused had purchased arms
+and ammunition for distribution amongst a
+revolutionary brotherhood; that they had
+been concerned in storing gunpowder and
+other explosive materials for the purpose
+of wrecking public buildings and overthrowing
+the Government of the Queen. Chester
+Castle, with its great store of arms, was to
+be seized. Arms were to be transmitted in
+piano packing-cases by the mail train from
+Euston, and the express was to be held up
+on the route to Holyhead. Thereafter the
+rails were to be torn up, the telegraph wires
+cut, and an armed band of two thousand
+men was to take forcible possession of the
+mail boat and land in due course on the
+Irish coast.</p>
+
+<p>None of these things, beyond the purchase<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span>
+of a limited quantity of arms and ammunition,
+had really come to pass; but, as usual,
+the inevitable informer had revealed the
+alleged plot to the Government. Four arrests
+had been made, but the principal efforts of
+the prosecution were vigorously employed to
+obtain the conviction of one prisoner in
+particular—Michael White.</p>
+
+<p>This prisoner was a journalist, hitherto
+living in one of the suburbs of London, and
+acting as correspondent for certain journals
+in Ireland and in America. Under a search
+warrant the police had ransacked every
+corner of his house. They found what purported
+to be an incriminatory letter written
+in invisible ink, also a glass tube containing
+a liquid which, when tested by the Government
+analyst, was proved to contain crystals.
+These crystals, if dissolved in water, could
+be used for the purpose of making impressions
+on paper, and such impressions would
+be invisible until copperas or certain other
+chemicals had been applied. Beyond these
+discoveries and the evidence of the informers,
+there was but little to connect Michael White
+with the alleged conspiracy.</p>
+
+<p>The prisoner was a handsome, middle-aged
+man, whose intellectual face was in striking
+contrast with those of the two shifty-eyed
+and cringing informers, on whom from time<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span>
+to time he bent looks of infinite disgust and
+scorn. The sympathy of not a few was
+with the accused; but so strenuous was the
+conduct of the prosecution, and so adverse
+the judicial summing up, that only one result
+could be expected from the trial.</p>
+
+<p>One member of White’s family was present
+through the long and agonising trial—the
+prisoner’s only son, and there was a double
+bitterness in the young man’s heart as hour
+by hour he saw the net being weaved about
+his father, for he, himself, had his own
+personal reason for hating Westwood, the
+zealous junior counsel for the Crown. When
+the fierce eyes of young Marcus White met
+the barrister’s, the latter shifted his gaze,
+fumbled with his papers, or made a show
+of entering into conversation with other
+counsel. The prisoner’s son watched these
+poor devices with a contemptuous smile.
+A complex, burning sense of wrong filled his
+breast. The private wrong which he believed
+had been done to himself by Westwood,
+blended, as it were, with the wrong that he
+conceived was being done to his father; and
+this in turn was interwoven with the sense
+of wholesale wrong inflicted during centuries
+upon prisoners and captives who had come
+within the iron grip of English criminal law.</p>
+
+<p>Marcus White, like his father, was a man<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span>
+of no small intellectual power. A journalist
+who is to write anything worth reading must
+read much before he writes, and the prisoner’s
+son had read much. At one time it had
+been intended that he should join the army
+of advocates, but he turned away with repugnance
+after a preliminary survey of the
+law. Later, his father, to whom he was
+devotedly attached, gave him some training
+in his own profession, the profession of the
+pen. The elder White had long had in hand
+a book on the subject of barbarous punishments,
+and his son diligently assisted him
+in looking up and collating ancient records
+of the shocking violence in times past done
+to humanity under the sanction of the law.
+He knew that the English Criminal Code
+included at one time nearly two hundred
+offences punishable with death; he knew
+that this dreadful catalogue comprised innumerable
+offences of the most trifling character,
+while it omitted enormities of the
+utmost atrocity.</p>
+
+<p>A study of these penal statutes and their
+ruthless application had shattered his instinctive
+reverence for the law and its administration.
+He had learnt to see in the
+sanguinary monuments of so-called justice
+the oppression of the strong, the cruelty of
+the cowardly, a terrible revelation of “man’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>
+inhumanity to man.” His mind revolted at
+the idea of a divine right in kings to hang,
+draw, and quarter any one who criticised their
+conduct or advocated another form of
+government. It was, he held, only the
+<em>Lex talionis</em>, supported by force, and all the
+traps and complexities of criminal pleading
+were but the miserable devices of lawyers
+ever ready to prostitute a calling that in
+itself was noble. History proved it—history
+of which nearly every page was stained with
+judgments of expediency or the dark crime
+of judicial murder. “The truth, the whole
+truth, and nothing but the truth,” was supposed
+to have come from the poisonous lips
+of such creatures as Titus Oates. The judge—he
+might be a Jeffreys or a Scroggs—was
+but the Government in wig and ermine.
+The Crown counsel were paid pleaders for
+the party in power. The docile jury, ruled
+by the judge, were in effect the most obedient
+servants of the Government. This, then,
+was human justice—which in its true essence
+was supernal and divine. This was the
+Western Baal that men were called on to
+revere!</p>
+
+<p>Rightly or wrongly, thus he reasoned.
+From such thoughts there had sprung up
+and still was growing and destined to grow
+in the mind of Marcus White a loathing for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span>
+the law and a desire for vengeance on all
+who followed it as servitors. Such were
+the feelings with which he had seen his own
+father caught in these dreadful toils; practised
+advocates, perjured witnesses, and crafty
+detectives, all combining to bring about the
+climax that was imminent.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>There was a cry of “Silence!” The jury
+were stumbling back into the box; the
+judges returned to the bench. Amid a breathless
+stillness the Clerk of Arraigns put the
+accustomed questions: “Do you find the
+prisoner, Patrick Desmond, guilty or not
+guilty?”—“Not guilty.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you find the prisoner, John O’Leary,
+guilty or not guilty?”—“Not guilty.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you find the prisoner, Robert Dale,
+guilty or not guilty?”—“Not guilty.”</p>
+
+<p>Then, last of all, “Do you find the prisoner,
+Michael White, guilty or not guilty?” The
+pale face of the foreman twitched; there
+was a momentary hesitation in his manner.
+Every ear was strained to catch the verdict.
+Then, in a low voice, it came,—“Guilty.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a swift scratching of pens. The
+Clerk of Arraigns was recording the verdict
+on the parchment of the long indictment,
+the judge was noting it, the counsel were
+indorsing the result upon their briefs, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span>
+the eyes of all others were on the face of the
+prisoner at the bar.</p>
+
+<p>“Michael White,” said the Clerk of Arraigns,
+“you stand convicted upon this
+indictment. Have you any cause to show
+why the Court should not pass judgment
+upon you?”</p>
+
+<p>“I have to say,” answered the prisoner,
+in a clear, strong voice, “that I had no hand
+in this so-called plot. My conviction has
+been brought about by perjured evidence
+and trickery; but, my lord, do not suppose
+that I shall whine for mercy. I am not the
+first man to suffer for a cause. I love my
+native land, and I hate those who oppress
+it. If my life could be the price of justice
+to Ireland and the Irish I would gladly lay
+it down; if the hand that I now raise to
+heaven could bring vengeance on those who
+have wronged us I should rejoice; and
+though death or prison-house make me powerless,
+with my last breath I would whisper
+to my son to carry on the work.”</p>
+
+<p>For a moment the prisoner’s face was
+turned towards his son’s, and there were
+those in Court who saw and afterwards recalled
+the answering look.</p>
+
+<p>Then Michael White received, unmoved,
+his sentence.</p>
+
+<p>Penal servitude for life.</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span></p>
+
+<h3>PART II<br>
+<small>RIVALS IN LOVE</small></h3>
+
+
+<p>“Stand aside,” said Westwood, in a voice
+which he vainly strove to steady.</p>
+
+<p>“Not yet,” was the savage answer;
+“you’ve got to listen!”</p>
+
+<p>The two men faced each other in the calm
+starlight of the April evening. The Embankment
+was almost deserted save for the
+huddled, heedless outcasts on the benches.
+A few hansoms rattled westward; a few
+small vessels, with sails spread, moved ghostly
+and silent on the swirling river. Nature’s
+placidity was in strange contrast with the
+fiery passion that flamed in the eyes of
+Marcus White and found expression in his
+threatening gestures. Both men were pale;
+their facial muscles tense. But the pallor
+of the one was begotten of anger and hatred.
+With Westwood it was the outcome of nervous
+apprehension, if not of actual fear.</p>
+
+<p>“This is folly,” he said, with a better effort
+at self-command. “So far as I am concerned
+you have nothing to complain of——”</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing to complain of,” exclaimed
+White. “What! You steal the girl who
+was mine. Yes, mine,—until you sneaked
+in between us——”</p>
+
+<p>“That is not true, White.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I say you stole her—she was beguiled
+away from me. I was poor, and likely to
+be poorer. You had your profession, your
+respectability, and your prospects. Curse
+you! You’re not fit to touch her hand.
+Nor am I. I know that well enough; but
+I love her, and always shall. She was everything
+to me—my strength, my hope—till
+you stepped in; and to-night I’d think no
+more of taking you by the throat and ending
+your mean life than I would of crushing a
+beetle or any other filthy thing beneath my heel.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry if you think——” began Westwood.
+Then he paused, half ashamed of
+his own propitiatory tone, but debating how
+he could appease the fury of his enemy and
+escape from a situation which had become
+so threatening.</p>
+
+<p>“And not content with taking her from
+me,” the other went on, drawing a step
+nearer and speaking with increased intensity,
+“you stood up in Court to prosecute my
+father. You and the others have helped to
+send him into slavery for life. The prosecution
+was a lie, I say, and you lied as much
+as any of the witnesses. Not on oath; that
+wasn’t wanted. You saw your chances, and
+you laid hold of them. You got the advertisement
+you wanted. There was deviltry
+in your pretended moderation. But you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span>
+know the tricks of your trade—your looks
+and gestures to the jury said what you dared
+not put in words. He was in the dock and
+you were at the bar, with all its privileges
+and all its honourable traditions! Faugh!
+You sickened me. Yours was the face I
+watched; not the judge’s; not the foreman’s
+when he stood up and gave the verdict——”</p>
+
+<p>“Let me pass, man; you’re acting like
+a madman,” said the barrister.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah! You’re afraid of me. Coward!
+coward! You daren’t deny it.”</p>
+
+<p>Westwood glanced round. He had been
+kept late at his chambers in Paper Buildings,
+and near the corner of Temple Avenue
+had come suddenly upon this enemy whom,
+of all men, he least desired to meet. The
+stream of wheeled traffic came steadily across
+Blackfriars Bridge and branched off right
+and left, but on the footway of the Embankment
+still scarcely a creature was to
+be seen. Westwood spoke again.</p>
+
+<p>“I only did my duty. The brief came
+to me because of the illness of another man,
+and I was bound to take it. You ought to
+understand that legal etiquette——”</p>
+
+<p>“Legal etiquette!” exclaimed White scornfully,
+“etiquette that allows you lawyers to
+libel other men and twist and turn the truth
+to suit your case. Etiquette that justifies<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span>
+your taking fees you don’t earn, and neglecting
+cases when it suits you. For you and
+your brood there is no sort of penalty. You
+pose as good citizens. You talk yourselves
+into Parliament, and fawn on the Government
+when there are places to be given away. You
+sit on the Bench and draw a year’s salary
+for little more than half a year’s work, and
+send to penal servitude men in whose presence
+you ought to stand bare-headed.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t stay here and listen to your
+raving,” said Westwood angrily.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ve got the best of it at present.
+You’ve had us every way,” persisted White.
+“There’s nothing left for me in England.
+That suits your purpose, too. But, mark
+my words, Westwood, I haven’t done with
+you. Sooner or later the tables shall be
+turned. I swear by heaven they shall!
+Some day you’ll hear of me again!”</p>
+
+<p>Ending, he spat on him. Then, with a
+contemptuous gesture, turned away. Westwood,
+with a movement of disgust and anger,
+took two steps as if to follow him; then
+hesitated, stopped.</p>
+
+<p>Marcus White did not even condescend
+to turn his head, but, striding eastward,
+passed into the shadows of the London night.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center big1 p2">END OF PROLOGUE</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER I<br>
+<small>LONDON IN 1910</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>An Englishman returning to his native land
+after an absence of twenty-five years, might
+not at first discover much difference in the
+look of London. There stood the old familiar
+landmarks—Buckingham Palace, St James’s,
+the Marble Arch, Apsley House, Westminster
+Abbey, the Houses of Parliament, the National
+Gallery, the British Museum, St Paul’s, the
+Tower, the Monument, and many another
+well-remembered building. There were new
+hotels, new theatres, new buildings of all
+sorts, and at least one notable new thoroughfare.
+In the great arteries of business the
+old familiar thunder of the traffic rose louder
+than ever, with the modern addition of a
+new smell and a new noise—the smell and
+the whir of the motor-car. The mean streets
+were as mean as ever; the contrast between
+this and that locality more than ever noticeable.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span></p>
+
+<p>And the people, save for the scarcely
+perceptible change in fashion of dress, at first
+looked pretty much the same. There were
+more loafers, more wastrels, more sprawling
+scarecrows of humanity in the parks, and
+along the Embankment. The richest city
+in the world still had thousands and more
+thousands of homeless, miserable creatures
+in its midst, thousands whom the State
+knew not how to save for their own sake, or
+for the service of England.</p>
+
+<p>It would be obvious to the returned native
+that the old country must long since have
+ceased to be a “merry England.” The look
+on the faces of the people was enough to
+settle that. The intent gaze, the joyless expression,
+told a convincing tale. Here and
+there might be seen a flower of beauty in the
+gigantic garden of weeds—a stalwart, handsome
+man, a “perfect woman, nobly plann’d.”
+Eyes of youth, looking eagerly upon the page
+of life, still shone with the glow of hope and
+happiness; young girls and young children,
+in their freshness and charm, still reminded
+the wayfarer that in the great design human
+beings were meant to be even more beautiful
+than the flowers of the field. But the vast
+crowd—what had come to it, and what was
+coming? Was the English race, as a race,
+growing not only plain, but positively ugly?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span></p>
+
+<p>When the home-comer found time to move
+about a little, he would discover that in
+many respects the changes wrought in twenty-five
+years were greater than he had
+supposed. There were, in outlying districts,
+certain new or enlarged buildings of formidable
+aspect. These were the lunatic asylums
+of the capital. The inquirer had to learn
+that insanity had been advancing by leaps
+and bounds. Five years ago the number of
+London lunatics was nearly 27,000, and now
+there were nearly 100,000 certified lunatics in
+London. The workhouses also were larger
+and fuller than ever; and in the City, the
+scene of the trial of Michael White in 1885,
+the old court-house, haunted with the horrors
+of centuries, had given place to a new and
+imposing building, with greater accommodation
+for criminals. Solid, handsome, stony,
+the New Bailey frowned down on the new
+generation of Londoners. The City Fathers
+were justly proud of their modern palace of
+justice, though the question of what motto
+should be inscribed over its portal gave
+rise to some difference of opinion. A very
+reverend dean suggested, “Defend the children
+of the poor, and punish the wrong-doer,”
+or words to that effect. In what way the
+New Bailey was going to fulfil the first part of
+the text did not seem to be quite obvious<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span>
+but certainly the massive sessions-house
+looked quite equal to punishing the evil-doer.
+It did not occur to any one to recommend
+a text from the Koran, which declares that
+to endure and forgive is the highest achievement
+for humanity. Probably the City
+Fathers did not read the Koran. Besides,
+though in the interval we had allied ourselves
+with worshippers of Buddha, England
+as yet had no treaty with the unspeakable
+Turk. A quotation from the sacred
+book of Islam might have been considered
+out of place in a nominally Christian country.</p>
+
+<p>Such were some of the changes brought
+about in a quarter of a century. A person
+of cynical mind might well doubt whether
+they were changes for the better. For the
+rest, the people crowded hither and thither—underground,
+by tubes in all directions;
+above ground, on foot, and by vehicles of
+every description—mostly “motors.” By
+means of the latter insignificant persons
+tore through the streets, bound on errands
+of no importance. The private “motors,”
+of course, were owned by the pleasure-seekers
+of the age, who, for all their hurry, probably
+had nothing more urgent to do than to
+order luncheon at a fashionable restaurant,
+or purchase a box of cigarettes.</p>
+
+<p>Postal deliveries had been multiplied; telephone<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span>
+facilities increased. Everything was
+essentially modern; the great thing was to
+be up to date. But all the new facilities
+for saving time and trouble seemed to have
+resulted in leaving very little time for
+anything. Certainly there was no time
+for studying the past of England and of
+the British race; and as to the future, a
+great many persons believed that, for
+individuals, it was as mythical as Mrs
+Harris.</p>
+
+<p>The so-called educated classes, when not
+following the compulsory routine of their
+daily lives, were primarily engaged, as to
+the young men, in the frenzied pursuit of
+sport; and as to the young women, in the
+vital study of dress, varied by a steady
+perusal of their favourite authoresses in the
+domain of fiction.</p>
+
+<p>Newspapers, of course, were scanned—by
+the male population, at any rate; but people
+were not equal to the intellectual exertion
+of reading an unbroken column. News and
+notes had to be administered on the homœopathic
+principle, in scraps and snippets. And
+as the Bible had not yet been abridged, it
+necessarily followed that that was the very
+last book that up-to-date people could find
+time or interest to study.</p>
+
+<p>Lives of great men were still available<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span>
+to remind the moderns to make their lives
+sublime. But, then, the moderns could not
+find time or inclination to read the ancients.
+The sublime, in their view, was not only close
+to, but identical with, the ridiculous. Certainly
+they could not concern themselves
+with any nonsense about leaving footprints
+on the sands of time. Everybody, however,
+found time to read lengthy law reports arising
+from scandals in high life.</p>
+
+<p>A considerate aristocracy had of late done
+more and more to gratify public taste in that
+respect. The “upper classes” quarrelled
+about their children, about their heirlooms,
+about the “other man,” or the “secret
+woman,” about anything and everything.
+But, in spite of all, the average Briton, with
+inborn snobbishness, dearly loved a lord.
+Kind hearts were at a discount; but coronets
+fetched heavy premiums, especially in the
+American market. Broadly speaking, “simple
+faith” was non-existent; but Norman blood,
+however vitiated, covered in a double sense
+the multitude of sins. The Divorce Court
+had virtually become a public laundry, in
+which judge, counsel, and witnesses were
+constantly engaged in washing the soiled
+linen of the British peerage, a task varied,
+however, by similar operations on behalf of
+the ladies and gentlemen of the stage.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span></p>
+
+<p>The business classes, still solid, stolid, and
+worried, were mostly occupied in efforts to
+put money in the purse to an extent sufficient
+to meet the ever-growing expenses of modern
+life in England. By reason of this problem,
+there were fewer marriages than of yore;
+and, yet more significant, the birth-rate fell
+and fell. There was still great wealth in
+England, but it was in fewer hands. The
+Jew syndicates, the drink-sellers, the drapers,
+and the betting agents largely absorbed the
+nation’s gold. But the poor in pocket were
+by no means poor in spirit. Pampered and
+petted by political parties, the British working-man
+had realised the uses of the weapons
+placed at his disposal. He had a vote, and
+he used it, whereas the middle-class man did
+not. He had the weight of numbers behind
+him, and he meant to use that too. Yet,
+notwithstanding all these indications of decay,
+there was still in every rank a goodly leaven;
+the problem was, whether there was enough of
+it to leaven the whole lump, and resuscitate the
+nation. If, instead of the return of the native
+after only twenty-five years, the boy-poet,
+Keats, could have come back (from that bourn
+whence no traveller returns), after nearer a
+hundred years, it is to be feared he still
+would have found an “inhuman dearth of
+noble natures,” and still gloomier signs—</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span></p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“Of all the unhealthy and o’er-darkened ways<br>
+Made for our searching.”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>It was a covetous age, but it did not covet
+earnestly the best of gifts:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“Gentleness, Virtue, Wisdom, and Endurance,<br>
+These are the seals of that most firm assurance,<br>
+Which bars the pit over Destruction’s strength.”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>But Shelley, like Keats, was forgotten, or
+unknown. The age of mediocrity had no
+concern with intellectual giants; the period
+of small men, with parochial ideas, nothing
+in common with great conceptions of—</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“Love from its awful throne of patient power,”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>looking down upon humanity; or of humanity
+ready—</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“To suffer woes which Hope thinks infinite;<br>
+To forgive wrongs darker than death or night;<br>
+To defy Power, which seems omnipotent;<br>
+To love, and bear; to hope till Hope creates.”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>It was “Everyone for himself,” but not
+“devil take the hindmost”; because belief
+in the Prince of Darkness, like belief in many
+other things, had largely been discarded.</p>
+
+<p>The signs and the sounds of the times were
+many and various; but, not in England only—perhaps
+less in England than abroad—the
+most arresting was the diapason note of
+a steady march. The rolling rhythm of a
+mighty organ; the tramp, tramp, tramp of
+the many millions, drawing nearer and nearer.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER II<br>
+<small>AT THE NEW BAILEY</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>For three days public attention had been
+riveted on another sensational trial that had
+packed the New Bailey with an excited
+audience, and filled the report columns of the
+London papers. It was alleged that a daring
+and gigantic fraud had been practised on
+charitable persons, and, what was worse, not
+merely on persons, but on personages, highly
+placed in Church and State. Many distinguished
+victims had gone into the witness-box,
+and told their tale; and therein, for the
+time being, lay the main interest of the trial.
+Again, ladies of social celebrity, eager for a
+new sensation, had importuned city officials
+and the Judge himself for the equivalent of
+stalls to see the show. The Society journals
+gushingly described their excellent taste—in
+the matter of dress.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Malvern, the Chief Justice, had come
+down to try the case, and his counterfeit<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span>
+presentment in various attitudes of wisdom
+or weariness had figured in the <em>Daily Graphic</em>,
+with those of the prisoners, witnesses, and
+counsel. In this instance the prisoners themselves
+were persons of little interest or importance;
+for it was well understood that
+they were practically dummies, put forward,
+and, it was said, well paid for running the
+risk of capture. There was what the papers
+call a brilliant array of counsel. For the
+Crown, Sir John Westwood, Solicitor-General,
+led three other learned gentlemen, of whom
+“Bobby” Herrick was the least of juniors;
+and on the other side were ranged five advocates,
+the best the Bar could produce or
+money retain—the leaders being the well-known
+K.C.’s—Mr Duffus Jacobs, Mr Brill,
+and Mr Dawson Dalton.</p>
+
+<p>The elaborate nature of the conspiracy had
+only gradually been unfolded. It was amazing
+in its audacity; and yet in the minds of
+those who were specially qualified to read
+between the lines, there was a strong conviction
+that something much more serious
+lay behind. It was proved, indeed, that
+many thousands of pounds had passed into
+the coffers of the London Emigration League,
+but it was whispered that not one-tenth of
+the plunder had been brought to light or
+traced. The actual figures were believed to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span>
+run into scores of thousands, systematically
+collected under false pretences during a
+period of ten months and more. Dukes
+and lesser peers, with bishops, deans, prominent
+canons of the Church, and City magnates,
+had been made the puppets of the
+wire-pullers. As patrons they gave their
+names as well as their money to this well-sounding
+scheme, which professed to have
+for its object the sending of the loafers,
+wastrels, hooligans, and gaol-birds of the
+homeland to Canada, Australia, and South
+Africa. The project found favour, to some
+extent because it appealed indirectly to
+self-interest. The growing turbulence of
+the unemployed and unemployable seriously
+menaced social order, and the annual expenditure
+on prisons and workhouses had
+brought about an enormous increase in the
+rates.</p>
+
+<p>The scheme of the League, appealing thus
+to a spurious philanthropy, when once
+launched, was urged forward day by day
+under the auspices of illustrious names, and
+boldly pushed by means of page advertisements
+in the leading London newspapers. At
+the Mansion House the Lord Mayor presided
+over an enthusiastic meeting in support of
+the League. A resolution, moved by a
+member of the Royal Family, was received<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span>
+with plaudits and carried with acclamation.
+Thereafter, from leading assurance offices,
+and banking houses, and from City men of
+wealth and influence, munificent donations
+flowed in thick and fast. These gifts were
+freely advertised. The first list drew another
+list, and so forth. The snowball rolled and
+rolled.</p>
+
+<p>Doubt and suspicion, whispered here and
+there, were silenced or pooh-poohed. The
+League stood out boldly in the light of day.
+Its huge offices on Holborn Viaduct were filled
+with an army of clerks and typists by day;
+and by night its name was flashed ceaselessly,
+like that of a catchpenny soap or tobacco,
+before the eyes of wondering passers-by.
+Reports were issued to subscribers throughout
+the kingdom, who were given to understand
+that the colonial branches of the League
+were being steadily developed into working
+order, and that soon the farms and industries
+designed to provide honest labour for the outcasts
+of the crowded mother country would
+be available for the eager emigrants.</p>
+
+<p>The various colonies indicated were not
+quite keen in their appreciation of the project.
+Colonial journals protested against an influx
+of ex-convicts. Canada wanted population,
+but it must be population of the right sort;
+and Australia saw in the scheme a dangerous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span>
+likeness to the old transportation system,
+with all the attendant evils of a penal settlement.</p>
+
+<p>An officer of the League complained strongly
+in the <em>Times</em> of the misunderstanding and
+obstruction that thus hindered the fulfilment
+of their meritorious aims. Influential deputations
+of patrons and vice-presidents went to
+the Colonial Office, and waited also on the
+Prime Minister. The Crown agents of the
+Colonies were interviewed; and, the League,
+remaining prominently in evidence day by
+day, drew in, though more slowly as the
+months went by, additional subscriptions
+from all classes of society.</p>
+
+<p>Then, suddenly, a bolt fell from the blue.
+Mr Vandelaire, the owner-editor of the <em>Detector</em>,
+published an article in which he declared
+in round terms that the whole scheme
+was an imposture, a colossal fraud in root and
+branch. He boldly named the leading officials
+of the League as participators in a
+nefarious project, and politely informed them
+that if they considered the article was libellous,
+his solicitors (the much-paragraphed Messrs
+Ely &amp; Ely) would be ready to accept service
+of legal process. Other articles followed, and
+were eagerly read and quoted. They suggested
+that there was a rich and reckless
+man behind the League, the prime mover in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span>
+a mammoth project of deception; that the
+officials in question were, for the most part,
+figureheads; and finally, that robbery was
+not the real object of this daring and dangerous
+organisation.</p>
+
+<p>Questions were asked in Parliament, and
+evaded in the usual Governmental manner.
+The <em>Daily Telephone</em> devoted columns to the
+letters of correspondents, some of whom—guileless
+“constant readers” and others—angrily
+protested against “malicious attacks
+upon a great and meritorious scheme,” while,
+on the other hand, a few vehemently invoked
+the criminal law and declared that the
+Treasury Solicitor was a useless functionary
+unless, in such circumstances, he set the law
+in motion. Even the law officers of the
+Crown, sadly injured men who only wanted
+to draw their enormous salaries in peace and
+quietness, came in for criticism. Presumptuous
+persons actually wanted to know what
+they did for the money. It became quite
+manifest that the public demanded a prosecution
+of the League, and meant to have it.
+Ultimately, and, as it were with infinite
+reluctance, warrants were applied for and
+granted.</p>
+
+<p>A prolonged magisterial enquiry resulted,
+after endless remands, in the committal of
+the secretary and chief cashier of the League<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span>
+to take their trial at the Bailey. Such was
+the stage that had now been reached in this
+amazing drama of the day.</p>
+
+<p>On a certain Saturday in April—five-and-twenty
+years after Michael White went down
+into the silence of imprisonment, soon to
+pass into the greater silence of a yet narrower
+cell; five-and-twenty years after his son had
+uttered his savage warning to John Westwood,
+the sequel was beginning to take shape.</p>
+
+<p>As yet it was a little cloud, no bigger than
+a man’s hand; but the cloud was destined
+to grow to vast proportions, blacker and
+more threatening as time went on, shadowing
+London with a great terror of darkness, and
+begetting fear throughout the length and
+breadth of England.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER III<br>
+<small>THE LEAGUERS’ FIRST MOVE</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>In the Solicitor-General’s chambers, in Paper
+Buildings, Bobby Herrick was fuming, and
+looking at his watch. At intervals Wilson,
+the head-clerk, fussed in and out with briefs
+and papers. All the bundles were tied together
+with the inevitable tape; well may
+it blush red for the unholy and mendacious
+things it has enfolded! Westwood’s clerk,
+however, never blushed. For one thing, he
+had bargained so remorselessly for heavier
+fees at moments critical for his employer’s
+clients that he had lost the power of feeling
+shame. For another, he had a thick and
+doughy skin which preserved the same unhealthy
+hue at all times and in all places.
+He was a prosperous man, belonging, it was
+said, to the ranks of “gigmanity,” for he kept
+his pony chaise at Brixton. There were
+some who said that Josiah Wilson would sell
+his little soul for gold if only Mephistopheles<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span>
+would care to make a bid. He certainly had
+investments, and his average income from
+“clerk’s fees” (which immemorial usage
+extracts from the client, instead of from the
+advocate) was quite substantial. Many a
+struggling junior at the Bar would have been
+thankful to earn a third of that average income.
+Wilson really earned nothing except
+in the manner indicated; but he wore a
+silk-fronted frock-coat and a massive watch-chain.
+Nature, in its abhorrence of a straight
+line, had taken care that there should be
+no straight line in the waistcoat which that
+gleaming chain adorned.</p>
+
+<p>“Sir John’s late this morning,” said
+Wilson.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I know he is,” agreed Herrick impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>“Something wrong, I expect,” suggested
+Wilson, with a shifty look.</p>
+
+<p>“Good heavens! I hope not.” Herrick
+started up. “Why, everything depends on
+his being in Court. He’s going to claim his
+privilege and reply on the whole case for the
+Crown.”</p>
+
+<p>“He can’t if he isn’t there,” said Wilson.
+“He was a bit queer yesterday. Liver—that’s
+what it is,” he added hesitatingly.</p>
+
+<p>“Confound his liver!” Herrick muttered,
+under the slight cover of his fair moustache.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span>
+“Look here,” he said aloud, “why don’t you
+ring him up?”</p>
+
+<p>“I might do that,” assented Wilson, but
+not with enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>“He seemed all right in Court yesterday;
+a bit fagged, nothing more. It’s the House
+that knocks him up.”</p>
+
+<p>“He wasn’t all right last night when I
+took down that last report from Scotland
+Yard.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, go and ring them up, man. There’s
+hardly time to get there before the Court
+sits, and the Lord Chief won’t wait for anyone.”</p>
+
+<p>In a few moments he heard Wilson’s “Are
+you there?”—the feeble stereotyped inquiry
+of the telephonist—and presently the tinkle
+of the bell in the outer room in answer.
+Herrick felt nervous and excited—moved by
+an unaccountable apprehension of sinister
+happenings. So far as he knew at the moment,
+he had nothing to do but prompt his
+leader in regard to dates and details, if Westwood’s
+memory or private notes should fail
+him. The case had been a professional and
+financial godsend to the young barrister. Of
+course he knew perfectly well that the brief
+had not come to him as the just due of his
+talents. He was young, untried, and inexperienced—except
+in his capacity as one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>
+of the lesser “devils” in the Solicitor-General’s
+forensic Hades. The Treasury Solicitor gave
+him brief No. 4 because it was officially known
+that it would suit Sir John Westwood to
+have him in the case. He also happened to
+be a young fellow of good family, with a not
+very remote chance of succeeding to an earldom;
+finally, he was engaged to be married
+to Sir John Westwood’s only daughter.</p>
+
+<p>While Wilson seemed to be trying to extract
+intelligible information over the wires,
+Herrick took a turn up and down the slip of
+a back room in which he worked; then he
+stood awhile with his bulky brief tucked
+under his arm, and hands clasped behind him,
+gazing across the sunlit grass in the gardens.
+It was a perfect spring morning in point of
+weather, and Bobby, as the Bar called him,
+reflected how pleasant it would be if he and
+Aldwyth Westwood were up the river, or
+sauntering side by side along the woodland
+ways.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly the door behind him was opened,
+and the staccato voice of a boy-clerk announced,
+“Miss Westwood.”</p>
+
+<p>“Father can’t come! Isn’t it dreadfully
+unlucky?” she exclaimed, entering in a
+whirlwind of “frock and frill.”</p>
+
+<p>“Unlucky!” echoed Herrick, turning,
+aghast; “why, it’s the very—— Well, it’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span>
+simply disastrous! I firmly believe that unless
+he has the last word to the jury, they’ll
+acquit those scoundrels. The prosecution will
+fall through like a house of cards! Is anything
+serious the matter?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know—I can’t make out,” was
+the girl’s anxious answer. “He seems quite——well,
+almost stupefied this morning. Of
+course you know he’s not been well for some
+time past, and last night——” She paused,
+her lips trembling, tears in her tender
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear girl, I’m so awfully sorry,” said
+Herrick, taking her hand. “It can’t be
+helped. Don’t worry; the doctor will pull
+him round in no time. You sent for one, of
+course?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I telephoned to Queen Anne Street
+before I left.”</p>
+
+<p>“What message did your father send
+me?”</p>
+
+<p>“None at all—isn’t it dreadful? He
+seemed quite indifferent, and, as I told you,
+almost stupefied. When I questioned him,
+he seemed to have no power to answer clearly.
+When he spoke, his voice was thick and I
+could hardly understand a word he said.”</p>
+
+<p>“Good heavens! It sounds as if some
+drug had been at work. I suppose he
+never——?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I am quite sure he never takes a drug
+of any sort,” was the girl’s emphatic answer
+to the unfinished question.</p>
+
+<p>“No, of course not, of course not,” said
+her lover soothingly; then, looking once
+more at his watch: “Well, I ought to see
+our other leader at once, that’s clear.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s Mr Boulton, isn’t it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Boulton. Look here, will you come
+down to the Bailey in my hansom, and we’ll
+talk about this on the way?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I can do that, and then drive home
+again,” she agreed readily.</p>
+
+<p>“And you must tell Sir John he needn’t
+worry. I daresay the case will work out all
+right, after all.”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t think so really,” said Aldwyth,
+looking with her clear eyes into his.</p>
+
+<p>And in his heart of hearts he did not.</p>
+
+<p>Within a few minutes they were driving
+eastward as fast as the congested traffic of
+the street, alleged to have been specially
+beloved by Dr Johnson, would permit. On
+Blackfriars Bridge, cabs, omnibuses, vans,
+and vehicles of all sorts, held back by the
+raised hand of the constable on duty, were
+let loose just as the hansom in which the
+lovers sat had reached the end of Fleet Street.
+There was nothing unusual or remarkable
+in being blocked. But what struck Herrick<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span>
+as distinctly odd was the vast number of low-class
+pedestrians who were to be noticed
+streaming over the bridge from the Surrey
+side, and turning to the right up Ludgate
+Hill. The crowd impeded the vehicular traffic
+under the railway bridge, and blocked the
+narrow turning which gave access to that
+ancient bit of London, still popularly known
+as the Old Bailey. As Herrick stood up to
+pay the cabman presently, he noticed with
+surprise that other streams of people of the
+same low order seemed to be converging
+from Holborn, Giltspur Street, and Newgate
+Street.</p>
+
+<p>What did it mean? When he had sent
+Aldwyth off in the hansom with a lover’s
+look for herself and a last message of sympathy
+for her father, he turned to Henshaw,
+the detective inspector, who was
+standing near counsel’s entrance to the
+Courts.</p>
+
+<p>“Where’s all this riff-raff coming from,”
+asked the barrister.</p>
+
+<p>“Slums,” said Henshaw briefly.</p>
+
+<p>“But why?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah! that’s the question! Honourable
+members of this precious League, perhaps.
+There’s more in this affair than meets the
+eye, Mr Herrick.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span></p>
+
+<p>“The jury won’t know what to make of
+it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Begging your pardon, I think they’ll be
+made to know.”</p>
+
+<p>“What!—intimidation? Surely not!”</p>
+
+<p>“P’raps we’ll know more about it after a
+bit,” said the detective; and, with eyes
+scanning the growing crowd, he moved quietly
+away.</p>
+
+<p>“Pass along; pass along there, please,”
+said the uniformed men, with monotonous
+iteration; and Herrick, ere he hurried into
+the building, noticed that half a dozen of the
+constables were busily employed in keeping
+the fast-gathering multitude in motion.</p>
+
+<p>“Bad news about Boulton,” were almost
+the first words he heard in one of the corridors.
+The speaker was a circuit chum of his,
+and one of the junior counsel on the other
+side.</p>
+
+<p>“Why! What do you mean?” he demanded
+anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>“What! haven’t you heard? Set upon
+by hooligans near St Pancras station last
+night. Picked up insensible, and taken to
+the hospital in Gray’s Inn Road. We shall
+be on directly,” and, tilting up his wig, the
+speaker hurried down the corridor.</p>
+
+<p>A sense of planned events, a fatalistic feeling,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span>
+gripped Herrick at the heart. Then, with
+a deep-drawn breath, he turned into the
+robing room—the armoury of forensic fray.
+While he robed, he looked round eagerly for
+Arthur Dutton, who held brief No. 3 for the
+prosecution. Dutton was a stuff gownsman
+of many years’ experience, a master of criminal
+pleading—on paper and parchment—and
+one of the permanent advisers of the Crown.
+If Dutton were in good form, all might yet
+be well; though, unfortunately, as advocate
+he did not usually excel. But Dutton was
+nowhere to be seen, and that morning nobody
+had come across him. Of course it might
+be that he was already in his place in Court,
+and thither Herrick hurried, entering just
+as cries of “Silence!” from the ushers
+heralded the approach of Lord Malvern, the
+presiding judge.</p>
+
+<p>“Where’s Sir John?” asked the Assistant
+Treasury Solicitor in an anxious whisper.
+In a few hurried sentences Herrick informed
+him of the great man’s sudden illness.</p>
+
+<p>“Both our leaders absent! Good heavens!
+What’s going to happen?”</p>
+
+<p>What actually happened next was the
+passing of a telegram from hand to hand
+until it reached the Treasury official.</p>
+
+<p>“Read that,” he said, and sat back in his
+seat, dismayed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span></p>
+
+<p>Herrick read the message. It was as
+follows:—</p>
+
+<p>“<em>To Treasury Solicitor,<br>
+“Central Criminal Court.</em></p>
+
+<p>“<em>Have received telegram reporting dangerous
+illness of my father. Am leaving town for
+Windermere.</em></p>
+
+<p>“<em>From Dutton, Euston Station.</em>”</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER IV<br>
+<small>THE CASE THAT FAILED</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>Bobby Herrick was sound in wind and
+limb; healthy in heart and brain; but for
+a moment or two he sat dazed and helpless
+in face of the position that confronted him.
+The whole thing seemed unreal, impossible,
+and the monotonous calling of the names of
+the jurymen fell upon his ears like a buzzing
+sound of no intelligible significance. The
+faces in Court blended into a sort of misty
+phantasmagoria, until out of the mist one
+face immediately opposite him riveted his
+attention. Presently it stood out, distinct
+and well defined, with a watchful look in the
+dark and piercing eyes, and a sardonic smile
+on its upward curving lips. It was a face to
+be remembered; a face he was destined to
+see again in the course of those tragic episodes
+which the history of events in London was
+shortly to unfold.</p>
+
+<p>The Treasury Solicitor, he found, was plucking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span>
+at his gown. “You must ask for an
+adjournment,” he whispered urgently; “it
+is the only thing to do.” Almost at the
+same moment the judge’s voice was heard.
+His lordship spoke with eye directed towards
+the vacant seats of the prosecuting counsel.</p>
+
+<p>“Where are your leaders, Mr Herrick?”</p>
+
+<p>Herrick rose amid the silence that succeeded
+the inquiry, conscious that every eye in Court
+was fixed upon him.</p>
+
+<p>“My lord,” he said, in a voice slightly
+tremulous at first, “by a most unfortunate
+and remarkable combination of events, my
+learned friends are prevented from being
+present.”</p>
+
+<p>“Surely not all of them!” exclaimed the
+judge. “I heard some rumour of an accident
+to Mr Boulton—is it true?”</p>
+
+<p>“He was attacked and maltreated in the
+street last night, my lord, and is now in
+hospital.”</p>
+
+<p>“Another example of the growing spirit
+of lawlessness which prevails in this city,”
+said the Chief Justice sternly. “I deplore
+the absence of Mr Boulton, especially for
+such a reason; but where is the Solicitor-General?”</p>
+
+<p>“I regret to inform your lordship that he
+has been seized with sudden and, I fear,
+serious illness.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span></p>
+
+<p>“This is most extraordinary,” said the
+Chief Justice, leaning back and taking off
+his glasses.</p>
+
+<p>“Silence!” cried the usher, as a hum of
+subdued comment arose in the body of the
+Court.</p>
+
+<p>“What makes the position still more
+serious, my lord,” continued Herrick, “is
+the absence of Mr Dutton also, for reasons
+of a family nature.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is there no likelihood of his being here
+presently?”</p>
+
+<p>“He has been summoned to the north of
+England, and left Euston this morning, my
+lord, as stated in this telegram.”</p>
+
+<p>“A chapter of accidents, indeed! Well,
+Mr Herrick, <em>you</em> are here.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but being taken by surprise, I am
+quite unable to do justice to the prosecution,
+and my instructions are to ask your lordship
+to adjourn the trial.”</p>
+
+<p>“To that the defence cannot possibly
+assent,” interposed Mr Jacobs, on his feet
+instantly. “I speak at any rate for the
+prisoner whom I represent.”</p>
+
+<p>“I say the same on behalf of my client,
+my lord,” added Mr Brill.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, Mr Herrick——?” from the judge.</p>
+
+<p>“My learned friend is too modest,” said
+Jacobs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span></p>
+
+<p>“<em>Timeo Danaos et dona ferentes</em>,” retorted
+Herrick, with happy inspiration.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Malvern laughed a silent little laugh,
+and an audible little laugh went round the
+Court from those who understood the tag,
+and from those also who laugh because others
+laugh; for always man, as Lord Beaconsfield
+truly observed, is mimetic.</p>
+
+<p>Then the brief flash of merriment died
+out, and the Court came back to business.</p>
+
+<p>“It is perfectly clear that the trial must
+proceed,” said the learned judge. “Much
+public time has already been devoted to the
+case, and, I may add, much public money.
+The convenience of the jury and of many
+witnesses must be considered. This is the
+fourth day we have been here, and it is
+desirable on every ground that it should be
+the last.”</p>
+
+<p>“But, my lord, the Crown will lose the
+benefit of Sir John Westwood’s reply on the
+whole case.”</p>
+
+<p>“Sir John Westwood is not here, Mr
+Herrick.”</p>
+
+<p>“And the privilege of a law officer of the
+Crown in the connection mentioned is thought
+by some to be the more honoured in the
+breach than in the observance,” remarked
+Mr Jacobs.</p>
+
+<p>“On this occasion you are for the defence,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span>
+Mr Jacobs,” said his lordship. “On another
+occasion——” His lordship paused, with a
+humorous twinkle in his eye, and the gap
+was filled with a burst of laughter this time;
+for it was well known that the successful
+Hebrew advocate had his unsatisfied ambitions.</p>
+
+<p>“Are there any witnesses for the defence?”
+asked the Chief Justice, when silence was
+restored.</p>
+
+<p>“I call none,” said Mr Jacobs; and Mr
+Brill merely shook his head by way of answer
+for his client.</p>
+
+<p>“Very well, then, it only remains for Mr
+Herrick to address the jury. Counsel for
+the prisoners will follow, and my summing-up
+will not occupy more than an hour. The
+jury will understand,” said his lordship,
+turning towards them, “that however unfortunate
+the absence of the leading counsel,
+and however valuable the speeches of those
+who are present, it is upon the facts, and
+the facts alone, that their verdict must be
+based, according to the evidence. Now, Mr
+Herrick.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Thus it came about that greatness of a
+sort was thrust upon Aldwyth Westwood’s
+lover. Thus did fortune place in his way a
+golden opportunity. But this is no story of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span>
+a young barrister’s triumphant achievement,
+according to the interesting precedents recorded
+by the lady novelists. Young Herrick,
+at this stage of the strange and terrible
+game then opening, was little better than a
+pawn on the chessboard of a master-player.
+Throughout the moves that followed on that
+Saturday in April, he felt half conscious of
+the fact, and the face which had looked out
+of the mist at the beginning seemed to dominate
+him until the end.</p>
+
+<p>Herrick, thought most of his friends, rose
+to the occasion, dealing effectively with the
+complex facts and figures of the case. There
+were others who shrugged their shoulders,
+and merely conceded that he “did his best,”
+considering how heavily he was overweighted.
+In reality, the performance was nothing to
+be ashamed of; nothing to boast of. The
+older and more experienced advocates on the
+other side paid him some handsome compliments
+when their innings came. But that
+did not prevent them from making mince-meat
+of his arguments, and hammering home
+their own. It may be doubted, however,
+whether the most powerful advocate who
+ever breathed the air of the Criminal Courts
+of England would have drawn a verdict of
+Guilty from the jury.</p>
+
+<p>The judge, in his lucid summing-up, virtually<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>
+told them to convict; but there were
+other and more powerful influences at work.
+As the trial proceeded, the voice of a great
+crowd outside the walls of the Court rose in
+tumultuous sounds at intervals. In spite of
+the efforts of the police, it became only too
+plain that there was a demonstration—organised,
+determined; and that, for reasons
+then but imperfectly understood, the acquittal
+of the prisoners was demanded. It was, in
+effect, the first skirmish in that campaign
+against the forces of law and order, of which,
+presently, London was to be the battleground.
+The voice of the people prevailed. After an
+hour’s absence, and sundry messages of
+inquiry from the Chief Justice, the jury returned
+into Court with a verdict of “Not
+guilty.”</p>
+
+<p>“And that is the verdict of you all,”
+echoed the Clerk of Arraigns in the usual
+formula.</p>
+
+<p>Here and there in the packed Court there
+was an involuntary exclamation.</p>
+
+<p>“Silence! silence!” came from the ushers
+and police.</p>
+
+<p>“The prisoners will be discharged,” said
+the judge, whose manner had assumed the
+utmost gravity, “and,” he added significantly,
+“the jury will be discharged also from further
+duties in the box during the present sessions.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span></p>
+
+<p>Lord Malvern left the Bench as the two
+prisoners disappeared down the steps leading
+from the dock.</p>
+
+<p>A babel of voices arose outside the building,
+and grew, unchecked, until it became a mighty
+roar of triumph from the mob.</p>
+
+<p>The verdict was known; cheer after cheer
+broke out, and the accused, prisoners no
+longer, were received as heroes, and borne
+shoulder high from the gates of the prison,
+through the streets of London.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER V<br>
+<small>THE LEAGUERS’ SECOND MOVE</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>Rumour has many wings, and, though the
+following day was Sunday, rumour fluttered
+through clubland in the morning, giving rise
+to many languid speculations concerning the
+true inwardness of the New Bailey episode
+of the previous day. It was regarded, for
+the most part, as an isolated incident, and
+not as the first link in a chain of significant
+events. It only began to be recognised in
+the latter character when it became known
+that the telegram which had drawn the well-known
+Treasury counsel, Arthur Dutton, to
+the north, was an absolute forgery, and
+devoid of any sort of truth or justification.
+In the light of this discovery, the attack
+which had incapacitated his leader, Mr
+Boulton, assumed a sinister suggestiveness.
+But even then, there was no one in the West
+End clubs who attributed the inopportune, or
+opportune, illness of Sir John Westwood to
+any other than purely natural causes.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span></p>
+
+<p>Some light might have been thrown on
+that point by his trusted clerk, or, indirectly,
+by Wilson’s wife, who on Sunday afternoon
+found her husband contemplating a bank-note
+with interest so thoughtful and absorbed
+that he did not hear his better-half
+approach.</p>
+
+<p>“Bless and save us! what are you staring
+at there?” demanded Mrs Wilson, who
+always was tart of tone and imperative in
+manner.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s a Bank of England note,” was
+Wilson’s reply.</p>
+
+<p>“How much?” demanded Mrs Wilson.</p>
+
+<p>“Five hundred pounds,” said Wilson,
+slowly; and he straightway lied according
+to his lights, when the wife of his bosom,
+who had the instincts of a cross-examiner,
+pursued her vehement inquiries.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, the weather being charming,
+London society had been taking its Sunday
+airing in Hyde Park under surprising and
+inconvenient conditions. Between three and
+four o’clock great numbers of people of the
+type that had visited the Old Bailey on the
+previous day assembled on the south side
+of the Serpentine. Here, lining the rails,
+they shouted, yelled, and hooted at the passing
+carriages, to the surprise and alarm of
+their elegantly-attired occupants. Whistling,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span>
+groans, and discordant noises filled the air.
+The turbulent throng grew and grew, and
+under the shield of popular excitement,
+thieves, pickpockets, and other disorderly
+persons employed themselves with their accustomed
+diligence. A hulking youth ran
+before a carriage and repeatedly struck the
+horse’s nose with his cap. Mud was thrown
+at some of the brilliant sunshades that flashed
+past, and a gentleman on horseback was
+almost unseated by part of a hurdle thrown
+at him by a ruffian lurking in the crowd.
+Horses plunged; some fell; while the mob
+expressed its feelings in triumphant jeers and
+mocking laughter. Presently volleys of stones
+began to fly, and as yet the police were present
+in such small numbers as to be practically
+helpless in the face of this unlooked-for
+display of ruffianism.</p>
+
+<p>But while the unexpected was happening
+in the Park, the more or less expected had
+come to pass not far away. Sir John Westwood
+lived in Hill Street, and it had been
+his fate, as representing the Government, to
+incur the resentment of the masses by bringing
+into the House a Sunday Trading Bill of
+somewhat drastic character. The people—particularly
+the East-enders—were savage
+at the attempt to close the public-houses on
+the first day of the week, and jeered at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span>
+suggestion that they should go to church as
+an alternative resort.</p>
+
+<p>On the Saturday evening, a handbill was
+widely circulated in the lower quarters of the
+capital. This was how it ran:</p>
+
+<p class="big1 center p1 p1b"><span class="smcap">Let us go to Church<br>
+With Sir John Westwood To-morrow.<br>
+Afterwards there will be a<br>
+Grand Open-Air Fête and Monster<br>
+Concert in Hyde Park.<br>
+Come and see how Religiously<br>
+London Society observes the Sabbath.</span></p>
+
+<p>Thus it came about that a crowd of many
+hundreds gathered in front of the Solicitor-General’s
+house, and held their ground obstinately,
+notwithstanding the persuasive efforts
+of a small body of police to move them on.
+No actual violence was used by the crowd,
+but their groans, yells, and persistent clamour
+were sufficiently alarming.</p>
+
+<p>To Aldwyth Westwood, a girl of spirit, the
+demonstration caused more indignation than
+fear. Her chief concern was for her father.
+Sir John had now recovered to some extent
+from his strange condition of physical inertness
+on the previous day. Silent, but manifestly
+disturbed, he sat in his study at the
+back of the house, compelled to listen to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span>
+tumult of execration directed against him in
+the street. He was for drastic measures with
+the mob, but the divisional superintendent
+was either timid or discreet. He met the
+angry inquiry whether London was to be at
+the mercy of a hooting mob, by saying that
+he had no orders to resort to force to clear
+the street, and that patience and time were
+the best remedies, so long as no actual violence
+was attempted. The Solicitor-General
+acquiesced with a contemptuous shrug; as
+also in the advice that the front shutters
+should be closed, and the frightened servants
+directed not to show themselves.</p>
+
+<p>Stolid and calm, the police stood on the
+doorsteps, and in the area, while the roughs
+shouted themselves hoarse. At the end of
+a couple of hours came news that things were
+growing lively near the Serpentine; and
+thereupon, nearly half the Hill Street crowd
+hastened to the Park in search of something
+fresh and more exciting. Hastily, but still
+not sufficiently, reinforced, the police now
+attempted to check the conduct of the crowd,
+which had already driven all but a few of
+the pluckier carriage people homeward. Many
+of the most disorderly characters had now
+mustered near the Royal Humane Society’s
+Receiving House. A body of police, with
+truncheons drawn, marched along the drive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span>
+to clear it of pedestrians. Those who would
+not give way were pushed or roughly handled.
+The same tactics were pursued on the footpath
+on the south side of the Serpentine, and
+here much confusion and excitement arose,
+many persons being forced ankle-deep into
+the water. Women, who had got mixed
+with the crowd, screamed with terror. The
+wail of frightened children filled the air, and
+angry cries were raised against the constables,
+some of whom were struck by stones and
+clods of earth.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time, some fifty constables,
+under Superintendent Helden, reached Grosvenor
+Gate. There, the men were formed
+in a column of sections of ten, having a front
+of five men, and marched towards a threatening
+section of the mob. Instead of retiring,
+the people received the police defiantly and
+with an angry yell. The superintendent
+shouted to them to give way, but the warning
+was disregarded. Suddenly some one
+tripped him up. He fell and hurt his knee;
+and, thus provoked, the men with drawn
+truncheons rushed forward, and, without
+orders, attacked the crowd. A savage <em>melée</em>
+was the result. From that moment there
+were conflicts of a similar character throughout
+the Park. Reinforcements of police were
+hurried up, and further conflicts followed. So<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span>
+grave did the situation become as the evening
+hours drew on that large reserves of constables
+were mustered at Stanhope Gate, the Triumphal
+Arch, the Marble Arch, and Walton
+Street, and in Lowndes Square.</p>
+
+<p>Ere darkness fell the Humane Society’s
+Receiving House became a temporary prison;
+a riotous mob demanded the release of their
+friends, and there were many ugly rushes,
+repelled with difficulty by the police. Cabs
+now were sent for, and seventy persons,
+charged with assaults, disorderly conduct,
+and resisting the police, were removed, amid
+a storm of angry cries, to the Police stations.
+By nine o’clock the Park was cleared.</p>
+
+<p>Thus ended the first skirmish in the campaign
+of the Leaguers of London against the
+forces of law and order.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER VI<br>
+<small>THE MURDER OF DR GRADY</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>The weather prophets declared that it was
+to be one of the driest and hottest summers
+on record; and, for once, the prophets seemed
+in a fair way to be justified. The strain
+of the long, bright, rainless days began to
+tell upon Londoners. Two or three terrific
+thunderstorms shook the nerves of the feeble.
+Sundry earthquake shocks, though remote
+from these islands, imparted a sense of apprehension,
+and concurrently with these stern
+manifestations of Mother Nature, there were
+other hints of dread events—suggestive of a
+moral cataclysm, a war of classes, a volcanic
+outburst that would rend the bounds of social
+life.</p>
+
+<p>In this state of disquietude, sensational
+revivalism moved many neurotic persons to
+grotesque manifestations in the name of religion.
+And, on the other hand, it was well
+known that vice was rampant in every class<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span>
+of society, the eagerness of the pleasure-seekers
+for some new excitement, however
+vulgar or debasing, assuming the proportions
+of a mania.</p>
+
+<p>“Scenes” in Parliament were of almost
+weekly occurrence, and signs of hysteria
+became manifest, even in the speech and
+conduct of men who held office as cabinet-ministers
+or as judges. Though the Government
+was tottering to its fall, the Opposition,
+torn with internal jealousies, was not in a
+position to take advantage of its opportunities.
+Difficult problems of international
+law had arisen, but the Attorney-General,
+who had for some time been suffering from
+a mortal disease, was practically unavailable
+as an adviser, while the second law officer,
+Sir John Westwood, was said to still be incapacitated
+by what eminent doctors described
+as complete “nervous breakdown.”</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of this debilitated condition
+of political and social life, there was one
+movement which day by day seemed to
+gather strength and audacity. The London
+Emigration League still stood forward to
+claim attention and collect funds. White-washed,
+in a sense, by the verdict at the
+Central Criminal Court, the Leaguers of
+London, as they were now generally called,
+published appeals to the charitable, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span>
+organised marches and demonstrations, which,
+without committing actual breaches of the
+law, made known the ever-increasing numbers
+of the League, and its strangely cosmopolitan
+membership.</p>
+
+<p>It was the foreign element in the League
+that gave rise to special uneasiness at the
+Home Office and Scotland Yard. Ere long
+the sense of insecurity already germinating
+in the public mind was greatly accentuated
+by a startling discovery, rumoured, though
+not yet proved, to be connected with the
+Leaguers’ campaign. This was nothing less
+than the unmasking by Detective-Inspector
+Henshaw of a dynamite factory, only seventeen
+miles from London. In all probability
+the discovery would never have been made
+but for a murder of revenge, almost unexampled
+in its cold and calculated deliberation,
+and in all respects notable in the annals
+of criminology. It was a story of the ruthless
+edict of a secret society within a society, and
+that society was believed to be none other
+than the League; it revealed, when the story
+became fully known, the remorseless execution
+of a mysterious mandate, which yet
+again illustrated the truth that, however
+subtle and well considered the plan of crime,
+murder, in the end, will out.</p>
+
+<p>The victim of the crime was one Grady, a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span>
+doctor, who, after spending some years in
+New York, had come to England and acquired
+a fifth-rate medical practice in the purlieus
+of Holborn. His house and surgery were
+in Red Lion Street, not far from Red Lion
+Square. Grady was a man of ill-balanced
+mind, and given to intemperance. For some
+reason, never fully explained, he quarrelled
+with his friends. And, justly or unjustly,
+was suspected of betraying their plans to
+the police.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor became an object of hatred
+and fear in the eyes of his former associates,
+and the inner circle—or “actives,”
+as they were euphoniously styled—deliberately
+sentenced him to death. Early in
+June a man passing under the name of
+Featherstone took a room in the house facing
+that in which the ill-fated doctor carried on
+his miserable practice. Some articles of furniture
+and other things, including a large
+packing case, were bought by Featherstone
+and sent to his lodgings. At about the same
+time Featherstone, under the name Rolf,
+became the tenant of a house at Rickmansworth,
+which was let with a builder’s yard
+containing sundry sheds and outbuildings.
+Ostensibly these premises were to be used
+for the purpose of manufacturing Portland
+cement. At the end of the garden and yard<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span>
+ran the Grand Junction Canal. Close at
+hand was the River Colne; and in this way
+facilities were available to convey chalk
+and clay from a neighbouring estate to the
+“factory,” and to send the cement, when
+manufactured, on barges to London.</p>
+
+<p>Rolf, the “innocent manufacturer,” who
+was bent on developing this useful industry,
+advertised for a medical man to attend his
+workmen in case of illness or accident, and
+a marked copy of the paper containing the
+advertisement was sent to Grady. The
+doctor, compelled, doubtless, by his needy
+circumstances, swallowed the bait, and without
+much delay a contract was made with
+him on “club terms.”</p>
+
+<p>The significance of this was that cement-making
+is not really a dangerous trade, and
+that there were many doctors practising
+nearer to Rickmansworth.</p>
+
+<p>One night, a few weeks later, a man drove
+up in a cab, presented Rolf’s card to Dr
+Grady, and said his services were required
+at the cement works for one of the workmen,
+who had met with an accident. Grady at
+once put his instruments together and drove
+with Rolf’s representative to Baker Street.
+The unnamed agent then accompanied him
+by rail to Rickmansworth. In the darkness
+of the sultry night, he was conducted to his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span>
+doom. The house of which Rolf was the
+tenant was approached by a lonely lane on
+the outskirts of the little town. The two
+men were seen to enter by the front door,
+and a labourer who was approaching at no
+great distance declared that he heard a
+smothered cry, followed by heavy blows, and
+then a fall. His statement was not made
+known until some time had elapsed, as almost
+immediately after hearing these ominous
+sounds, he was knocked down and stunned
+by a motor-car.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the packing-case had been
+brought from Red Lion Street to Rickmansworth.
+The day after the crime, it was
+removed in a wagon. The wagon was seen
+again later, but in the interval the packing-case
+had vanished. It was found, empty, on
+the following day near Northwood. Grady’s
+clothes were found in a portmanteau in a
+neighbouring sewer, and the portmanteau
+was afterwards identified as one that Featherstone—<em>alias</em>
+Rolf—had bought and taken
+to his rooms in London. Finally, the naked
+body of poor Grady was discovered in a
+backwater of the River Colne. The head of
+the unfortunate man showed cuts and wounds
+in quite a dozen different places. He had
+been brutally and determinedly done to
+death.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span></p>
+
+<p>The police now overhauled the house at
+Rickmansworth, and there found other signs
+of an awful struggle and a cruel crime. Futile
+efforts had been made to paint out the blood-stains
+on the floor.</p>
+
+<p>From the house, the examinations were
+extended to the sheds and workshops, and
+though there were signs of removal and
+attempted concealment, enough remained to
+show that the place was in truth designed
+for the manufacture of bombs and other
+murderous explosives. There were invoices,
+letters, and receipts imperfectly destroyed
+by fire, that showed the harmless “cement-maker”
+to be a buyer of sulphuric acid,
+mercury, picric acid, saltpetre, and other
+ingredients of explosive compositions. These
+and other facts the inquest brought to light,
+partly owing to the self-importance of a
+fussy coroner, who disallowed the efforts of
+the police to keep back certain features of
+the ghastly story. Meanwhile the murderers,
+who obviously had command of ample funds,
+had fled the country.</p>
+
+<p>Sensational journals were not slow to unfold
+the tale of terror under startling headlines.
+Something akin to panic seized the
+country and coerced the Government into
+action. The Solicitor-General, though out
+of town, received earnest communications<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span>
+from ministers, and it was afterwards known
+that he had framed some of the most drastic
+clauses in the Bill which was forthwith introduced
+in the House of Commons. This
+measure obtained a Parliamentary record by
+passing through both Houses in a single day.
+It provided legal machinery for the suppression
+of conspiracies. It was part French
+and part Irish in its origin, and designed in
+effect to prevent the illegal manufacture and
+possession of explosives.</p>
+
+<p>The country, it was pointed out in Parliament,
+had been lulled into a false sense of
+security by the absence of dynamite outrages
+for a considerable time. But not so very
+far back, in a period of eleven years, there
+had been no less than sixty-nine crimes and
+attempted crimes by means of infernal
+machines, bombs, and other engines intended
+for the wholesale destruction of life and
+property. No wonder there were dark and
+agonised forebodings; for none could feel
+assured that history was not about to repeat
+that grim and blood-stained page in England’s
+capital.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER VII<br>
+<small>LOVE ON THE LEAS</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>“Thank heaven!” sighed Herrick. He tossed
+a bulky brief on a side-table, and rose to his
+feet. The heat was stifling in his narrow
+room in Paper Buildings. Outside in the
+gardens the brown grass, dry and baked,
+bore witness to the long-continued drought.
+London was becoming an inferno.</p>
+
+<p>But for a week-end, at any rate, he was
+going to escape from it. The Westwoods
+were at Folkestone, and within twenty minutes
+the train would be carrying him sea-wards,
+to clean, pure air, to a smokeless sky—and
+to Aldwyth Westwood.</p>
+
+<p>The boy-clerk entered with two letters.
+“For you, sir,” said the youth, known to
+his Temple intimates as “Awthur.”</p>
+
+<p>“Right,” answered Herrick, thrusting them
+into a pocket. “Here, take my bag—look
+sharp! a hansom for Charing Cross.”</p>
+
+<p>“Awthur” showed himself alert, and within<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span>
+four minutes the jaded barrister was being
+driven westward through the thronged and
+sweltering Strand.</p>
+
+<p>“Poor devils, <em>they’ve</em> got to stay in town,”
+he muttered. It struck him that the great
+artery of London life looked strange and sad
+in the afternoon glare of the summer sun;
+on every face was a set look of weariness
+and strain.</p>
+
+<p>High up on Exeter Hall, a huge placard
+attracted his attention:</p>
+
+<p class="center big1 p1 p1b">
+<span class="smcap">On Wednesday Next!!!<br>
+Meeting for Men only.<br>
+Address by<br>
+Father Francis.</span></p>
+
+<p>Father Francis was well known to him by
+reputation. They had been contemporaries
+at Oxford, but the “Father” was then known
+as Lord Francis Purbrook, fifth son of the
+Duke of Portsdown—a wild and dissipated
+youth. His follies and debaucheries had
+been continued in the wider world, outside
+the University; until a strange and sudden
+change had come to him. He simply said
+that he had been converted. His old companions
+sneered, and asserted that he had
+turned “goody-goody.” But this transformation
+of his, call it what you will, was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span>
+obvious to all. Then he had taken Holy
+Orders, and now was the priest-in-charge of
+St Stephen’s mission church—a chapel in a
+side street of Mayfair. His courtesy title
+had been wholly abandoned, and he was
+always spoken of as Father Francis.</p>
+
+<p>With so much of the past, Herrick, like
+most Londoners, was well acquainted; but
+it was not given him to foresee the tragic
+scene in which the young priest was soon to
+play a foremost and a fatal part. Herrick,
+at the moment prosaically absorbed, was
+mainly bent on catching his train in time
+for a corner seat in a “smoker”; and here
+in a few minutes was the station, busy and
+bustling as ever. Here, too, was Henshaw
+of Scotland Yard, keenly eyeing continental
+arrivals from Boulogne <em>via</em> Folkestone.</p>
+
+<p>“A lot of foreigners,” said the barrister,
+as he passed him with a nod.</p>
+
+<p>“And a bad lot, too,” was the detective’s
+comment. There was no time for more;
+late arrivals were scurrying down the platform.
+Herrick rushed with the rest; he
+found a seat; the guard’s whistle and extended
+hand signalled the departure of the
+train. They were off and away, wriggling
+over the railroad network of London, until
+presently the grim and hideous streets and
+outskirts of the Surrey side were left behind.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span>
+The pleasant fields and woods of Kent succeeded
+to scenes of sordid toil, and still more
+sordid recreation. The murk and stew of
+the great town, the hoot of its motors, the
+hoof-hammer of its jaded horses, the dominant
+note of its thousands of weary feet—all were
+left behind.</p>
+
+<p>Within three hours the westering sun had
+set. Eastward, lighthouses sent their first
+flashing rays across the heaving sea. Westward,
+the rose and amber of the clouds
+deepened into purple. The stars came out
+brighter and brighter in the darkening sky,
+thousands upon thousands, and tens of
+thousands—the steps of Allah’s wonderful
+throne!</p>
+
+<p>Herrick and Aldwyth Westwood paced
+slowly on the Leas. The influence of the
+magical hour had stolen upon their spirits.
+They spoke but little, but their hearts were
+full—full of the tenderness of kindred spirits
+in harmony with each other and in touch
+with the infinite. For this wonderful night
+seemed to reveal the infinite in all the ordered
+beauty of earth and sky and sea, breathing
+a message to poor humanity, whispering of
+ultimate emancipation and high destiny.</p>
+
+<p>Later on, they came down, as needs must,
+from the stars.</p>
+
+<p>Herrick, who had brought down important<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span>
+papers from the Temple, asked when he could
+discuss them with Sir John.</p>
+
+<p>To his surprise, Aldwyth showed some
+doubt.</p>
+
+<p>“Father is not quite himself,” she said
+hesitatingly. “But perhaps—— Well come
+in and I’ll ask him.”</p>
+
+<p>They walked across the grass and re-entered
+the hotel. The band—of violins and
+harps—was playing its final waltz, and the
+guests, who were lounging here and there,
+gazed with interest at the tall and comely
+couple. The well-knit figure and bearing of
+the young barrister won some approval; but
+the critical faculty of the lady onlookers expended
+itself chiefly in observing the evening
+dress and general style of his companion.
+Let no man expect that he will make any
+particular impression when there is a woman
+at his side whose costume calls for criticism,
+or the sincere flattery of imitation.</p>
+
+<p>Aldwyth went upstairs to the suite of rooms
+reserved for Sir John Westwood and herself,
+and Herrick, waiting her message, turned into
+the smoking-room, where only two men were
+sitting, and those engaged in earnest conversation.
+In the light of after events Herrick
+often recalled much of what they said. It
+was an open conversation in a public room.
+The speakers were unknown to him. Later<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span>
+on, he learnt that one was Dr Wilson Wake,
+a nerve specialist, to whose consulting rooms
+in Harley Street patients crowded. The other
+was a writer, whose essays in the weightier
+reviews had attracted much attention.</p>
+
+<p>“It happened before, and it will happen
+again,” the doctor was saying. “It was simply
+a sequel to the ravages of bubonic plague.”</p>
+
+<p>“You mean the Black Death of the fourteenth
+century?”</p>
+
+<p>“That, of course, was the popular name
+of the disease. The Italians, in their more
+musical language, called it ’<em>la mortalega
+grande</em>’—the Great Mortality.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you surely don’t anticipate——?”</p>
+
+<p>“A similar visitation?—certainly not. We
+were only speaking of the after effects; and
+similar effects might, and, in my judgment
+will, be produced in modern times by some
+less appalling form of physical disease. The
+<em>Chorea</em>, or Dancing Mania of the Middle Ages
+was the outcome of the Black Death, and
+the Dancing Mania itself was simply the
+expression of disordered nerves.”</p>
+
+<p>“But, my dear sir, this is the twentieth
+century.”</p>
+
+<p>“History always repeats itself, though
+with interesting variations. My dear fellow,
+the nervous system of the nation is out of
+order.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span></p>
+
+<p>“You ought to know.”</p>
+
+<p>“I do,” said the specialist, drawing at his
+cigar.</p>
+
+<p>“But the extent of the mortality from
+plague was greatly exaggerated,” protested
+the other.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course, of course; nevertheless, in
+London upwards of fifty thousand corpses
+were buried in layers in a single district, and
+we know the burial pits even to this day.”</p>
+
+<p>“And, after all, the Dancing Mania was
+mainly a Continental development.”</p>
+
+<p>“No doubt; but scientifically it was only
+a form of epilepsy, and St Vitus has had his
+votaries in all countries, at all times. It was
+not until the sixteenth century that the
+faculty ventured to question the demon
+theories of the priests. Look up Paracelsus,
+my friend. His diagnosis was correct, but
+his remedies were ridiculous.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose the tarantism of Italy was
+only a form of the same nervous disorder?”
+queried the other.</p>
+
+<p>“Precisely; the spider’s bite was a delusion—though,
+no doubt, the Apulian Tarantula
+was a <em>bona fide</em> insect. Hysteria can
+always invent a spider, or a mouse. As
+recently as 1787, two or three hundred girls
+in a Lancashire cotton mill were seized with
+violent convulsions, because one girl put a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span>
+mouse into the bosom of another girl. They
+all declared that they had been treated in
+the same way. The insane delusions of the
+Convulsionaires in France lasted till near the
+end of the eighteenth century, and of course
+we have had our own Jumpers, Shakers, and
+Pentecostal Dancers here in England.”</p>
+
+<p>“And you think we haven’t seen the last
+of them?”</p>
+
+<p>“Nor yet the worst,” said the specialist,
+rising. “Shall we finish our cigars outside?”</p>
+
+<p>As the two men ended their odd dialogue
+and left the room, a waiter brought Herrick
+a pencilled note.</p>
+
+<p>“<em>Father will see you.—Aldwyth.</em>”</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER VIII<br>
+<small>SIR JOHN BREAKS DOWN</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>John Westwood was the son of a solicitor,
+and paternal influence gave him his first start
+at the Bar. A patient, strenuous, and able
+man, he missed no chance. The crest of a
+political wave carried him into Parliament,
+and, unlike most lawyers, he became a House
+of Commons success. Successful in love, as
+in forensic war and party politics, he won a
+wife who was wooed at the same time by a
+lover mad in his worship and passion, wholly
+different in all respects from the cold and more
+calculating rival, whose methods and success
+the rejected lover never forgot nor forgave.</p>
+
+<p>Marcus White, after the episode already
+chronicled, took his headlong way beyond the
+ken of all his English associates. He was
+heard of as having made a huge fortune in
+Mexico, a country offering far more scope
+for a man of such drastic methods and daring
+enterprise. Westwood stayed at home and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span>
+plodded on. After his marriage, and when,
+as yet, briefs were far from plentiful, he and
+his wife lived in quite a quiet middle-class
+way at Norwood. He came to London every
+day, and took his meagre luncheon daily like
+any other grubbing barrister at a stuffy
+restaurant in Fleet Street. To find on his
+table a brief marked ten and one was quite
+a rare and gladdening event. In the general
+way prices ruled considerably lower in his
+chambers. But it was otherwise after he
+had entered Parliament. Ten years later
+there was a shuffling of parties, and John
+Westwood, who had taken silk, shot into the
+very bull’s-eye of political life. The prophets
+said that he would reach the Woolsack;
+but, meanwhile, sundry faithful if dull members
+of the bar and of the party blocked the
+way. The Chancellor clung to life and office
+with a tenacity which upset all calculations.
+The Attorney-General, too, refused to recognise
+the grave complaint from which he
+suffered as an equivalent to notice to quit.
+Other Government appointments were, in
+omnibus language, “full up,” and John Westwood,
+K.C., M.P., had to be content with a
+knighthood and the office of Solicitor-General.
+But his income and fees amounted to some
+ten thousand a year, and he was a man of
+thrifty habits, and saved considerably.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span></p>
+
+<p>Yet a price has to be paid by the man who
+burns the candle at both ends—in Parliament
+and in the Law Courts. It is the kind of
+double life that kills all but the toughest,
+and Sir John was far from tough. Affairs of
+state were critical, and at this crisis his “sword
+hung rusting on the wall,” while he was urgently
+wanted at Westminster. He was still lingering
+at Folkestone when delicate problems of
+international law demanded all the acumen
+that his brain could bring to bear. The
+Prime Minister almost implored his assistance,
+but, the specialist who had come down to the
+Métropole to see him asserted bluntly that
+it would be more than his sanity, or perhaps
+his life, could stand if yet awhile he plunged
+back into the quagmire of jurisprudence or
+the sea of party strife.</p>
+
+<p>Such was the man who paced with restless
+steps the room of the hotel that summer
+night. On the table were despatch boxes,
+blue books, blue draft papers, and bulky
+volumes that had been sent down from London.
+These were his tools, and he could
+not handle them! Aldwyth, his only child,
+and the one being in the world for whom his
+heart beat with affection, sat by the window
+anxiously watching him. Her love and tenderness,
+as she was beginning to realise, were
+powerless to assuage his mental suffering.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span></p>
+
+<p>Alone, we come into the world; alone, we
+tread the winepress of life; alone, we leave
+it by the darkened door.</p>
+
+<p>Herrick, as he entered, was painfully struck
+with the changed appearance of his chief.
+His restless movements, lined cheeks, and
+twitching facial muscles, told a saddening
+tale.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s no good,” said Sir John, after the
+first few words, “I can’t work, I can’t think;
+worse than all, I can’t sleep. I ought to
+resign.”</p>
+
+<p>“Father!” exclaimed Aldwyth, appealingly.
+Herrick was silent. What could he
+say? It relieved him when, after a few
+moments of silence, the Solicitor-General
+drew a long breath and showed a greater
+self-command.</p>
+
+<p>“By the way,” he said suddenly, “I’ve
+had a threatening letter. I don’t suppose,”
+he added, “that any one need feel alarmed.”
+It was obvious that he regretted having said
+so much before his daughter.</p>
+
+<p>“The cowards!” she cried indignantly;
+“the cowards!”</p>
+
+<p>“What did you do with it?” asked the
+younger man.</p>
+
+<p>“Burnt it,” was the terse reply.</p>
+
+<p>“Wasn’t it a pity to destroy the evidence
+of handwriting?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span></p>
+
+<p>“There was no handwriting; it was typed.”</p>
+
+<p>“And no signature?”</p>
+
+<p>“Only a sign; the embossed outline of a
+metal disc.”</p>
+
+<p>“Curious,” said Herrick.</p>
+
+<p>“But hardly a curiosity,” was Sir John’s
+comment. “I understand that various members
+of the Government have been favoured
+in the same way, besides all the judges of the
+King’s Bench Division, and every magistrate
+in London.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then there’s no special threat so far as
+you’re concerned, father?” said Aldwyth,
+watching him uneasily.</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps not,” said Sir John, speaking
+slowly, doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>“I see you have some further information,”
+said Herrick.</p>
+
+<p>“Plenty of information, and nothing that
+would stand a moment’s test according to
+the laws of evidence.”</p>
+
+<p>“And yet there seems to be an attempt at
+wholesale intimidation. Surely the Government—the
+Home Secretary——”</p>
+
+<p>“The Home Secretary,” retorted Westwood
+angrily, “is not the man for times like
+these. England is face to face with an organised
+conspiracy. This so-called League, which
+grows in numbers and power every day, is
+really an army of anarchy recruited from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span>
+criminal classes at home and abroad. It seeks
+to paralyse the penal law of England. If the
+State does not crush it, it will overthrow the
+State. This gang of miscreants, with its
+weapons of terrorism and bribery——”</p>
+
+<p>“Bribery!” exclaimed Herrick, astonished.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; bribery on a colossal scale, and
+expended mainly in corrupting the police,
+by whom alone the public can be safeguarded;
+and, mark you this, bribery doesn’t stop so
+low as that. The wire-pullers know their
+men—threats for some, and money for others;
+a ten-pound note for a police sergeant, and
+so upwards on a sliding scale, until the maximum
+may reach to thousands.”</p>
+
+<p>Herrick and Aldwyth listened with increased
+amazement.</p>
+
+<p>“I know it; I have proofs,” Sir John
+continued.</p>
+
+<p>“At any rate,” interposed Herrick, “the
+Home Secretary has issued a circular to every
+local authority offering a hundred pounds’
+reward to any person who makes known the
+illegal manufacture of explosives.”</p>
+
+<p>“Useless!” said Westwood, throwing up
+his hands. “Police officers are excluded
+from the offer; they are the only people who
+could give such information. After the case
+at Rickmansworth, even if there are traitors
+in the League, who is likely to seal his own<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span>
+doom as Grady did? Besides, where the
+Home Office would pay a hundred pounds for
+betrayal, the men behind the metal disc
+would pay five hundred pounds for complicity
+and concealment.”</p>
+
+<p>“The public ought to demand the enforcement
+of the new Act,” argued Herrick
+hotly.</p>
+
+<p>“The public don’t understand how to
+enforce anything; they leave the weapons
+of agitation in the hands of the lawless, and
+trust to the executive for the protection of
+life and property; while the executive——”
+He shrugged his shoulders, and for a moment
+stood moodily staring at the wall. “The
+Government hope the crisis will be averted,”
+he resumed. “It needed the Phœnix Park
+murders to bring the Prevention of Crimes
+Act into force in Ireland. What price in
+horror and bloodshed will have to be paid
+in London before this campaign of outrage
+and dynamite is brought to an end, God only
+knows. I tell you, Herrick, that to pause
+or parley while these men perfect their plans
+is madness, and a betrayal of the nation!”
+He spoke with force and vehemence. For a
+moment his growing weakness had been
+shaken off. Carried away by his subject and
+his convictions, his voice and gestures gave
+some indication of the intellectual force that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span>
+such a man could bring to bear in forensic
+argument and in debate.</p>
+
+<p>Then, suddenly, there was a swift and
+shocking change in Westwood’s manner and
+appearance. His rushing thoughts and excited
+utterance had produced a terrible reaction.
+Aldwyth and Herrick were at his
+side in a moment. They led him to a chair.
+He sat there, staring, with ghastly cheeks and
+twitching muscles, manifestly unable to control
+the convulsive motions of his lower limbs,
+or the movement of the hands, which kept
+rising and falling with involuntary gesticulations.
+Herrick, horror-struck, recalled the
+conversation he had overheard in the smoking-room
+below.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER IX<br>
+<small>FATHER FRANCIS AT FOLKESTONE</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>When Herrick awoke on the following morning,
+after a night of restlessness and troubled
+dreams, the summer sunshine seemed to be
+almost mocking in its brilliancy. For, in
+spite of the gladness of Nature, the times were
+out of joint. There was something wrong
+with life. With a sigh of depression, as he
+recalled the occurrences of the previous night,
+he set about facing the problems of the day—his
+own problems and Aldwyth Westwood’s
+in particular.</p>
+
+<p>His coat lay over the back of a chair, and
+two unopened letters had slipped from a
+pocket to the floor. They were those he had
+received from the alert “Awthur” in the
+Temple, left unopened in the hurry of his
+departure from town, and until now entirely
+forgotten. He picked them up with no great
+interest. He knew from the envelope what
+one would be about. It was a regimental<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span>
+notice from the headquarters of the “Devil’s
+Own” in Lincoln’s Inn. Until lately he had
+been a keen volunteer officer, but the systematic
+snubs administered by the War Office
+to the citizen soldiery had greatly discouraged
+him and a great many others. He opened
+the other letter mechanically and with a
+morning yawn. But what he read—typewritten
+on half a sheet of thin quarto paper—instantly
+fixed his attention. He stood up,
+stared at the words, and read them again:</p>
+
+<p>“<em>Give up the law (if you value your skin).
+It will soon be a dangerous trade.</em>”</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp15" id="i_086" style="max-width: 18.75em;">
+ <img class="w100 p1 p1b" src="images/i_086.jpg" alt="ilop86" title="p86ilo">
+</figure>
+
+<p>There was no date. The impression, which
+took the place of a signature, corresponded
+with that produced by the familiar seals of
+public companies. It was in the form of a
+disc, and had the outline of a spider in the
+centre.</p>
+
+<p>Was this some silly practical joke, or could
+it be a genuine and malignant threat? But
+for what Sir John Westwood had told him
+on the previous evening, he would have concluded<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span>
+unhesitatingly in favour of the first
+theory. But now he pondered.</p>
+
+<p>After a solitary breakfast in the coffee-room,
+and pondering still, he waited about the hotel,
+hoping to see Aldwyth, but she was unable
+to leave her father’s side. When he came out
+on to the Leas, the Folkestone Church Parade
+had already begun. Here, among the crowd
+in the sunshine, a serious reading of the
+threatening letter seemed impossible.</p>
+
+<p>The seaside world was decked with light
+as with a garment, and the butterflies of
+fashion fluttered their laces and laughed at
+the little jokes of the wearers of Panama
+hats as if life could hold nothing more serious
+than the choice of a graceful “confection,”
+and the art of wearing it with good effect.
+At the west end of the Leas there was nothing
+suggestive of the seamy side of life, nothing
+to hint at the possibility of social earthquake.
+He wondered vaguely, as he walked eastward
+with hands clasped behind him, whether in
+olden time the good people who then looked
+out upon that sparkling sea had truly realised
+the danger, horror, and humiliation of the
+threatened invasion of a powerful enemy of
+England. It struck him that the British
+race, which has “worried through” so many
+awkward crises, obstinately cherished the
+conviction that, as a nation, it bore a charmed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span>
+life; that the slings and arrows of outrageous
+fortune could never bring it to the proud foot
+of a conqueror. A dangerous faith! For
+here on this very coast, much less than two
+hundred years ago, invasion had been imminent.
+The French were mustered at Dunkirk,
+Calais, and Boulogne. The Pretender’s
+youngest son was with them, and there was
+an Irish Brigade to aid the enterprise. The
+English, too, had furnished a contingent of
+traitors to assist the enemy, for the Folkestone
+smugglers had sold themselves to act as pilots
+for the invading force. But for the vigilance
+of that tough old sailor, Admiral Vernon,
+invasion would have become an accomplished
+fact. By his order, the miserable fleet, placed
+at his disposal by a blundering government,
+patrolled the Channel unceasingly. Warning
+beacons blazed along the coast from Beachy
+Head to the South Foreland. There was one
+even on Hurricane House, as the sailors
+styled the parish church of Folkestone—the
+church which Herrick was passing at the very
+moment of recalling those far-off troubled
+times.</p>
+
+<p>But to-day, in the old town as in the new,
+people knew or cared for none of these things,
+nor even dreamed of the possibility of any
+untoward events that might make Folkestone
+an ineligible resort for week-end trippers. On<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span>
+every side ’Arry and ’Arriet rejoiced, and were
+glad in the glorious weather. The ’Arry collars
+and shoes were entirely and manifestly satisfactory
+to their wearers; and the blouses of
+’Arriet and her sisters, cousins, and aunts,
+blazed violently in the dazzling sunshine.
+The yachting caps the maidens wore were all
+that unbecomingness could possibly demand,
+and the hats of the mothers and aunts fully
+exemplified that marked unsuitability for
+which the British female of mature years is
+so renowned.</p>
+
+<p>Herrick, as he made his way through the
+cheerful and perspiring throng, decided that,
+as an advocate, he could make out a strong
+case for the survival of our ancient sumptuary
+laws.</p>
+
+<p>Though Folkestone, west and east, already
+was pretty full, here were other visitors,
+within a stone’s-throw of the shores that
+welcome such hosts of undesirables from
+foreign lands. One of the much advertised
+steamers of the South-Eastern line was rapidly
+nearing the harbour with a crowded human
+cargo. Of late years the Boulogne and
+Folkestone route had increased in favour.
+It was not surprising, for it made the journey
+between Paris and London shorter by twenty-eight
+miles than the Calais-Dover line.</p>
+
+<p>Herrick, who knew something of the signals<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span>
+adopted on these boats, was aware that each
+ball on the foremast represented a hundred
+passengers; a ball on the mainmast vouched
+for another twenty; a flag on the foremast
+stood for fifty passengers; a ball at the peak
+over the ensign represented ten. It was plain
+to him that the <em>Queen of the South</em>, whose
+figurehead gleamed in its brand-new gilt
+above the dancing wavelets, was as full as
+the Board of Trade would allow—and perhaps
+a little fuller. While the steamer was
+being berthed, he stood upon the long platform
+and watched the passengers as they
+came ashore. The number of foreigners was
+quite astonishing. Swarthy, dark-haired, ill-favoured
+fellows, most of them, they hurried
+to the London train already in waiting, while
+there were a few whom the after-stress of
+what Thackeray called the “marine malady”
+drove in eager search of refreshment.</p>
+
+<p>What, however, struck Herrick even more
+forcibly, and, indeed, with something akin
+to shock, was the fact that each one of those
+ill-favoured visitors wore upon his breast a
+metal disc. Yet more amazing, the disc—unless
+his eyes deceived him—resembled the
+impression on the threatening letter he had
+carefully placed inside his pocket-book only
+an hour or two ago.</p>
+
+<p>While this staggering circumstance held<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span>
+him wondering, the through passengers entrained;
+the warning whistle sounded, and
+they were off. A man, who had landed in
+leisurely fashion from the boat, stood near
+him, also watching the departing train. Presently
+he turned. Their eyes met, and in them
+came a look of recognition. Somewhere,
+Herrick felt assured, he had seen that face
+before—but where? The man passed him,
+a slight smile on his lips, and entered a well-appointed
+motor-car. Then, in an instant,
+conviction flashed on Herrick’s mind. It
+was the face that had affected him so strangely
+at the Central Criminal Court, when he stood
+up as Counsel for the Crown in the memorable
+case that failed!</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>That evening, in the ancient parish church,
+so beautifully restored, Aldwyth and her
+lover stood side by side. Sonorous and
+impressive, organ, choir, and congregation
+together voiced a hymn of faith:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“Beneath the shadow of Thy Throne<br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Thy Saints have dwelt secure;</span><br>
+Sufficient is Thine Arm alone<br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And our defence is sure.”</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The sadness of fleeting life found deep
+expression towards the end:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span></p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“Time like an ever-rolling stream,<br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Bears all its sons away;</span><br>
+They fly forgotten, as a dream<br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Dies at the opening day.”</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Then, with gathering strength, came again
+the cry for help and hope:</p>
+
+<p>
+“O God, our Help in ages past,<br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Our Hope for years to come,</span><br>
+Be Thou our guard while troubles last,<br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And our eternal home.”</span><br>
+</p>
+
+<p>And all the people said “Amen.”</p>
+
+<p>A rustle of expectancy, a settling movement,
+and, over the heads of the sitting congregation,
+Herrick and his companion could
+see the preacher. They exchanged quick
+glances of pleased surprise. The tall priest
+looking down with wistful eyes upon the
+many faces was Father Francis.</p>
+
+<p>There were others in the church besides
+themselves who, in the shadowed after-time,
+recalled the preacher’s look and words that
+night.</p>
+
+<p>In this narrative, though Father Francis
+has an honoured place, only the gist of what
+he said need be recorded.</p>
+
+<p>“<em>Watchman, what of the night?</em>” There were
+those, he said—having given out the text—who
+saw a dark night gathering over England.
+The growth of luxury and self-indulgence,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span>
+the follies of the rich, the miseries of the poor,
+the insatiable thirst for pleasure and excitement,
+the struggle between capital and labour,
+and the faltering of national faith in the
+eternal verities—these converging causes were
+shaping the materials for a great catastrophe.
+If righteousness exalted a nation, assuredly
+unrighteousness would lay it in the dust. In
+the book of this same prophet Isaiah it was
+written: “For the nation and kingdom that
+will not serve Thee shall perish; yea, those
+nations shall be utterly wasted.”</p>
+
+<p>Again and again such prophecies had been
+fulfilled. The once mighty empires of the
+East, honeycombed with sensuality and corruption,
+had long since fallen into decay.
+The Roman eagle, beneath which the whole
+world had cowered in awe, no longer soared
+aloft; Carthage had fallen; Athens and
+Alexandria, and many another ancient capital
+of arms or learning, had lost their power and
+proud pre-eminence. The ruins of Nineveh
+lay buried beneath the sands and dust of
+centuries; Babylon the mighty, with its idols
+of silver and gold, had been laid low. “Come
+down and sit in the dust, O virgin daughter
+of Babylon, sit on the ground; there is no
+throne, O daughter of the Chaldeans; for
+thou shalt no more be called young and
+delicate. Take the millstones and grind meal.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span>
+Sit thou silent, and get thee into darkness
+... for thou shalt no more be called the
+lady of kingdoms.”</p>
+
+<p>The women of old had not differed greatly
+from the women of to-day, said the preacher,
+looking down upon the many women who
+listened to his words. The prophet had
+marked their ways; they walked with
+stretched forth necks and wanton eyes. They
+were haughty in the bravery of their tinkling
+ornaments, their chains and their bracelets,
+the changeable suits of apparel, the mantles,
+the wimples, and the crisping pins, the fine
+linen, the hoods, and the veils. Wherein, he
+asked, did those women of old differ in their
+vanity and arrogance from the women of
+that great modern Babylon which they all
+knew so well—the centre and capital of the
+stupendous empire on which the sun never
+set?</p>
+
+<p>There would yet, he believed, be a further
+fulfilment of that stern prophecy of the
+eastern seer, and in that dark and terrible
+time what part would be played by the
+women of England—the women of London?
+They were destined to faint and fail! The
+luxurious, jewel-decked women of ease and
+fashion would be swept like rotten leaves
+before the storm! Only a woman such as
+Solomon described in the last chapter of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span>
+Book of Proverbs could ever fulfil the high
+destiny of her sex, whether in times of peace
+or in times of trouble. “Who can find a
+virtuous woman? for her price is far above
+rubies ... strength and honour are her
+clothing, and she shall rejoice in time to come,
+... she openeth her mouth with wisdom,
+and in her tongue is the law of kindness....
+Her children arise up and call her blessed;
+her husband also, and he praiseth her....
+Many daughters have done virtuously, but
+thou excellest them all. Favour is deceitful
+and beauty is vain; but a woman that
+feareth the Lord, she shall be praised.” You
+and I, said Father Francis, may never meet
+in this church again, but in this solemn
+evening hour, in this still and wonderful
+summer night, forget not the storms which
+sometimes beat upon this ancient building,
+and remember, too, the storms of life, the
+terror and distress of nations. Whither shall
+we flee in that dread hour? There is and
+can ever be but one refuge—the Rock of
+Ages, with its calm, cool shadow in a weary
+land; its strength and steadfastness amid
+the tempestuous passions of the human race.
+At the last, he said, in solemn tones, pointing
+to the “Tree of Jesse” in the north transept
+of the church, all nations and peoples of the
+earth would be brought to see that in Him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span>
+of whom the prophets and the angels testified,
+and in Him alone, was hope, salvation, and
+tranquillity. “I am the root and offspring
+of Jesse, and the bright and morning Star.”</p>
+
+<p>For a moment the preacher paused. Suddenly,
+with a thrilling intonation, he repeated
+the question of his text—” <em>Watchman, what
+of the night?</em>” Then, with hand pointing
+eastward—an action dramatic but not theatrical—he
+gave the prophet’s answer in
+triumphant tones—” <em>The watchman saith, The
+morning cometh.</em>”</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER X<br>
+<small>MARCUS WHITE RETURNS</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>The usual Monday morning movements had
+kept the hotel in a bustle for some little time,
+and Herrick’s cab was waiting at the door.
+There was a motor-car waiting also, and one
+that the barrister promptly recognised. An
+impulse led him to return from the hotel
+steps to the office in the vestibule. Here a
+lady-clerk with frizzy hair was bending her
+eyes and her glasses over the visitors’ register.
+She looked up as he asked his question: Oh
+yes, she knew; the car belonged to Mr
+Marcus White, the rich gentleman from
+Mexico.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly the girl turned scarlet, as she
+saw that some one was standing by Herrick’s
+side. “Oh, I beg pardon,” she said confusedly.</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps you are interested in motors?”
+The enquiry was addressed to Herrick, and
+the speaker was the man of the New Bailey,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span>
+the man who had landed at the harbour on
+the previous morning. The sarcastic intonation,
+the half contemptuous look, and the
+quiet way in which the stranger had drawn
+near, all served to cause embarrassment.</p>
+
+<p>Herrick, angry with himself, blurted out a
+“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“If you would like to test the speed of
+mine,” said White, nodding towards the hotel
+entrance, “I could perhaps give you an
+opportunity. I return to town to-night.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thanks, but I return this morning,”
+answered Herrick, recovering his self-possession.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah! you return to the pursuit of your
+interesting profession!”</p>
+
+<p>“I hope yet to render some service to the
+cause of law and order,” said Herrick, thinking
+of a certain letter.</p>
+
+<p>“You mean to make hay while the sun
+shines. Perhaps you are wise.”</p>
+
+<p>“Plenty of sunshine at present.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; but it won’t last,” was the reflective
+retort.</p>
+
+<p>“Prophecy is dangerous.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but not so dangerous as the law.”</p>
+
+<p>“You mean to the clients?”</p>
+
+<p>“On the contrary, I was thinking of the
+lawyers.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m afraid I can’t stop to argue that.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span>
+The younger man lifted his hat—very slightly.
+Marcus White raised his—with a bow and
+gesture of such exaggerated respect as almost
+to constitute an insult. He stood for a
+moment watching the departure of the other,
+then turned his gaze upon the puzzled clerk.</p>
+
+<p>“Sir John Westwood is staying here?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
+
+<p>“Will you send some one up with my
+card?”</p>
+
+<p>“I am afraid——,” began the girl.</p>
+
+<p>“You will be good enough to send up this
+card.”</p>
+
+<p>She took the card nervously, but mustered
+courage for another effort to withstand this
+masterful man. “Sir John Westwood is ill,
+sir.”</p>
+
+<p>“We are old—acquaintances.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m afraid he can’t see you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I shall be waiting here for an answer.”</p>
+
+<p>He strolled slowly through the vestibule,
+with a calm but patient air, which seemed
+to imply that to him it was the most natural
+assumption in the world that his behests
+should be complied with.</p>
+
+<p>Five minutes later Marcus White was
+ushered into a handsome room on the first
+floor, and at the same time Aldwyth entered
+by another doorway. The manifest and immediate
+effect produced in him by her appearance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span>
+bewildered her. The dark-skinned
+face of the visitor paled, his eyes narrowed,
+and gazing at her face intently, he grasped
+the back of a chair as if for support. They
+stood and gazed in silence. Then, mastering
+his emotion, White spoke, as if by way of
+explanation:</p>
+
+<p>“It was some resemblance,” he said; “I
+was hardly prepared, and it startled me.”</p>
+
+<p>“You mean a resemblance to my father?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, to your mother.”</p>
+
+<p>“You knew my mother?” She looked
+at him, wonderingly.</p>
+
+<p>There was something in his face and bearing
+which made her look and look again.
+Lately she had been reading the life-history
+of Balzac, and fragmentary accounts of his
+appearance, and also of that of Armand de
+Montriveau—in whom the great romancist
+reproduced some of his own characteristics—came
+swiftly to her mind, as she watched the
+face of Marcus White. “He seemed to have
+reached some crisis in his life, but all took
+place within his own breast, and he confided
+nothing to the world without.... He was
+of medium height, broad in the chest, and
+muscular as a lion. When he walked, his
+carriage, his step, his least gesture, bespoke
+a consciousness of power which was imposing;
+there was something even despotic about it.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span>
+Then, again, another passage: “The black
+hair, shining and radiant, receding from the
+temple in bright waves ... the eyes steeped
+in a golden penumbra with tawny eyeballs
+... send out a glance of astonishing acuteness.”</p>
+
+<p>“You knew my mother?” she repeated
+quietly.</p>
+
+<p>The question was not answered. White
+had turned his eyes towards the window and
+seemed to be gazing at a distant sail.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course you expected to see my father,”
+Aldwyth began, after an awkward pause. “I
+am sorry it is impossible. But if there is
+anything that I can tell him——”</p>
+
+<p>He turned his eyes upon her swiftly. “Miss
+Westwood, there are some things that must
+be discussed between men alone.”</p>
+
+<p>“My father is ill. So, unfortunately——”</p>
+
+<p>“Is he really ill?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t understand you,” she said stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>“I beg your pardon, but, as I daresay you
+know, there are such things as legal fictions,
+political fictions, illnesses of expediency.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is it on political business that you are
+here?”</p>
+
+<p>“In a sense, yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“The doctor has given the most positive
+orders that my father is to have complete rest
+from every sort of worry and anxiety.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Desirable, but impossible. Then he does
+not know that I am here?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” coldly.</p>
+
+<p>“I should say that there is only one way
+in which your father can make sure of carrying
+out the doctor’s orders.” She looked at
+him with gathering resentment, but he continued
+calmly: “He would do well to throw
+up the appointment he holds under the
+Crown”—she listened, amazed; but she
+was obliged to listen—” and resign his seat
+in Parliament.”</p>
+
+<p>Her face flushed angrily.</p>
+
+<p>“He must also abandon his profession.”</p>
+
+<p>“Must!” she repeated, indignantly and
+wonderingly.</p>
+
+<p>“I can assure you I am giving you excellent
+advice.”</p>
+
+<p>“We are not asking for advice.”</p>
+
+<p>“There are reasons which lead me to
+volunteer it.”</p>
+
+<p>“My father has been threatened by some
+cowardly writer of anonymous letters,” she
+said impulsively, “but the police will soon
+stop that.”</p>
+
+<p>His smile checked her. “Ah, the police,”
+he said quietly. “But of course Sir John
+Westwood is not afraid?”</p>
+
+<p>There was an implication in his words, a
+subtle intonation, that stung her to the quick.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span>
+She moved across the room with outstretched
+hand, to touch the bell.</p>
+
+<p>“One moment,” he interposed.</p>
+
+<p>“My time is not my own to-day,” said
+Aldwyth.</p>
+
+<p>“You think me brutal and presumptuous?”</p>
+
+<p>“Extremely presumptuous.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is necessary for Sir John Westwood to
+be warned. He shall have a fair chance.”</p>
+
+<p>“What you say is quite unaccountable to
+me,” she answered, and looked at him again.
+It flashed upon her that only madness could
+be the explanation of this extraordinary
+conversation. And yet the man was manifestly
+calm and resolute.</p>
+
+<p>“As to the time of warning him——” he
+continued.</p>
+
+<p>“Of what?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of the necessity for doing what I have
+suggested. As to the time of telling Sir John
+Westwood what I have said this morning,
+something may be left to your discretion.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are very kind!” with scornful
+emphasis.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t claim to be kind, but I am candid,
+and I think that when, at your discretion,
+you tell your father of this interview, he will
+see the futility of hurling himself against the
+rocks.”</p>
+
+<p>“What rocks?” she demanded.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span></p>
+
+<p>“He will discover in due time, if he does
+not know already.”</p>
+
+<p>She rang the bell, and walked towards the
+window.</p>
+
+<p>“I am sorry,” she heard him add.
+There was a short pause. “I am sorry
+for <em>you</em>.”</p>
+
+<p>She turned her head, with an angry retort
+upon her lips; but the door was closing,
+and she found herself alone.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XI<br>
+<small>THE SIGN OF THE SPIDER</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>The London season languished. Even the
+cult of the great god Pleasure found few
+genuinely zealous votaries. Trade, said the
+managers of the big West-end drapery establishments,
+had never been so bad. Manifestly
+there was something radically wrong
+when crowds of women-folk no longer blocked
+the pavement in front of Simon Robertson’s
+great plate-glass windows. The king lay ill
+at Windsor Castle, and such social functions
+as might ordinarily have counted on the
+presence of royalty roused but little interest.
+Arid, parching days, and sultry, suffocating
+nights, made ball-rooms and places of entertainment
+almost unendurable. The booking-offices
+of the theatres told a convincing tale
+of bad business, and the art of advertisement
+in manifold forms, so well understood by
+stars of the stage and actor-managers (and
+so zealously promoted by the writers of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span>
+dramatic gossip in the papers) took forms
+which suggested the desperation of despair.
+In the world of music it was just the same.
+People yawned or sighed wearily when their
+eyes met the puff preliminary concerning the
+latest freak in musical precocity. Even the
+emotional women who usually worshipped
+as near as might be the bushy-haired violinists
+exploited by concert agencies, fanned
+themselves languidly and stayed at home.
+In the city there was but little difference
+in the look of things. Men appeared to be
+busy, but their seeming energy was largely
+due to the mere habit of hurry, acquired
+through the influence of surroundings. Every
+morning, as usual, the swarm of stockbrokers,
+dealers, and hangers-on of the House, came
+bustling out of the stations at Liverpool Street,
+Broad Street, and Cannon Street. Between
+nine-thirty and ten-thirty the accustomed
+crowds might be seen hurrying over London
+Bridge. But when the brokers reached the
+Stock Exchange there was next to nothing
+to do. American rails refused to lend themselves
+to any sort of manipulated excitement,
+and in the mining market, shares were thrown
+about at rubbish prices, or could not be made
+to change hands at all. The financial journals
+still came out, but their advertisement
+pages lacked those big announcements of new<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span>
+issues from which their profits were mainly
+derived. They eked out a precarious existence
+by publishing carefully edited reports
+of company meetings at so much per column,
+supplying copies at special rates for transmission
+to confiding shareholders. The daily
+columns of market prices became shorter and
+shorter, for, in such times, the smaller companies
+could not pay to have their dead or
+dying stock quoted as if it still possessed the
+elements of vital movement.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, the galvanic efforts of the “great
+dailies” still continued; but the latest attempt
+of the <em>Times</em> to introduce a new and
+important series of instructive works on
+almost give-away terms into the homes of
+the public (including a beautiful bookcase in
+fumed oak) met with practically no response
+at all.</p>
+
+<p>But the papers, with editorial finger on
+the pulse of London, now took up a theme
+to which increasing space was devoted day
+by day. The leading journal showed that
+it still knew how to thunder. Its latest
+warnings, its most booming utterances, were
+directed against the growing power and
+audacity of the Leaguers of London. It
+told the nation plainly what had been hinted
+at before in the <em>Detector</em>—in effect, that there
+was a great conspiracy on foot, and that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span>
+unless the Governmental powers bestirred
+themselves, the safety of the capital, if not
+of the whole nation, would be imperilled.</p>
+
+<p>This conspiracy, it was stated, had ramifications
+and objects far more dangerous than
+those that had been exposed in the famous
+series of articles on “Parnellism and Crime.”</p>
+
+<p>Tudor Street and Carmelite Buildings were
+not to be outdone by Printing House Square
+or Fleet Street. The League figured constantly
+in the bold headlines and contents
+bills of the halfpenny journals, and one of
+them—the <em>Epoch</em>—whose prosperity was not
+so great as was commonly supposed, bent
+on a bid for fame, now boldly alleged that
+the head centre of the mysterious League
+was none other than the Anglo-Mexican
+millionaire, Marcus White. The result was
+looked for with anxiety and interest. When
+it was known, the devout believers in the
+disinterestedness of the <em>Epoch</em> received something
+of a shock; for one morning it was
+announced that the paper had changed
+hands, and the journal which so recently had
+denounced the Leaguers of London and all
+their works, was now the accredited organ
+of the League, and the champion of its objects.
+There was something sinister and cynical in
+the transaction.</p>
+
+<p>The price paid for the <em>Epoch</em>, its goodwill,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span>
+its plant, its printing houses and stock, was
+said to be enormous, but in its sale as a commercial
+property the commercial instinct
+was by no means eliminated. It became at
+once a powerful collecting agency for the
+League. A coupon-form, with the imprint
+of the spider-disc, appeared in every copy,
+and it was intimated that those readers who
+subscribed a stated sum to the funds of the
+League, would have their names and addresses
+carefully registered, thereby securing immunity
+from further applications for financial
+support. In effect, such subscribers would
+obtain the protection of the League itself,
+in case of public disturbance, or that risk to
+life and property which, according to the
+contemporaries of the <em>Epoch</em>, the police of
+London were not in sufficient strength to avert.</p>
+
+<p>Coupons, with names and addresses, and
+remittances often largely exceeding the minimum
+amount invited, now poured into the
+offices of the <em>Epoch</em> by every post. The
+receipt sent in every case was a metal disc,
+which now met the eye of astonished Londoners
+in every street, railway carriage, omnibus,
+tram-car, and place of public resort. It was
+worn prominently on the left breast by an
+ever-increasing multitude, men and women,
+and even by children, belonging to all ranks
+of life.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span></p>
+
+<p>Lists of the disc-holders were published in
+batches in the <em>Epoch</em> from day to day, and
+were read with extraordinary and ever-growing
+eagerness. In vain the <em>Times</em> and
+other sober journals denounced the folly and
+danger which these ever-lengthening lists
+exemplified.</p>
+
+<p>It was of no use to declare that people of
+high character and good position, were blindly,
+even madly, allying themselves with the
+scum of London and the off-scourings of the
+Continent; that their action would infallibly
+paralyse their only reliable protectors, and
+promote the cause of social disruption by
+giving the League the semblance of respectability.
+There was nothing to show, said the
+leader-writer, that this so-called Emigration
+League took any practical steps to give effect
+to its ostensible programme. On the contrary,
+there was ample evidence that it
+organised immigration of anarchists and miscreants
+of all sorts into England. Never
+before had the foreign element been so much
+in evidence in London. The tardy and much
+vaunted legislation against the influx of aliens
+had proved little better than a fiasco. Foreigners
+still swarmed to Grimsby, Hull, Newhaven,
+Southampton, and Harwich, though
+ineffectual steps were taken to check the influx
+at those ports; while no similar machinery<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</span>
+had been fairly tried at Dover and at Folkestone.
+Aliens were everywhere, not only on
+English ground, but also on British ships.
+In vessels belonging to the port of Cardiff
+alone, the crews were foreigners in the proportion
+of fifty per cent. Thus the mercantile
+marine, which should be the great feeder
+of the Royal Navy—our first line of defence
+against Continental enemies—was become an
+actual source of danger, instead of strength,
+to the nation.</p>
+
+<p>But warnings fell on deaf or indifferent
+ears. Personal safety had become the dominant
+idea. Panic was in the air, and the
+purchase, for such in truth it was, of the little
+metal disc, was now widely regarded as the
+only means of securing a magnet by which
+the alarmed population could hope to steer
+clear of the vortex towards which the tides
+of life were tending.</p>
+
+<p>The <em>Daily Telephone</em>, in desperation, started
+a correspondence under the title: <span class="smcap">Are we
+Afraid?</span> Letters from all sorts and conditions
+of people descended like a postal
+avalanche upon the editorial offices; and
+while the selected correspondence was published
+from day to day, a series of special
+articles dealt with Crazes of the Past—Law
+and his Mississippi Scheme; Blunt and the
+South Sea Bubble; the Jabez Balfour fiasco;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</span>
+the Whitaker Wright boom, with many other
+examples of chicanery, folly, and consequent
+disaster, receiving elaborate notice. The
+moral was illustrated, the application was
+solemnly rubbed in; but all to little purpose.
+The sale of the metal disc still increased by
+leaps and bounds. Inborn inclination to
+abbreviate asserted itself, in accordance with
+abundant precedent, and one person would
+ask another: “Are you a Spider?” and the
+answer would be, “Yes,” “No,” or “I mean
+to be.” Thus the League, though having, it
+was believed, many inner circles or subdivisions,
+became sectionised into two great
+classes—the Leaguers proper (or improper)
+unemployed, unemployable, and hosts of discharged
+prisoners; and those others—the
+respectable “spiders,” holders of the metal
+disc as a species of insurance against the
+terrorism and depredation which were expected
+from the original Leaguers.</p>
+
+<p>What, precisely, the “Spider” meant was
+the subject of much controversy. But what
+purported to be an explanation was given
+in one of the leading articles in the <em>Standard</em>;
+a totally different theory being put forward
+with equal prominence in the <em>Daily Chronicle</em>,
+in an article headed, “The Mystery of the
+Metal Disc.” At about the same time, in
+the <em>Morning Post</em>, the pen of a well-known<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</span>
+author and journalist, whose versatile talents
+were constantly employed in surveying the
+world from St Andrews to the Antipodes,
+airily instructed the public concerning the
+Real Significance of the “Spider.” The
+writer, being of that nation which an English
+writer has declared “unspeakable,” naturally
+enough commenced with an allusion to the
+famous spider of a famous king of Scotland.
+He pointed out, however, that that particular
+spider was not of Scottish origin, because the
+insect really appeared to Robert Bruce in
+the little island of Rathlin, which is off the
+coast of Ireland. The writer then went on
+to treat of the spider at Sans Souci, which
+fell into the cup of chocolate prepared for
+Frederick the Great, whose life it was instrumental
+in saving. From Sans Souci he passed
+lightly to Mecca, and told of the spider that
+spun the web that hid Mahomet from his
+enemies. From that to the murder of Sir
+Thomas Overbury was only a step, and the
+theory of poison made from spiders’ bodies
+was aptly illustrated by a quotation from
+the <em>Winter’s Tale</em>. More pertinent, perhaps,
+was the reference to the old wives’ fable,
+which held that certain physical ills might
+be averted by wearing a spider in a nutshell
+round the neck. Finally, the versatile contributor
+raked in the legend connected with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</span>
+the “Shambles” shoal off Portland, at the
+bottom of which, according to tradition, are
+the wrecks of many ships seized and dragged
+down in far-off times by the giant spider,
+Kraken.</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“Below the thunders of the upper deep;<br>
+Far, far beneath in the abysmal sea,<br>
+His ancient, dreamless, uninvaded sleep<br>
+The Kraken sleepeth.”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>There to remain—</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“Until the latter fire shall heat the deep;<br>
+Then once by man and angels to be seen,<br>
+In roaring he shall rise, and on the surface die.”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Such articles, perhaps, were calculated to
+spread, rather than restrict the general feeling
+of uneasiness. They served to fix the
+public mind upon what was already sufficiently
+in evidence, and by suggesting elements
+of the uncanny and occult, promoted
+the hysteric tendencies which were
+becoming so distressingly conspicuous among
+the people.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XII<br>
+<small>THE “EPOCH” RUNS AMOK</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>In those never-forgettable summer weeks in
+the mammoth city the converted <em>Epoch</em>
+published a series of denunciatory articles
+without parallel in the history of the modern
+press. The <em>Epoch</em> was now an organ of
+opinion, indeed, but not of opinion made to
+order, or governed by the exigencies of
+political party. Its independence was a fact,
+and not a polite fiction. It dealt with men
+as men and as members of specialised professions.
+It ranked politics as one of the
+professions, and not the most honourable, and
+it tarred the “ins” and the “outs” with
+one and the same prickly brush. The new
+departure made it clear that the freedom
+of the press, as hitherto understood, was itself
+a mere fiction.</p>
+
+<p>In law the newspaper had no greater
+freedom than the individual critic. Political
+opponents might, indeed, be attacked and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span>
+misrepresented with an impunity begotten
+of necessity, and the pot-and-kettle system,
+inherited from the journalistic organs of
+Eatanswill; but beyond that, the only freedom
+consisted in the right to publish what a
+jury of twelve tradesmen might not consider
+libellous. Journalism, in fact, was analogous
+to advocacy. The pot called the kettle
+black, and the kettle declared that the pot
+was blacker. Both pot and kettle, meanwhile,
+had an eye to business. That was
+perfectly legitimate and natural, but the
+radical mistake of the public lay in its view
+of the press as a philanthropic institution
+bent only on maintaining the cause of peace
+and happiness, truth and justice, religion and
+piety throughout the realm. It was obvious
+to the reflective worldling that no journal
+could be run on truly ethical lines with ultimate
+advantage to the bank balance of its
+proprietors; just as it was plain to the
+world-fearing Christian that practical Christianity
+would never “pay.” No journalist
+or Christian admitted these facts. They
+knew them quite well, but they ignored them,
+and placidly drew around themselves the
+comfortable robes of organised hypocrisy.</p>
+
+<p>The very last thing that any well-conducted
+journal would have dreamed of would be the
+printing of a slashing and remorseless attack<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span>
+upon the great Middle Class—the backbone
+of the country and the mainstay of modern
+journalism. Censures of the “smart set,”
+foolishly so called, and of their social descendants,
+of course had been administered
+<em>ad nauseam</em>, thereby giving to a limited body
+of showy persons (with more money—or
+credit—than brains) an exaggerated sense
+of their own interest and importance. The
+lower orders, too, had met with stern rebuke
+(for their thriftlessness, their laziness, and
+their self-indulgence) but only in journals
+which the lower orders never read. The
+<em>Epoch</em>, however, assailed with tooth and nail
+the denizens of the great middle country, the
+buffer state in which dwelt all the respectables—the
+clergy, the doctors, the lawyers, brokers,
+dentists, accountants, surveyors, merchants,
+shopkeepers, active and retired, who “made
+England what it was,” and what the <em>Epoch</em>
+roundly declared it ought not to be.</p>
+
+<p>As a journalistic programme this was considered
+part and parcel of the midsummer
+madness that had fallen on the distracted
+capital. Fleet Street, Printing House Square,
+Bouverie Street, Shoe Lane, and Whitefriars,
+as embodied in the persons of representative
+journalists, shook their heads. “It was playing
+the fool”; it was “not cricket”; it was
+“quarrelling with your bread-and-butter,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span>
+or killing the goose that laid the golden—or
+at least the gilded—eggs; it was “the reckless
+destruction of a splendid commercial
+property”—in short, such bad “biz,” that
+no editor would pursue it unless under orders
+to ride deliberately for a fall. In particular,
+to assail the Church! the Law!! the Medical
+Faculty!!! in one fell charge! Midsummer
+madness, indeed! To fall foul, not merely
+of one learned profession—especially when
+the <em>Epoch</em> might have gone for one of them
+(the clergy for choice), and with impunity;
+but to attack all three was—well it was pure,
+absolute, and undiluted lunacy. Thus quoth
+Fleet Street. But the onslaught continued.
+From the archbishops down to the deacons,
+none was spared.</p>
+
+<p>It was admitted that there were good and
+true soldiers in the clerical ranks—some such
+pitiful minority of righteous men as those
+for whose sake Abraham, in his prayerful and
+pathetic apology, entreated that the Cities of
+the Plain might be spared. But for the rest?—the
+time-serving right reverends on the
+path of promotion, with one foot in the
+sanctuary and the other in the temple of
+Mammon; the deans and archdeacons who
+clung to high benefice, and forgot the solemn
+ordination vows of their early manhood; the
+canons whose intellectual vanity found vent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span>
+in sermons and pamphlets that argued faith
+in the cardinal doctrines of Christianity to
+be only a delusion and a snare; the holders
+of rich livings who had waxed fat and kicked
+against all the labours of parochial duty;
+the popular preachers who did not practise
+what they preached; the faithless stewards
+of the mysteries who declared there were no
+mysteries at all; and the flaccid curates who
+feebly bleated in the pulpit to a congregation
+of martyrs in the pews—for these, and all of
+these, the <em>Epoch</em> let loose the chastisement of
+journalistic whips and scorpions.</p>
+
+<p>Somewhat less sweeping was the treatment
+dealt out to the profession of the healing art;
+but here, too, condemnation was not spared.
+The claptrap of the calling was its blight;
+the “abracadabra” of its Latin prescriptions;
+the bestowal of long names on short ailments;
+the fetich of the medicine bottle; the hoodwinking
+of the patient’s friends; the solemn-faced
+acquiescence in the patient’s mendacious
+explanations of his or her symptoms;
+the decorous delusions indirectly fostered in
+the best “bedside manner”; the pandering
+to the egoism and self-importance of opulent
+“sufferers”; the frequent farce of “second
+opinions”; the puff paragraphs countenanced
+by eminent practitioners in relation to their
+visits to eminent patients; the etiquette that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span>
+supported the “lumping” of fees, and the
+continuation of “professional services” long
+after such services had ceased to be necessary:
+these, perhaps, were but the stereotyped
+faults which unthinking men regard as
+justified by custom or their own necessities.
+The rank and file of the medical brotherhood,
+the <em>Epoch</em> admitted, had much work and
+scanty wage. But the sins of their leading
+men were more heinous. The selfishness
+which made them contend for the retention
+of great hospitals in unsuitable localities;
+the enormous fees exacted from private
+patients on the strength of hospital reputation;
+the too ready use of the operating
+knife on the human subject, and the tortures
+of vivisection inflicted in the abused name
+of science upon the dumb creation: these,
+indeed, were sins that cried aloud for reproof
+and repression.</p>
+
+<p>But the <em>Epoch</em> was more scathing still in
+its bombardment of the system of judicature,
+and the legal ministers thereof. It began
+with the House of Lords as a legal tribunal—” the
+gilded asylum in which judicial patients
+suffering from the incurable disease of old
+age delivered very occasional judgments in
+exchange for princely salaries and exalted
+rank.” The Royal Courts of Justice were
+characterised as a gigantic honeycomb in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span>
+which clerkly drones got as much as they
+could for doing as little as possible; a mighty
+mill in which the machinery stood still during
+vacations which lasted about a third of the
+working year; a vast temple in which the
+servers were ever engaged in piling fuel on
+the altars of precedent and practice.</p>
+
+<p>Then the writer, or writers, went on to
+deal with the legal practitioners, whom he
+or they described as “Locusts of the Law”;
+but here, again, there was no condemnation
+for the honest rank and file—the barristers in
+their chambers and the solicitors in their
+offices, who were fair and square in their
+dealings, and manfully struggled to keep
+their footing under almost impossible conditions.
+But for the brilliant leaders of the
+Bar—the advocates who walked in silk attire
+and siller had to spare—there was no gentleness.
+“Scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites!”
+For them, said the <em>Epoch</em>, the whole pretentious
+fabric of our legal system was maintained;
+for their advantage the monstrous
+delusion of honorary services; for their
+immunity the supposed dissociation of forensic
+labour from forensic fees; and the helpless
+position of suitors whose causes they
+mismanaged or neglected.</p>
+
+<p>Contempt was poured on the “representative
+bodies” which misrepresented the forensic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span>
+profession—the General Council of the
+Bar, with its policy of tithe, mint, and cumin,
+and its neglect of the weightier matters of
+the law; the Benchers, with their limpet-like
+clinging to ancient funds and obsolete traditions;
+the circuit messes, with their petty
+jealousies and selfish trade-unionism.</p>
+
+<p>But here, in the middle-class multitude, if
+anywhere, lay the true strength and stay of
+the nation. With all their faults, these men
+were mainly of the right sort. But they were
+selfish, supine, indifferent, save to their own
+immediate comfort and advantage. In politics
+they were swayed by purely party cries,
+or else not moved at all. In municipal affairs
+they allowed themselves to be swamped by
+noisy social democrats; in religion, if not
+actually hostile to the Church, they maintained
+a cautious “non-committal” attitude.
+They placidly acquiesced in government by
+permanent secretaries—men of clerkly mind,
+the clustering, clinging barnacles on the great
+ship of State. But when conscription was
+talked of—when the idea of devoting a few
+years to military training, and, in some dire
+emergency, their lives, if need be, to the
+service of king and mother-country—they held
+up their hands in pious horror at the bare
+thought of anything so “un-English,”—and
+so very inconvenient!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</span></p>
+
+<p>Thus may be very briefly summarised the
+outspoken and unflinching attacks on bodies
+of men and institutions which it had always
+been considered right to pat on the back, and
+on the leading members thereof, (to whom,
+as they already had much, it was servilely
+considered that more should be given). It
+certainly was manifest that the <em>Epoch</em> writers
+had been given a free hand, and had used
+it, with <em>magna est veritas</em> for their war-cry.
+Naturally, protests, remonstrances, denials,
+poured in from the attacked; for to few is it
+given to see ourselves as others see us.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, after all, it was but a twentieth century
+echo; a rough and trenchant postscript to a
+certain sermon preached long, long ago on
+a Syrian mountain-side to listening multitudes
+who were astonished at the Preacher’s
+doctrines.</p>
+
+<p>Whether this stirring of the dry bones
+would ultimately make for greater righteousness
+time alone could show. Dark are the
+workings of destiny; and in the path of reform
+immediate results can rarely be recorded.
+Undoubtedly the proximate outcome of the
+<em>Epoch</em> campaign was a strengthening of the
+cause of the malcontents. The numbers of
+the Leaguers still grew and grew. They had,
+in fact, become an army on half pay; for
+every Leaguer, unemployed and unemployable,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</span>
+drew something from the coffers of the
+organisation, and thus the body of Adullamites
+drew in every one that was in distress, and
+every one that was in debt, and every one
+that was discontented. In effect, the rate-payers
+of London, who were for buying peace
+at any price, had provided their enemy with
+the sinews of war, and thereby hastened the
+approaching climax.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XIII<br>
+<small>THE STRANGE OUTBREAK AT QUEEN’S HALL</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>The recrudescence of the Dancing Mania
+first took notable form on a certain Sunday
+evening. At Queen’s Hall the Sunday League—which
+is in no way to be associated with
+the Leaguers of London—had organised one
+of those frequent and excellent concerts
+which, presumably, are intended to provide
+a suitable substitute for religious worship in
+our churches. A famous conductor, whose
+brilliant services to the cause of the higher
+music had brought him a world-wide reputation,
+was there to sway with his bâton the
+finest orchestral band ever known to the
+music-lovers of London.</p>
+
+<p>The great hall and the vast galleries were
+densely packed, and as the programme proceeded,
+the heat, generated by hundreds
+upon hundreds of listening humans, became
+intense and overpowering. There was a
+marked sense of overstrain during the wonderful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</span>
+rendering of Tchaikovsky’s lengthy Symphony
+(No. 6 in B minor). The music itself
+was full of subtle emotion. Deep melancholy
+alternated with swelling excitement. The
+passionate pessimism of the Russian character
+communicated itself through the medium
+of the score to those among the great audience
+who were predisposed to share it. The tragic
+gloom and fatalism of the movement hung
+like a thunder-cloud in the stifling atmosphere,
+and the wailing sadness of the subdued finale
+was succeeded by a tense silence. Then, as
+the audience was about to burst into the
+accustomed applause, a woman rose in the
+body of the hall, and gave a piercing shriek.
+The effect was electrical. Hundreds of people
+started to their feet. Another shriek, still
+more weird and piercing, drew a like response
+from scores of throats. In an instant confusion
+reigned throughout the hall and corridors,
+and in the balconies. Attempts to
+restore silence and order were drowned in
+the general tumult. Here and there, men
+and women, unable to reach the aisles, tried
+to climb over the closely ranged lines of
+movable stalls. Many of these seats fell with
+a crash, and horrified spectators in the balconies
+saw masses of people heaped and
+struggling on the ground. The bandsmen
+had risen excitedly, instruments in hand,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</span>
+unheeding for once the gestures of the conductor,
+who turned with pallid face, the
+perspiration in great drops on his forehead,
+and made imploring gestures to the audience.
+Bruised and bleeding, distraught with terror,
+some of those who had fallen in the effort to
+escape struggled to their feet and fought
+viciously and desperately to reach the exit
+doors.</p>
+
+<p>The officials of the Sunday League, with
+many persons in the audience, now made
+great and partially successful efforts to prevent
+a general rush. Shouts of “Sit down!
+sit down!” came from all parts of the building.
+The bandsmen were the first to resume
+their seats, and while the outgoing crowd
+was checked and marshalled into some sort
+of order, others set a good example, and,
+realising that there was absolutely no reason
+for panic, settled down as if intending to
+remain throughout the programme. But by
+a wise discretion on the part of the conductor,
+the concert was abandoned. At a signal, the
+familiar first bar of the National Anthem
+brought all to their feet again; then, turning
+to the audience, the wielder of the bâton
+invited them to join; and, with extraordinary
+volume and fervour, “God Save the King”
+brought the concert to a close. A terrible
+catastrophe had been averted; for, by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</span>
+marvellous good fortune, no life was lost in
+the frantic effort of a section of the audience
+to escape. Those who were injured were being
+hurried, half-fainting, into cabs, and those
+who were merely suffering from shattered
+nerves sat on chairs in the corridors, while
+anxious friends tried to restore them to some
+degree of self-control.</p>
+
+<p>The swift reaction, born of unexpected
+safety, may perhaps account in some measure
+for what followed. The woman whose scream
+had given the first impulse to disturbance—afterwards
+recognised as a Spanish dancer
+at the Empire music-hall—was suddenly seen
+to be moving down the corridor in a wild,
+fantastic dance. Bursts of laughter greeted
+the extraordinary and unlooked-for display.
+An avenue was made for her, and on she
+danced. Her hat was gone; her long black
+hair had fallen to her waist, and her eyes were
+blazing with the look of a demoniac. The
+crowd closed after her, with fresh laughter,
+which presently gave place to excited and
+wondering exclamations. Now she was in
+the entrance hall, and one of the officials laid
+his hand upon her shoulder. She shook herself
+free with a scream of foreign words.
+Another moment, and those peering eagerly
+from the entrance steps and pavement, saw
+the Bacchantic figure whirling in the street.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</span>
+The cries and tumultuous shouts which arose
+among the crowd around the dancer, and the
+warning shouts of the drivers of approaching
+vehicles, brought hosts of visitors to the open
+windows of the Langham and the neighbouring
+houses. Presently, those who could look
+down from these vantage points, and others
+who now packed the steps of All Souls’ Church,
+saw with bewilderment that the magnetism
+of example had drawn some six or seven
+young girls and women into a kind of dance
+which imitated the movements of the Spaniard.</p>
+
+<p>Thus the glare of the electric lights revealed
+one of the strangest and most lamentable
+scenes ever witnessed in the streets of London.
+It was brief, but pregnant with painful possibilities.
+Two or three policemen, as soon as
+they realised in some measure what was
+happening, assisted by some resolute men
+who had now emerged from the hall, brought
+the dancers to a forcible standstill. Their
+resistance was cat-like, savage; but exhaustion
+aided the efforts of the constables,
+and within twenty minutes the roadway was
+cleared, the crowd dispersed, and Langham
+Place had almost resumed its normal aspect.</p>
+
+<p>For ten days after these occurrences there
+was nothing to indicate that they were likely
+to be repeated. Then, in another quarter
+of London, there was a somewhat similar<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</span>
+outbreak, and, unhappily, on a more extensive
+scale. It took place among the girl-pupils
+attending a large school of shorthand
+in Southampton Row. Rumour had it, and
+probably it was true, that some of them had
+been present at Queen’s Hall on the occasion
+already chronicled. After the long, hot afternoon
+hours in the class-rooms, the shorthand
+pupils—girls and youths—poured out in the
+usual throng into the streets. There was a
+good deal of gossiping, as usual, and here
+and there a little innocent flirtation. The
+flower-sellers, who drive their trade near
+Cosmo Place on the pavement of Southampton
+Row, as usual eagerly drew attention to
+their baskets. Then one, whose basket was
+first emptied, executed a wild pirouette of
+triumph. Some of the young men applauded
+vigorously. Here and there a girl was pushed
+forward, and some of the more reckless danced
+a few steps, in imitation of the flower-seller.
+The spark was in the bonfire! and before
+any one realised what was happening, a score
+of dancers, male and female, filled the pavement,
+and by force of numbers moved into
+the roadway. To escape the horse traffic
+and motors, they whirled across at an angle
+into Russell Square. The cabmen on the
+stand applauded them derisively, bursting
+into coarse guffaws. Incoherent cries came<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</span>
+from the parched throats of the dancers.
+Some of them now joined hands and swept
+over the broad southern roadway of the
+square; others, with grotesque gestures,
+danced alone, leaping into the air at intervals.
+A cornet-player, who was standing near the
+north corner of Bedford Place, raised his
+instrument to his lips, and the clear, sudden
+notes that followed seemed to act upon his
+hearers as a trumpet-call. It served to
+quicken to an almost appalling degree the
+epidemic character of the amazing outbreak;
+for passers-by, moved as by an irresistible
+impulse, joined in the maddened movement
+of the dancers. They overflowed into the
+quiet thoroughfare of Bedford Place. From
+the residential hotels and boarding-houses
+on either side people rushed to the doorways
+and windows. Servants, with shrill cries,
+hurried up area steps to witness, with loud
+comment, the stupefying display, until many
+of the watchers themselves were drawn
+into the widening circles of the excited
+dancers.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XIV<br>
+<small>BILLY OF MAYFAIR</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>There was one, and only one, section of
+society in London that found unalloyed
+pleasure in the abnormal features of the
+period. The youth of the lower orders revelled
+in the absence of the restraint that
+hitherto had qualified the natural joy of life.
+The Boy in the Street in all his varied experiences
+had never had so good a time
+before. He made the most of it. He came,
+not as a single spy, but in battalions. His
+shrill voice rent the air day and night; his
+cockney smartness found new and glorious
+opportunities for exercise; the badinage of
+the pavement was heard on every side. The
+march of the Leaguers, or the whirling rush
+of a band of Dancers, never failed to stir him
+to loud delight or tumultuous excitement.</p>
+
+<p>There was one small youth, here entering
+the pages of this chronicle, who participated
+with the keenest relish in the unfolding drama<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</span>
+of the day. This boy was Billy of Mayfair.
+Not always had he found his headquarters
+in that highly rented and exclusive district.
+Like the Wise Men, and like many clever
+boys, he came from the East. But his travels
+westward began at an extremely early age,
+and in regard to the migrations of that
+period Billy’s mind was quite a blank. His
+grandmother, a woman of no importance, and
+given, when means permitted, to inebriety,
+sometimes mentioned Poplar as the place of
+his nativity, and on other occasions asserted
+that in the Isle of Dogs Billy’s pink eyes
+first opened on the murky world down East.
+There was not much difference, and nothing
+to choose between those grimy regions, and
+Billy himself never troubled his white-thatched
+head about the past. He was in the West
+Central district when first he realised that
+he was anywhere, and he accepted his surroundings
+just as he accepted his physical
+peculiarities. Billy was quite accustomed
+to the special, if unflattering, notice which
+his appearance attracted, and showed no
+surprise or resentment when addressed
+contemptuously as a “blooming Halbino.”</p>
+
+<p>If a skin specialist had explained to him
+that his abnormal skin and hair resulted from
+an absence of the minute particles of colouring
+matter usually found in the lowest layer of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</span>
+the epidermis, he would have listened respectfully
+and then departed with the skimming
+step and whooping yell familiar to his
+young companions of the gutter. But nobody
+explained him to himself, and it was an
+accepted, and not perhaps unwelcome, fact
+that he was not like other boys.</p>
+
+<p>When Billy reached the age of ten he was
+still residing in a “third floor back” in an
+unsavoury court of which the narrow entrance
+is in Chapel Street, a short thoroughfare
+running from Lamb’s Conduit Street to Milman
+Street. But Billy was not much at
+home; nor was Billy’s grandmother aforesaid,—a
+prematurely aged and doddering
+person who earned precarious pence by perfunctorily
+sweeping crossings in an adjacent
+square. At night the two shared the
+shelter of the third floor back, and breathed
+till morning light, or darkness, the poisonous
+air of the miserable apartment. In warm
+fine weather Billy kept late hours. Sometimes,
+like the people who were “seeing
+life”—Heaven save the mark!—the boy did
+not go home till morning. Billy, like many
+another gutter child in London, knew much
+of its night side—the side known to the
+policemen, to hansom-cabmen, and to hospital
+nurses on night duty, who look out of
+window when cabs rattle up to certain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</span>
+neighbouring houses. Editors and journalists
+know also of that night side, but all
+things are not for publication. Half the
+world is ignorant of the deadly canker eating
+into the vitals of the nation; and the other
+half keeps silence.</p>
+
+<p>It was through being out late at night
+that Billy lost his leg. It fell out thus:
+Billy, dead tired, was sleeping in a doorway
+at the top of Bedford Row, when the vigilant
+eye of P.C. Dormer espied his small and
+huddled form. The law, through the eyes
+of the constabulary, looks with sternness on
+such lapses from well-ordered life and habits.
+The open-air treatment must not be adopted
+on your own responsibility. If you have no
+home—well, you ought to have. You may
+walk the king’s highway, but if that grows
+fatiguing and you slumber on a doorstep, it
+is the plain duty of P.C. Dormer to rouse and
+move you on. In effect, to be homeless is to
+be criminal, and to wander abroad without
+any visible means of subsistence, brings man
+or boy within the purview of the law. Lucky
+for you if P.C. Dormer does not see reason
+to conclude that incidentally you are loitering
+with intent to commit a felony.</p>
+
+<p>So Billy was shaken, and slumbered again;
+he did not rise, but the policeman’s temper
+did. So the grip of a mighty hand came<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</span>
+upon Billy’s bony little shoulder, making
+him call out sharply and then whimper.</p>
+
+<p>“Get out o’ this,” growled the constable.
+So Billy got out, into Theobald’s Road.
+There, at what he believed to be a safe distance,
+he found another lurking-place, and
+having had a fatiguing day in the streets,
+he fell asleep again. But the law was on
+his trail. P.C. Dormer’s bull’s-eye, searching
+nooks and doorways, discovered once again
+the insignificant rebel against social order.
+Dormer was greatly ruffled. At the corner
+of Gray’s Inn Road, half an hour earlier, he
+had encountered a band of hooligans, who,
+strong in numbers, had jeered at his authority.
+In such circumstances it was but police
+nature that he should take it out of somebody.
+And here was Billy, defying or ignoring
+the majesty of the law! With a howl of
+pain and terror the boy came out of his
+dreams to find himself once more in the
+grip of a superior force. He wriggled to the
+pavement and lay there sobbing. Then P.C.
+Dormer gave him a vicious kick and Billy
+screamed with agony. It was no good now
+to tell him to be off. To “move on” was a
+physical impossibility. He lay and writhed.</p>
+
+<p>The next day he was in hospital in Great
+Ormond Street. He was supposed to have
+been knocked down by a fire engine in a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</span>
+hurry. Billy knew better, but he held his
+peace. His bibulous grandmother told the
+matron that “there’d always been summat
+wrong with his ’ip.” There was something
+very wrong now; and presently they transferred
+the injured child to the Alexandra
+Hospital in Queen Square, where hip disease
+was a speciality. Surgeons came and went,
+and now and then there were operation days
+at intervals. There came a day when the
+operating knife was brought to bear on Billy,
+and when it had done its necessary work,
+Billy’s right leg was his no more, and for a
+time he had that weird experience of feeling
+pain in a member that was non-existent.</p>
+
+<p>Sister, staff-nurse, day nurses and night
+nurses—they were all kind and tender to the
+little one-legged patient. They assured him
+he would be all right now, and that he was
+going to have a beautiful little crutch to get
+along with presently. His grandmother came
+to see him on visitors’ days, blear-eyed and
+pendulous of lip. On those days, indeed,
+many impossible parents and guardians went
+up the stone stairs of the Alexandra, bringing
+cheap and noisy toys, and refreshments of a
+wholly inappropriate character. With the general
+throng came on one occasion a stalwart
+man who walked like a policeman. He was
+a policeman. It was P.C. Dormer. He was a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</span>
+good fellow in the main, and he had children
+of his own. At first Billy did not recognise
+him out of uniform. Then remembrance
+dawned, and to his amazement his quick pink
+eyes noted tears in the eyes of P.C. Dormer.
+Clumsily, ashamedly, the constable put a
+painted toy upon the bed, and Billy smiled.
+Then the big man, with hasty glance around,
+bent his great red face over him.</p>
+
+<p>“You ’aven’t spilt, ’ave you?” he asked
+in a hoarse whisper.</p>
+
+<p>“Not me,” said Billy, speaking very low,
+but very scornfully.</p>
+
+<p>“My Gawd! but you’re a good plucked
+’un!” said P.C. Dormer. “I’m damned
+sorry, that I am.” His great fist closed upon
+the small boy’s tiny hand. It was the proudest,
+happiest moment Billy had ever known.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes, though the Alexandra was devoted
+to the hip-diseases of children, other
+diseases found an entry; and one day, Billy,
+who had shown disquieting symptoms, found
+himself, as the nurses said “in isolation.”
+In other words, he was placed in a detached
+ward, approached by a short bridge, under
+the care of a nurse specially told off
+to watch and tend him, and perchance to
+catch the same disease herself. The word went
+round that it was “dip.” And “dip” it
+was. When the doctor was sure of that,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</span>
+Billy was treated with anti-toxin for diphtheria,
+and the telephone was quickly set to
+work. An ambulance came round—a beautiful
+carriage, the nurse in charge explained;
+and Billy—nurses nodding and smiling at a
+distance, with eyes that had a tearful, frightened
+look—was borne down the staircase and
+so away to Hampstead. There, in the “dip”
+ward of the Fever Hospital, he fought the
+fight with death—the students in their quaint
+garb looking on; and, to the surprise of all,
+came out victorious.</p>
+
+<p>Seven weeks later he was discharged, and
+back again in the three-pair back. There was
+the old grandmother, doddering still, the
+same, yet not the same. One grey morning,
+when Billy awoke, something in her appearance
+startled him. The poor old thing was
+dead; and so unsightly and alarming in his
+eyes that straightway he arose and fled,
+hopping and tapping with his crutch along
+the grey, deserted streets—anywhere, anywhere
+away from that awesome sight.</p>
+
+<p>How the boy lived, or starved, throughout
+the next few days he never realised. When
+at length he mustered courage to return, all
+that remained of “this our sister” was there
+no longer. The parish authorities were accustomed
+to these cases. The room was
+swept and garnished after a fashion. Already<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</span>
+other tenants were in possession, and Billy
+was admonished to go about his business.
+Having no business, he hopped vaguely into
+the streets again. He had a horror now of
+walls and rooms. Over there in the Alexandra
+he had had his experiences, and outside
+the National, on the opposite side of the
+square, in the night, he had sometimes heard
+blood-curdling screams from epileptic patients.
+He shuddered—shook, as it were, the dust
+from his remaining foot, and hopped off towards
+the unexplored regions of the west.</p>
+
+<p>Along Great Russell Street he made his
+way, gazing at the grim mass of the great
+museum, and wondering if it were another
+hospital or a prison. There were pigeons and
+policemen inside the formidable railings.
+The former attracted; but the latter repelled.
+So he turned his back on the mighty store-house
+of antiquities, caring and knowing
+nothing about the forty-three miles of the
+bookshelves, and all the cheerless wonders
+of its different sections. Onward he hopped,
+across Tottenham Court Road into Oxford
+Street. The district pleased him. Presently
+the waving of big boughs attracted notice, and
+exploration led him into Grosvenor Square.
+Further investigation resulted in the discovery
+of Berkeley Square, and finally, very
+weary and hungry, he sat down to rest on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</span>
+the doorstep of Sir John Westwood’s house
+in Hill Street.</p>
+
+<p>From that day forth the boy became and
+remained Billy of Mayfair; destined to play
+his little part in national events.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XV<br>
+<small>THE SHRINE OF LUXURY AND PRIDE</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>Thus the wind of the world, which bloweth
+whither it listeth—or whither the Great
+Spirit that rules the world directs—had wafted
+Billy, a fortuitous atom of humanity, into
+touch with Aldwyth Westwood and Father
+Francis of St Stephen’s. Billy, however,
+fought shy of Father Francis, who had speedily
+run across him. The boy was not very keen
+on the clergy; being rather disposed to class
+them with the police—and that, indeed, in a
+moral sense is what they are, or ought to be.
+But with Aldwyth, who discovered him one
+early morning on the doorstep, he speedily
+developed friendly relations. He soon learnt
+to look up to her with reverently admiring
+eyes, as a beautiful being belonging to another
+sphere; one who smiled with an enchanting
+smile, and bestowed sixpences as other people
+bestowed halfpence.</p>
+
+<p>Not that the boy lived wholly on charity.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</span>
+Sometimes he invested his little capital in a
+stock of newspapers, and persistently thrust
+that luminous organ, the <em>Planet</em>, under the
+notice of the wayfarer. But there was not
+much sale for the <em>Planet</em> in Mayfair. The
+truth is, that Billy never realised the greatness
+of his surroundings, and the Birth and
+Wealth of other residents in that favoured
+district of the peerage and the plutocracy;
+nor would any one know the importance of
+Mayfair merely from personal observation.
+The <em>cliché</em> of locality is not a matter of instinct,
+but of manufacture. In Mount Street,
+close at hand, a good deal of the manufacturing
+was done by the eminent firms of
+auctioneers and estate agents, the bank-like
+qualities of whose establishments appealed to
+the rich and the refined. Plate-glass windows,
+burnished mahogany, polished brass—plenty
+of brass—soft carpets, and delightful chairs,
+allured the seekers after mansions in town or
+country. Not here did vulgar posters in
+thick and sticky ink offend the eye. Bills of
+all sorts, including the little bills for commission
+and miscellaneous services, were kept
+out of sight. Beautifully executed photographs
+of desirable properties for gentlemen
+of position were to be seen in these handsome
+offices, and expensively got-up Particulars
+and Conditions of Sale were freely issued<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</span>
+through the medium of the post. They could
+let you a cramped little dwelling in Mayfair
+for as low a rent as £450 a year, but, of course,
+for a really commodious residence, a much
+higher figure was demanded.</p>
+
+<p>It was a much higher rent that Sir John
+Westwood paid for his house in Hill Street.
+Long past and gone were the days of suburban
+residence. The rising man, like the man who
+is born on the heights, must have the right
+address. It was good enough for the once
+obscure barrister to journey daily from Norwood
+Junction, reminded <em>ad nauseam</em> by the
+railway porters of the interesting regions of
+Anerley, Penge, Brockley, and New Cross.
+But a law adviser of the Crown, a parliamentarian
+battling for a foremost footing, must
+live in the right quarter. Mayfair is the
+place for the mighty, just as Harley Street—the
+valley of the shadow—is the place for
+the eminent doctor. The specialist knows
+that the people who come to him will measure
+his value less by his treatment than by the
+locality in which he writes his prescriptions.
+Such is the wisdom of the world.</p>
+
+<p>So Aldwyth Westwood had the satisfaction
+of feeling that round and about her resided,
+when in town, the fine flower of British rank
+and fashion. But rank and fashion as yet
+showed no eagerness to embrace her with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</span>
+effusion. Her friends were few; perhaps the
+best of them was plain Molly Barter, the
+nursery governess of her early days, who had
+stayed on indefinitely as quasi-companion,
+needlewoman, and general factotum of the
+house. Miss Barter was a person of the
+happiest disposition; calm and unimaginative,
+untroubled by the problems of life;
+sound, not to say solid, in her views of things
+in general; unvarying in appetite and modes
+of expression, and devoted to Aldwyth with
+a sort of dog-like fidelity.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Barter did not understand Aldwyth.
+There were many things she did not even try
+to understand. She had never read Voltaire;
+but to her it seemed, even in those troubled
+months, that nearly everything was for the
+best, in the best of all possible worlds. That
+was by no means the opinion of Aldwyth
+Westwood. None the less, she found comfort
+in the mental altitude of the faithful
+Molly, who feared neither ghosts nor mice,
+and remained quite unmoved in the presence
+of a blackbeetle. Miss Barter, through Aldwyth,
+also made the acquaintance of Billy.
+To her it seemed not unreasonable that he
+should be homeless and ragged. Sometimes
+she asked him, with slight signs of severity,
+what he had done with his cap, and Billy had
+to explain that “the chaps”—meaning other<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</span>
+boys, two legged and aggressive—had deprived
+him of that article. The same thing happened
+whenever a new cap or an old was given to
+Billy; the “chaps” seemed to think that
+a “blooming little Halbino” ought to show
+the colour of his hair. So Billy’s cap was
+“chucked” over a wall, or down an area,
+and there was an end of it.</p>
+
+<p>Another friend of his—one Joe, a stableman
+at the mews in Hill Street—told him that it
+wasn’t respectable to go capless in those
+parts. But what could a boy do, much as he
+would have liked to give satisfaction to the
+stableman, for Joe was good to him.</p>
+
+<p>On chilly nights he sometimes allowed the
+small vagrant to hop into a coach-house or
+harness-room, and sleep like a little lord in
+warmth and comfort. In return, Billy allowed
+Joe to scan the racing tips and learn
+the latest odds without investing in the
+purchase of a <em>Planet</em>. The coachmen and
+footmen of the locality were much more
+haughty. Men of their position knew what
+was due to it, and had no sympathy with
+intrusive ragamuffins from the far East. The
+Mayfair flunkey still lived up to the lofty
+traditions of “Jeames de la Pluche of Buckley
+Square”:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“He vel became his hagwillets,<br>
+He cocked his ’at with <em>such</em> an hair;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</span><br>
+His calves and viskers <em>was</em> such pets,<br>
+That hall loved Jeames of Buckley Square.”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>While as to the butlers, they, indeed, were
+dignitaries to be viewed and revered from a
+distance. Once, in his inexperience, Billy
+volunteered to assist a Hill Street butler,
+who brought forth his bicycle to place on a
+four-wheeler. The man swore at him. But
+as Joe, who saw the episode, observed to
+Billy, “It warn’t no good to expect anything
+from that sort. A chap like that never did
+a day’s work in his (sanguinary) life. He was
+too d——d artful.” With which, Joe, bare-armed
+and hot, resumed his “hissing,” and
+vigorously cleaned down his “hoss.”</p>
+
+<p>There were a great many little tips to be
+picked up in Mayfair during the early summer
+months following Billy’s coming to the district.
+He arrived after the first demonstration
+of the Leaguers in Hyde Park, and therefore
+missed the Sunday visit of the mob to
+the Westwoods’ house in Hill Street. But
+after that there was such a stampede from
+the big houses, that the ubiquitous cab-tout,
+especially the tout who wore a “spider,”
+reaped quite a harvest thereabouts. He took
+care, however, that so weak a competitor as
+the crippled boy should keep his distance.
+So Billy, to some extent unintentionally, developed
+a means of raising money in which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</span>
+no tout could rival him. The pace at which
+he learnt to hop along was quite amazing;
+but, not content with that, he took to making
+high leaps in the air, coming down upon his
+foot and crutch for the most part without
+disaster. Then he essayed to dance a little
+on one leg, after the manner of Donato, a one-legged
+man who, once upon a time, drew
+all London to Drury Lane to see him in a
+pantomime.</p>
+
+<p>The passers-by, seeing these perilous displays
+of agility, paused with horror, and then
+produced a coin. One day, outside a mansion
+on the east side of Berkeley Square, a thin
+pale-faced gentleman, with a worried look,
+stared aghast for a moment while the unconscious
+Billy was rehearsing. And when
+the worried man passed into the house, the
+young acrobat found a shilling, actually a silver
+shilling, in his hand. He asked who the gentleman
+was, and Joe informed him that he was
+none other than the most noble the Marquis of
+Downland. No wonder he was worried; for,
+apart from the domestic agitation of the capital,
+the pulse of other capitals had to be felt
+through the medium of the wires in Downland
+House. All the inner workings of the
+Chancelleries of Europe were known within
+those walls; all the devious devices of diplomacy;
+all the international collisions avoided<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span>
+by a hair’s breadth; all the movements of
+foreign fleets; all the ambitions of foreign
+potentates and the disposal of continental
+armies. For the Marquis was Minister for
+Foreign Affairs, and they gave him sleepless
+nights. To Downland House came ambassadors
+and envoys at critical junctures in the
+lives of States. They came after the great
+naval battle of the Dogger Bank, in which a
+powerful fleet of trawlers, armed with fishing
+nets, was utterly routed by a Russian Squadron;
+they came again, but less conspicuously,
+when a German Squadron paid a surprise
+visit to Tangier. And there were many conferences
+there when certain Powers proposed
+to close the Baltic Sea to British men-of-war.</p>
+
+<p>When the Foreign Secretary suffered from
+nightmare, it generally took the form of a
+thing with wings. It was a creature which
+sought to imitate the Apostle Peter by walking
+on the sea—a web-footed, oceanic bird,
+with a rudimentary hinder toe, and the upper
+mandible very strongly hooked. This restless
+bird liked to visit every sea, skimming the
+surface and gobbling the small fishes, crustaceans,
+molluscs, and the rest of them. It
+always came in view in stormy weather.
+When the Foreign Secretary awoke from
+these bad dreams, he never felt quite sure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span>
+whether the bird were a gigantic stormy petrel
+or the German Emperor.</p>
+
+<p>But of course his lordship did know that,
+in the Kaiser’s view, “the twentieth century
+belonged to Germany,” and that his Majesty
+also considered Britannia had ruled the waves
+too long. Wherefore, Hoch! and again,
+Hoch! for the rights of the Vaterland. How
+glorious an achievement—as foretold by the
+German romance-writer—to drive the British
+Squadrons from the North Sea; to disembark
+without difficulty sixty thousand German
+warriors at Leith; to march southward, while
+accommodating French allies landed another
+army at Hastings and closed in on London; to
+dictate terms of peace at Hampton Court;
+and then to enter London with all the pomp
+and circumstance of war—imperial victor—not
+merely William the Second, but William
+the Second Conqueror of England. Hoch!
+and again, Hoch! and Hoch! once
+more.</p>
+
+<p>A dream? the baseless fabric of a vision?
+Probably; but the German navy was a stern
+reality; they were very busy over there at
+Kiel, Heligoland, and elsewhere, and realities
+must be reckoned with. The shipwrights’
+hammers resounded persistently in the German
+dockyards, and the clangour crossed the
+sea.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span></p>
+
+<p>So Lord Downland had a good deal to
+think of in Berkeley Square, as well as at the
+Foreign Office; though, even so, he little
+dreamed of what the Royal Petrel would be
+about before the year was out.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XVI<br>
+<small>THE MANIA THAT LAID HOLD OF LONDON</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>When London became fully alive to the weird
+occurrences in its midst, the first feeling was
+one of contempt, but it was quickly followed
+by the dawn of consternation. An article
+in the <em>Lancet</em>, widely quoted by the lay newspapers,
+dealt gravely with the problems that
+the revival of the Dancing Mania presented.
+It foreshadowed possible developments in
+terms which led husbands to look at their
+wives, and fathers at their daughters, with
+an uneasy feeling that they, too, might become
+victims of what the <em>Lancet</em> described in
+technical terms as chorea, and in popular
+language, as a form of St Vitus’s dance. Like
+lawyers searching for precedents, the press-men
+of the day delved diligently for the history
+of the Dancing Plague. The best contribution
+on the subject was contained in an
+anonymous article which appeared in the
+<em>Fortnightly Review</em>. The writer pointed out<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span>
+that these convulsionary manifestations were
+more or less prevalent during a period of
+quite two hundred years, dating from the
+end of the fourteenth century, and that,
+human nature being the same in all ages,
+there was nothing inconceivable, or even improbable,
+in a revival of such distressing
+symptoms in modern times. The difference
+would be in treatment rather than in the
+disorder itself. In former times chorea was
+regarded as curable only by those—the priests—who
+had the cure of souls. People who
+were hurried body and soul into the magic
+circle of hellish superstition needed to be
+rescued by supernatural agencies. The screaming,
+foaming men and women who in the
+Middle Ages swept with wild gyrations through
+the towns of Germany and the Netherlands,
+therefore, were made the subject of priestly
+exorcisms. They were forcibly dragged to
+the shrines of St John or St Vitus, where,
+by means of masses and religious ceremonies,
+the evil spirits were believed to be cast out.
+In regard to St Vitus in particular, the priests
+invented a legend that the holy youth had
+prayed to be protected from the Dancing
+Mania, and lo! an answer from heaven—” Vitus,
+thy prayer is accepted.” Thus, for
+all time, had the martyred St Vitus become
+patron saint of all who were afflicted with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span>
+chorea, just as St Martin of Tours was the
+patron of all who suffered from small-pox.</p>
+
+<p>It was not until the sixteenth century, the
+writer said, that the physicians had made
+any attempt to take the dire disease scientifically
+in hand. One thing was absolutely
+certain—the deep-seated inclination of morbidly
+imaginative persons to imitate the
+afflictions of others. In the language of the
+<em>British Medical Journal</em>, “Such attacks themselves
+were, as in all nervous complaints,
+the almost necessary crises of an inward
+morbid condition which was transferred from
+the sensorium to the nerves of motion.”</p>
+
+<p>On the medical aspect of the modern outbreak
+it is unnecessary to dwell. Two significant
+circumstances, however, may be noticed.
+Ample authority was given for the statement
+that in the Middle Ages the Dancing Plague
+had always been most prevalent in the month
+of June; and, secondly, had wrought its
+greatest ravages among shoemakers, tailors,
+and others who led a confined or sedentary
+life. Thus it came about that those Londoners
+who were under no compulsion to remain in
+town, reading these articles, developed the
+greatest urgency in leaving it. Ere midsummer
+day had passed, scenes at the great
+railway stations became quite amazing. Piles
+of luggage blocked the platforms, bribes to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</span>
+secure seats were offered freely to the railway
+men, and though enormous exertions were
+made to cope with the outgoing traffic, the
+congestion became almost unmanageable. The
+scenes enacted at Victoria, Waterloo, and
+London Bridge in particular were such as had
+not been known in the whole history of
+English railways.</p>
+
+<p>The haste and extent of these departures
+involved incomplete arrangements for the
+protection of vast numbers of London houses
+and of the property that they contained.
+Burglaries, and even daylight robberies became
+frequent and daring. It was observed
+that the victims of these impudent thieves
+were mostly those whose names were not in
+the lists of subscribing members of the League;
+and, whether justly or unjustly, most of the
+burglaries and robberies with violence chronicled
+in the daily press were connected with
+the operations of that much-feared and ever-increasing
+association.</p>
+
+<p>In such circumstances it was inevitable
+that much abuse should be showered on the
+police. But, as a body, the Metropolitan
+force remained loyal and zealous. The same
+must in justice be said of the City police, on
+whom depended the safety of the enormous
+wealth garnered in the vaults and strong-rooms
+of the City banks and warehouses.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</span></p>
+
+<p>But the police at each end of the town now
+had to reckon with unprecedented problems.
+The Leaguers were far too numerous to be
+suppressed, even if a hesitating Government
+had given the mandate—which, it seemed,
+they dared not do. Moreover, it was found
+practically impossible to secure convictions
+or even to complete prosecutions. The magistrates
+and judges were prepared to do their
+duty, but witnesses were afraid to come forward,
+and jurymen who could not manage
+to get medical certificates to excuse their
+absence, nevertheless stayed away from the
+criminal courts, and submitted, as a choice
+of evils, to the payment of heavy fines.
+Throughout the long and blazing summer
+days, bands of Leaguers marched through the
+streets, ringing at doors or hoisting collecting
+boxes on long poles to the first-floor windows.
+Shops were invaded in like manner. At the
+hotels and clubs defence corps were organised,
+but so menacing was the aspect of the wearers
+of the metal disc that in most instances peace
+had to be bought rather than insisted on.
+Then suddenly the cry would be raised, “The
+Dancers are coming; the Dancers: the
+Dancers!” The sound of bagpipes, drums,
+or of accordions, blended with the hum of
+many voices and the rush of feet, and bands
+of girls and men swept into view, dishevelled,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span>
+heated, but whirling with fantastic steps
+through street and square, dancing and
+dancing still, while some in the climax of
+delirium sank in exhaustion to the
+ground.</p>
+
+<p>The places of those who fell out of the
+Dancers’ ranks were constantly filled with
+new recruits. Many bystanders, who began
+by watching and wondering, felt themselves
+drawn into the repulsive vortex. Women,
+more especially, were thus allured. Girls came
+rushing from behind shop counters. The doors
+of private houses were suddenly thrown open,
+and in spite of the efforts to prevent them,
+unhappy women fought their way into the
+street to be absorbed in a moment in the ever-moving
+circles of the maddened Dancers. It
+was noticed that there were certain instruments
+and certain types of music which developed
+the tendency to join in and exaggerate
+these deplorable public exhibitions. Night
+was rendered hideous by the noise that filled
+the streets. Indeed, during the short hours
+of darkness, the quiet stars looked down on
+many a sight that well might make the angels
+weep. London was become in a more painful
+sense than ever a City of Dreadful Night. The
+Dancing Mania had got a strengthening grip
+upon its people. At one time it seemed only
+too likely that it would become an epidemic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span>
+of appalling extent and characteristics throughout
+the kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>Regarded thoughtfully, there were many
+causes that tended to bring about such an
+outbreak of hysteria in that exceptionally
+hot and rainless summer, (bringing as it did
+a dearth of water for domestic use and street
+cleansing). The state of things was summed
+up thus by an able German writer: “Imitation—compassion—sympathy—these
+are imperfect
+designations for a common bond of
+union among human beings—for an instinct
+which connects individuals with the general
+body, which embraces with equal force reason
+and folly, good and evil, and diminishes the
+praise of virtue as well as the criminality of
+vice.... Far be it from us to attempt to
+awaken all the various tones of this chord,
+whose vibrations reveal the profound secrets
+which lie hid in the inmost recesses of the
+soul.”</p>
+
+<p>But, assuredly, it was to this mysterious
+instinct of imitation that one must look for
+explanation of that loss of will power, of
+which, in that distressing time, so many
+Londoners were either examples or witnesses.
+The first morbid condition produced was that
+of a bird fascinated by a serpent, and the
+outcome was surrender to the violent excitement
+of the Dancing Plague. There was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</span>
+another feature of the times, more or less connected
+with the administration of justice,
+that began to cause dismay. The police
+found it practically impossible to enforce the
+provisions of the Licensing Acts. Riotous
+scenes occurred when attempts were made
+to close the public-houses at statutory hours.
+Customers, amongst whom the disc-holders
+figured prominently, refused to go. They
+demanded more drink, and they got it.
+Isolated examples of this lawlessness could
+have been put down, but it was so general
+that enforced obedience became as impossible
+as the vindication of criminal justice in the
+law courts.</p>
+
+<p>Only when the stage of exhaustion or helpless
+intoxication had been reached, did the
+foul-mouthed and turbulent customers of the
+publicans come forth into the streets.</p>
+
+<p>Often they fought and screamed in the
+grey sadness of the dawning day; some
+staggered off in search of home or resting-place;
+others rolled in the gutters, and where
+they rolled they lay, while frightened faces
+peered from the upper windows of the neighbouring
+houses, and startled children in their
+cots broke into cries of misery and terror.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XVII<br>
+<small>THE GREAT FIRE IN HYDE PARK</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>Greatly moved by the evil things that had
+befallen London, and stung in some measure
+by the trenchant attacks appearing in the
+<em>Epoch</em>, a small band of London clergy who had
+recognised in this grave crisis a challenge to
+the Church, set themselves earnestly to alleviate
+the growing sufferings of their people.
+Among the most active and unconventional
+of this little band was Father Francis. His
+church—St Stephen’s—was the first that was
+made available for the definite purpose of
+checking the spread of the Dancing Mania
+by special prayer and meditation. The
+unhappy subjects of this repellent affliction
+were invited to seek the calm of the sacred
+buildings, and find in the contemplation of
+the sanctuary rest for their perturbed spirits,
+peace from the contagious excitement of the
+stifling streets. Strange scenes were sometimes
+witnessed in these churches—frequented<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</span>
+as they came to be not merely by those who,
+already, had been drawn into the whirlpool
+of the mania, and vehemently desired to be
+preserved from a relapse, but thronged also
+by girls and women who, though hitherto
+unaffected, felt and feared they, too, could
+not long escape.</p>
+
+<p>Outside, in the glare of day or in the shadow
+of night, tumultuous sounds would reach the
+ears of priests and suppliants. Nearer and
+nearer came the clangour of crude instruments
+of music; broken cries and bursts of hysterical
+laughter filled the outer air; the scuffling
+of the Dancers’ feet became more and more
+audible. Perhaps the direful medley came
+and passed without any of the Dancers entering
+the church. At other times they crowded
+in with loud discordant noises. But almost
+always these were soon subdued by the
+solemn stillness of the building, and the unmoved
+calm of kneeling men and women,
+already earnestly engaged in intercessory
+prayer. No set services were attempted after
+the first few experiments. It was found that
+sermons or addresses often stimulated feelings
+already over-excited, and that hymns produced
+uncontrollable emotion. But the church
+organs were put to constant use when it was
+discovered that music, especially music of
+a certain type, was marvellously potent in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</span>
+stilling the overwrought nerves of the Dancers
+and allaying the tendency to hysterical outbreaks.</p>
+
+<p>This remarkable result of musical sounds
+recalled to many the recorded effects of the
+Italian tarantellas in counteracting the effect
+of poisonous spider-bites. Not only so, but
+it was whispered by the more credulous that
+spider-bites actually were the cause of the
+mania in its modern form, and that in this
+connection, the spider symbol of the Leaguers
+possessed a special and malignant meaning.
+That there were numerous instances of self-deception
+and of fraud was beyond all question.
+That, indeed, is a common experience
+among hysterical persons, and in this instance,
+as already intimated, the Dancers were largely
+recruited from classes predisposed to excitement
+and delusion—factory girls from the
+East End, workers in close, unhealthy surroundings,
+and great numbers who belonged
+to the painted sisterhood of the streets.
+Practically it was a form of insanity, and now
+for the first time the curative effect of music
+in the treatment of mental disease received
+something like systematic application. Music,
+of certain kinds, it was certain, excited to
+exhibition of the mania; music at the same
+time provided for many the virtue of an
+antidote. Unfortunately, though these combined<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</span>
+influences of religion and melody were
+so well employed for the benefit of large
+numbers, there were still greater numbers
+untouched by any sort of remedy, whose wild
+paroxysms were constantly drawing new adherents
+into the ranks of the Dancers. Any
+attempt at forcible suppression only resulted
+in displays of increased violence. Practically
+the evil had grown in a few weeks to such a
+head that the authorities had to stand by
+in the hope that it would wear itself away.
+Already the police were vastly overweighted
+by the task of maintaining any semblance of
+public order. There were hosts of designing
+men and women who aided and abetted the
+grotesque excesses of the Dancers for no other
+purpose than to take advantage of opportunities
+for conduct violating every principle
+of public decorum.</p>
+
+<p>Thus the fateful summer wore away. The
+railway termini presented conditions more
+chaotic than ever. All outgoing trains were
+densely packed by Londoners fleeing with
+their families from the multiplying terrors of
+the capital. But though scores of thousands
+escaped, millions necessarily remained—the
+helpless puppets of time and circumstance.</p>
+
+<p>When at length the August Bank holiday
+came round, the disorganised condition of the
+railway service led to the abandonment of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</span>
+any adequate provision for the usual excursion
+traffic; as a consequence, vast crowds, that
+in the ordinary course would have got away
+from London, were practically kept prisoners
+within its bounds. The reek of the wood and
+asphalt of the streets, the glare of the pavements,
+and the pitiless rays of the relentless
+sun, drove them in herds into the public parks.
+There, under the parched foliage of the trees,
+some measure of shelter could be had, and on
+the brown and dusty grass holiday keepers—Heaven
+save the mark!—threw themselves
+down in weariness and sullen discontent, while
+hosts of women and children, indifferent to
+the feeble remonstrances of the frightened
+park-keepers, paddled in the dwindling waters
+of the Serpentine, the Round Pond, and the
+ornamental lakes. As the long and joyless
+day drew to its close, news came to Scotland
+Yard that mobs had forced their way into
+the private gardens of the large squares. It
+proved to be true as regards Berkeley Square,
+Grosvenor Square, Belgrave Square, Tavistock
+Square, and many others. Temple Gardens
+and Gray’s Inn Gardens also had been invaded,
+but urgent messages for police protection were
+only met with the answer that it was impossible
+to spare the number of men required
+for such a purpose. In Grosvenor Square,
+indeed, a body of police did manage to clear<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</span>
+the gardens of a gang of turbulent intruders,
+after a violent resistance. To repeat the expulsion
+in a score of other squares was quite
+impracticable. It was an hour of alarm that
+brought home to peaceable citizens the conviction,
+long dawning, that a combined force
+of Metropolitan and City police, which did
+not exceed 17,000 men—and could provide
+only about 5000 for duty every eight hours—was
+absolutely inadequate to safeguard London
+day and night in times of exceptional
+disorder.</p>
+
+<p>The mob in various quarters had scored a
+triumph. By the simple expedient of forcing
+a lock or clambering over some low railings
+it had gained possession of many acres of
+fresh country. Well-mown grass and carefully
+cultivated flower-beds were at their service.
+Noisy revellers shouted indecencies in the
+growing shades of evening. Unwashen and
+verminous creatures in rags and tatters
+sprawled on the garden seats and prowled
+amongst the shrubs.</p>
+
+<p>In the parks fresh contingents arrived, and
+jeered at the orders to clear out at closing
+time. Under the trees they drank and shouted
+in the gathering darkness. Here and there
+bits of candles and matches were lighted, and
+ribald laughter and drunken yells burst forth
+at the sights the flickering flames revealed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</span></p>
+
+<p>Rumour of what was going on brought
+many persons to the Park, and among them
+Herrick. Quite suddenly he ran up against
+Henshaw the detective.</p>
+
+<p>“Nice game, isn’t it?” said the latter.
+“This sort of thing’s going on all over the
+place. I’ve just come down from Kensington
+Gardens, and, if anything, it’s worse there
+than it is here.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, here comes a breath of air,” sighed
+Herrick, baring his head to the faint puff that
+rustled the leaves.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, and from the south-west, too. It’ll
+do us good if it brings the rain at last.”</p>
+
+<p>They sauntered on—they were on the south
+side of the Serpentine—listening and looking.
+Presently they reached a widened space.</p>
+
+<p>“Hullo! do you see that?” exclaimed the
+detective, halting.</p>
+
+<p>“See it? Yes! What does it mean?”</p>
+
+<p>“Fire!”</p>
+
+<p>“A house?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, a tree. It must be in Kensington
+Gardens. That’s what comes of this match
+and candle business. If I’d had my way the
+troops should have hunted the whole pack
+of them out of this an hour ago.”</p>
+
+<p>“Look! look!” cried Herrick excitedly.
+Westward a tongue of flame had shot into
+the air, and then another, and another.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</span></p>
+
+<p>“My God!” said Herrick, horrified. Then
+he set off at a run, the other keeping at his
+heels. On every side recumbent forms were
+scrambling to their feet. Oaths, obscene jests
+and blasphemous shouts broke upon their
+ears, and far and near sounded the shrill persistent
+whistles of the constables. A lurid
+light now illumined the western sky, and
+here and there ahead of them great cones of
+flame shot up, while huge columns of smoke
+bent and spread before the rising gusts of
+wind.</p>
+
+<p>The two men paused, exhausted for the
+moment, letting the rush of dim and stumbling
+figures eddy round them.</p>
+
+<p>“Kensington Palace must be on fire,”
+panted Herrick.</p>
+
+<p>“If so the League’s at the bottom of this
+business,” said the detective. “Hullo! you
+there——”</p>
+
+<p>Away to the left in a bed of flowering shrubs
+his quick eye had caught a stealthy movement.
+Almost as the words escaped him
+there was a little flame low down near the
+ground. It revealed a glimpse of a white,
+hot face, glistening with perspiration. The
+cheeks were inflated, the mouth was blowing
+at a little heap of straw, dried chips, and
+leaves.</p>
+
+<p>“You devil!” shouted Henshaw; “that’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</span>
+your game?” He dashed into the bushes,
+but the incendiary was too quick for him.
+He wriggled clear on the other side and was
+lost to view in the wild on-rushing crowd.</p>
+
+<p>When they reached the road dividing the
+Park from Kensington Gardens, it was seen
+that the refreshment châlet just within the
+rails of the gardens was burning fiercely. In
+the midst of the crackling of the furnace
+could be heard crash after crash of crockery,
+as the piled cups and saucers, plates and jugs,
+came tumbling from their charred and splintering
+shelves.</p>
+
+<p>In the glare that lit up the broad roadway,
+a maddened, half-intoxicated mob of Dancers,
+breaking out into screams and maniacal
+laughter, circled in full view of the burning
+châlet, until the galloping horses of the fire
+engines, approaching from the north, drove
+them, still leaping and gyrating, southward
+towards Kensington. Fire engines now approached
+from every quarter, but it was
+obvious that little could be done to save the
+trees. Every thirsty bush served as a conductor
+for the greedy element. The furnace
+spread from bough to bough; below, the fire
+fastened on fragments and twigs lying on the
+parched surface of the grass, curling its way
+snake-like to the nearest trunk; then, with
+a sharp hiss, climbed to the lower branches,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</span>
+licking them eagerly until, with one united and
+terrific hiss, the brown and shrivelled foliage
+combined to make a pyramid of fire. Tree
+after tree became thus outlined in a mighty
+burst of flame, then lapsed into smoke and
+blackness, still revealed here and there with
+glowing branches. Sometimes the fire commenced
+its work high in the loftier foliage;
+for now the upper air was filled with charred
+and glowing embers borne north and eastward
+by the rising wind. In the rush of sparks
+and smoke above the swaying tree-tops, it
+seemed as if the weird Valkyrie sisters rode
+triumphant. Bushes and branches were
+hastily torn down where possible, and bands
+of people made frantic efforts to beat out the
+fire ere it obtained an unconquerable hold.</p>
+
+<p>But deviltry was loose that night, and,
+however the first fire may have been occasioned,
+the distances at which new outbreaks
+were discovered pointed conclusively to deliberate
+acts. In all, seven men were seized—taken
+red-handed in the act of causing separate
+fires. Four of the prisoners wore the symbol
+of the League.</p>
+
+<p>Towards morning, a heavy downpour of
+rain extinguished the last sparks of the
+conflagration. It had come too late to save
+the trees, and all that the fire brigade had
+been able to achieve was the preservation of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</span>
+Kensington Palace from more than partial
+destruction.</p>
+
+<p>Dawn crept, frowning, over the dreary scene,
+the black ghost of its former beauty—a wilderness
+of ashes; above which the charred
+branches of denuded trees waved mournful
+arms to greet the mournful day.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XVIII<br>
+<small>ALDWYTH ASKS A QUESTION</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>Less than thirty miles from the monster city,
+now festering and malodorous under the
+September sun, high in a breeze-swept garden,
+Aldwyth Westwood, with a book upon her
+knees, sat gazing at the fleecy clouds. Slowly
+they sailed across the sky, casting deep
+shadows on the fields and woods. Anon the
+darkened tracts of country again were bathed
+in brilliant sunshine, and, far as the eye could
+reach, the face of Nature smiled.</p>
+
+<p>“Sunshine and shadow—in Nature and in
+life,” she thought. A sigh succeeded—a sigh
+that sprang like tears “from the depth of
+some divine despair,” a girl’s tribute to the
+burden and the mystery</p>
+
+
+<p class="center p1 p1b">“Of all this unintelligible world.”</p>
+
+
+<p>Here, if anywhere, near the summit of
+Leith Hill, was a refuge from the outward
+stress of life, a place of peace and quiet
+breathing. Sir John had benefited greatly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</span>
+from the pure air and calm of the retreat.
+The high gardens were a glory, and the
+house—bought ready furnished from a wealthy
+man’s executors—contained a well-stocked
+library, in which the jaded refugee from
+Parliament and Law Courts renewed with
+some zest the varied reading of his earlier
+years.</p>
+
+<p>Westwood was fifty-four—an age when, if
+a man allows himself to think at all, the
+length of life’s journey and its destination
+are thoughts that recur to him with deepening
+gravity. Behind him—the years that the
+locust had eaten; before him—what? Great
+numbers of men still feel young and vigorous
+at fifty-four, and much later, but the fact
+remains that it is the wrong side of the fifty.
+To some, but to few, celebrity, success, promotion,
+may come later; but if so, it lacks
+the heart-flush of early triumph; in some
+indefinable way the prize, so long fought for
+and looked forward to, proves something less
+than solid gold. Rewards tardily won savour
+of a short lease—an annuity bought late in
+life, an eleemosynary provision.</p>
+
+<p>At fifty-four the artist’s finest picture has
+been hung; the author’s best book has been
+published; the great surgeon has performed
+his greatest operation; the great advocate
+has scored the most brilliant of his forensic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</span>
+victories; the engineer has built his biggest
+bridge; the parliamentarian, sick and savage
+with hope deferred, then sees the biggest prize
+of all eluding him, or, if it comes at last, it is
+bestowed hesitatingly, not because of what
+he is and can accomplish, but of what he was,
+and tried to do, when at the zenith of his
+powers.</p>
+
+<p>Westwood had been wonderfully successful,
+as success is reckoned by the man in the
+street; but success is only relative. You have
+got something, but it sharpens the appetite
+for the “little more,” and so the chase
+continues.</p>
+
+<p>The prospect of a judgeship offered him
+few attractions; <em>that</em> meant finality on five
+thousand a year. His aims were higher, but
+politically and professionally his position was
+complex. The parliamentary situation, and
+the state of parties and sub-parties, made
+further progress, even if his health permitted it,
+quite impossible for the time being. He was
+alive to that, and conscious oftentimes that
+probably he had already secured the best
+that life was likely to offer him.</p>
+
+<p>What were his spoils? Abundance of this
+world’s goods, the envy of hosts of less successful
+men, and the affection——? He
+paused at that; affection of whom? It was
+not a pleasant thought that there were only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</span>
+two beings in the whole world genuinely attached
+to him; an old and faithful servant,
+a woman whose fidelity withstood the outbursts
+of his petulance, and his daughter.
+Aldwyth was fond of him—yes, he was sure
+of that. But there was a lurking feeling that
+she would have been fonder still if he had
+only given her a chance. His cold reserve
+had kept her at a needless distance. He had
+denied her nothing that she asked for, but
+he had volunteered little for which she had
+not asked. He had shown no real concern
+in her interests or pursuits. Yet he had
+reason to know hers was a warm, impulsive
+nature like her mother’s, quick to believe and
+love, swift to be rebuffed and chilled. The
+possibilities of closer intimacy were now
+remote. Young Herrick, as was natural,
+would have the first place in her thoughts.
+Presently she would marry, and he, the
+envied and successful man, would be—alone.</p>
+
+<p>Of that strange interview with Marcus
+White, Aldwyth had told her father nothing.
+The condition of his health forbade it at the
+time; but now that the mysterious nervous
+attack which had caused her so much alarm
+seemed to have been wholly shaken off; now
+that his step was firm and his colour healthier,
+her mind was exercised as to her duty.</p>
+
+<p>Westwood, at his table, looked up as his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</span>
+daughter, with reflective face, walked past the
+open window of the library.</p>
+
+<p>“Deep in thought?” he said, inquiringly.</p>
+
+<p>She stopped, and returned a pace or two.</p>
+
+<p>“I was wondering where we should go
+when we leave here,” she answered.</p>
+
+<p>“Back to town,” her father replied, with
+raised eyebrows; “but of course it won’t be
+until the third week of October.”</p>
+
+<p>“The House won’t be sitting then, will it?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, but the judges will.”</p>
+
+<p>“Father,” she said impulsively, “need you
+go back to the Bar?”</p>
+
+<p>“I need not, but I shall,” he answered
+rather coldly. “Why do you ask?”</p>
+
+<p>“Is it—is it wise?” she stammered.</p>
+
+<p>“Wise!” he exclaimed, amazed.</p>
+
+<p>“Why need you do it?”</p>
+
+<p>“In the first place, I shall have to prosecute
+those scoundrelly incendiaries, who have
+already gone for trial.”</p>
+
+<p>“But, surely, that will be dangerous?”</p>
+
+<p>“For whom?”</p>
+
+<p>“For you, father; you know that you were
+threatened.”</p>
+
+<p>“Threatened men live long,” he answered,
+with a lightness that perhaps was a little
+strained. “You surely would not have me
+neglect an obvious duty because some unknown
+blackguard sends me an empty threat?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</span></p>
+
+<p>“The threat may not be empty. At Folkestone
+you told us others had been threatened,
+that there was a real conspiracy, and if so——”</p>
+
+<p>“If so, one must do one’s duty all the same.
+My health was broken down at Folkestone.
+I was not myself. Why, my dear girl, if I
+kept out of this case they would end by
+calling me a coward. I should be virtually
+driven into private life.” There was a pause.</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps there is something I ought to
+tell you,” she said slowly.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, what is it?”</p>
+
+<p>“When we were at Folkestone, and you
+were ill, some one came to see you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Go on, go on”—impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>“His name was Marcus White.”</p>
+
+<p>Westwood made no comment, but his face
+grew paler.</p>
+
+<p>“What he said was a sort of warning. I
+was to tell you when I pleased—that you had
+better give up everything—Parliament, the
+Bar,—father, what does it mean?” She
+advanced swiftly to the broad table on the
+other side of which he sat, his eyes bent upon
+the blotting pad and balancing a paper knife
+between his fingers. “Won’t you tell me
+what it means?” she repeated, entreatingly.</p>
+
+<p>“It only means that this man is an old
+enemy of mine, and, it seems, one who does
+not forgive or forget.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</span></p>
+
+<p>“But is there any reason—any ground?
+If you never wronged him in any way—father,
+say you never did!”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I never did”—the words were somewhat
+laboured. “But I married your mother,
+Aldwyth. That was the cause of quarrel.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah!” she exclaimed; “he spoke of her.
+Were they to have been married, if you——”</p>
+
+<p>“Something of the kind,” he answered,
+rising, then turning to the window. “It was
+many years ago; we need not talk of it.”</p>
+
+<p>“But he has not forgotten.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, it seems he has not forgotten.”</p>
+
+<p>“What shall you do?”</p>
+
+<p>“I think there is nothing to be done.” He
+sat again, and drummed on the table with his
+fingers.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you believe this man would really
+harm you if he could?”</p>
+
+<p>“You saw him. You can judge as well as
+I,” he said, evasively.</p>
+
+<p>“He must be mad.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mad with the long-nourished passion of
+hate, mad with the long-cherished desire for
+revenge—mad in that sense, yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then God help you, father,” said Aldwyth
+solemnly.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, God help me,” and he buried his face
+in his hands.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XIX<br>
+<small>THE LORD MAYOR READS THE RIOT ACT</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>The Long Vacation having dragged its monotonous
+length to a finish, the Courts re-opened
+in the third week in October. The day was
+dull, and dull foreboding seemed to oppress
+the Temple, Lincoln’s Inn, and all the other
+haunts of law. Fewer people, and less cheerful
+than of yore, mustered in the Great Hall
+to witness the customary procession of the
+judges. The Lord Chief Justice bore himself
+with dignity, but wore the marks of feeble
+health. The other judges were ordinary,
+estimable men. They had served their clients
+and themselves with more or less satisfactory
+results, and now discharged their monotonous
+functions in a duly monotonous manner. The
+nominal leader of the Bar—his Majesty’s
+Attorney-General—was absent again through
+illness, and the Solicitor-General, Sir John
+Westwood—whose looks were criticised curiously—led
+the army of the long robe. One<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</span>
+and all, with silks and stuffs by way of tail
+to the procession, the King’s justices passed
+through the long hall of the florid Gothic
+structure, that cost the nation a million and
+a half of money, and still is in process of
+absorbing millions more in salaries, fees, and
+costs.</p>
+
+<p>The function was soon over, and then, in
+the thousand chambers of the building, the
+formal business of the day was dealt with.
+Once again the pieces of machinery were got
+into their appointed places. Once again the
+creaking, cumbrous, monstrous thing began
+to work. Amongst the unemployed members
+of the Bar—which is to say, the majority of
+barristers—there was much conjecture as to
+the business outlook. The cause-list was
+thin to the point of attenuation, but still
+there was a list. But those who were interested
+in criminal practice in the magisterial
+Courts, and at Sessions and the Bailey, were
+deeply concerned at the state of affairs which
+the history of the past few months foreshadowed.
+How far were the Leaguers going
+to carry their supposed programme? What
+was to happen if the British juryman failed
+his country? Was it possible that our boasted
+<em>palladium</em> was breaking down? Britannia
+might need no bulwarks, but criminal law
+could not get on without a fearless jury, to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</span>
+say nothing of fearless witnesses, undaunted
+by open or veiled intimidation.</p>
+
+<p>It was confidently believed that in his approaching
+speech at the Mansion House, the
+Prime Minister would make an announcement
+of the first importance in reference to the
+subjects that were agitating the public mind.
+Since the great fire in Hyde Park, and the
+committal of the seven accused men for trial,
+the Leaguers had been comparatively quiet,
+but their numbers and their funds had further
+increased, and there were those who saw in the
+present quiescence only the lull that precedes
+a storm; merely an autumn pause before the
+oncoming of a dark, tempestuous winter.</p>
+
+<p>The ninth of November brought with it
+the accustomed features of that date, including
+the presentation of the new Lord
+Mayor by the Recorder at the Law Courts
+in the inevitable speech, replete with pompous
+stereotype. The Chief Justice took occasion
+to comment on the increasing signs of popular
+unrest, and various other indications of the
+times, which made it of paramount importance
+that the chief magistrate of the City of
+London should possess very special qualifications
+for his ancient and important office.
+His lordship added that so far as his Majesty’s
+judges were concerned, the country might be
+well assured that the fabric of social safety<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</span>
+would be resolutely maintained, depending
+as it did on the vindication of justice and the
+punishment of evil-doers.</p>
+
+<p>With that significant allusion to what every
+one was thinking of, the civic party was
+dismissed. The puerile pageant, traditionally
+associated with the occasion, once more appealed
+to the contempt of gods and men,
+and the Lord Mayor’s show, having wound
+its way home through the miry and melancholy
+streets, was lost to sight in the foggy City.</p>
+
+<p>At the mayoral banquet in the evening,
+the First Lord of the Treasury made his
+eagerly expected speech, which, however, contained
+nothing that had been expected on
+the burning subject of the hour. The right
+honourable gentleman was an oratorical acrobat
+of no mean talent. He winged his flight
+from trapeze to trapeze with marvellous
+agility, turned oratorical somersaults at unexpected
+moments, and came down on his
+feet whenever it was expected he would
+arrive on his hands. The whole performance
+was extremely dexterous and carefully non-committal.
+When the Prime Minister sat
+down, of course there were thunders of
+applause. Criticism of such speeches comes
+on the following day. Less cautious, but
+also well applauded, were the utterances of
+my Lord Mayor. Inspired with the ambitions<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</span>
+of the new broom, and encouraged by the
+counsel of the Chief Justice delivered earlier
+in the day, the unfortunate gentleman made
+a doughty onslaught on the Leaguers, and
+hinted at drastic action if any of them came
+before him in the justice room.</p>
+
+<p>With a sense of having risen to the occasion,
+the chief magistrate retired late to his couch,
+fully confident that he had struck the right
+note. But next day, when rising from his
+bed with a slight headache and other symptoms
+of discomfort, his lordship speedily discovered
+that there was something wrong without, as
+well as within. From an early hour small
+groups of men were observed in the neighbourhood
+of the Mansion House, whose gestures
+and looks indicated no friendly feeling towards
+its official resident.</p>
+
+<p>The Lady Mayoress, whose training had
+been provincial, and whose nerves were flustered
+by the responsibilities of her new position,
+felt much alarm at the appearance and
+manner of these men. One of them, moved
+on peremptorily by the City police, was seen
+to hurl a large stone, which crashed through
+a window over the portico on the Walbrook
+side of the Mansion House. The fellow was
+promptly arrested and held prisoner, though
+an attempt to rescue him on the part of his
+associates almost proved successful.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</span></p>
+
+<p>Throughout the day there was much difficulty
+in keeping the streets converging at the
+Mansion House available for the normal traffic.
+The streams of vehicles from Cheapside and
+Queen Victoria Street here had to be regulated
+so as to allow free passage for the other tides
+of traffic ever pouring in from Cornhill, King
+William Street, Threadneedle Street, and
+Princes Street. Yet at this very pivot-point
+of the congested City traffic, there were persistent
+attempts to block the way. Again and
+again the roadways had to be forcibly cleared
+by the police, and several accidents occurred.
+Removed from one position, groups formed
+again at another, scowling defiance at the
+constables who strove to keep them moving.</p>
+
+<p>For some hours after the first stone was
+thrown there was no other overt act of violence.
+But suddenly, as the sombre afternoon
+was merging into darkness, a pistol shot was
+heard. The report seemed to come from the
+corner of Bucklersbury. The crash of falling
+glass immediately followed, and over the head
+of a group of people a revolver was tossed
+high into the air and fell upon the shoulder
+of a constable. Some eight or ten policemen
+immediately made a rush in the direction
+from which the weapon appeared to have
+been thrown. A violent struggle ensued, in
+the course of which several persons were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</span>
+severely injured, but the actual offender
+escaped capture.</p>
+
+<p>A desperate attempt now was made to
+clear the space on the west side of the Mansion
+House, but the difficulty was enormous.
+A great block of vehicles and foot-passengers
+spread right across the end of Queen Victoria
+Street and the Poultry. The mob could only
+be driven southward or westward through
+the two narrow necks of Walbrook and
+Bucklersbury, and those thoroughfares were
+so packed already that the attempt to clear
+them was ineffectual. The position was rendered
+doubly grave by the sudden arrival of
+another body of police from Cloak Lane, with
+the result that the people herded in Walbrook
+found themselves attacked in rear as well as
+in front. Those who sought to escape via
+the short curve of Bucklersbury were driven
+against another force of police at the Queen
+Victoria Street end, behind whom was a phalanx
+of omnibuses and cabs, wedged together, and
+rendering escape impossible. Caught thus,
+like rats in a trap, the crowd fought desperately.
+The glass door of a stick and umbrella
+shop, which had been insufficiently secured,
+was forced by a band of Leaguers, and with
+such weapons as the stock afforded the police
+were furiously belaboured and forced to act
+on the defensive.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</span></p>
+
+<p>At this crisis the electric lights flared out,
+and those who were near the Mansion House
+were able to discern the figure of a deformed
+man standing on the parapet of the book-seller’s
+shop behind which rises the tower
+of St Stephen’s church. He was bare-headed,
+and the blue light shone upon his grizzled
+hair and strong, pale features. By a movement
+of the arm he appeared to convey a
+signal to the outskirts of the crowd where
+Queen Victoria Street and the Poultry form
+an angle. At any rate, as if by concerted
+action, sudden volleys of stones rattled against
+the north and west fronts of the Lord Mayor’s
+residence, and a terrific crash of broken glass
+immediately followed.</p>
+
+<p>Within the Mansion House itself, the Chief
+Clerk, as adviser of the Lord Mayor in criminal
+matters, had been in attendance for some
+hours, and with great difficulty the City
+Solicitor and the Town Clerk had also been
+brought together to attend a conference.
+The narrow passage at the rear of the building
+was strongly guarded by police, and any
+approach to it from the west had long been
+impracticable. The legal officials and superior
+police officers had obtained ingress <em>via</em> George
+Street on the east, the entrance used being
+that at which the “Black Maria” usually set
+down its prisoners for the justice-room.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</span></p>
+
+<p>The Lord Mayor, pale and nervous, had
+appealed for advice, and was told that the
+police would soon be able to restore order;
+but the organised volley which sent stones and
+glass into the interior of the official residence
+showed how futile was that expectation. It
+was now hastily decided to read the Riot Act,
+or, strictly speaking, the warning proclamation
+which the Act contains. This Act—passed
+some two hundred years before—is
+intended to meet the case of tumults and
+riotous assemblies. If twelve or more persons
+remain assembled for one hour after the reading
+of the proclamation, all are guilty of
+felony. The offence formerly was punishable
+with death.</p>
+
+<p>Not within the memory of living man had
+the Riot Act been put into force in the City
+of London, and for a moment a sense of
+curiosity and expectation silenced the swaying
+and excited crowd, when the Lord Mayor,
+in robe of office, came forward, flanked and
+supported by officials and police, to signal for
+attention. The little group stood on the
+stone terrace of the building facing north,
+and his lordship’s voice sounded singularly thin
+and weak as he began the proclamation, having
+first held up his hand to secure attention:</p>
+
+<p>“Our sovereign lord and king chargeth
+and commandeth all persons assembled immediately<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</span>
+to disperse themselves and peaceably
+depart to their habitations, or to their lawful
+business, upon the pains contained in the
+Act——”</p>
+
+<p>The rest was lost in a swift yell of derision
+and defiance, and the concluding words,
+“God save the King,” were quite inaudible
+save to those who were around or immediately
+below the speaker.</p>
+
+<p>The civic group now retired with such
+haste that a great burst of laughter came
+from thousands who observed the retreat.
+It gave just that touch of humour to the proceedings
+that saved the situation. The police,
+marking the sign of better temper, stayed
+their hands, and when it became known that
+“God save the King” were the final words
+of the proclamation that had been read, here
+and there in the throng a voice started the
+National Anthem, and vast numbers began
+to chime in. It was discordant, but hearty,
+and bore indisputable witness to the personal
+popularity of his Majesty. The mob, perhaps,
+had done all that it had intended to
+do; but, at any rate, the crisis was passed,
+and in less than the hour’s grace allowed by
+the Act, the great crowd had marched away
+in sections, leaving only the broken windows
+of the Mansion House as evidence of the recent
+onslaught.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</span></p>
+
+<p>It was not generally known until later that
+a military force had been hastily got in readiness
+to aid, if need were, the repressive action
+of the police. The outcome, however, was,
+in one sense, disastrous, for it led the authorities
+to conclude that the worst was over;
+a miscalculation that facilitated the moves
+that followed in the daring campaign of the
+Leaguers.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XX<br>
+<small>THE LEAGUERS AT THE HOME OFFICE</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>A shadow had fallen upon the engagement
+of Herrick and Aldwyth Westwood. The
+Westwoods were back in Hill Street, and
+Herrick also had returned after a long yachting
+cruise with his cousin, Lord Eastmere.
+But although he went frequently to see
+Aldwyth at Hill Street, and was disposed to
+be more than ever a devoted lover, something
+had come between them. It puzzled and
+troubled him. He kept hoping from week
+to week that the chill would pass away. He
+hoped, so far, in vain. Aldwyth, of course,
+was conscious that the chill existed. She
+blamed herself, and tried to persuade her
+heart that it ached for nothing more than
+the rather ordinary tribute that a rather
+ordinary young man had to offer; was not
+it her plain duty to be happy in her engagement
+and in the prospect of marriage that
+lay not far ahead?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</span></p>
+
+<p>But the fact remained that she was not
+happy. Hers was a far more subtle temperament
+than her lover’s. What satisfied him
+left her with a sense of something wanting.
+She found herself—somewhat to her own surprise—comparing
+young Herrick with two
+other men with whom she had been brought
+in contact. One of these was Marcus White,
+whose powerful personality had been vividly
+remembered after that strange interview at
+the Folkestone hotel. She had seen no more
+of him, but his name was constantly whispered
+in connection with the demonstrations
+of the Leaguers; moreover, she could not
+forget that there was, as her father had
+confessed, an old-standing and ominous
+antagonism between himself and this strange
+man, who had told her that he knew her
+mother. It was not that she had any definable
+feeling for her father’s enemy, except
+that his was a strong, exceptional, and interesting
+personality. Thus he was often present
+in her thoughts, and she had an intuitive
+conviction that he and she would meet again.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile there was Father Francis—his,
+also, was a personality that was powerfully
+influencing her life and feelings. This priest,
+ascetic in life as in appearance, in truth was
+exercising an extraordinary, an almost hypnotic
+influence over great numbers of women<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</span>
+who belonged to West End society. At
+every service at which he officiated, St
+Stephen’s Church was packed. His sermons,
+often appealing, but more frequently denunciatory,
+were listened to with rapt attention
+by crowded congregations. He, pre-eminently
+among the clergy of London, had
+shown an inspired capacity to deal with the
+sins and sorrows of the times. He fiercely
+attributed the latter to the former, and declared
+that the greatest sinners in all the sinful
+city were those—a multitude of men and
+a still greater multitude of women—who
+lived selfish, idle, and luxurious lives, untouched
+with divine compassion for the masses,
+and deaf to the prophetic warnings of evil
+to come.</p>
+
+<p>From the nucleus of the congregation of
+St Stephen’s, a new society of women, nearly
+all of whom were delicately nurtured, was
+called into being, and drew vast numbers of
+adherents. It was called the Sisterhood of
+the Kindly Life. There was no conventual
+establishment and no monastic rule. The
+sisters still lived in their own homes; they
+were at liberty to marry, and they dressed,
+if it pleased them, in the fashion of the hour;
+but the vast majority discarded the finery
+and ornaments which cost so much and had
+once seemed so essential to their happiness.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</span>
+A bonnet and cloak as simple as those worn
+by hospital nurses became widely adopted
+as the uniform of the Sisterhood. There were
+no actual vows, but two injunctions were
+solemnly impressed upon the Sisters by Father
+Francis, as their warden—self-denial in everyday
+life, and the service of others in every
+way that each Sister’s circumstances permitted.
+Every day each Sister was to perform
+at least one act of kindness. Of this
+Sisterhood Aldwyth Westwood became a member,
+and, with others of the order, she found
+much practical scope for helpfulness in ministering
+to the great number of unemployed
+men who in the early winter weeks marched
+into London from great distances in the vain
+hope of enlisting help from the ruling powers
+in Church and State.</p>
+
+<p>These marches from provincial centres had
+assumed most remarkable, and, indeed, dangerous
+proportions. The great bulk of those who
+joined in such demonstrations from the provinces
+were sober, well-conducted, but unlucky
+beings. Footsore and weary, they
+tramped through the suburbs into London,
+and were charitably provided for in halls and
+schools, where the Sisters attended to their
+wants; only to leave the capital after a few
+days with no improvement in their prospects.
+Long ago the foreigner had been allowed to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</span>
+get a grip on our industries. So complex had
+the position become that England could no
+longer support her own sons on English soil.
+Even the old soldiers, always numerous in
+these provincial contingents—men who had
+fought and bled for their country on far-off
+battlefields, where pluck and endurance had
+been lauded in the hour of triumph—were now
+forgotten and unprovided for in their maturity
+or old age. The bitter feeling engendered by
+the failure of successive Governments to
+grapple with the problem of the unemployed,
+on statesman-like lines of national policy, now
+bore fruit. For, while patient endurance was
+the characteristic of most of the provincial
+demonstrators, there was a considerable minority
+ripe for resentful action against the
+ruling classes. Great numbers of these men
+having come to London, stayed there, and
+the magnetism of a powerful organisation
+attached them practically, if not admittedly,
+to the forces of the League. The old soldiers,
+in particular, were welcomed and well paid
+on account of their experience in discipline,
+and the qualifications which many of them
+possessed for marshalling bodies of recruits.</p>
+
+<p>After the riotous proceedings at the Mansion
+House there was a short respite; but when the
+Leaguers next loomed prominently into public
+notice, it was obvious that, instead of being<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</span>
+more or less of a disordered rabble, their ranks
+partook of the character of an organised force.</p>
+
+<p>Fearful of public disturbance on a more
+extensive scale, the Government now arranged
+for a postponement of the trial of the Hyde
+Park incendiaries. A public application was
+made at the Central Criminal Court and
+granted as a matter of course. As soon as
+this was known, the Leaguers showed their
+hand. Five thousand strong, they marched
+to Whitehall and peremptorily demanded an
+interview with the Home Secretary. That
+timid functionary was, or was said to be,
+absent from the building, and a more courageous
+official—an under-secretary—was put
+forward to receive a deputation from the serried
+ranks that filled the thoroughfare. Never
+since an unhappy king stepped forth from
+Whitehall Palace, to meet, in the face of an
+awed and awful multitude, the death to which
+he was condemned by regicides, had the great
+street of England’s Government witnessed so
+convincing a manifestation of popular power.</p>
+
+<p>The demand of the deputation was plain
+and unmistakable. The prisoners awaiting
+trial must be released. A like claim was made
+on behalf of those who were still in custody
+on various charges arising out of the riot at
+the Mansion House. The under-secretary, with
+carefully prepared notes in his hand, did<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</span>
+his best to temporize. He was wordy but
+indefinite. It was not in his power to interfere
+with the course of justice. If a case for
+special intervention could be made out in
+writing it should be duly considered. The
+clemency of his Majesty the King could only
+be exercised in a constitutional manner on the
+advice of the Home Secretary. The Home
+Secretary, in a matter of such grave import,
+would have to consult the whole body of
+Cabinet ministers, but Ministers were out of
+town. Meanwhile, if he could tender advice,
+he would strongly urge the deputation to use
+all possible influence in the interests of peace
+and quietness——</p>
+
+<p>“Are you going to set ’em free?” roughly
+interposed a shoemaker named Raggett, one
+of the spokesmen—the same who had been
+seen on the roof near the Mansion House.</p>
+
+<p>“I?—impossible!” stammered the under-secretary.</p>
+
+<p>Raggett turned his back contemptuously
+upon the Government official, and held a
+whispered colloquy with the other members
+of the deputation. He was extraordinary,
+alike in his physical deformity and in intellect.
+He nourished, it was said, the bitterest hate
+against the State, for having confined him,
+improperly as he alleged, in a lunatic asylum.</p>
+
+<p>“Gentlemen——” began the under-secretary,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</span>
+but his appeal for attention was unheeded.
+Raggett and his colleagues finished
+their whispered conversation, and without
+another word or sign marched out of the
+Government building. There was a call for
+silence in the street, instantly obeyed, and
+then the half-crazed shoemaker, mounted on
+the topmost of a flight of steps, reported in a few
+terse and savage sentences the failure of the
+deputation. Revolutionary action invariably
+brings to the front men who are prepared
+to out-Herod Herod, followers who become
+leaders, cranks who establish an ascendency
+which no one could have foreseen at the outset
+of the movement. Such a man was Raggett,
+whose power with a large section of the
+Leaguers was immediately manifested by the
+response to the keynote of his brief harangue.
+A sullen growl arose from those nearest to the
+demagogue; it spread and swelled in volume,
+until, from the great concourse stretching
+southward along Parliament Street, and northward
+towards Trafalgar Square, a terrifying
+roar of wrath went up from some five thousand
+throats. It rose and fell, and rose again,
+reaching its culminating savagery when suddenly
+each Leaguer raised both arms above
+his head. Then, as at a signal, ten thousand
+fists, many grasping cudgels and other rough-and-ready
+weapons, were shaken in the air.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</span>
+This united menace, that seemed to include
+the Home Office, the Treasury, Downing
+Street, and the very Houses of Parliament,
+was terrible in its volume and intensity.</p>
+
+<p>So appalling was the tumult, and so electrifying
+the excitement, that the horses of the
+troopers in the Horse Guard Shelters reared
+and plunged forward into the close ranks of
+the Leaguers who were standing on the pavement.
+Shouts of anger and fear now rent
+the air. One horse slipped upon the flagstones
+and threw its rider heavily among the crowd.
+The other, entirely beyond the trooper’s control,
+tore wildly through the fleeing mob
+towards Westminster.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XXI<br>
+<small>THE DEVIL’S OWN ON THE DEFENSIVE</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>The acute alarm now felt in Government
+circles led to a hasty decision to embody a
+large auxiliary force of special constables. A
+source of much anxiety was found in the
+rumoured designs of the Leaguers on certain
+important buildings connected with the Law.
+The Temple church, and the halls and libraries
+of the Inns of Court, both north and south of
+the Strand, were believed to be in jeopardy,
+and arrangements were made with the Inns
+of Court Volunteers to protect the prized and
+ancient buildings from attack or incendiarism.
+Both within and without the Law Courts a
+strong force of police was kept on duty day
+and night, and London solicitors furnished
+from among their number a large contingent
+of special constables to safeguard the Law
+Society’s hall and library in Chancery Lane.</p>
+
+<p>Even these precautions were not such as
+to satisfy the urgent demands of the timid<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</span>
+“better classes” in London, and a cry was
+raised for more troops. At this juncture, however,
+the Secret Service agents of the Government
+were sending in reports that negatived
+the possibility of reducing the military strength
+of outlying districts, and pointed to the paramount
+necessity of maintaining efficiency and
+vigilance at the naval ports and arsenals. It
+was beyond question that at this critical
+moment of domestic history there was a subtle
+shifting of international cards that was fraught
+with danger to the country. A revived Russia,
+it was well known, only waited an opportunity
+to wound or humiliate Great Britain. The
+German Emperor, while adroitly masking his
+real attitude, was believed to be anxious to
+test the metal of his strengthened navy.
+Against what country other than Great Britain
+could the ceaseless activity in the German
+dockyards be directed? Armoured cruisers,
+of about 15,000 tons; battleships of from
+17,000 to 18,000 tons, with armour ever
+thicker and guns ever more powerful! All
+this increased tonnage, sanctioned under the
+German Navy Act of 1900, meant an expenditure
+of something like £800,000 upon
+a single battleship. In 1906, £12,000,000 had
+been expended on Kaiser William’s navy; in
+1912, at this rate, German naval expenditure
+would have climbed to £16,000,000. And,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</span>
+in the interval, or after, what appalling test
+of strength and watchfulness might not be
+put upon the navy of Great Britain?</p>
+
+<p>France, though disposed to be friendly, was
+fettered by treaties with other Powers; and
+Japan, whose fleets were no longer confined
+to Eastern seas, was by some suspected of
+having a secret understanding with Russia,
+her former enemy, that involved ultimate
+designs upon Britain, her present ally. That
+alliance had not proved so advantageous to
+the youngest of the Great Powers as the
+Mikado’s government had expected it to be.
+The shilly-shallying of successive British ministers
+had at last disgusted the Japanese.
+Those hardy, patient, and self-controlled Eastern
+islanders, steadily increasing their marvellous
+powers, while the islanders of the West
+were showing marked signs of physical and
+moral deterioration, had no intention of submitting
+to a one-sided international bargain.
+Japan knew her own strength on the high
+seas, and now prepared to use it ultimately,
+anywhere and against all comers for her own
+advantage. Russia had not forgiven and
+never would forgive the disasters and defeats
+inflicted on her navy and her troops, but
+Russian revenge can bide its time. Meanwhile
+there were grudges of far older standing
+against Great Britain, and if, while the treaty<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</span>
+of peace with Japan held good, the Japanese
+would help the new Czar to inflict an indirect
+injury on England, it was fairly certain
+that any opportunity would be eagerly seized.</p>
+
+<p>A sinister circumstance, in this connection,
+was the undoubted fact that the new navy
+built or bought by Russia was largely officered
+by men who had been trained and instructed
+by Japanese experts. A few years before, it
+would have been deemed inconceivable that
+a Russian should have submitted to tutelage
+from the once despised “little yellow men.”
+But the bitter lessons of experience had made
+their impression even in Russia. The deep-seated
+desire for restored prestige and power
+outweighed the national pride; and the
+Japanese, on their part, were not unwilling
+to make certain Russian ships and crews
+efficient for naval warfare, provided such
+ships remained thousands of miles from Japan
+and her possessions in the East. Thus it had
+come about, in the whirligig of time’s revenges,
+that Japan, which had learnt her naval lessons
+from Great Britain, and had splendidly carried
+them into practice against Russia, was now
+supposed to be Russia’s secret guide, philosopher,
+and friend in inculcating the art and
+science of naval warfare.</p>
+
+<p>These, however, were matters of which the
+British public in general had but little knowledge.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</span>
+For them the shoe pinched nearer
+home. So dangerous and uncertain were the
+conditions of life in London, that hosts of
+prosperous people, who had returned in the
+autumn, hoping that the tyranny would be
+over, left town again with their families when
+it was discovered that the winter months might
+hold something yet worse in store. But these
+departures, numerous as they were, made but
+a small gap in the enormous aggregate life of
+the capital. Scores of thousands, or hundreds
+of thousands might go, but millions remained,
+and must remain; for here was their lot cast;
+here in the misery and murk of the season of
+fog and slush and drizzle the railroad of life
+was laid down for them, and to leave the
+rails was hopeless and impossible.</p>
+
+<p>With the idea of calming the apprehensions
+of residents and tradesmen, and at the same
+time in the hope of overawing the Leaguers,
+the civil and military authorities now organised
+a patrol of the streets by bodies of police
+and special constables. At the same time it
+was noticed that musters and marches of the
+regular troops and volunteers were of frequent
+occurrence. It was in connection with
+the renewed activity of the “Devil’s Own”
+that Herrick now had an exciting personal
+experience of the perils of the times.</p>
+
+<p>The unexampled slump in legal business<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</span>
+had left him, and great numbers of his brother-barristers,
+with next to nothing to do. Many
+of them, in common with himself, had received
+threats under the sign of the spider, but so
+far there had been no actual fulfilment of the
+warning. It was noticeable, however, that
+fewer men in wig and gown were seen in the
+streets in the vicinity of the Law Courts, and
+those who did wear their forensic armour
+were sure to encounter gibes and insults from
+some contemptuous tongue. Events were to
+prove, however, that in the first place the
+Leaguers were maturing their plans to fly at
+higher game than the ordinary stuff gownsman.</p>
+
+<p>So altered were the relations between himself
+and Aldwyth Westwood that Herrick,
+wisely, perhaps, had deemed it best not to
+worry her with continued remonstrances, or
+requests for explanations. The times were
+out of joint, but the shadow could not last
+for ever, and his temperament led him to
+believe that all would yet be well. Meanwhile,
+his zeal as a volunteer officer was
+reawakened by concurrent events, and the
+occupation that drills and marches afforded
+him was very welcome.</p>
+
+<p>On a memorable afternoon, about a week
+after the Leaguers’ demonstration at Whitehall,
+the “Devil’s Own” were mustered for
+a march. Groups of officers and men stood<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</span>
+talking in Stone Buildings, Old Court, and
+New Square, waiting for the complement of
+rank and file. The men came in from various
+directions—some by the archway from Carey
+Street, some through the passage at the south-west
+corner of New Square, others from the
+various Chancery Lane approaches. Herrick
+himself turned in at the large west gateway.
+Thus it was that he noticed that a muster
+of another character was at the same time
+taking place in Lincoln’s Inn Fields, probably
+as preliminary to another and formidable
+street demonstration on the part of the
+Leaguers.</p>
+
+<p>Herrick immediately made a report to his
+commanding officer, and from observations
+then taken it was seen that the Leaguers were
+assembling rapidly and in great force. They,
+on their part, noted the muster of the volunteers,
+and presently sundry jeers and insults
+were shouted at the citizen soldiers. Groups
+of men, who were seen to be wearing the
+metal disc, gathered close to the open gates
+and watched the formation of the battalion.
+The possibility of a collision at once became
+apparent, for it was intended to march the
+volunteers through Lincoln’s Inn Fields, and,
+<em>via</em> Long Acre, to the West End. There was
+no other exit from the Inn suitable for marching
+order in the intended direction; and, on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</span>
+the other hand, it was pretty obvious that to
+cross Lincoln’s Inn Fields would certainly
+involve a collision with the Leaguers, whose
+numbers already largely exceeded those of
+the battalion. The disc-men, growing more
+aggressive, now showed a disposition to enter
+New Square itself, and a hasty council of
+officers was held, and the order given to close
+the gates. Instantly angry groans were raised
+by the Leaguers, and a shrill voice yelled:
+“Down with the lawyers!” At the same
+time a rush was made for the wall separating
+the gardens from the east side of the Fields,
+and, with no great difficulty, large numbers
+of the Leaguers clambered to the top and
+descended on the other side. In this way
+the flank of the battalion was menaced by
+a gathering mob. In effect, it looked as if
+the volunteers were now on the defensive,
+and derisive laughter greeted the hurried
+orders of the officers.</p>
+
+<p>Mortified and puzzled at this development,
+the colonel decided to march immediately.
+As soon as this was realised, a crash of timber
+was heard, and it became known that the
+Leaguers were tearing down the hoarding that
+enclosed the foundations of an extension of
+the Land Registry buildings close at hand.
+The levelled hoarding at once exposed to
+view great balks of timber, ladders, and stacks<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</span>
+of pickaxes and shovels. It was an unexpected
+armoury, ready to hand, and the
+Leaguers immediately availed themselves of
+its resources. Several heavy pieces of timber
+and ladders were now dragged towards the
+Lincoln’s Inn archway, triumphant and excited
+cries bursting from the mob. The next
+moment these improvised battering-rams were
+brought to bear with terrific violence upon
+the gates and brickwork. The unarmed contingent
+that had scrambled into the gardens
+urged on their comrades with wild applause,
+and hurled defiance at the humiliated battalion.
+“Rats! Rats in a trap! Down
+with the lawyers!” burst hoarsely from a
+thousand throats. The colonel turned pale
+as death, and his horse, terrified by the uproar,
+plunged dangerously in proximity to
+his men. Above the din, the order, “Open
+the gates!” was shouted. But, before it
+could be obeyed one of them came crashing
+to the ground. The other was torn aside,
+and the Leaguers and the “Devil’s Own”
+stood face to face. There was a pause.
+Then, hurtling through the air, came a pavior’s
+rammer, followed by a stonecutter’s mallet,
+and two privates with anguished faces limped
+out of the ranks of the volunteers. At the
+same instant the growing force of Leaguers
+on the flank made a determined effort to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</span>
+tear up the iron railings bordering the
+grass.</p>
+
+<p>“Fix bayonets!” roared the colonel angrily.
+A howl of rage went up from the Leaguers;
+then, suddenly, as if at the crack of doom,
+every voice was silenced, every face was
+blanched. The thunder of a great explosion
+filled the air, followed by crash on crash, and
+multitudinous reverberations.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XXII<br>
+<small>THE BOMB BRIGADE</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>The appalling explosion which checked the
+impending conflict between the volunteers
+and the Leaguers, causing the latter to melt
+away from Lincoln’s Inn and rush in surging
+hordes in the direction of Clerkenwell, was
+the most terrible outrage that had yet befallen
+the alarmed capital. It was not without
+precedent; indeed precedent was, in some
+respects, carefully followed by the organisers
+of this desperate attempt to release the
+imprisoned incendiaries. Nearly fifty years
+earlier the prison wall had been blown down
+for a somewhat similar purpose by a desperate
+gang of Fenians. The effect of that diabolical
+outrage on the policy of Mr Gladstone is
+matter of history. On that occasion many
+houses in Corporation Lane were partially
+wrecked, four persons were instantly killed,
+and some forty others were maimed or injured
+in various degrees. The immediate object<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</span>
+of the prisoners, however, was not attained,
+for, though a considerable breach was made
+in the prison wall, none escaped.</p>
+
+<p>On the present occasion the damage to life
+and limb was somewhat less; only two were
+killed, and thirty-one injured, but the destruction
+to property was far more extensive
+than before. The latter fact was, to some
+extent, explained when it was ascertained
+that there had been in reality two explosions,
+different in character, but rapid in succession.</p>
+
+<p>Early in the afternoon all the prisoners had
+been taken into the prison-yard for exercise,
+as usual. Raggett, one of the alleged incendiaries
+(son of the half crazy shoemaker),
+was observed to fall out shortly after a small
+indiarubber ball was thrown over the wall.
+The ball was supposed to have been thrown
+by a street boy, and a warder threw it back,
+not dreaming that it was in reality a pre-concerted
+signal. Raggett was ordered to
+join the ranks, but made some excuse about
+a nail in his boot hurting him, and obstinately
+kept aloof.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, on the other side of the wall,
+two men, having the appearance of chimney-sweeps,
+and whose faces were covered with
+soot, were observed in the act of wheeling
+a hand-truck on which was a large barrel.
+Fitted in the barrel was a funnel, or tundish,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</span>
+which undoubtedly held a fuse. The supposed
+chimney-sweeps, having wheeled the
+truck rapidly but carefully to a selected
+position in close proximity to the prison wall,
+suddenly deserted it, and disappeared immediately
+and without question in the adjacent
+slums. A few people, moved by a
+fatal curiosity, stopped and gazed at the
+truck; and a policeman, noticing first the
+loiterers and then the barrel, approached
+slowly, and perhaps with some suspicion.
+Before he could reach the spot, a terrific flame
+burst from the ignited gunpowder, and with
+a rending crash a large section of the prison
+wall fell outward into the street. The unfortunate
+constable, struck on the temple by
+a broken paving-stone, fell dead, and by his
+side a woman, whose face was covered with
+blood, stumbled with outstretched arms into
+the gutter and lay there prostrate. Bricks,
+stones, and fragments of masonry fell in all
+directions, beating down the shrieking, panic-stricken
+people as they fled through the adjacent
+streets. Crash after crash followed,
+as the walls of other buildings tottered and
+collapsed; then, as a crowning climax of the
+outrage, another distinctive detonation came
+from the Sessions-house, designed, no doubt,
+to distract attention from the prison. It
+served, unquestionably, to facilitate the escape<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</span>
+of Raggett and three of his fellow-prisoners,
+who scrambled over the fallen masonry and
+got free before the dazed and stupefied warders
+could realise what was happening. Two warders
+and three prisoners lay wounded and
+bleeding in the prison-yard.</p>
+
+<p>In the neighbouring Sessions-house at the
+time there were only three cleaners and a
+man who was employed as usher when the
+Court was sitting. This man subsequently
+described what he saw. Awed by the gunpowder
+explosion and the nerve-destroying
+sounds that followed it, and ere he had time
+to rush into the street, he suddenly heard a
+crash of broken glass, as some hard object
+was hurled through one of the windows of
+the Court. As it fell on the floor a blue flame
+shot into the air; there was an ear-splitting
+report. The building seemed to rock, huge
+beams gave way and fell, and every window
+with its framework was blown outwards.
+A cloud of dust and powdered mortar filled
+the air. The women lay huddled and screaming
+in a heap, and the usher, with a gash in
+his cheek caused by splintered wood, staggered
+back against the wall, gazing helplessly upon
+the shattered seat of justice.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>In the midst of the welter that followed
+the foregoing catastrophe, the Cabinet, at a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</span>
+hastily-summoned meeting, at last decided
+on something in the nature of drastic action.
+Since the suppression of the Leaguers, for
+the time being at any rate, was quite impossible,
+it was resolved to raid the offices
+of the <em>Epoch</em>, which had become more and
+more revolutionary in its articles, and was
+held by the police to have indirectly incited
+the recent outrage. It certainly was significant
+that this very moment was chosen for
+publication of a sketch of the career of Jack
+the Painter, who was extolled by the <em>Epoch</em>
+as a hero and martyr for his attempts to
+destroy certain of the royal dockyards in the
+time of the American war with the mother
+country. The <em>Epoch</em> dwelt on the brutality
+of the punishment dealt out to this man,
+who was convicted at Winchester in 1777, and
+sentenced to be executed at the gate of
+Portsmouth dockyard. There the wretched
+man was drawn up by pulleys to a gibbet
+sixty-four feet high, made of the mizzenmast
+of the frigate <em>Arethusa</em>, higher than Haman
+hanged on the gallows he had meant for
+Mordecai. His body afterwards hung in chains
+at the entrance to the harbour for several years.
+This, and many another barbarous punishment,
+said the <em>Epoch</em>, was ruthlessly carried
+out in the sacred name of Justice. “Let
+Justice be purified by the shedding of blood—an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</span>
+eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, exacted
+by a counter-claim which no statute of limitations
+should avail to bar.”</p>
+
+<p>Further articles containing like passages
+were found ready in type when the police in
+great force made a sudden descent on the
+offices of the journal; but, apparently, the
+contingency had been anticipated. No resistance
+was offered by the staff, but after
+only a day’s interval the <em>Epoch</em> reappeared,
+published at another printing-office, and
+printed this time in blood-red ink.</p>
+
+<p>The Christmas holidays were drawing near;
+and, impressed by the lamentable condition of
+his province, the newly-created Archbishop of
+London issued a pastoral, which was read from
+hundreds of pulpits to the assembled congregations.
+His lordship called upon all faithful
+children of the Church to keep the approaching
+Bank holiday, not as a day of feasting
+and pleasure, but as one of solemn prayer and
+national humiliation, to the end that the
+divine mercy might be vouchsafed and the
+tyranny of the time be ended speedily. He
+reminded Churchmen that, though too much
+ignored, the 26th December was the great
+commemoration-day of the first Christian
+martyr—Stephen, a man full of faith; Stephen
+who fearlessly denounced a stiff-necked generation,
+uncircumcised in heart and ears, rebels<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</span>
+against the Just One, of whom they had been
+the betrayers and murderers. Christians, so-called,
+said the Archbishop in this modern
+time were not less betrayers and murderers of
+the Just One. They had received the law by
+the disposition of angels and had not kept it.
+“Because there is wrath, beware lest he take
+thee away with his stroke; then a great
+ransom cannot deliver thee.”</p>
+
+<p>This episcopal admonition made a deep
+impression. At St Stephen’s Church in particular
+special services were arranged, and a
+great street procession was organised for the
+approaching Bank holiday. But while the
+pastoral counsel was adopted in many of
+the metropolitan churches, a spirit of rebellion
+sprang up in other quarters, and there was
+much resentment at what was described as
+an act of ecclesiastical dictation. The publicans,
+in particular, were furious at the idea
+of their custom being diminished on one of the
+great drinking days of the Christian year. In
+all these past months of stress and trouble
+the trade had reaped huge gains from the
+disorder that prevailed. The swing-doors of
+their Temples of Bacchus at nearly every
+street corner were never still. Men and women
+thronged the showy bars; they drank, and
+drank again, the flaring lights shining on their
+dulled eyes and sodden faces. They talked,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</span>
+maundered, shouted choruses, quarrelled,
+fought; the beer engines poured forth unending
+streams into innumerable “pewters”
+and the money poured into the tills. Humanity
+sank deeper and deeper into the slough of
+despond and the slime of self-indulgence; and
+the brewers and publicans reaped their rich
+reward as licensed purveyors of poison for
+the people.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XXIII<br>
+<small>THE CRANKS’ CORNER</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>In the sombre days of December a double
+gloom settled down upon the sacred precincts
+of Mayfair. But little incense was being
+heaped on the shrine of luxury and pride.
+The fire of fashion burnt low, smouldering
+and smoky beneath the lowering clouds.
+Even Billy of Mayfair, who was usually as
+light of heart as he was agile of leg, felt the
+oppressive influence of things. His friend
+Joe had become an absolute pessimist for the
+time being, and even had high words with the
+wife of his bosom concerning the proposed
+baptism of his third-born child. Then Mrs
+Joe craftily enlisted the aid of Father Francis.
+Joe had a reasonable respect for the clergy,
+and a still profounder reverence for the peerage.
+Father Francis, he knew, was the Duke
+of Portsdown’s son; he had been to Dorking
+for an excursion, and had some acquaintance
+with the ducal grooms. So, though he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</span>
+showed fight, he touched his bare forehead,
+quite prepared for a theological crusher,
+though not necessarily to be convinced.</p>
+
+<p>“Look ’ere, sir,” said Joe, “what’s the good
+of it, that’s wot I want to know. Wot’s the
+blessed good of pouring a little water on a
+baby’s ’ead?”</p>
+
+<p>It was an inspiration that enabled Father
+Francis to give the very answer that appealed
+to Joe.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, my friend,” said he, “we’ve all got
+to obey somebody’s orders, haven’t we?”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s right enough,” agreed Joe, tightening
+his belt.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, our Lord commanded it.”</p>
+
+<p>Joe brightened instantly; it simplified
+the position wonderfully.</p>
+
+<p>“Blest if that ain’t the best answer I’ve
+’eard,” said the stableman cheerfully. And
+the child was called Francis Joseph—not
+after the Emperor of Austria, of whom the
+parents knew nothing, but after the curate
+in charge of St Stephen’s Church, and Joseph,
+the infant’s father.</p>
+
+<p>It was about this time that Billy also began
+to feel that Father Francis was a friend,
+though he still avoided church and schools,
+just as he had learnt to dodge the school
+attendance officer and Policeman X. In
+summer weather he had spent most of his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</span>
+Sundays in the Green Park which was close
+at hand, or watching the wild-fowl on the
+ornamental water of St James’s, but about
+noonday on these winter Sundays, he might
+generally be found at the Cranks’ Corner
+in Hyde Park, listening with more or less
+wondering looks to the wild and whirling
+words of the competing speakers. Here,
+on the battleground won for free speech in
+many a contest with authority, the cranks let
+off the steam according to the measure of
+their crankiness. The pitches were so close
+together that the groups of listeners almost
+blended, and an auditor quick of hearing had
+presented to him a sort of mosaic of oratory
+that was, to say the least, bewildering. One
+speaker would be raving against the worthlessness
+and wickedness of vaccination, while
+another volleyed and thundered against the
+Education Act. But, mostly, the changes
+were rung on Religion, Atheism, and Socialism.
+Each cult had its champion every Sunday.
+There was a crank who had his own peculiar
+interpretation of the Book of Revelation,
+undertaking to tell his hearers what was signified
+by the beasts with many eyes, the vials
+of wrath, and the sealing of the servants of
+the Lord. He knew who were the horned
+kings of the Apocalypse, or, at least, some of
+them,—the Kaiser, the Czar, and the Mikado.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</span>
+He knew, or thought he did, all about the
+battle of Armageddon, that terrible conflict,
+transcending in its terrors every bloody war
+that men had waged on earth. The war of
+Michael and his angels against the dragon and
+his angels, “who prevailed not, neither was
+their place found any more in heaven. And
+the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent
+called the devil and Satan which deceiveth
+the whole world.”</p>
+
+<p>“And where was the great dragon sent?”
+cried the speaker, “and where had he been
+at work ever since? ’Woe to the inhabitants
+of the earth and of the sea: for the devil
+is come down unto you, having great wrath,
+because he knoweth that he hath but a short
+time.’ Perhaps they didn’t think it was
+a short time,” said the speaker, who could
+be shrewd and logical at times, “but time
+must not be measured by the little span of a
+man’s earthly life. What was a thousand
+years in the boundless depths of eternity?
+And why need there be so much talk about
+eternity when time itself was so immeasurable—the
+time of the geological periods, the
+time of the solar system,—unthinkable, like
+the distances from star to star.</p>
+
+<p>“And yet some people,” the speaker went
+on, “said that it was all a fable; that there was
+no such being as the Prince of Darkness. If<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</span>
+men looked around they would see plenty
+of his handiwork. If there were good spirits,
+why shouldn’t there be evil spirits; spirits not
+all alike in power or characteristics, but rank
+and file, with leaders and commanders—Satan,
+Beelzebub, Moloch?” Then he quoted
+from <em>Paradise Lost</em>:—</p>
+
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry"><p>“First Moloch, horrid king, besmear’d with blood<br>
+Of human sacrifice, and parents’ tears,<br>
+Though for the noise of drums and timbrels loud<br>
+Their children’s cries unheard, that past through fire,<br>
+To his grim idol.”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>And Billy, amongst others, heard and
+trembled. It was a comfort after that to
+hear another preacher yonder telling his
+hearers of One in whose presence the devils,
+believing, could not but tremble; of One who
+cast out devils from the souls of men and
+boys; who loved to have the children round
+Him, and rebuked those who would have
+kept them from Him.</p>
+
+<p>When Billy found that this same lover of
+men’s souls was put to death by those whom
+He had sought to serve, that the Jews had
+shouted “Crucify Him!” and the Roman
+soldiers had nailed Him to a cross, the boy’s
+heart was hot within him, and his eyes were
+wet with tears. He had met with many
+Jews—the dirty, unkempt Jews of Petticoat
+Lane and Whitechapel, and the rich Jews<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</span>
+of the West End, heavy of nose and watch-chain,
+silk-hatted, frock-coated, owners of
+splendid horses, which Joe cleaned down in
+the mews. And in his childish imagination
+there sprang up a strange, fantastic picture
+of a mixed and savage mob of these Jews of
+modern times assailing with cries and blows
+their lonely and forsaken King.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t like them Jews,” he said one day
+to his friend Joe.</p>
+
+<p>The stableman rubbed his bullet-head reflectively.</p>
+
+<p>“There’s good Jews and there’s bad ’uns,”
+he remarked, as one speaking with authority,
+“just the same as there is in t’other lot.
+When a Jew’s good, he’s uncommon good.
+When he’s a bad ’un, he’s a cove as can
+get the blood out of a stone; he’s a chap
+as’ll squeeze ye dry, like that there sponge”—throwing
+one into his zinc bucket. “And,
+mark my word, Billy, there’s plenty of
+Christians as’ll do the same. Six of one
+and half a dozen of t’other, that’s what
+it is, my lad.”</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XXIV<br>
+<small>THE LOWER CRITIC</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>All the week there had dwelt in Billy’s
+mind that, to him, new and terrible story
+of the murdered King of the Jews. On Sunday—a
+bleak, dull day, when the charred
+trees in the Park stood out grim and black
+against the heavy sky, he hopped across to
+the Cranks’ Corner, hoping to hear more;
+but this time there were other voices and
+other subjects for the crowd. He saw two
+faces above the clustering people. One
+speaker was a man whom he had heard before,
+but failed to understand; the other was
+Father Francis. The man unknown to the
+boy by name was Raggett, the rabid social
+democrat. Even without the torrent of his
+venomous invective, attention would have
+been arrested by his appearance.</p>
+
+<p>Stiff black hair stood up on his oddly-shaped
+head; and the face, behind a bristly grey
+moustache, reminded Billy of a savage half-Persian<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</span>
+cat that haunted Hill Street mews.
+The man was fluent, and his high-pitched
+voice almost rose into a scream as he declaimed
+his speech to a band of Leaguers
+mixed with a miscellaneous mob.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, that’s what the parsons tell you!”
+he yelled, derisively. “You’ve to bless the
+squire and his relations, and always keep
+your proper stations. That’s Christianity in
+the country, and it’s pretty much the same
+up here in London. They’ll tell you a lot
+about the many mansions up in heaven.
+Well, we don’t know about that. We haven’t
+seen ’em; but we know right enough about
+the mansions here below. The only mansions
+they provide for you and me are the workhouse,
+the prison, or the asylum. The rich
+men keep the others for themselves. There
+are some pretty good mansions over yonder
+beyond the Marble Arch, and there are plenty
+more, and fine ones too, along Park Lane.
+We don’t get invitations to dinner, do we?
+But there is plenty of food there, and good
+wine, and spirits and beer for their cursed
+stuck-up servants; and rich furniture, and
+soft beds to sleep on, too; and jewels and
+precious things of all sorts. Oh! they do
+themselves pretty well, depend on it. But
+why don’t they share out a bit? Not they!
+Hold fast!—that’s their motto. And it is the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</span>
+same with the land. Don’t believe ’em when
+they say there isn’t room in England. There
+is room, but they won’t let you have it. They
+want the land for their parks and gardens;
+they want the woods for their pheasants and
+their sport. The working-man may slave in
+their fields all day, and sleep in a hovel at
+night; and if he gets tired of it and comes to
+London, it’s the slum or the doss-house that’s
+his portion. That’s good enough for him. Oh
+yes, Holdfast is a good dog; but I’ll tell you
+something—Grab’s a good dog too!”</p>
+
+<p>He paused, almost breathless, and there
+was a dull mutter of assent throughout the
+crowd. Above the angry sound the clear
+voice of Father Francis was heard, a voice
+of delicate timbre, in striking contrast with
+the raucous tones of the demagogue. It was
+the first time he had come amongst the
+cranks as a competitor for notice, and he had
+only done it after great misgiving concerning
+his own powers and the utility of trying them
+under such conditions. Yet, he asked himself,
+what right had the clergy of England
+to shrink from the ordeal? Why should the
+men under whose lips was the poison of asps,
+why should the blasphemer, be allowed to hold
+the field? If the people would not come to
+the church, ought not the church to go to the
+people? Was not the Master Preacher of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</span>
+all time an open-air preacher. Was not the
+greatest of all sermons preached from the
+hill-side to the common people, who heard
+Him gladly? The fields of corn, the trees,
+the flowers, the common objects of the country-side,
+had ever furnished simple but convincing
+themes for One who spake as never spake
+mortal man before or since. No, he <em>would
+not</em> be a coward! So the young priest put
+his Bible under his arm and walked across
+Park Lane to the Cranks’ Corner. Was discretion
+always the better part of valour, or was
+it really a synonym for cowardice? He went
+with no idea of entering into argument or
+controversy with others. He knew that amid
+much mendacity there was blended not a
+little truth, though perhaps partial and perverted,
+in some of those inflammatory speeches.
+No one knew better the sins of his own order.
+He himself, in his younger days, like Augustine
+of old, had drunk deep of the knowledge of
+evil. Like Tannhäuser, he, too, had lingered
+in the Venusberg, and gone back to it again
+and yet again; but ever in his ears—sometimes
+near and sometimes from afar—had
+sounded the wonderful chant of the pilgrims;
+the rhythm of their steadfast march always
+reproached him; until, suddenly, shame and
+remorse had wrought a miracle, and, stumbling
+and mistrustful of himself, he joined the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</span>
+pilgrims’ ranks, and understood the music
+of that mighty march as he had never done
+before.</p>
+
+<p>Here, on this unique spot in London, men
+were always pouring out their own ideas,
+intoxicated with the exuberance of their own
+verbosity; but he himself had resolved to try
+another plan. What could he, or any man,
+offer better worth hearing than the words of
+the book under his arm, which contained the
+lively oracles of God Himself!</p>
+
+<p>He knew he should not meet any of the
+Higher Critics in the Park. The German professors
+and the English divines, who sit comfortably
+in their book-lined studies and pen
+presumptuous onslaughts on the faith once
+for all delivered to the saints, work their
+mines of infidelity from a safe distance. These
+theological dynamitards do not come into
+the open with their bombs. Their machines—not
+less infernal—take the form of neatly
+bound volumes on the bookstalls, sold at
+popular prices, handy to explode the faith
+and hope of thousands of their fellow-creatures,
+leaving them torn and mangled in soul upon
+the rocks of desperation and despair. But
+the Lower Critics, he knew, found in the Park
+their happy hunting-ground. Why should
+they have it all their own way in Christian
+England?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</span></p>
+
+<p>“<em>And the Spirit and the bride say, Come.
+And let him that heareth say, Come. And let
+him that is athirst come. And whosoever will,
+let him take of the water of life freely.... And
+if any man shall take away from the words of
+the book of this prophecy, God shall take away
+his part out of the book of life, and out of the
+holy city, and out of the things that are written
+in this book.</em>” That solemn record gave him
+courage. So, standing up beneath the murky
+sky, with the din of the traffic on one side
+and the screaming voice of Raggett the Raver
+on the other, Father Francis, pale but calm,
+read aloud some passages from one of the
+oldest and most wonderful books in the Bible.
+How marvellous was the contrast between
+the words of the iconoclast and the words
+echoing down from the far-off centuries to
+the fool who had said in his heart, “There is
+no God!”</p>
+
+
+<p>“<em>No doubt ye are the people, and wisdom
+shall die with you!... But ask now the
+beasts, and they shall teach thee; and the fowls
+of the air, and they shall tell thee: Or speak to
+the earth, and it shall teach thee, and the fishes
+of the sea shall declare unto thee. Who knoweth
+not in all these that the hand of the Lord hath
+wrought this? In whose hand is the soul of
+every living thing, and the breath of all mankind.</em>”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</span></p>
+
+<p>Raggett was speaking again. “If we don’t
+look after ourselves,” he shouted, “who do
+you think is going to help us? Tell me
+that!”</p>
+
+
+<p>“<em>With him is strength and wisdom</em>,” read
+the priest, “<em>the deceived and the deceiver are
+his. He leadeth counsellors away spoiled, and
+maketh the judges fools. He looseth the bonds
+of kings, and girdeth their loins with a girdle.
+He leadeth princes away spoiled, and overthroweth
+the mighty. He discovereth deep things
+out of darkness, and bringeth out to life the
+shadow of death. He increaseth the nations
+and destroyeth them. He enlargeth the nations,
+and straiteneth them again.</em>” ...</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” roared Raggett, harping on his
+theme, “when they talk to you about heaven,
+tell them heaven helps those that help themselves.
+You’ve got to make your own heaven,
+and now’s your time to do it!” ...</p>
+
+
+<p><em>” But ye are forgers of lies, ye are all physicians
+of no value. O that ye would altogether
+hold your peace! and it should be your wisdom....
+Will ye speak wickedly for God? and
+talk deceitfully for Him? Will ye accept His
+person? Will ye contend for God? Is it good
+that He should search you out? Or as one man
+mocketh another, do ye so mock Him?”</em> ...</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</span></p>
+
+<p>“... Seeing’s believing, to my mind,
+and possession’s nine points of the law....”</p>
+
+
+<p>“<em>Who is this that darkeneth counsel by words
+without knowledge? Gird up thy loins now
+and I will demand of thee, and answer thou
+me. Where wast thou when I laid the foundations
+of the earth? Declare if thou hast understanding
+... whereupon are the foundations
+thereof fastened? or who laid the corner-stone
+thereof, when the morning stars sang together,
+and all the sons of God shouted for joy?...
+Or who shut up the sea with doors when it brake
+forth.... And said, Hitherto shalt thou come,
+but no further, and here shall thy proud waves
+be stayed? Hast thou commanded the morning
+since thy days; and caused the dayspring to
+know his place?... Have the gates of death
+been opened unto thee? or hast thou seen the
+doors of the shadow of death?</em>” ...</p>
+
+<p>Raggett had paused and was glaring at
+the priest over the heads of the people.
+“There’s a lot of texts going about,” he
+said, pointing. “I’ll give you one: ’Down
+with them, down with them, even to the
+ground!’”</p>
+
+<p>A surging murmur of approval ran through
+the crowd, and menacing faces were turned
+towards Father Francis. His calm, clear<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</span>
+voice went on, and only two red spots glowing
+on his pale cheeks showed that he was even
+aware of the pointing finger and the savage
+faces.</p>
+
+
+<p>“<em>Canst thou bind the sweet influences of
+Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion?...
+Knowest thou the ordinances of heaven? Canst
+thou set the dominion thereof in the earth?</em>”
+He paused a moment.</p>
+
+<p>“<em>Shall he that contendeth with the Almighty
+instruct Him? he that reproveth God, let him
+answer it.</em>”</p>
+
+<p>Raggett’s arm was raised, but he faltered.
+Nearly all the faces were turned towards the
+man at whom he had pointed, and the crowd
+was strangely still.</p>
+
+<p>Father Francis shut his Bible, and stepped
+down.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XXV<br>
+<small>MARCUS WHITE GIVES ORDERS</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>On the twenty-first of December the Law
+Courts “rose” for the Christmas vacation.
+It was the end of the gloomiest and slackest
+term within the memory of living lawyers.
+The abnormally disturbed condition of social
+and business life had reacted on the whole
+profession, in both its branches. Suitors
+shunned the Courts; jurymen persistently
+absented themselves in spite of threats and
+fines; witnesses would not come for love,
+money, or subpœnas; and here at the Royal
+Courts, as at the Bailey, case after case broke
+down for want of evidence. The whole
+machinery of the law was out of gear. The
+outrage at Clerkenwell gave rise to anxious
+fears lest it should be repeated in the chief
+Palace of Justice, and day and night strong
+relays of police, concealed as far as possible
+from sight, kept vigilant observation and
+guarded all approaches to the building. Nearly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</span>
+half the detective force of Scotland Yard was
+employed on this special duty, for it was
+known that the leader, or leaders, of the
+League felt special enmity against all officials
+and professional followers of the law; while
+some believed that here, at the centre of the
+legal system, in some dark way a deadly
+attack might be expected.</p>
+
+<p>Such was the critical condition of affairs,
+and so grave, in particular, the problem of
+repressing crime and protecting life and property,
+that all the judges of the King’s Bench
+Division were officially requested to remain
+in town, or near to it, during the vacation.
+Communications of an urgent character
+reached the Chief Justice from the Lord
+Chancellor and also from the Home Office.
+Eager questions and wild surmises were
+whispered on every side by members of the
+Bar, but no one seemed to know what was
+going to happen, and, apparently, least of
+all his Majesty’s Government.</p>
+
+<p>Herrick, as he sauntered down the great hall
+towards the Strand, was overtaken by his old
+informant, Henshaw, whom he had only occasionally
+seen since the Hyde Park conflagration.</p>
+
+<p>Henshaw touched his hat. “A merry
+Christmas, Mr Herrick.”</p>
+
+<p>“Looks like it, doesn’t it?” said the
+young man, gloomily.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I expect we’ll be worse before we’re
+better,” opined the detective.</p>
+
+<p>“What are they going to do?”</p>
+
+<p>“Lord knows, sir. Everything’s at sixes
+and sevens. But one thing’s pretty certain—we
+shall soon be in the dark.”</p>
+
+<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
+
+<p>“The gas-workers are coming out on strike,
+and the electric-lighting men are pretty sure
+to follow suit.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose these cursed Leaguers are at
+the bottom of it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah! ask their General—that’s what they
+call him among themselves—though they do
+say some of his men have got so out of hand
+he can’t stop ’em now, even if he wants to.
+That man Raggett, for one; why, he’s as
+mad as a March hare, and he means to let
+hell loose on London before he’s done with
+it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is Marcus White really their so-called
+General?”</p>
+
+<p>Henshaw nodded, and glanced round to
+see that no one overheard them.</p>
+
+<p>“Is he in London?”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly he is, living as bold as brass
+not five minutes’ walk from here. He’s got
+a great flat down at the end of Surrey Street,
+overlooking the Embankment.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then, man, why, in heaven’s name, don’t<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</span>
+you lay him by the heels?” said Herrick,
+vehemently.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah! why don’t we? I’ll tell you. Because
+the Home Secretary is afraid of the
+music; and there are other reasons, too.
+We can’t prove anything against him, and
+he is stronger than we are, just at present;
+and if we did get him, no jury would dare
+find him guilty. What’s more, Mr Herrick,
+no counsel would dare stand up in Court to
+prosecute him—unless you would,” he added.</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed, I would,” said Herrick, grimly.</p>
+
+<p>The detective stood back and looked at
+the young advocate’s face. “I believe you,”
+he said, admiringly. “Well, you won’t get
+the chance, I’m afraid.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps that depends on the police.”</p>
+
+<p>“We’re nearly done; I know that. Mortal
+men can’t stand the worry and the work of
+it day and night, and everybody swearing at
+us all the time. They’ll have the Force on
+strike if this game lasts much longer—then
+God help London!” He nodded and passed
+on; but returned again. “I’ll tell you one
+thing,” he said, in a lowered voice: “There’s
+going to be a meeting here”—he jerked his
+head towards the Courts and offices behind
+them—” all the K.B. judges.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah! I knew <em>that</em>,” said Herrick.</p>
+
+<p>“To be sure; your friend Sir John Westwood<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</span>
+would know. He’ll have to come too,
+of course. And there’ll be a good many
+more.”</p>
+
+<p>“Who else?”</p>
+
+<p>“All the police magistrates, the Clerkenwell
+and Middlesex judges, the Recorder and
+the Common Serjeant, and our boss, the
+Chief Commissioner.”</p>
+
+<p>“A multitude of counsellors!”</p>
+
+<p>“And not much wisdom, I expect,” was
+the detective’s comment.</p>
+
+<p>“When do they meet?”</p>
+
+<p>“Christmas Eve—the 24th. Good-night.”</p>
+
+<p>They parted at the southern entrance, and
+Herrick walked over to the Temple, pondering.
+He still had in his pocket the threatening
+missive he received at Folkestone; but though
+ever since then he had had a sense of being
+shadowed, no actual evil had yet befallen
+him. It was not so, he knew very well, with
+many others who had been similarly warned.
+Disasters of various sorts had overtaken them—street
+assaults, mysterious accidents by
+day, and onslaughts by masked robbers in
+the night. He had a feeling that he himself
+had not been spared through oversight,
+but by design.</p>
+
+<p>Not far away from Paper Buildings, to
+which he took his way rather from habit
+than because he had anything to do there,—in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</span>
+a big room overlooking the river, there
+sat a man who could have told him all
+about it.</p>
+
+<p>In the appearance of Marcus White a
+marked change had been wrought since Herrick
+had left him at the Folkestone hotel. The
+swarthy look had given place to a peculiar
+pallor; the veins stood out upon the temples,
+and beneath his eyes were purple shadows.
+But the eyes themselves still burnt with the
+fire that had so impressed Aldwyth Westwood
+five months ago.</p>
+
+<p>The firelight played upon his face, as he
+sat with head thrown back, his eyes seeming
+to study the scroll-work on the handsome
+ceiling.</p>
+
+<p>A foreign-looking man who stood a few feet
+away waited patiently for his attention—a
+man whose sun-tanned, wind-roughened skin
+told plainly of the sea. His style of dress
+confirmed the impression, and there were
+sailor’s earrings in his great red ears.</p>
+
+<p>“You understand?” said Marcus White,
+his gaze coming down to the man’s face.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, General, but——”</p>
+
+<p>“There is no ‘but.’ You understand?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, General.”</p>
+
+<p>“Everything is on board?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, General.”</p>
+
+<p>“You can trust your men?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</span></p>
+
+<p>Pedro showed his white teeth in what
+was intended for a smile. The answer was
+sufficiently convincing.</p>
+
+<p>“Steam is to be kept up day and night,
+in case you are wanted.”</p>
+
+<p>“That will be so, General; but—pardon—if
+one might know when we are likely to clear
+out of the river?”</p>
+
+<p>“On the twenty-fourth, after dark—probably
+about this time”; he glanced back
+through the great blindless window at the
+darkened sky. “It will be dark enough?”
+he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Quite dark enough, General.”</p>
+
+<p>“What is the weather likely to be?”</p>
+
+<p>“One must expect squalls at this time of
+the year, General; but your quarters will be
+well protected, and you do not fear the sea,
+though in a boat like that——.” He paused
+significantly.</p>
+
+<p>Marcus White stared into the fire. The
+other waited awkwardly, then said:</p>
+
+<p>“All shall be ready when it suits you to
+come aboard, General.”</p>
+
+<p>“I stay here.”</p>
+
+<p>The man’s surprise was manifest.</p>
+
+<p>“But, my General, I understood——”</p>
+
+<p>Marcus White waved his hand. “There
+will be other passengers.”</p>
+
+<p>“Where are they to be landed, General?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</span></p>
+
+<p>“You will come here for sealed orders on
+the twenty-fourth, at noon.”</p>
+
+<p>“Sealed orders? Yes, General, but when
+am I to open them?”</p>
+
+<p>“When you sight the Channel Islands.”</p>
+
+<p>A questioning look came to the man’s face,
+but there was a glint in the eyes of Marcus
+White that checked him.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XXVI<br>
+<small>THE CAPTURE OF THE JUDGES</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>The weather had suddenly turned to bitter
+cold, and, in spite of prevailing alarms, every
+one had something more or less obvious to
+say on the unfailing subject. Disaster may
+impend, kingdoms may totter to their fall,
+but through all the steadfast Briton harps
+on the text of the barometer. “Dry and
+much colder; freshening north-easterly wind,”
+was the record of the morning, and the afternoon
+abundantly confirmed its truth. His
+Majesty’s judges, for the most part elderly
+gentlemen, and necessarily leading sedentary
+lives, felt, and liked not, the eager, nipping
+air. They reached the Law Courts in the
+dusk of the afternoon for their projected
+conference, feeling not a little ill-used that,
+on Christmas Eve of all days in the year, such
+a conference should be needed.</p>
+
+<p>Most of them drove by roundabout routes
+to the judges’ entrance in Carey Street;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</span>
+others deemed it safer to approach on foot,
+and entered the great building either east
+or west, from Bell Yard, or Clement’s Inn.
+None but the police were using the great
+main entrance in the Strand, which had been
+closed and strongly guarded ever since the
+rising of the Courts for the vacation. The
+street scenes of the past few days, and the
+threatening conduct of the people towards
+those who drove in private carriages or motors,
+had produced a notable effect upon the traffic.
+Many of the omnibuses had been taken off
+the streets. Numbers of the cabmen, long
+discontented with their lot, had joined the
+Leaguers, and people who did hire a hansom
+or four-wheeler had to submit to what the
+driver considered the fare should be in the
+special circumstances of the moment. But
+the Strand, like other main thoroughfares,
+was thronged with foot passengers, roadway
+as well as pavement, and any sort of wheeled
+traffic could only be carried on under slow
+and apologetic conditions. All of which
+tended to prevent punctuality on the part
+of the functionaries of the law, and to increase
+their sense of hardship and uneasiness. The
+Law had so long ridden rough-shod over the
+people, that it seemed especially surprising
+that things were taking such a different turn.</p>
+
+<p>By a quarter past four, however, all but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</span>
+three of the judges and magistrates and
+Sir Robert Hill, Chief Commissioner of Police,
+had arrived, and in the big room selected
+for the discussion, scattered groups stood in
+earnest conversation on the urgent questions
+of the hour.</p>
+
+<p>It was a memorable gathering. The Master
+of the Rolls was supported by all the Lords
+Justices of the Court of Appeal. The
+Lord Chief Justice had as his judicial
+satellites a dozen judges of the King’s Bench
+Division—all, in fact, save those who were
+incapacitated by serious illness. Both the
+Judges of the Probate, Divorce, and
+Admiralty Division were present, and also
+those important but lesser lights of the
+law, the three City judges, and the
+Chairmen and deputy-Chairmen of Sessions
+for the Counties of London and Middlesex.
+The Lord Mayor had been invited to attend,
+but a serious nervous disorder from which he
+had suffered ever since the riotous scenes at
+the Mansion House on the tenth of November,
+made his presence impossible. Twenty of
+the stipendiary magistrates from the Metropolitan
+Police Courts had come in obedience
+to the summons, two having recently died,
+and the others being confined to their beds
+through illness.</p>
+
+<p>Sir John Westwood, who was known to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</span>
+have been suffering from insomnia, stood,
+haggard and silent, by one of the windows,
+while Lord Malvern expounded to him and
+a few others his personal views as to the
+drastic measures required to meet the crisis.
+His lordship was of opinion that the King,
+who unfortunately still lay ill at Windsor
+Castle, should be advised to summon a special
+session of Parliament for the purpose of
+passing an Act for the suppression of the
+League, after the precedent adopted many
+years earlier in dealing with the Land League
+in Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>“I doubt whether we want more legislation,
+my lord,” said Westwood. “But we do need
+a stronger executive.”</p>
+
+<p>“I agree with Sir John,” said one of the
+group—Mr Justice Wigham, a man of downright
+type and resolute manner. “The plain
+fact is that the civil power has broken
+down. When that happens order can only
+be restored by the military arm.”</p>
+
+<p>“Hear, hear!” chimed in several; for
+the group was now growing larger.</p>
+
+<p>“Kitchener would be the man, if he were
+back from India,” said the Master of the
+Rolls.</p>
+
+<p>“He is back, my lord; he arrived yesterday;
+but he’s ill,” said the Solicitor-General.</p>
+
+<p>“Everybody’s ill,” observed Mr Justice<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</span>
+Barling. “Illness has its advantages at the
+present time. I think I shall be ill myself.”
+The pleasantry was received with coldness.</p>
+
+<p>The learned judge was known to be a
+judicial joker of an inveterate type, but his
+brethren of the bench considered there was a
+“time for all things.” Similarly, Mr Harrowden,
+the well-known merrymaker of the
+magisterial bench, talking to some colleagues
+at the other end of the room, received no
+encouragement when he essayed to launch
+a little witticism and support it with a
+laugh.</p>
+
+<p>“Order, order!” exclaimed the Chief
+Justice, raising his voice. “This is quite
+unseemly.”</p>
+
+<p>“My brother Barling shouldn’t set such a
+bad example,” whispered Mr Justice Hartmill
+to his neighbour.</p>
+
+<p>“Things are pretty bad, but I suppose
+you know there is a possibility of something
+worse behind?” The speaker was Sir
+Gwilliam Ranthorn, a well-known judge,
+amongst whose excellent qualities a discreet
+reticence could not be numbered. “I had it
+on excellent authority,” said his lordship.</p>
+
+<p>“Had what?” asked some one.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, Germany is working at the wires,
+as usual. All this domestic disorder in England
+is being utilised abroad. Don’t be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</span>
+surprised at anything you hear within the
+next few days.” He nodded wisely.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course we’ve all heard rumours,” said
+Sir George Wigham, rather bluntly. “But
+even if they mean war, England can’t be
+attacked without some reasonable pretext.”</p>
+
+<p>“A pretext, if you like, but not necessarily
+a reasonable one,” returned Sir Gwilliam,
+warmly. “When will their army be stronger;
+and hasn’t the Kaiser got all the ships he
+wanted while we’ve been twiddling our
+thumbs?”</p>
+
+<p>“That is not the worst of it,” chimed in
+Sir Borrall Carnes, who, as President of the
+Admiralty Division, knew more about shipping
+and seamen than all the rest. “German seamen
+swarm in our mercantile marine, and
+German pilots can do as they please with
+hundreds upon hundreds of British vessels.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s monstrous! It’s madness!” declared
+Sir Gwilliam.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, yes,” assented the Chief Justice. “I
+am disposed to endorse all you say. But
+that’s the business of the Admiralty and the
+Board of Trade. We, as guardians of civil
+order, and bound to preserve the King’s
+peace, must confine ourselves to our proper
+functions.”</p>
+
+<p>As his lordship ended, the electric light
+went out, and loud exclamations were followed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</span>
+by a curious silence, broken in
+a moment by the voice of Mr Justice
+Barling. “Why are his Majesty’s judges
+like the heathen?” he was asking. From
+a shadowed corner came the prompt reply
+of Mr Harrowden: “Because they sit in
+darkness.”</p>
+
+<p>“Lights, please; lights of some sort,”
+demanded Lord Malvern, testily.</p>
+
+<p>Alert attendants soon procured them—lamps
+and candles, always in readiness for
+an emergency, were brought in and placed
+on the great baize-covered table. At a sign
+from the Chief Justice there was a general
+move to the surrounding chairs.</p>
+
+<p>“The business of the meeting must not
+be delayed any longer,” said his lordship,
+looking round before he took the presidential
+chair. “Probably all who were summoned
+are now present?”</p>
+
+<p>“All but Sir Robert Hill,” said an attendant,
+who had checked the arrivals at the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>“It is very desirable that the Chief Commissioner
+should be here,” remarked the
+Master of the Rolls.</p>
+
+<p>A knock came on the door, and the attendant,
+opening it, had a whispered conversation
+with some one who could not be seen from the
+table. The attendant looked round: “My<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</span>
+lord, Major Rollin, one of the Assistant Commissioners,
+is here.”</p>
+
+<p>“Let him come in,” said the Chief Justice,
+dropping wearily into his chair.</p>
+
+<p>The Assistant Commissioner advanced into
+the room, and it was noticed by all that,
+though self-possessed, he was extremely pale.</p>
+
+<p>“I regret to say, my lord, that Sir Robert
+cannot possibly be here.” The judges exchanged
+glances. Major Rollin hesitated a
+moment, and then continued: “The fact is,
+we have had a very urgent message over the
+wires from Windsor. A large demonstration
+of the Leaguers is being organised near
+the Castle, and every man that we can
+spare must be despatched there. The Chief
+Commissioner is now making the necessary
+arrangements. Your lordship will perhaps
+excuse me?”</p>
+
+<p>The Assistant Commissioner bowed and was
+gone almost before his hearers realised to the
+full the ominous information he had given
+them.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the telephone bell began
+to ring. The face of the attendant, as he
+listened to the message, was watched by all
+with some anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>“Well?” demanded Sir Gwilliam. “What
+is the message?”</p>
+
+<p>“Apparently from the Home Office, my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</span>
+lord—One moment. Yes?”—listening—” Very
+well.” Then turning towards the
+table: “They wish to communicate with
+the Lord Chief Justice.”</p>
+
+<p>Lord Malvern rose at once and went across
+to the instrument. “Well, what is it? Yes—I
+am Lord Malvern. What? Now—immediately?”
+The hum and buzz of the
+machine continued, ringing the changes of
+question and answer in the usual fashion.
+Then his lordship came back to the table,
+looking very grave.</p>
+
+<p>“Matters of great urgency have arisen, and
+our presence is desired immediately to confer
+with the Lord Chancellor and the Home
+Secretary, who are busily engaged on affairs
+of State. I am to request all who are here
+to accompany me at once.”</p>
+
+<p>“Where?—to Downing Street or Whitehall?”
+asked several voices.</p>
+
+<p>“To the House of Lords—the Home Secretary
+is there with the Chancellor at this
+moment.”</p>
+
+<p>“Westminster!—easier said than done,”
+murmured one of the judges.</p>
+
+<p>The telephone bell rang out again, and
+once more the Chief Justice hurried to the
+instrument and listened. “Yes, I hear. Do
+you say at the Temple Pier? What vessel?—the
+<em>John Milton</em>? Yes.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</span></p>
+
+<p>He turned to his anxious colleagues. “It
+is considered unsafe and impracticable to
+drive to Westminster, but a paddle-steamer—the
+<em>John Milton</em>—has been sent to the
+Temple Pier to convey us to Westminster.
+Come, gentlemen, we are the servants of the
+State and there is no time to lose.”</p>
+
+<p>And no time was lost. All rose from their
+seats, pushing the chairs back in noisy haste.
+Very few of those present had taken off their
+overcoats, owing to the coldness of the room.
+Hasty messages were given to the attendants
+for the coachmen who were waiting in Carey
+Street, and in a few minutes, split up into
+small parties, the whole judicial company
+emerged by various doors on the Clement’s
+Inn side of the building. They hurried across
+the crowded, turbulent Strand, with a few
+constables acting as an escort, and made their
+way, some <em>via</em> Essex Street, and others through
+Arundel Street, to the Temple Pier. A cutting
+wind greeted them on the Embankment, and
+scattered snowflakes heralded a coming storm.</p>
+
+<p>The hiss of the escaping steam was heard,
+and the masthead light, with here and there a
+lantern on the decks, showed them the outline
+of the <em>John Milton</em>, lying alongside the pier,
+her bow towards Westminster.</p>
+
+<p>“I thought the County Council had sold
+the <em>Milton</em>.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Well, here she is, and the sooner we’re
+on board and out of this the better,” said
+one of the magistrates as they hurried down
+the steps.</p>
+
+<p>The captain was already on the bridge,
+and one of his great earrings gleamed in the
+faint light of a lantern. “All below, please,”
+he called out sharply.</p>
+
+<p>One of the seamen led the way to the
+saloon, and in a few moments the complement
+of passengers was completed. The rattle of
+the movable gangway was heard, as the men
+upon the pier withdrew it; then, as the paddle
+wheels slowly began to revolve, the taut ropes
+strained and throbbed ere they were thrown
+loose. The doors of the saloon were closed.</p>
+
+<p>“Prisoners for the first time in our lives.
+They’ve turned the tables!” ventured Mr
+Justice Barling, but no one took any notice
+of the joke. The sway of the steamer and
+churning of the water told them that she was
+clear of the landing stage. But presently
+looks of inquiry and surprise were exchanged
+amongst the passengers. “By Jove! Westwood,”
+said one of them, “they’ve put the
+boat about!”</p>
+
+<p>Sir John Westwood rushed to the doors of
+the saloon and tried to open them. The doors
+were locked and barred.</p>
+
+<p>“Great Scott! we’re heading for London<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</span>
+Bridge!” exclaimed some one else. “What
+does it mean?”</p>
+
+<p>They made a dash to the portholes and
+tried to open them; but they were fixed and
+firm.</p>
+
+<p>The clang of a well-known signal from
+bridge to engine-room reached their ears.
+“<em>That</em> means ’full speed ahead!’” said the
+last speaker; and they stood aghast and
+helpless as the <em>John Milton</em> raced down the
+river towards the open sea.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>At his window, overlooking the Embankment,
+Marcus White was watching. A grim
+smile played across his features as the lights
+of the steamer rushed eastward, and soon
+were lost to view in the black and bitter
+night.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XXVII<br>
+<small>THE BLACK CHRISTMAS</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>The elements ignore, and thus subdue, the
+rage of men. Wind alone would not have
+cleared the streets, but wind and snow together
+drove loiterers and roisterers alike to
+shelter. And in the midst of the snowstorm
+Henshaw’s prediction was fulfilled. The lighters
+of London—the men at the gasworks and
+electric lighting stations—threw down their
+tools; the lamplighters “struck,” and presently
+a great horror of darkness fell on the
+distracted citizens. The hours went on, and
+the snow still fell, deadening the sounds of
+night, muffling the city in a mighty shroud.
+This gradual hush of London seemed to
+many far more appalling than its familiar
+roar.</p>
+
+<p>But towards midnight, here and there,
+custom asserted itself, in spite of adverse
+influences, and the church bells reminded
+residents, at any rate those in the central<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</span>
+districts, that this, in very truth, was Christmas
+Eve.</p>
+
+<p>Over the broad squares south of St Pancras
+the deep-toned bells chimed out the ancient
+hymn:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“Glad tidings of great joy I bring<br>
+To you and all mankind.”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Yet darkness and distress weighed on the
+silent dwellings, and the “shining throng” of
+angels that once appeared to Eastern shepherds
+brought no message to the British
+Babylon, nor showed a glimmer of their
+glorious wings. The last chime died away;
+and soon the snowfall ceased. Then London
+slept, or tried to sleep, till, once again, after
+a long night of moaning wind, wan daylight
+stole across the white-draped roofs. Once
+more the bells were heard, but this time not
+in chimes; and through the streets, upon the
+frozen snow, dim muffled figures hastened to
+the churches. Mostly these worshippers were
+girls and women—courageous keepers of the
+Christian feast! Thus was it aforetime in
+that mysterious Easter dawn, when a woman,
+first of all,—a woman of the town—came
+hurrying to the Holy Sepulchre.</p>
+
+<p>It was not till the grey dusk of the afternoon
+that the first warning of most portentous
+happenings reached the ears of London
+citizens. Suddenly shrill-voiced newsboys<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</span>
+came yelling through the gloom; and then
+the croaking note of hoarse-toned men was
+heard—at first far off; then nearer, nearer,
+coming and going through the streets and
+squares.</p>
+
+<p class="center p1 p1b"><em>Epoch! Epoch!! Epoch</em>, <span class="smcap">Special!!!</span></p>
+
+<p>Puzzled faces peered from behind blinds,
+and eager people rushed out to their doorsteps.</p>
+
+<p class="center p1 p1b"><em>Epoch! Epoch!</em> <span class="smcap">Special Edition!</span><br>
+<br>
+<span class="smcap">German Fleet off Plymouth!</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">Portsmouth Dockyard on Fire!</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">Hostile Squadron in North Sea!!!</span></p>
+
+<p>Thus, on the anniversary of the day that
+centuries ago had brought the glorious greeting,
+“Peace on Earth,” came the dire news
+that England’s foe, the Prussian Eagle, at
+last was going to make the long-intended
+swoop. The bugles sounded over land and
+sea, “War, son of hell” was loose—</p>
+
+<p class="center p1 p1b">“Contumelious, beastly, mad-brained war.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>It seemed incredible! Talk of invasion
+there had been from time to time, but long
+immunity had made men disbelieve in such
+a possibility. In like manner it had seemed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</span>
+inconceivable that such upheavals as had
+recently convulsed many a continental town
+could be repeated here in England. Yet
+London was bearing reluctant witness to the
+fact.</p>
+
+<p>And now—</p>
+
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“There is a sound of thunder afar,<br>
+Storm in the South that darkens the day,<br>
+Storm of battle and thunder of war.”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Would English hearts respond this time to
+the old war-song? Would English grit once
+more avail to hurl back the advancing enemy?</p>
+
+<p>Even now, in many minds, after the first
+shock of such intelligence, there was a disposition
+to discredit it as based on exaggerated
+or sensational reports. Yet here in
+black and white the <em>Epoch</em> gave the circumstantial
+story. In brief, it was as follows:</p>
+
+<p>German spies had discovered, or pretended
+to discover, an intrigue between the Duke of
+Saxe-Cobourg Gotha and the British Government.
+The Duke’s sympathies, as well as
+the ties of relationship, it was said, allied him
+to the royal house of England. English by
+birth, and Prussian only by adoption, on succeeding
+to the Duchy this grandson of Queen
+Victoria had found his position one of exceptional
+difficulty. Political controversy in
+the Duchy had been revived or manufactured.
+The Premier had found occasion to resign,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</span>
+and rumours of a stormy interview between
+the Kaiser and the Duke had got abroad.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time the Emperor, whose navy
+had now attained most formidable proportions,
+found himself checkmated by Lord Downland
+in respect of a long-cherished German scheme
+for acquiring Madeira from the Portuguese.
+It was supposed to be a purely commercial
+project, but the British Foreign Secretary
+knew better. The island of Madeira, lying
+only four hundred miles from Morocco, and
+not remote from England, possessed much
+to recommend it in German eyes. It
+was, in truth, a Naboth’s Vineyard. The
+owners of Madeira could not only cultivate
+the vine, but they could find plenty of
+accommodation for a coaling station for the
+German navy. All of which was well understood,
+though politely disguised, in diplomatic
+circles. Lord Downland’s management of
+the situation had been supplemented by the
+invaluable influence of his royal master, with
+whom the King of Portugal and the King of
+Portugal’s ambassador at St James’s had a
+complete and cordial understanding. From
+all of which it came to pass that, like Ahab
+of old, the monarch of united Germany was
+vexed in spirit. A powerful German fleet
+appeared one day off Lisbon, but nothing
+untoward occurred. The surprise visit was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</span>
+not a lengthy one, and the great engines of
+destruction—battleships, armoured cruisers,
+and destroyers—vanished as suddenly as they
+had arrived, in the enfolding mists of the
+Atlantic.</p>
+
+<p>Then over the cables came intelligence of
+the indisposition of the Kaiser, and of a projected
+sea voyage as the remedy recommended
+by the royal physicians. The excellent advice
+of the faculty was promptly followed.
+The magnificent Hamburg liner, <em>Schiller</em>, was
+made available for his Majesty’s accommodation,
+and the cruise was said to afford
+opportunity for testing certain remarkable
+improvements in turbine engines, which
+keenly interested the Emperor.</p>
+
+<p>Nor was this all. The Kaiser’s influence
+with the new Emperor of all the Russias had
+become quite paramount, and concurrent
+rumours of a combined movement of Imperial
+squadrons in the North Sea had added
+to the already serious uneasiness of the
+British Lion. The Eagle and the Bear were
+on the pounce!</p>
+
+<p>Time and the hour had been well chosen.
+The British capital was in the throes of internal
+discord, fomented by the industrious
+agencies of foreign powers; and Christmas, with
+its holiday closure of all public departments,
+admirably served to emphasise the opportunity.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</span></p>
+
+<p>Long ago the risks of invasion had been
+publicly discussed by a prime minister of
+England, who had dismissed the idea as quite
+impracticable. But there were naval and
+military experts and others who thought
+otherwise. The unmasked landing of from
+60,000 to 100,000 foreign troops on these
+shores certainly would be a hazardous achievement
+which many things might combine to
+defeat. But, assuredly, it was not impossible;
+especially if the way should be cleared for
+such a landing by the disablement of the
+naval ports, and the defeat of one or more
+of the squadrons charged with watch and
+ward over our extended coast-line.</p>
+
+<p>It was known to the naval authorities that
+Portsmouth and Portland were peculiarly
+exposed to the form of attack which Admiral
+Togo had so persistently tried at Port Arthur,
+and which, a few years earlier, the Americans
+had adopted at Santiago. To bottle a harbour
+by sinking a merchant ship in its mouth
+was a device that might be tried in England,
+as it had been tried abroad. If such an
+attempt succeeded, invasion in military force
+might become a comparatively easy task.
+Granted the feasibility of an invasion, and
+then what France had suffered in the annexation
+of Alsace-Lorraine, England might have
+to endure by ceding Kent or Yorkshire to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</span>
+strong man armed. What happened to the
+Kingdom of Hanover might happen—preposterous
+though it seemed—to the Kingdom
+of Great Britain and Ireland.</p>
+
+<p>The Germans, almost insolently, had shown
+their hand for years. They had said to
+Britain: “You cannot keep the sea for ever.
+We mean to take it from you; the trade first,
+and then—the flag.” There were thousands
+of Germans in our forecastles, scores of German
+masters and mates on the bridges of our
+merchantmen, and German pilots had been
+allowed to know all that charts and practical
+experience could tell them of our coasts and
+harbours. One and all, they had an unconcealed
+aim—to make the Teuton sea-lord
+of the world. Yet, knowing all this, England,
+like a giant drugged with deadly wine, had
+slumbered in apathy.</p>
+
+<p>Had the fateful hour really struck at last?
+Here, indeed, was a Naboth’s Vineyard worth
+coveting, for England and the English-speaking
+States on the other side of the Atlantic
+controlled between them four-fifths of the
+gold production of the world; England and
+the United States held a third of the dry
+land, owned four-sevenths of the shipping,
+two-thirds of the coal, and more than half of
+the world’s iron and steel. A splendid prize!
+A glorious heritage! Could Germany wrest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</span>
+it in part from the Anglo-Saxons, or would
+Britain, aided or unaided, rouse herself at
+last and hold her own?</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“Of old sat Freedom on the heights,<br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The thunders breaking at her feet,</span><br>
+Above her shook the starry lights,<br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">She heard the torrents meet.”</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>But now? Could Freedom sit unmoved?</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“Grave mother of majestic works,<br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">From her isle-altar gazing down,</span><br>
+Who, God-like, grasps the triple-forks,<br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And King-like wears the crown.”</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>But now? Could Britain’s navy hold the
+triple-forks against her foe?</p>
+
+<p>It was a solemn question, which, in that
+dark Christmastide, many asked themselves,
+in doubt and fear.</p>
+
+<p>The old national spirit, proud and patriotic,
+that, spite of blood and toil, had carried
+Freedom to the splendid heights, had lapsed
+from its virility. What could England hope
+from the hordes of stunted, ill-fed, debilitated
+men and youths who for months past had
+been thronging the streets of her capital, and
+taking ransom from its nerveless and submissive
+middle-class citizens?</p>
+
+<p>The hour had come. The drugged giant
+must awake and fight for life, or lie at the
+proud foot of a conqueror!</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XXVIII<br>
+<small>IN TRAFALGAR SQUARE</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>The daring <em>coup de main</em> of Marcus White
+had met with the most amazing and complete
+success. With the exception of the Chancery
+judges, who, for purposes of criminal law, were
+a negligible quantity, every judge and magistrate
+entrusted with the maintenance of law
+and justice in the capital of England had
+been swept into one net. There could be
+no summons, warrant, or indictment, in the
+absence of these judicial officers, anywhere
+outside the City boundary. Arrests would be
+idle, for no magisterial hearing or trial could
+follow. The strong arm of the law, already
+greatly weakened, now was wholly paralysed!
+One and all, the judges and magistrates had
+disappeared, carried by a cockleshell steamer
+into the mystery of the darkness and the sea.</p>
+
+<p>People were full of their own affairs, “fear
+was in the way,” and apprehension for themselves
+and their families left men but little<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</span>
+power or wish to think about the functionaries
+of State. Moreover, on Christmas Eve the
+colossal outrage became known to only a
+very few, and knowledge came too late for
+any attempt to arrest the steamer in her
+reckless rush into the night.</p>
+
+<p>Heads of departments had gone out of
+town—eager to escape the depression of the
+looming Christmas holiday in London. The
+War Office, the Admiralty, and the Home
+Office were in charge of messengers and
+caretakers. These circumstances, carefully
+counted on by the wire-pullers of Germany,
+had also played into the hands of Marcus White
+in his long-cherished, revengeful war against
+the representatives of the law of England.</p>
+
+<p>The police were the first to learn what had
+happened. The startling story of the capture
+at first was scoffed at; but when the truth
+was made quite sure, the effect upon the
+Force was staggering. The police had long
+felt that there was a power arrayed against
+them which could not be subdued by ordinary
+means. They knew the extent to which the
+normal machinery of the criminal law had
+broken down. And now it was completely
+shattered! The men were powerless, and
+realising the fact, they felt like straws borne
+on the waves of a tumultuous river towards
+an unknown sea.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</span></p>
+
+<p>The general public were entirely ignorant
+of what had happened, and the news that
+came from the naval ports late on the afternoon
+of Christmas Day was too absorbing to
+permit of much inquiry about what was
+taking place nearer home.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever families of other judges and
+magistrates might be asking or wondering,
+Aldwyth Westwood, as yet, knew of no reason
+for special anxiety about her father. For
+the past few weeks he had scarcely been at
+home. Weary of the police escort which
+had been told off to accompany him daily
+from Hill Street to the Law Courts, he had
+taken up his quarters at the Inns of Court
+Hotel, going not at all to his chambers in the
+Temple, but traversing, as he thought unnoticed,
+the short distance between Lincoln’s
+Inn Fields and Carey Street. There, in the
+room allotted to him as one of the law officers
+of the Crown, and burdened with his colleague’s
+official work as well as his own, the Solicitor-General
+had passed the days, forcing his brain
+to work, and haunted ever with the dread of
+a physical relapse.</p>
+
+<p>The eager people who rushed to the news-agents’
+shops on the morning of Bank Holiday
+were not seeking news concerning his Majesty’s
+judges, but were hoping to learn more of the
+movements of the hostile fleets and the reported<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</span>
+conflagration at Portsmouth dockyard.
+News there was none. Not a single journal
+had been published. The great body of
+compositors had followed the example of the
+gas-workers; and the <em>Epoch</em>, which alone
+among London journals could have commanded
+the services of the men, had published
+nothing since its special edition of the previous
+day.</p>
+
+<p>Baulked at the shuttered newspaper shops,
+hosts of people made for the railway stations
+in the hope that the bookstalls might have
+been supplied with special news. But here,
+too, everything was blank. Nothing authentic
+was ascertainable; but rumours were
+going round of interrupted communication
+with the provinces, of wires cut in all directions,
+and, worse still, of mysterious explosions
+in several tunnels, which blocked certain of
+the railways, and severed the links between
+London and the coast. An air of awe and
+anxious expectancy appeared on the faces
+of the bewildered people, and, too excited to
+remain in their houses, as the day wore on
+they came in ever-increasing numbers into
+the streets, until the snow on road and footway
+was churned into black and penetrating
+slush.</p>
+
+<p>Multitudes flew to drink, at once their
+heaven and hell. There was no organised<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</span>
+march or demonstration of the Leaguers, but
+everywhere they were seen in knots and
+groups. The sign of the Spider was more
+in evidence than ever, just at the moment
+when Kraken, monster-spider of the deep,
+seemed to have risen to the surface of the
+sea to crush the naval strength of England.</p>
+
+<p>In the early afternoon, thousands of people
+assembled in Trafalgar Square, and rabid
+speakers, raucous in voice, breathed fire and
+fury into the frosty air.</p>
+
+<p>Raggett, on the steps near the National
+Gallery, raved to a multitude of hearers, and
+no one dared to say him nay.</p>
+
+<p>Presently, above his screaming tones, there
+came the sound of many voices chanting in
+the open air. Those who were standing on
+the steps on the west side of the square then
+saw a strange procession advancing slowly
+along Pall Mall East. A cornet-player, wearing
+a surplice, walked at the head of the
+procession, and the clear, strong notes of his
+instrument led the voices of a multitude of
+singers. A surpliced choir of quite a hundred
+men and boys was followed by the Sisters of
+the Kindly Life, and behind and around them
+came a mixed company of all classes, all ages,
+and both sexes—young men and maidens, old
+men and children. One and all rolled to the
+wintry skies a hymn of hope and triumph<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</span>
+that filled the people in the square with wonder
+and amaze.</p>
+
+<p>At first there were some jeers and vulgar
+cries, and here and there a burst of scornful
+laughter in the crowd. But the quaint hymn
+of the ancient Church had such a lilt and
+cadence in its setting, that tender chords
+were touched in the hearts of thousands, and
+scorn and blasphemy were silenced. The
+people were irresistibly drawn into the flood
+of the melody. They caught eagerly at the
+cards which every one in the procession held
+out to those who wanted them.</p>
+
+<p>“’Ere, let’s ’ave a card, lady,” said a husky
+voice at Aldwyth Westwood’s elbow.</p>
+
+<p>“Ain’t yer got a card for me, guv’nor?”
+came from every side.</p>
+
+<p>Thus the volume of the song of triumph—discordant
+here and there, but earnest and
+full-throated—grew and strengthened as the
+band of singers advanced towards St Martin’s
+Church. Two banners floated in the air;
+the banner of the day—St Stephen’s, emblematic
+of his martyrdom; and the banner
+of the Holy Grail, emblazoned with the mystic
+Cup of Sacrifice. A jewelled cross gleamed
+high over all heads, and behind it, with
+clasped hands, walked Father Francis.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XXIX<br>
+<small>BILLY’S MESSAGE</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>There were few London households in which
+Christmas had been “merry,” and the lack
+of festive doings had necessarily extended to
+those who are of the roofless household of
+the streets. Billy of Mayfair, in his brief
+career, had had some “well-fed” Christmases—the
+roast beef of old England, solid slabs of
+plum pudding, with oranges and nuts to
+follow. Thanks to the spasmodic attention
+of kindly people, the boy’s digestive machinery,
+which usually had very little to work upon,
+on those special occasions had been taxed to
+its utmost capacity. He had had one specially
+happy Christmas in hospital, and there
+lingered in his memory a song of goodly
+fare which all the little patients had been
+taught to sing in unison:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“Apple pies in Autumn,<br>
+Currant pies in June;<br>
+Mince pies at Christmas,<br>
+Coming very soon!”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</span></p>
+
+<p>The poetry of pie!</p>
+
+<p>The staff-nurse said Billy had the sweetest
+voice in the ward. It had won him—coupled
+with his one-legged agility—great popularity
+with the young family of Joe the stableman,
+and he was the sole guest at their
+Christmas gathering in their rooms at the
+end of the mews. There was a goose for
+dinner—provided by Aldwyth Westwood—and
+other fare both rich and succulent. The
+savour thereof filled the small and inconvenient
+apartment, and with it was blended
+the odour proper to the mews itself. The
+preparation of such a meal taxed Mrs Joe’s
+time and temper to the uttermost. She
+cooked the repast with an infinite amount of
+clatter, and then sat down to share it, nursing
+the while their youngest born, one Francis
+Joseph, of whom mention has been already
+made. Francis Joseph was fretful, and dominated
+the whole company—a truly imperial
+and imperious infant.</p>
+
+<p>Joe, in his shirt-sleeves—he was never
+happy in a coat—expounded to Billy his
+strong objections to the motor-car. “Give
+me ’osses,” he growled; “when you’ve got
+an ’oss to deal with you know how to go
+to work; but them machines, snortin’, and
+smellin’, and tearin’ all over the place—why,
+it’s disgustin’!” Billy cordially agreed.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</span>
+“What’ll happen when there ain’t no ’osses
+left in London, that’s what I want to know,”
+said Joe. Billy was unable to say. He
+didn’t know, and he said so.</p>
+
+<p>But they were in full sympathy these two,
+always the best of friends. They were out
+together on Bank Holiday, and in the procession
+to Trafalgar Square were to be seen
+marching side by side.</p>
+
+<p>None in that miscellaneous multitude sang
+more lustily than Joe and Billy. The stalwart
+stableman, card in hand, roared forth the
+glories of the Better Land, and Billy also,
+hopping through the snow and slush, trilled
+out in his clear boyish voice the wonders of
+the Golden City. Here, in the grim and
+sombre wilderness of bricks and mortar, they
+sang of heaven-built walls and pearly gates,
+of halls of Zion jubilant with praise, of mansions
+bright with saints and angels and all
+the martyred throng. Here, in the fading
+afternoon of London streets, they sang of a
+land where daylight is serene. Here, with
+no glimpse of the fadeless flowers of Paradise,
+they sang of the pastures of the blessed.
+Here, in the miserable garments of the poor,
+they sang of robes of white and crowns of
+glory.</p>
+
+<p>Raggett, momentarily silenced by the swelling
+notes of the triumphant hymn, turned<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</span>
+round and glared upon the priest as the procession
+passed between him and the National
+Gallery. Half his meeting melted away, but,
+with gleaming eyes and fantastic gestures,
+he renewed his harangue and poured abuse
+and scorn upon the Church and all her works.</p>
+
+<p>His violent language and gesticulations
+met with some success in stirring up the
+latent hostility of the baser sort among his
+hearers. Faces full of hate and brutality
+looked towards those who were gathered
+round the shining cross upon the steps of
+St Martin’s. The fire was smouldering, and
+Raggett fanned it into flame.</p>
+
+<p>“There’s one of them,” he shouted, with
+left hand extended; “one of ’the unco’
+guid!’ Plenty to eat and drink; purple and
+fine linen to wear—all the good things of life
+to call his own. What does he care about
+Lazarus and his sores! They come into the
+streets singing about the heavenly kingdom.
+But, as I’ve told you in the Park, it’s the rich
+who are to have it both ways—a good time
+here and the best places up above. Where
+do you come in? They give you stones, my
+friends, instead of bread—the stones of London.
+They’ve got their cellars full of wine,
+but they want to rob a poor man of his
+beer; yes, even on Bank Holiday. That’s
+one of them that wants to do it. Why don’t<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</span>
+you go and tell him what you think of
+him?”</p>
+
+<p>A storm of groans and hisses burst from
+his hearers. A sodden-faced woman, passing
+a black bottle to her companion—a towering
+navvy, whose eyes were glazed with drink—yelled
+to Raggett between her raised hands:
+“Right you are, mate! right you are!”
+The navvy took a great pull at the bottle,
+and then swore freely and at large.</p>
+
+<p>The hymn was ended with a sonorous
+“Amen,” and only one voice was heard from
+the church steps—the voice of Father Francis,
+vibrant and clear. He was not preaching;
+he was simply speaking to the people. The
+peculiar timbre and modulation of his voice
+made him audible to great numbers of the
+crowd, which now was growing denser and
+denser over the square and the converging
+streets. In simple language he carried on
+the theme of the finished hymn, telling the
+multitude of the Celestial City, the house not
+made with hands eternal in the heavens.
+There, he said, the tired traveller would find
+a sweet and blessed country, the home of the
+elect; the pastures of that country lay in
+glorious sheen, amid still waters and eternal
+bowers. There men would rest from their
+labours. Ended would be the dull, deep
+pain of earthly life and its constant anguish<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</span>
+of patience. But the happy people of that
+land would have high service to perform,
+tasks suited to an ennobled human nature.
+The land of the saints had its capital, a great,
+a glorious city, and the existence of a city
+implied community of life, activity, achievement.
+They, if they so willed, might become
+citizens of that wonderful capital. The gates
+were open and all might enter in whose names
+were written in the book of life. The nations
+of them that were saved would walk in the
+light of it. On the banks of the crystal river
+that flowed through the city there was the
+tree of life, and the leaves of that tree were
+for the healing of the nations. Healed by
+the leaves of that most blessed tree, the
+mortal would have put on immortality, henceforth
+to be a perfect being with a perfect life
+triumphant over sin and hell and death.
+That would be life indeed!—life for evermore;
+gladness without sorrow, health without a
+pang, light without darkness. The vigour
+of age would know no decay; beauty would
+not wither, nor would love grow cold. Such
+was the inheritance that humankind might
+enter into or reject—incorruptible, undefiled,
+never to fade away.</p>
+
+<p>He paused, and with enraptured face gazed
+into the western sky, where now the sun
+was sinking amid vast ragged clouds. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</span>
+towering masses, fringed at first with silver,
+slowly broke and parted, taking the shapes of
+ramparts, towers, and pinnacles. A rose-red
+glow was spreading over all, and shafts of
+amber light seemed to stretch onward in the
+infinite, towards heavenly gates of pearl.</p>
+
+<p>Aldwyth Westwood, gazing upward from
+the lower steps, saw in the face thus lighted
+from the west a look that awed her—a look
+she never could forget. Well might the
+witnesses of St Stephen’s death have seen the
+face as of an angel when the Eastern mob ran
+with one accord upon the proto-martyr and
+took the life he valued but as dross. And,
+in some sort, the same passions that animated
+the people of two thousand years ago
+found expression in the London mob to-day.
+Raggett had not spoken in vain. Scowling
+men and unsexed women had been steadily
+forcing their way towards the church while
+Father Francis was speaking. Some of them
+threw stones and bits of mortar at the priest,
+and opprobrious cries came from every side.
+The crowd surged and swayed in fierce excitement.
+But Father Francis, his eyes still
+fixed upon the western light, seemed quite
+unconscious of attack or danger.</p>
+
+<p>Joe steadied Billy as the pressure increased
+around them, and both looked round indignantly
+when the man and woman with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</span>
+bottle came pushing and lurching through
+the crowd behind them. Once more Father
+Francis was speaking.</p>
+
+<p>“The promise,” he cried, “is to you and
+to your children, and to all that are afar off.”</p>
+
+<p>“’Ere, Bob, you have a shy,” said the
+reeling woman to her companion. She handed
+him the now empty bottle, and the man,
+grasping it by the neck, in a half drunken
+frenzy whirled it round his head. Women
+began to shriek and men to swear.</p>
+
+<p>“It is written here—in this Book,” cried
+the priest in thrilling tones, as he held a
+Bible high above his head; “<em>and this is the
+Word of God</em>!”</p>
+
+<p>Then the huge navvy, urged by the woman,
+“had a shy”; the bottle flew from his hand
+with deadly force; the Bible fell, and the
+face of Father Francis, ghastly and bleeding,
+sank back amongst those who stood around
+him on the steps. Billy saw it all, and, in
+an access of fury, balancing himself unaided
+for an instant, raised his crutch and struck
+the shoulder of the ruffian with all his force.
+With a savage oath the man half turned, and
+grasping the boy’s neck, hurled him forward
+with terrific violence upon the steps. In
+haste to escape, the people close at hand
+made a sudden rush. Some fell, their dead
+weight crushing the unhappy child against<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</span>
+the granite edge. Joe, with a tiger’s swiftness
+and a loud cry of wrath, had sprung upon the
+boy’s assailant. They wrestled, swayed, and
+fell, the woman clawing at the stableman,
+the crowd parting right and left in terror at
+the fury of the struggle.</p>
+
+<p>But Billy of Mayfair lay very still at Aldwyth
+Westwood’s feet.</p>
+
+<p>Some one raised the boy a little, and they
+laid him gently on the stones. His face was
+pale with a pallor that Aldwyth had never
+seen before; his eyelids fluttered very faintly.</p>
+
+<p>“My Gawd!” said a woman, peering forward,
+“the boy’s done for. Where’s a doctor?
+Ain’t there no doctor here?”</p>
+
+<p>“Stand back, can’t you,” cried another.
+“Give ’im some air.”</p>
+
+<p>Some one elbowed his way through the
+people, and bending over Billy, made a swift
+examination of his injuries. “Lungs,” he
+said, tersely. “He’s bleeding internally.
+Nothing to be done.”</p>
+
+<p>“Take ’im to the ’orspital,” shouted a voice.</p>
+
+<p>“He’ll die before you get him there,”
+muttered the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>Aldwyth was kneeling now. Her left arm
+supported Billy as he lay; her right hand
+held his twitching fingers.</p>
+
+<p>Azrael, Angel of Death, was drawing near.</p>
+
+<p>“Billy,” she said softly, “Billy.” The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</span>
+boy’s eyes opened, and he smiled a startled
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>Then, stooping, her face almost as white
+as his, she whispered in his ear the Sacred
+Name. The child gazed at her fixedly,
+questioningly.</p>
+
+<p>“He died for you, Billy, and you are going
+to live with Him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Say it again,” he panted, eagerly. Once
+more she said it.</p>
+
+<p>The child sighed faintly. Had he heard?
+Azrael, Angel of Death, was very near.</p>
+
+<p>“Dear Billy,” she whispered once more,
+“He died for you, and you are going to live
+with Him.”</p>
+
+<p>Again his face was eager. “Please thank
+Him for me, mum. Please——”</p>
+
+<p>The voice had died away.</p>
+
+<p>Billy of Mayfair would speak no more.
+But, perchance, the Angel heard, and bore
+the message to Him who loves the children
+of our race.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XXX<br>
+<small>THE FATE OF PORTSMOUTH DOCKYARD</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>On the night of Bank Holiday, Londoners did
+not lack illumination. Gas and electric light
+had failed, but north and south, and east and
+west, the lurid glare of burning buildings filled
+the sky. Cries of “Fire! Fire!” in every
+quarter of the town brought pale, affrighted
+people from their houses to the roadways or
+the roofs. This added terror of wholesale
+arson stupefied the luckless householders.
+The fires—some said there were forty, fifty,
+sixty—had free play, for the extreme section
+of the Leaguers—now known as Raggett’s
+Men—by concerted action, after dark, had
+rushed nearly all the stations of the Fire
+Brigade and forcibly removed the horses. The
+most destructive of these fires occurred in
+Bartholomew Close, where closely packed
+warehouses in yards and tortuous streets gave
+free scope to the spreading flames. At one
+time it was feared that the great hospital<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</span>
+itself would be involved, and the troops
+were ordered out to aid the civil power
+and keep some order among the excited
+crowds.</p>
+
+<p>Brave deeds were done that night; rescues
+effected in the face of almost certain death;
+buildings pulled down and cut away to check
+the spreading of the conflagration. But
+without means of utilising the water supply,
+what had once been seized by fire burnt out
+to its cindered end. Strong military guards
+were ordered by the general commanding the
+Home District to the railway stations. Euston,
+St Pancras, and King’s Cross remained intact.
+Paddington escaped with some damage to
+the goods department. Both the hotels and
+stations at Charing Cross and Cannon Street
+burst into flames almost simultaneously. The
+royal palaces suffered no injury. Incendiaries
+were caught red-handed, just in time, at the
+British Museum, and the better sort of people,
+now roused to retaliatory fury by these
+malignant acts, almost tore the offenders limb
+from limb.</p>
+
+<p>London in its desperation found some
+courage. The quiet, orderly inhabitants had
+borne almost as much as could be borne.
+They realised, moreover, that yet worse things
+might happen unless the hydra-headed monster
+of disorder could be crushed. London might<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</span>
+starve. Meat, milk, vegetables would fail;
+all the necessaries of daily life might be cut
+off, if the railways should be blocked. Six
+millions, young and old, would be the almost
+helpless victims of the Leaguers. Those who
+had gone about the streets wearing the Spider
+as a talisman suddenly found that it was a
+dangerous sign. Right and left were heard
+loud curses on the League. Men began to see
+the full significance of the long-tolerated
+movement—a growing canker at the heart of
+the nation, which gave the nation’s enemies
+without the very opportunity they had planned
+and watched and waited for. There was still
+some tough material in Englishmen; and if
+the authorities could not help them, they
+would help themselves. The tide began to
+turn. The giant was stirring. It had needed
+a galvanic shock to rouse his brain; and
+verily, the shock had come at last. It was,
+indeed, time to wake from sleep, and throw
+aside “the drowsy syrups of the world.”</p>
+
+<p>In that fiery, sleepless night, in many
+districts great numbers of the younger men
+of the better class banded themselves together,
+beating up recruits from house to house, and
+posting watchers to give warning of incendiary
+attempts. Armed with whatever weapons
+they could find, they systematically patrolled
+the streets. Shouts of “Down with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</span>
+Leaguers!” burst out from time to time, and
+women and children, peeping and cowering
+behind the window-blinds, gathered hope and
+courage. At last the men of London had
+been roused!</p>
+
+<p>But the flames were still licking and curling
+round many a house and public building. All
+night the wind was rising to a gale; the cloud
+wrack flew across the reddened sky. As the
+tardy hour of dawn drew near, strange pallid
+people with fantastic gestures—hatless, oddly-clad—came
+wandering through the streets.
+Raggett had freed his friends. The Leaguers
+had let loose hundreds of the lunatics of
+London!</p>
+
+<p>Seventy miles away a yet more deadly
+wound was being inflicted on the British
+nation. About five o’clock on the morning
+of Christmas Day two terrific explosions in
+quick succession roused the inhabitants of the
+little Hampshire town of Havant and the
+surrounding villages. Great numbers of Portsmouth
+people also heard it, but, of course,
+more faintly. When, later on, it became
+known that a fire had broken out in the
+Royal dockyard it was assumed by many
+that the sounds of explosion must have come
+from the same quarter. Every thought was
+concentrated on this appalling catastrophe,
+the full extent of which was only to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</span>
+gradually realised. But, all the time, the great
+naval yard, Britain’s pride and strong tower
+against the enemy, was fast becoming one
+gigantic furnace. The grip of all-devouring
+fire grew deadlier every hour. This many-acred
+hive of naval industry, the factory of
+the wooden walls of England, dating from
+King John, and now the birthplace and the
+nursery of the armoured giants of the deep,
+was crumbling into dust and ashes. The
+docked ships, ships’ stores, and armament,
+that stood for millions of the nation’s money,
+needed for national defence, roared into
+flame and blackened into cinders.</p>
+
+<p>The seven thousand dockyard men of course
+were keeping holiday. Many of the high
+officials were away on leave, and those few
+guardians of the yard who were supposed to
+be keeping watch and ward regarded their
+duty as perfunctory. What was likely to
+happen there, or anywhere, on Christmas Day?
+Perhaps some of those intelligent foreigners
+who had been permitted to inspect the yard
+from time to time—intelligent emulators of
+Jack the Painter—could have answered the
+question. By-and-by, of course there would
+be a most strict and searching Government
+inquiry—expert evidence, red tape, blue-books,
+and all the rest of it. Meanwhile, the
+great fire burned on—freely and furiously.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</span>
+Soon after the alarm was given the seamen
+from the Whale Island Barracks, and many
+from the ships in harbour, with a strong force
+of marines from Forton, came pouring into
+the dockyard, but only to make a terrible
+discovery. Of what avail a thousand willing
+hands—of what use all the activity and
+resource of British seamen, when the one
+element with which the fire could be fought
+and conquered was not available? The water
+supply had failed! At first, and, indeed, for
+some time, the real reason was not understood,
+for the pumping station of the Havant water-works
+was eight miles away. Then the appalling
+truth was realised—the explosions
+explained; the great engines, those in use
+and those in reserve, had been shattered by
+dynamite in the darkness of the previous
+night. The Royal dockyard was left to the
+mercy of the flames. All day, and all the
+night that followed, they raged and roared.
+Red ruin and destruction—almost without
+restraint—spread on every side.</p>
+
+<p>The Portsmouth Hard was packed with
+horrified spectators. The townspeople in excited
+throngs ran to all the dockyard gates,
+and in the poorer districts surrounding the
+great wall enclosing the extension works,
+every roof was loaded with awe-stricken
+watchers of the conflagration.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</span></p>
+
+<p>The church steeples of the town stood out
+to view in blended clouds and smoke, illumined
+with a fiery glow; the gilded ship on the
+tower of Portsmouth parish church seemed
+to be sailing in a sea of fire. Disaster followed
+on the heels of horror. In the midst of the
+great calamity a rending explosion took place
+in the vast powder magazine at Priddy’s
+Hard,—on the Gosport side.</p>
+
+<p>The harbour was now so unsafe for shipping
+that orders were given to remove all ships
+as far as possible. Among the large vessels
+alongside the dockyard jetty was the <em>Carisbrooke
+Castle</em>, a South-African liner which had
+lately been chartered by the Admiralty to
+serve as an auxiliary scout with a Flying
+Squadron then lying at Spithead. The <em>Carisbrooke</em>
+had been brought round from Southampton
+and was taking in a quantity of
+stores; but the danger of her position made
+it advisable to get her clear of the harbour
+without delay. Just when she was abreast
+of Blockhouse Fort an explosion—accidental
+or designed, none knew—occurred on board.
+The great ship, viewed by the flashlight from
+the fort, was seen to heel over. In half
+an hour she had settled down, blocking the
+fairway, and effectually bottling the harbour
+against all craft of heavy tonnage.</p>
+
+<p>On the Gosport side the shore was lined with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</span>
+lookers on. From this side, indeed, looking
+across the water, the sight was exceptionally
+striking, for the far-spread glow lit up the
+towering masts and rigging of the <em>Victory</em>
+and all the ships in port.</p>
+
+<p>From the tower of the old Norman castle
+at Portchester, away beyond the mudbanks
+of the harbour, and on the crumbling walls
+that flanked its water-gate, the villagers gazed
+spellbound at the awesome sight. Farther
+away, on the long ridge of Portsdown Hill, the
+rural population of the district had a yet more
+impressive view of what was happening. To
+them it seemed as if the whole town of Portsmouth
+must be wrapped in flames.</p>
+
+<p>Here, on the chalk down, stood a solitary
+pillar, erected long years ago to the memory
+of Nelson. Grey, moss-grown, and mournful,
+it looked down on scenes with which the
+great sea-captain once had been so familiar.—Southsea
+Common, where a “blackguard
+horse” ran away with him; the Sally Port,
+where his sailors always were coming or
+going; the old nooks and alleys of “Point,”
+where the press-gang did its work; the old
+George Inn, in which he breakfasted on the
+morning of his last embarkation; the spot
+on the beach, marked by the anchor of the
+<em>Victory</em>, where the people grasped his hand
+and, weeping, bade him a final Godspeed;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</span>
+and there, in the light of the burning dockyard,
+rode the brave old ship in which he died
+for England.</p>
+
+<p>More than a hundred years had passed
+away, and now the Royal dockyard, that had
+equipped so many fleets for the greatest of
+Britannia’s admirals, lay engulfed and wrecked
+in a tremendous, rolling sea of flame and
+smoke.</p>
+
+<p>Portsmouth, for all purposes of naval
+warfare, was out of action.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XXXI<br>
+<small>THE NAVAL BATTLE OFF PLYMOUTH</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>Thus the chronicler: “The Spanish Invasion
+being brought to a crisis, after the most
+assiduous application of three whole years
+to fit out that fleet vainly named by the
+Pope the great, noble and invincible Armada
+and Terror of Europe.... King Philip
+gave orders for its sailing on the 19th of May
+1588. It consisted of 134 sail of tall towering
+ships, besides gallies, galliasses and galleons.”
+The fleet carried 8766 mariners, 21,855 soldiers,
+and 2088 galley slaves; together,
+32,709 men, irrespective of Spanish Dons and
+their attendants, priests, surgeons, and servitors
+of all sorts.</p>
+
+<p>First, and before all things, it was to be
+understood that the motives of his Spanish
+Majesty were truly religious—” to serve God,
+and to return unto his Church a great many
+contrite souls ... oppressed by heretics,
+enemies to our Holy Catholic Faith.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</span></p>
+
+<p>Britain, as usual, was unready; but a
+fleet was got together in only 50 days. The
+City of London being desired to furnish 5000
+men and 15 ships, provided 10,000 men and
+30 ships, and at this great crisis in our national
+life there was “such a zealous love and duty
+throughout the nation towards the Queen as
+is inexpressible.” Britons were Britons in
+the spacious days of Queen Elizabeth; “an
+uncommon joy and alacrity appeared in the
+face of every one. They were pleased with
+the thought of contributing, every man in his
+way, towards the defence of their country,
+their liberties, and their Queen.”</p>
+
+<p>The English fleet consisted of 80 ships
+manned by 9000 sailors, and not all those
+were available when the Armada was sighted
+off the Lizard, disposed in a crescent seven
+miles long from horn to horn; but when the
+Spanish admiral got back to Spain in late
+September he had but 60 sail out of his 134.
+Thus, with the loss of only one small ship
+and about a hundred men, England remained
+the mistress of the seas. Shame, loss, and
+dishonour had befallen her treacherous enemy.
+<em>Venit, Vidit, Fugit!</em></p>
+
+<p>And now, three hundred and twenty-two
+years after the winds and the waves had come
+to the aid of England, another fleet of vastly
+different character had been sighted from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</span>
+the Lizard—insignificant, relatively, in point
+of numbers, but immeasurably more powerful
+in type and armament. And once again a
+British fleet came out from Plymouth, to
+watch and, if need were, to fight the foreigner.</p>
+
+<p>After the first and unexpected appearance
+of the German battleships and cruisers off
+Plymouth—made known to London by the
+special <em>Epoch</em> on Christmas Day—certain
+mysterious manœuvres followed. But when
+eager observations were taken early on the
+morning of Bank Holiday, not one German
+ship remained in view. Phantom-like the
+fleet had come, phantom-like it had vanished
+in the dark and stormy night.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, to the intense relief of Plymouth,
+another British Squadron hove in
+sight. Signals and messages were rapidly
+exchanged, and certain cruisers and destroyers
+were at once detached for scouting work—their
+duty being “to track the Germans,
+shadow them cautiously, and send back news
+by wireless telegraphy of their latest movements.”
+The scouts, in turn, were lost to
+view. Their orders were to cruise along an
+east and west line some fifty miles from land,
+to meet twice a day, exchange reports, and
+then return in opposite directions to the
+limits of their beat.</p>
+
+<p>At sunset the battleships and cruisers remaining<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</span>
+at Plymouth went to general quarters,
+and the crews were kept at their guns during
+the night. Every officer and bluejacket felt
+the tension of the hour. None knew what
+test of courage, skill, endurance the night or
+the morning might exact from them. The
+honour of the Flag, the responsibility of upholding
+great traditions, the safety of their
+country might suddenly be entrusted to their
+keeping. The scene might well inspire English
+hearts. For all remembered that hither came
+in those far-off days the mighty fleets of Spain
+in the period of her power; and, again, it was
+out yonder in the misty sea that once upon a
+time the Dutch admiral, Van Tromp, flaunted
+his flag—jacks and pennants flying—in the
+face of the fiery Blake, who accepted the
+defiance and at once attacked and beat the
+Dutchman’s ships. The older navies of the
+kings and queens of England had known how
+to exact the salutation of the Flag. And
+Cromwell, too, had known. For in a treaty of
+his time it was provided “that the ships of
+the United Provinces, as well those fitted out
+for war as others, which should meet in the
+British seas any of the ships of war of England,
+should strike their flag and lower their topsail
+in such manner as had been any time practised
+before under any former Governments.” Sir
+Cloudesley Shovel and Sir George Rooke—they,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</span>
+too, had exacted homage to the Flag
+when Queen Anne was on the throne; and no
+foreign navy had ventured to withhold the
+first salutation in the long reign of Queen
+Victoria.</p>
+
+<p>To the navy of King Edward VII., in
+this supreme moment, was committed the
+maintenance of our marine supremacy.</p>
+
+<p>Yet experienced officers were well aware
+that, with all the foresight and sagacity that
+could be brought to bear, the fortune of war
+at sea depended very much on what men
+still called chance. “Right or left,” said
+Nelson, “it is all a matter of guess, and the
+world attributes wisdom to him who guesses
+right.” Nelson himself had to hunt for the
+French fleet many a time and oft; the
+American fleet had no news of the Spanish
+ships for something like a fortnight in the
+fight for Cuba; and in the war between
+Russia and Japan, the fleet of the former
+was “a dark horse” to Admiral Togo for considerable
+periods. The game of wits at sea,
+for which the other term is naval strategy,
+depends on distances, the elements, the unforeseen.
+Specific programmes are impossible,
+and the best-laid plans of admirals
+“gang oft agley.” Thus it came about that
+in this critical juncture the British scouts
+failed to get in touch with the potential enemy,—a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</span>
+failure almost attended with dire results
+for England.</p>
+
+<p>The Germans having given our scouts the
+slip (whether by luck or skill was never known)
+crept back in the dark hours towards Plymouth.
+Then, suddenly, their whole flotilla
+of destroyers, with lights out, and steaming
+at full speed, made a desperate attempt to
+force an entrance to the harbour. The rush
+was admirably planned. Anticipating partial
+detection, and by means of clever feints, the
+torpedo craft sought to attract the search-lights
+of the defence works to one particular
+destroyer, hoping that the main division
+might thus be enabled to make a successful
+dash, under the shadow of the shore, to the
+eastern and western channels of the breakwater.
+But the manœuvre failed. In the
+very nick of time the flashlights exposed the
+real and formidable nature of the onslaught.
+The roar of the battery guns burst forth upon
+the night, continuing with unabated fury until
+all but one of the flotilla—which ran headlong
+upon the breakwater—were sunk or driven
+off, damaged and defeated. The projected
+supplementary action of the German battleships,
+now looming into view, thus became
+hopeless, if not impossible.</p>
+
+<p>A mighty cheer went up from all the British
+ships when this was realised. It was their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</span>
+turn now to take the warpath, and the Admiral,—Sir
+Lambert Meade,—saw that they
+took it instantly. In the hearts of all, if not
+upon their lips, was the spirit of the stirring
+English war-song:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“Who fears to die? Who fears to die?<br>
+Is there any here who fears to die</p>
+<hr class="tb">
+<p><span style="margin-left: 3em;">Shout for England!</span><br>
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Ho! for England!</span><br>
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;">George for England!</span><br>
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Merry England!</span><br>
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;">England for aye!”</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Daylight was near at hand, and when it
+came, grey and mournful, over the sullen sea,
+the tactics of the British admiral left the
+enemy in doubt. An elaborate feint made
+with certain British battleships and armoured
+cruisers led the Germans to suppose the intention
+was to drive them back into the
+Atlantic; and ere they realised their error, the
+greater number of the British ships steamed
+diagonally outside the enemy, enclosing them
+within an imaginary line drawn from the
+Eddystone to Lizard Point. The light cruisers
+were told off to harass the German auxiliaries,
+and seeing the probable effect of this manœuvre,
+the enemy opened fire, wasting powder
+and shell long before they were within effective
+range. The British guns, however, remained<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</span>
+silent until the distance between the fleets
+was only four miles or less. Then the British
+admiral gave the signal, and straightway four
+battleships and eight armoured cruisers hurled
+shell after shell against the nearest of the
+German ships. The detached section of the
+fleet that had steamed westward along the
+coast, attacked with equal fury the other wing
+of the invaders’ line. The Germans at first
+replied with spirit. In every battle the
+winning cock must lose some feathers, and
+sorrow and mourning were on their way to
+many an English home.</p>
+
+<p>Presently there were signs of disaster and
+disablement among the enemy’s ships. Caught
+between two fires, and deprived of the aid of
+their destroyers, the position produced a
+demoralising effect upon their men. The
+German plan of campaign had miscarried,
+and the crews and gunners were at first disconcerted
+and then thrown into panic by the
+concentrated and mathematical precision with
+which the British guns riddled the leading
+ships of their column. Here and there, in
+both fleets, the bursting shells produced wholesale
+slaughter and mutilation. The worst
+disasters to the enemy’s ships, however, were
+caused by the repeated shocks of the terrific
+projectiles, which displaced the steel plates
+of their armour. Thus the rivets sprang, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</span>
+water crept in at a hundred holes. Two of
+the finest German battleships, through the
+gaining weight of water, had their centre of
+gravity gradually shifted. They foundered,
+and all hands were lost—officers and men
+going bravely, calmly, to their doom.</p>
+
+<p>The battleship <em>Wilhelm II.</em> became unmanageable
+and left the line, and, at the
+same time it was seen that desperate attempts
+were being made to give protection to one in
+particular of the auxiliaries—a liner of great
+speed, that presently broke away and headed
+for the open sea, hotly pursued by two light
+cruisers and one destroyer from the British line.</p>
+
+<p>Both remaining sections of the defending
+force now closed in upon the Germans, their
+great guns doing more and deadlier work
+as the range was lessened. One of the German
+battleships was now on fire, and the great
+clouds of smoke that rose for a time so hid
+the ships that firing was suspended. When
+the smoke cleared the British admiral gave
+another signal, and then the deadly wasps
+of naval warfare—the torpedo flotilla—swarmed
+in upon the enemy to complete
+the havoc and destruction commenced by
+the great guns of our battleships.</p>
+
+<p>England, sovereign of the seas, had won
+another victory. Her flag was still supreme!</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</span></p>
+<p>The scattered units of the German fleet
+had not only to seek safety from their pursuers,
+but also, as the short day closed in, to
+battle with a formidable gale. For the <em>Schiller</em>
+and other ships that had steamed westward,
+the position was one of appalling jeopardy.
+They had to reckon with the terrors of a
+wild and rocky shore.</p>
+
+<p>Less than three hundred miles from London,
+the westerly extremity of England, grey and
+granitic, frowns on the roaring seas that beat
+in vain upon its rocky bastions. Here the
+channels mingle with the mighty ocean, and
+stupendous billows, tumbling shoreward, break
+on the cliffs with a terrific roar that sometimes
+daunts the hardened miner at work in the
+galleries that stretch beneath the ocean-bed.
+A little more than a mile from the
+cliffs the Longship’s Lighthouse throws its
+rays upon the spume of the tremendous
+waves, and away to the west lies the granite
+group of the Scilly Isles.</p>
+
+<p>The wind and the rain are twin rulers of
+these islands; and the yeasty currents have
+swept many a gallant ship upon their jagged
+reefs. The “Bishop” and his “Clerks” are
+always on the watch to shrive the souls of
+shipwrecked mariners. It was here on the
+Gilstone Rock (near the small islet of Roseviar)
+that Sir Cloudesley Shovel, returning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</span>
+from the siege of Toulon, met with his tragic
+end. Driven off his course by storms, his
+ship, the <em>Association</em>, was forced upon the
+rock, and in a few minutes fell to pieces. In
+that night of dreadful memory, the <em>Phœnix</em>,
+the <em>Romney</em>, and the <em>Firebrand</em> met a like
+fate. The <em>St George</em> only narrowly escaped.
+Upwards of 2000 lives were lost in that
+dread night, and since that far-off time
+many another ship has gone to pieces in
+those hungry jaws.</p>
+
+<p>It was around these ragged westerly islands
+that the storm raged with especial fury on
+the night that followed the scattering of the
+German fleet.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XXXII<br>
+<small>MARCUS WHITE AND THE MOB</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>With that mocking perversity which confutes
+the weatherwise, the frost and bitter
+wind had given place to heavy rainstorms.
+The wind, veering round to south-west late on
+Boxing Day, blew with an ever-growing force
+and fury, and made the night of December
+26th one of terrible memory for many
+years to come. In London and Westminster
+alone a million pounds’ worth of damage
+resulted from the tempest, and the tale of
+ships wrecked and lives lost all round the
+coast was only to be told later on and by
+instalments.</p>
+
+<p>The traffic on nearly every railway was
+now disorganised, and a strike of the railway
+men had become imminent. The cutting of
+telegraph wires by the Leaguers had already
+gone far to keep Londoners in ignorance of
+momentous events happening outside the
+metropolitan area, and the great storm almost<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</span>
+completed the work the Leaguers had left
+unfinished. But the partial isolation of the
+great town in other respects, and particularly
+the threatened dearth of food supplies,
+constituted a yet further cause of apprehension.
+Early on the morning of the 27th,
+the provision shops were besieged by people
+of all ranks, eager to lay in stores of every
+description—meat, vegetables, groceries, bread,
+and every kind of household necessaries. In
+many cases it became a raid, in which some
+paid monstrous prices, while in the scramble
+others secured provisions without paying for
+them at all. Great numbers of shops and
+stores were wholly cleared of stock, tradesmen
+and their assistants being overpowered,
+while customers hurrying homewards were
+frequently waylaid, maltreated, and robbed
+of their purchases. The tumult and excitement
+in the streets became appalling. Military
+patrols were now seen in some of the
+principal thoroughfares, but not in sufficient
+numbers to maintain good order. Here and
+there a band of hooligans, who smashed all
+the street lamps as they passed, were chased
+by troopers, but they generally escaped into
+side streets and alleys, and resumed their
+work of destruction in another quarter.
+Shutters were closed, and boarded windows
+met the eye in all directions. Wild rumours<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</span>
+went round. There were, it was said, barricades
+at the West End. Martial law would
+be declared before the day was out. Stories
+were told of disaffection among the troops
+at Aldershot; of a night muster on Ascot
+Heath and a march through Windsor Great
+Park to the Castle. Another organised
+mob was reported to have assembled at
+Grange Wood, near Croydon, marching thence,
+with increasing swarms of adherents, through
+Camberwell, Walworth, and Lambeth, making,
+as some said, for the Archbishop’s Palace, or,
+as others declared, for the Houses of Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>The truth, and the whole truth could not
+be ascertained, but in all the passion and
+excitement of the hour, scarcely a word of
+disloyalty was breathed of the King individually.
+On the contrary, the vast majority
+believed that, but for the illness which lately
+had prevented his Majesty from taking an
+active part in the affairs of State, his tact
+and courage would have remedied existing
+evils before they had come to such a dangerous
+head.</p>
+
+<p>The dangers of civil conflict were greatly
+augmented by the strong and avowed resentment
+that had at last broken forth against
+the tyranny of the Leaguers; and this peril
+in turn was accentuated by splits in the ranks<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</span>
+of the Leaguers themselves. The proximate
+cause of the schism was found in the <em>Epoch</em>,
+which, appearing in the streets about midday,
+contained a remarkable article, printed prominently
+in leaded type. In effect, the writer
+declared in forcible language that though he
+had no cause to love England, he would
+fight side by side with Englishmen rather
+than see her trodden under the iron heel of
+Germany or any other continental nation.
+Eschewing the cautious language of the average
+leader-writer, he roundly stated that there
+was a deadly conspiracy developing in certain
+of the chancelleries of Europe. He warned
+Great Britain to beware lest her enemies, by
+a swift and sudden stroke, should lay her,
+fettered, in the dust. There would soon be
+news, he said, of the doings of the powerful
+German squadron in the south and west, and
+of a dual fleet, Russian and German, in the
+North Sea. These were but the vanguard
+of an enormous fleet of transports, prepared
+in sections in various German ports, and
+designed to land 100,000 foreign soldiers on
+our shores.</p>
+
+<p>Then came a great surprise. This, said the
+writer, was the last time the <em>Epoch</em> would
+appear.</p>
+
+<p>The article was signed, “Marcus White,”
+and his last warning words to the nation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</span>
+were those written by a laureate of England
+half a century before:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“Form! form! Riflemen form!<br>
+Ready, be ready to meet the storm!”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The article produced at first a staggering
+effect upon the Leaguers, and the extreme
+section, led by Raggett, but consisting mainly
+of foreign anarchists, vowed vengeance on
+the leader who they swore had betrayed and
+hindered them in the moment of impending
+triumph. A vast and threatening mob gathered
+on the Embankment, and crash after crash
+of broken glass startled the neighbourhood.
+A beast-like roar went up when Marcus White
+came forward to a window and looked down
+upon the crowd.</p>
+
+<p>It was as he stood thus, with folded arms,
+that Aldwyth Westwood and Herrick entered
+the room, unannounced in the confusion of
+the moment. But Marcus White turned instantly,
+and the same swift look of recognition
+that Aldwyth remembered noticing in the
+Folkestone hotel came into his eyes as he
+gazed at her. Her own eyes were strained
+and sad; but, though her face was very
+pale, there was courage and firmness in its
+expression.</p>
+
+<p>She spoke at once: “I have come to ask
+you about my father’s safety.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</span></p>
+
+<p>For a moment Marcus White gazed from
+her face to her companion’s, answering nothing.</p>
+
+<p>“Why should it be supposed that I am Sir
+John Westwood’s keeper?” he asked quietly.</p>
+
+<p>Herrick broke in: “It is known that you
+had a strong personal hostility to Miss Westwood’s
+father, and that a monstrous outrage
+has been committed, in which you——”</p>
+
+<p>Marcus White raised his hand. “You are
+not addressing a Court of Law,” he said
+scornfully.</p>
+
+<p>“I wish to Heaven I were!” answered the
+barrister hotly. “And, more than that, I
+wish you were standing in the dock, where
+you ought to be.”</p>
+
+<p>Aldwyth laid her hand entreatingly on her
+lover’s arm.</p>
+
+<p>“What has this to do with Sir John Westwood?”
+asked Marcus White, almost indifferently.</p>
+
+<p>Aldwyth stepped forward. “I ask you
+this question: Is my father alive?”</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Westwood,” was the slow answer,
+“I cannot tell you.”</p>
+
+<p>“You will be called to account for this,”
+said Herrick sternly.</p>
+
+<p>A roar arose from the mob below the window.</p>
+
+<p>“I am being called to account for many
+things,” said Marcus White, listening, with
+a slight shrug of his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Are you mad?” cried Herrick.</p>
+
+<p>The other laughed bitterly. “Perhaps I
+am. I have played for a great stake and I
+won the trick, but”—glancing towards the
+broken windows—” I may not win the rubber.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you refuse to give us any information?”
+It was Aldwyth who spoke now.</p>
+
+<p>“No, I don’t refuse. Your father and those
+who were with him were left to the mercy of
+that God in whose name they administer law
+and justice in this country. Can you complain
+of that?” He looked at Herrick as
+he spoke.</p>
+
+<p>“What do you mean?” asked Aldwyth
+breathlessly.</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Westwood, can those who are entrusted
+with the quality of mercy towards
+their fellow-creatures—can they complain if
+they are left to the mercy of the elements?”</p>
+
+<p>“It is madness and worse than madness—murder!”
+said Herrick, stepping forward.</p>
+
+<p>“You have courage,” answered Marcus
+White, regarding him. “Perhaps,” he added
+significantly, “that is why you have been
+spared.”</p>
+
+<p>“But my father!” interrupted Aldwyth.
+“What is to be done?”</p>
+
+<p>Heedless of the tumult without, Marcus
+White advanced to the table and sat down.
+He wrote a few lines rapidly. “If you take<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</span>
+this to the Admiralty,” he said, “they may
+be able to get you a report; or, better still,
+go to the Foreign Secretary. He is more
+likely to be able to give you information.”
+He folded the paper and gave it into Aldwyth’s
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>“Let us go at once,” she said, turning to
+Herrick.</p>
+
+<p>As she spoke a great stone came hurtling
+through the window and smashed the mirror
+over the mantelpiece. Heavy blows were
+heard upon a door below. A white-faced,
+breathless clerk burst into the room. “The
+mob are threatening to break down the outer
+door,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“I am afraid,” said White quietly, looking
+at Herrick, “you have brought Miss Westwood
+at an awkward moment.”</p>
+
+<p>But she answered for herself. “It was I
+who insisted on coming.”</p>
+
+<p>“I will see that you are not molested,”
+was White’s reply. He paused a moment.
+More stones came flying through the windows.
+There was a sharp crack of firearms, and a
+bullet shattered the great chandelier in the
+middle of the ceiling. Marcus White crossed
+quickly to the door; the frightened clerk
+drew aside and watched him anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>“Great heavens! where are you going?”
+asked Herrick.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Outside, to face these curs.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is not safe, sir; there’ll be murder
+done,” cried the affrighted clerk.</p>
+
+<p>But White ignored him. “Keep Miss Westwood
+here for a few moments,” he said to
+Herrick, speaking in clear, emphatic tones.
+“Then you will be able to get away in safety.
+When you hear me fire,” he drew a shining
+revolver from his pocket, “go—at once!”</p>
+
+<p>Without another word, and bare-headed as
+he was, he passed out of the room. They
+stood in breathless suspense until a hoarse
+yell of execration came from the street,
+attaining increased violence and menace as
+it was taken up by the greater crowd on the
+Embankment.</p>
+
+<p>An irresistible impulse hurried them to the
+window. Surrounded by a small bodyguard
+of adherents, Marcus White was seen, forcing
+his way across the road. Fists and sticks
+were shaken at him on every side, and vile
+epithets in half a dozen languages fouled the
+air as the human wedge drove through the
+clamouring, struggling mass and reached the
+pavement on the river side of the Embankment.
+The next moment he was standing
+on the parapet, looking down with dauntless
+eyes upon the sea of furious faces that was
+now turned towards him. His voice rang
+out above the uproar.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Fools! fools, that you are, listen!”</p>
+
+<p>The mob responded with a howl of wrath.</p>
+
+<p>“Traitor!” cried Raggett, shrill above the
+din; “Traitor!” and the vast excited multitude
+took up the cry, yelling it with indescribable
+ferocity.</p>
+
+<p>The gleam of a revolver caught the eye.
+There were those who thought he fired above
+their heads. Others believed the shot was
+meant for Raggett.</p>
+
+<p>At any rate it was the promised signal;
+but Aldwyth and Herrick stood for a moment,
+held by the overmastering excitement of the
+scene. Then, with savage curses and screams
+of fury the mob rushed at the parapet, reckless
+in their rage. Some clambered up;
+others fell and were trampled under foot.
+Swaying and reeling, gripped and torn on
+either side, Marcus White for a moment held
+his ground.</p>
+
+<p>Covering her eyes, and with a low cry of
+horror, Aldwyth turned from the window
+now, and in a moment, supported by Herrick,
+she had reached the street.</p>
+
+<p>Close at hand, in Howard Street, the Westwoods’
+carriage, a closed landau, was waiting.</p>
+
+<p>“Quick, to Berkeley Square,” cried Herrick.</p>
+
+<p>Aldwyth sank back against the cushions,
+almost fainting, as the horses plunged forward
+under the sharp lash of the driver’s whip.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XXXIII<br>
+<small>THE FOREIGN SECRETARY</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>Lord Downland’s private secretary shook
+his head.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear fellow, it is impossible,” he said.
+“I’d manage it for <em>you</em> if it could be done for
+any one; you know that well enough.”</p>
+
+<p>Herrick did know it, for the speaker and
+he were first cousins, and good friends.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s of vital importance,” he said earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>“A matter of life and death,” urged Aldwyth.</p>
+
+<p>“Look here, Langdale”—Herrick laid his
+hand on the other’s arm—” we come from
+Marcus White.”</p>
+
+<p>“Marcus White!” The secretary drew
+back, amazed, and looked from Herrick’s
+face to Aldwyth’s. “You mean the head-centre
+of the Leaguers?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; but they’ve rounded on him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Only a few moments ago, when we left
+him, he was fighting for his life,” said Aldwyth.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</span></p>
+
+<p>“It’s horrible, but it’s a fact,” added
+Herrick; “they were on him like a pack of
+wolves.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s news, indeed!” Langdale looked
+very grave.</p>
+
+<p>“We have here something that he wrote
+for us to give into Lord Downland’s hands.
+It bears on the safety of Miss Westwood’s
+father, and perhaps on special foreign news
+which his lordship ought to know.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll see what can be done,” said Langdale
+briskly. “The French ambassador is with
+the marquis just at this moment; and, as you
+see, the brougham is at the door. There’s no
+harm in saying”—he lowered his voice slightly—” that
+the chief’s on the point of starting
+for Windsor, by the King’s command. But
+I’ll try to manage it for you.” And he quickly
+left the room.</p>
+
+<p>Over the window blind they could see the
+electric brougham, ready and waiting to start.
+Two or three uniformed policemen stood near
+at hand. Farther off, Herrick caught sight
+of his old acquaintance, Henshaw; and, at the
+same time, the rattle of accoutrements attracted
+his notice to a cavalry escort waiting
+at the north end of the square.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly Henshaw moved quickly out of
+view. There was whispering among the uniformed
+men, who wore a watchful, anxious look.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</span></p>
+
+<p>Something untoward was happening, and
+the barrister looked round intending to attract
+Aldwyth’s attention; but she was sitting at
+the table, her elbows resting there, and her
+face covered with her hands. He did not
+speak to her. Tact taught him that she was
+better left alone. He believed that in the
+complex trouble she was suffering she was
+no longer indifferent to his deep and constant
+affection; and it was true. Thus does the
+shaking of our lives sometimes restore the
+balance. A strong man’s love; a life-companion,
+tender, true, and kind! Happy the
+woman who can win the prize. Aldwyth, at
+least, was learning to be grateful; and gratitude,
+like pity, is akin to love.</p>
+
+<p>When Herrick glanced through the window
+again, Henshaw, usually most deliberate in
+his movements, was hurrying past; but his
+quick eyes had caught sight of the barrister,
+and the next moment he rang the bell. There
+was a hurried conversation with the hall
+porter; then a footman brought in a hasty
+note written on a leaf torn from a pocket-book:</p>
+
+
+<p>“<em>Can I see you for a moment? Urgent.</em>”</p>
+
+<p>Herrick, with a word to Aldwyth, who still
+seemed to be stunned by recent events, went<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</span>
+out, and was shown into a small anteroom,
+to which the detective quickly followed him.</p>
+
+<p>“What is it?” he asked, wonderingly.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, it may be much and it may be
+nothing; I can’t explain now—but, look here,
+sir, that carriage out there is waiting for you
+and the lady, isn’t it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; they’re Sir John Westwood’s
+horses.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you mind if the Marquis goes off in
+that carriage instead of in the brougham that’s
+waiting for him?”</p>
+
+<p>“You must have some special reason for
+suggesting that!”</p>
+
+<p>“I have,”—emphatically.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll ask Miss Westwood,—it’s not my
+carriage.”</p>
+
+<p>“One moment—need you ask? Ladies
+want explanations, and there isn’t time to
+give them.”</p>
+
+<p>“My good sir, you can hardly expect——”</p>
+
+<p>“Take it upon yourself, sir,” interrupted
+the police officer, impressively. “It may
+save life—a valuable life, too. I know what
+I’m talking about, and if any harm comes to
+Sir John’s horses, you may be pretty sure it
+is a case in which the Government will make
+the damage good.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very well; do what you think right. I
+see there is something serious in the wind.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Right you are, sir”; and the detective
+was out of the room and the house before
+another word could be said.</p>
+
+<p>As Herrick crossed the hall to return to
+Aldwyth Westwood, the private secretary met
+him.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, here you are! The ambassador’s
+gone. Now if you want three words with
+the marquis before he leaves, come this way.
+But where is Miss Westwood?”</p>
+
+<p>“Here,” said Herrick, opening the door.</p>
+
+<p>Aldwyth rose instantly, and the two followed
+the secretary to Lord Downland’s library.
+The Foreign Secretary stood upon the hearth-rug.
+A valet was helping him to put on his
+travelling coat. At a sign the man retired,
+and Langdale, after a low-toned word or two
+to his chief, placed a chair for Aldwyth and
+also left the room.</p>
+
+<p>It was obvious that his lordship was in
+great haste to get away.</p>
+
+<p>Herrick, without a word, put Marcus White’s
+written message in the minister’s hand. Lord
+Downland glanced at it rapidly, then read it
+carefully again. A shade of colour came into
+his pale, thin cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>He looked up. “This news was partly
+known to me,” he said, “but not quite all.
+The rest may be very valuable.” He glanced
+for a second at the fire, then added: “This<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</span>
+leader of the Leaguers seems to have some
+love for England, or, at any rate, some scruples,
+after all. But he will have to pay a heavy
+penalty for his misdeeds.”</p>
+
+<p>“Lord Downland,” said Aldwyth quietly,
+“I think he has paid the last of all penalties
+already.”</p>
+
+<p>The Foreign Minister looked at her quickly,
+with grave inquiring eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“My lord,” said Herrick, “the Leaguers
+have turned on him. We left Marcus White
+at the mercy of the mob.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah! is that so? A terrible experience
+for Miss Westwood. But I have intelligence
+that will relieve her of a great anxiety—Sir
+John Westwood is safe.”</p>
+
+<p>“Safe! thank God for that!” cried Aldwyth,
+with clasped hands.</p>
+
+<p>“All on board were safe. It was almost
+a miracle. The steamer could not have
+floated for another hour, and,” he added,
+significantly, “she was discovered drifting
+towards the Race of Alderney, deserted by
+her captain and the crew. A monstrous
+outrage!—monstrous!”</p>
+
+<p>“Then Sir John—all of them—must be on
+their way to London now,” exclaimed Herrick.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said the marquis quietly. “They
+are safe, but at present they are not on
+their way to England. They were picked up<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</span>
+by a German cruiser; and our relations with
+Germany at the present moment are not
+friendly.” A faint half-smile flickered over
+his face. “It is what a former colleague of
+mine would call ‘a sort of a war!’” Lord
+Downland took up his hat and moved towards
+the door.</p>
+
+<p>“Your lordship means that they are
+prisoners?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Mr Herrick. But there is no need
+for alarm,” with a reassuring glance towards
+Aldwyth. “England also has a prisoner—one
+of very great distinction. At this moment he
+is on his way by special train from Penzance
+to Windsor Castle.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>On each side of the entrance to Mount
+Street, as the carriage approached with the
+Foreign Minister on his way to Paddington,
+small groups were loitering. The men, for
+the most part, had the look of foreigners.
+Three things were vividly recalled later on—one
+of them, that the officer in command of
+the cavalry escort sent two troopers ahead;
+secondly, that, on seeing this, Henshaw ran
+forward with a loud cry of warning; thirdly,
+that a shrill whistle was heard as the troopers,
+followed rapidly by the carriage, approached
+the turning into Mount Street.</p>
+
+<p>Then, swiftly following on the whistle,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</span>
+there was a blue flash in the air, and a sharp,
+cracking detonation. The leading troopers
+were scattered, one of the horses plunged and
+fell with a crash upon the pavement, throwing
+its rider heavily against a doorstep. The
+troopers’ horses in rear of the carriage reared
+and plunged; a scream came from some
+women who were near, and a young girl,
+shockingly mutilated, fell bleeding to the
+ground.</p>
+
+<p>The bomb had struck the roadway between
+the leading troopers and the carriage horses,
+but, as if by a miracle, the latter, though
+terrified, were uninjured, and tore through
+Mount Street at a gallop.</p>
+
+<p>Behind them, on the right-hand pavement
+a struggling group was seen. Henshaw, whose
+device had been defeated by the misconceived
+movement of the troopers, had darted on a
+sallow-faced man with a short black beard.
+The man fought like a wild beast in the detective’s
+grip, but the uniformed police had
+hurried to the scene, and one of the most
+powerful—it was P. C. Dormer—enveloped
+the dynamitard in his arms, while others went
+in hot pursuit of his fleeing confederates.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XXXIV<br>
+<small>THE EAGLE IN THE LION’S JAWS</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>The strike of compositors which had maddened
+the conductors of daily journals proved
+to be a blessing in disguise. Such stirring
+news had come to hand that a few hours’
+delay in publishing the morning papers were
+worth all the terms that trades unions could
+exact—and more also. The morning papers
+of December 27th became afternoon papers,
+and they went off like wildfire.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed there was news that staggered
+humanity:</p>
+
+<p>Item One:—The death of Marcus White
+by drowning in the Thames—with the murderous
+clutch of Raggett and another Leaguer
+still on his throat. And this, it was recognised,
+meant not only the death of three men—it
+was the death-blow of the League itself.</p>
+
+<p>Item Two:—The direful catastrophe at
+Portsmouth dockyard, with all that it meant,
+and might have meant, for England.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</span></p>
+
+<p>Item Three:—The treacherous night attack
+of the Germans at Plymouth, so happily
+detected, and the subsequent victory of the
+British fleet.</p>
+
+<p>Item Four:—Failure of a projected joint
+movement by the German and the Russian
+fleets in the North Sea.</p>
+
+<p>The stars in their courses had “fought
+against Sisera.” The concerted action of the
+combined squadrons had come to naught,
+partly because of the delay and blundering
+of the Russian admiral; mainly by reason of
+the terrible storm which swept the sea and
+thundered on our shores on that eventful
+night.</p>
+
+<p>Battered and beaten by the tempest, the
+invading ships had made all haste to return
+to port. Once again, as in the days of
+Queen Elizabeth, “God blew, and they were
+scattered!”</p>
+
+<p>But the heaviest stroke of misfortune
+suffered by the enemy was not inflicted in
+the North Sea. The remnant of the German
+Squadron of the south, seeking to escape from
+its pursuers, had found the flying squadron
+despatched from Spithead completely barring
+their passage in the Straits of Dover. The
+British crews were fresh and fit, burning for
+battle. But once again in the history of
+nations discretion was acknowledged to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</span>
+the better part of warfare. The Germans
+were not now in force or condition to show
+fight. Every ship fell into the hands of the
+British admiral, and was promptly interned
+in Dover harbour.</p>
+
+<p>There yet remained a startling postscript
+to this tremendous news. The <em>Schiller</em>, pursued
+by the British cruiser <em>Cadmus</em> and
+the destroyer <em>Hornet</em>, on the 26th had made
+desperate efforts to escape capture. Driven
+to the west in the darkness and the storm,
+the liner made a rash attempt to double back
+between her pursuers and the Scilly Islands.
+The result was fatal. Too late, the commander
+of the <em>Schiller</em> discovered his dangerous
+proximity to the “Bishop and his Clerks.”
+A terrific wave swept the great liner like a
+plaything on the deadly rocks. There came
+another mighty, shattering rush of water that
+drowned the captain and swept a passenger,
+who stood beside him in that awful moment,
+clear of the ship and far up on the tangled
+seaweed of the rocks.</p>
+
+<p>So hot and close was the pursuit of the
+<em>Cadmus</em> and the <em>Hornet</em> that they, too, narrowly
+escaped similar disaster. The <em>Cadmus</em>
+was not half a mile to windward when the
+<em>Schiller</em> went ashore. The <em>Hornet</em>, nearer in,
+only escaped by being refloated on the first
+great wave that drowned the <em>Schiller</em>’s lights.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</span></p>
+
+<p>Of all on board the German liner only the
+one passenger was saved. This passenger,
+bruised, exhausted, with a broken arm, received
+the prompt and kindly attention of
+the coastguard. Little did these rough but
+sympathetic folk suspect the exalted rank
+and dignity of the sufferer. He seemed to be
+a foreigner, but knew much more of the King’s
+English than was known to the humble islanders
+themselves. When the stranger gave them a
+massive gold ring, set with a brilliant stone, by
+way of parting gift, these good folk began to
+think they had entertained an angel unawares.</p>
+
+<p>In truth they had ministered, not to an
+angel—but to an emperor.</p>
+
+<p>The skipper of the Trinity steamer that
+conveyed the stranger to St Mary’s Island
+for temporary surgical treatment was a man
+who had seen many illustrated newspapers.
+Though at first incredulous, he thought he
+recognised the illustrious foreigner. He was
+quite sure of it before the steamer left St Mary’s
+for Penzance with the passenger on board.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Downland, as the reader is aware,
+knew who the stranger was before his lordship
+left Berkeley Square—to run the gauntlet of the
+bomb brigade—on his way to Windsor Castle.</p>
+
+<p>The prisoner of England was none other
+than Kaiser William, King of Prussia, German
+Emperor.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XXXV<br>
+<small>THE KING AND THE KAISER</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>London went mad when all the news was
+known—mad with amazement, relief, anger,
+joy: amazement at the deadly reality of the
+national danger that had been averted; relief
+at the safety of England; anger with the</p>
+
+<p class="center p1 p1b">“New majesties of mighty States”—</p>
+
+<p>that, with “great contrivances of power,” had
+sought to encompass our inviolable island.</p>
+
+<p>And there was joy—delirious, exuberant—that
+the hydra-headed mob no longer held the
+field in London.</p>
+
+<p>The main thoroughfares were densely
+packed with shouting multitudes. In the
+sharp reaction of the moment, in the complex
+excitement occasioned by the news, people
+laughed and wept and sang. Social distinctions
+were broken down; the gloved
+hands of cultured women were given gladly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</span>
+into the grip of the grimiest workmen. Men
+and women of every rank exchanged greetings
+and congratulations. Everywhere it was
+“Rule Britannia!” “God save the King!”
+“England for ever!”</p>
+
+<p>Those who recalled the street scenes on
+Mafeking night declared they were as nothing
+compared with the wild and jubilant excitement
+of the present hour. Banners were
+slung across the streets; nearly every upper
+window displayed a flag of some sort; and,
+when darkness came, Chinese lanterns, lamps
+and candles, supplied the want of public
+lighting—which, however, was speedily restored.</p>
+
+<p>Any sailor who was met with casually was
+hoisted shoulder-high and carried through the
+thoroughfares amid cheering crowds. Thousands
+stood bare-headed before the Nelson
+Column in Trafalgar Square, while a
+young girl, with rapt face and glowing eyes,
+standing on the masonry, recited Tennyson’s
+National Song:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“There is no land like England<br>
+Where’er the light of day be;<br>
+There are no hearts like English hearts—<br>
+Such hearts of oak as they be.”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>A vast concourse also assembled before the
+broad façade of Buckingham Palace; and,
+undeterred by its silent emptiness and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</span>
+myriads of white blinds, all drawn down,
+shouted lustily and again and again for King
+and Queen. “Three cheers for the Navy!”
+roared a stentorian voice, and with a swift
+and mighty response the crowd gave not
+three cheers, but nearer thirty.</p>
+
+<p>The next day, and the day after, and the
+day after that, the noise and the excitement
+were continued almost without abatement.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile there had taken place at Windsor
+Castle, amid surroundings of quietude and
+regal dignity, an interview fraught with great
+import to England, to Germany, and to the
+whole of Europe.</p>
+
+<p>Two mighty monarchs, constitutional rulers
+of great empires, came face to face, in circumstances
+of unexampled interest and embarrassment.
+It was a supreme moment,
+stupendous in the main problem that it
+presented, subtle and painful in the side-issues
+which that problem involved. For these were
+men, as well as monarchs. Not only were
+they men with like passions as we ourselves
+have, but the blood of a common ancestor
+flowed through the veins of each. The two
+were kith and kin.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing mean or petty could be said or
+done by King or Kaiser in that trying hour.
+The salutation of royal personages must
+be exchanged after the custom of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</span>
+Courts. The ritual of State observance must
+be followed in all its detail. Yet, notwithstanding
+these formalities, each exalted personage
+was acutely conscious of the rough,
+the tragic, underlying elements of the unexampled
+situation.</p>
+
+<p>Neither could forget in that ironic moment
+the bombastic utterances of the royal captive,
+the vapouring allusion to the “mailed fist,”
+the “dry powder,” the “taut muscles,” and
+all the rest of it. Graver still were the
+recollections of the inspired press campaign
+against Great Britain, the manufactured grievances,
+the falsely imputed intrigues, all sequent
+to the unfriendly spirit shown in the
+memorable telegram to the President of the
+South African Republic. Worse than all
+was the evidence of enmity and jealousy
+afforded by the persistent increase of the
+German navy, the injurious uses to which
+Heligoland had been put, the enlargement of
+the Kaiser Wilhelm Canal, and the partial
+construction of a new naval base for the
+German fleet in the North Sea.</p>
+
+<p>Vaulting ambition had inspired these things,
+the overmastering obsession of a supposed
+divine right of empire. The proud possessor
+of a giant’s power had sought, and found, some
+pretext for gigantic deeds.</p>
+
+<p>And now the cup of humiliation had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</span>
+presented to those proud lips. Like the great
+emperors of the past, whose dynasties had
+long lain in the dust, the modern monarch
+had to learn that kings propose, but One alone
+disposes; that He alone, above the water floods,
+“remains a King for ever.” This, indeed,
+was no triumphal entry into England’s capital.
+Not as William the Conqueror, but as William
+the Conquered, Kaiser William stood on
+English soil.</p>
+
+<p>But if there was humiliation on the one
+side, there was on the other not only righteous
+wrath, but kingly magnanimity.</p>
+
+<p>Of what precisely passed between the two
+august sovereigns no written record was preserved.
+They spoke as man to man. Nor
+was there any occasion for a formal treaty
+between the high contracting parties. King
+Edward, with the advice of his ministers,
+had already decided on the minimum of
+his requirements as representing the just
+demands of a great nation. Those requirements—absolutely
+inflexible, and not to
+be varied in any one particular—were as
+follows:</p>
+
+<p>Heligoland was to be restored to the British
+Crown. The captured warships were to be
+incorporated in the British Navy. If the new
+naval base on the North Sea were not forthwith
+dismantled and abandoned, the British<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</span>
+fleet would bombard every German port in
+Europe.</p>
+
+<p>It was said that the Kaiser listened with
+knitted brow, and, after a brief pause, asked
+quietly:</p>
+
+<p>“What assurances does your Majesty require?”</p>
+
+<p>“Your Majesty’s word of honour,” was the
+answer.</p>
+
+<p>“It is not intended to treat me as a hostage?”</p>
+
+<p>“Your Majesty is free.”</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XXXVI<br>
+<small>THE BROTHERHOOD OF DEATH</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>Far from the madding crowd of London,
+beyond sound of all the shouting and the
+tumult, they laid to rest, “each in his narrow
+cell,” Father Francis and Billy of Mayfair.
+The priest, after lingering for two days, had
+died in Charing Cross Hospital from heart
+failure, resulting from the injuries he had
+sustained in the memorable meeting in Trafalgar
+Square. For the moment, and to all
+seeming, the Bottle had triumphed over the
+Bible; but the preacher of the higher truth,
+being dead, yet spoke to the hearts of
+thousands, and many journeyed down from
+London to attend his funeral.</p>
+
+<p>It was the Duke, his father, who, hearing
+of Billy’s boyish impulse to avenge the murderous
+attack on his favourite son, decided that
+the London waif, who had paid for his temerity
+with his life, should not sleep his last sleep
+in a pauper’s grave. In life these two had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</span>
+been separated by an enormous social gulf.
+Rank and culture belonged to the son of the
+ducal house. In his veins flowed the blood
+of royalty—the blood of a lecherous monarch
+of the House of Stuart. But Billy?—Well,
+what mattered now? Death, the great leveller,
+had made such questions quite superfluous.
+Duke’s son and ragged outcast of the streets,
+they had entered into the same rest, and in
+death they were not divided.</p>
+
+<p>On Ranmore, one of the loveliest of the
+Surrey hills, they ended together the little
+journey of their mortal lives. The sun shone
+brightly on the churchyard; far overhead
+great billowy clouds, slow and majestic, sailed
+across the illimitable blue. The snow had
+vanished from the rolling hills. It might have
+been a day in early spring.</p>
+
+<p>“I am the resurrection and the life, said
+the Lord: he that believeth in me, though
+he were dead, yet shall he live; and whosoever
+liveth and believeth in me shall never
+die.... We brought nothing into this
+world, and it is certain we can carry nothing
+out. The Lord gave and the Lord hath
+taken away; blessed be the Name of the
+Lord.”</p>
+
+<p>When they came to the graveside, aristocrat
+and pauper came with the same promise of
+life and immortality. As each had borne the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</span>
+image of the earthy, so each should bear the
+image of the heavenly. The boast of heraldry
+availed nothing. The pomp of power was
+as an idle tale. This was “the inevitable
+hour” for one and all!</p>
+
+<p>The old duke, white-haired and tremulous,
+lifted his tired eyes to the far-off sky when
+they committed to the earth the body of his
+much-loved son. The old man was trying to
+grasp the “sure and certain hope!” He could
+not weep, as others wept, for “these our
+brothers.”</p>
+
+<p>But two stalwart men, standing close at
+hand, could not keep back their tears. There
+was a great lump in the bull throat of P. C.
+Dormer that nearly choked him when he
+looked on the last home of the child in the
+tragedy of whose life he had played a cruel
+and much-repented part. The strong, rough
+man had found a place for sorrow and remorse,
+and it was sanctified with tears.</p>
+
+<p>And Joe the stableman, he, too, passed his
+huge red hand across his smarting eyes,
+sorrowing much that he would see his little
+friend no more.</p>
+
+<p>“Man that is born of a woman hath but a
+short time to live and is full of misery. He
+cometh up and is cut down like a flower;
+he fleeth as it were a shadow and never
+continueth in one stay.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</span></p>
+
+<p>Yet, there remaineth a rest....</p>
+
+<p>“I heard a voice from heaven, saying unto
+me, Write, From henceforth blessed are the
+dead that die in the Lord: even so, saith the
+Spirit; for they rest from their labours.”</p>
+
+<p>In little groups, or one by one, the mourners
+went away; Aldwyth and Herrick together,
+passing down the church path—and onward
+down the path of life. The tottering duke,
+leaning on his eldest son, went home to his
+great, dull mansion; P. C. Dormer returned
+to night duty in the London streets; Joe
+the stableman went back to his horses in the
+mews. All, all the living left the lonely dead.
+Thus, one day, will you and I be left, alone
+in our long last sleep.</p>
+
+<p>The glow of the sun would wane; darkness
+would shroud the graves; the pale beams of
+the moon would rest there, and, in turn, the
+steely light of winter stars; the strong spring
+breeze would bend the grass, and the daisies
+would cluster there; the song of happy birds
+would come and go; the tender bud of hope,
+and the red ripeness of the autumn leaf; daybreak
+and sunset over the hills; summer and
+winter, seed-time and harvest,—till that great
+day of ripened grain, when the angels will be
+the reapers, and the harvest the end of the
+world.</p>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" >CHAPTER XXXVII<br>
+<small>THE GREAT THANKSGIVING</small></h2>
+
+
+<p>On the last day of the year there was a national
+service of thanksgiving in St Paul’s Cathedral.
+The rushing river of national feeling, at first
+tumultuous like the sound of many waters,
+had found a channel, deep and broad. The
+waters, being deep, were therefore still. It
+was a joyful and a pleasant, but also a solemn
+thing to be thankful.</p>
+
+<p>Vast numbers came from every quarter to
+attend the service; the highest and the
+lowest; the King and the Queen; the civic
+rulers; the restored judges of the land; the
+rich and the poor.</p>
+
+<p>Here in the vast cathedral church in by-gone
+years the voice of praise and thanksgiving
+had been raised on memorable occasions;
+a thanksgiving for the King when, as
+heir to the throne of England, he had come
+back from the very jaws of death; a thanksgiving
+for the long and prosperous reign of a
+Queen dear to the hearts of her people; but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</span>
+never before a thanksgiving such as this—so
+complex and so sudden in its causes, and
+following so swiftly on the perils from which
+the nation had been saved.</p>
+
+<p>The newly appointed Primate of London—a
+former Bishop of Stepney—was the
+preacher; but it was no set sermon that he
+preached. His Grace gave out no text, but
+every heart was thrilled by what fell from his
+lips:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“Love thou thy land, with love far-brought<br>
+From out the storied Past, and used<br>
+Within the Present, but transfused<br>
+Thro’ future time by power of thought.”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>He spoke of the patriotism that is sublime,
+and of the pride that goes before a fall: of</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“True love turn’d round on fixed poles,<br>
+Love that endures not sordid ends,<br>
+For English natures, freemen, friends,<br>
+Thy brothers, and immortal souls.”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>True patriotism was instanced by the
+banished Jew, made cup-bearer to a heathen
+king, the man who sat down and wept when
+he learned that the walls of his beloved
+capital were broken down and the gates
+thereof burned with fire: the man who worked
+as well as wept; who inspired his compatriots
+and rebuilt the walls and gates of the city—trowel
+in one hand and sword in the other.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</span>
+“So built we the wall ... for the people had
+a mind to work.”</p>
+
+<p>Then the Primate turned to the wonderful
+story of the first Babylon. He spoke of the
+king who dreamed dreams wherewith his
+spirit was troubled, dreams that could only
+be interpreted—not by court magicians and
+astrologers—by the servant of One who
+changeth the times and seasons, removeth
+kings, giveth wisdom to the wise, and knowledge
+to them that know understanding. He
+alone “revealeth the deep and secret things
+and knoweth what is in the darkness.”</p>
+
+<p>Who should dare to say, demanded the
+Archbishop, that even now, in the twentieth
+century, the vision of the eastern king was
+not receiving fresh fulfilment—that mystical
+vision of the kingdom of gold, the kingdom of
+brass, and the kingdom of iron—iron that was
+mixed with miry clay?</p>
+
+<p>The king whose dreams troubled him had
+many warnings. When he set up his golden
+idol on the plain of Dura, he was warned.
+In his rage and fury with the Jews who dared
+to disobey him, he cast the three righteous
+men into the seven-fold heated furnace, and
+lo! he saw four men walking loose in the
+midst of the fire, unhurt; and the form of
+the fourth was like the Son of God. Thus
+was he warned again.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</span></p>
+
+<p>So when the heart of Nebuchadnezzar was
+lifted up, and his mind hardened, he was
+deposed from his kingly throne, and they
+took his glory from him.</p>
+
+<p>And Belshazzar his son, he, too, was warned
+by that mysterious writing on the wall. In
+that same night was he slain and Darius took
+the kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>And the prophet himself had visions of the
+future, visions of nation fighting against nation;
+of the four winds of heaven striving upon the
+great sea; of the four great beasts that came
+up from the sea, diverse from each other—the
+first like a lion, the second like the bear, the
+third like a leopard, and the fourth dreadful
+and terrible and strong exceedingly, with
+teeth of iron. Who, again asked the preacher,
+should dare to say that the vision of the great
+sea and the great powers might not have
+further fulfilment among the nations and
+navies of to-day?</p>
+
+<p>You Englishmen and Englishwomen, the
+Primate went on, leaning forward and looking
+into the myriads of upturned faces, should
+lay these thoughts to heart. The prophetic
+vision is not concerned with the kings of the
+earth alone. No king can stand without
+national support, and the nation is made up
+of individuals. Stands England where she
+did? Was Great Britain worthy of continued<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</span>
+greatness, and able to maintain it?
+Think of her history! “England, bound in
+with the triumphant sea, whose rocky shore
+beats back the envious siege of watery Neptune.”
+Would this dear England ever be
+“bound in with shame, with inky blots and
+rotten parchment bonds?” This England,
+that was wont to conquer others! If we
+loved England, then in a just quarrel we must
+fight for England, holding the “water-walled
+bulwarks still secure, and confident from
+foreign purposes,”—pulsing the “little body
+with a mighty heart.” Each man must bear
+his part, a part worthy of his nationality,
+inspired with the belief of the English statesman
+whose statue stood in the heart of London—that
+life is a great and honourable calling,
+not a mean and grovelling thing to be shuffled
+through.</p>
+
+<p>In some sense they had regarded themselves
+as a chosen people. Let them remember
+that older nation once chosen, but
+now scattered and oppressed. High above
+the towering dome of that cathedral where
+they worshipped, the cross stood out year
+after year—a warning, a symbol, an inspiration.
+It meant self-sacrifice. Self-sacrifice
+was the watchword, and the example, of the
+great Captain of their salvation. Nothing
+would avail an England, or an Englishman,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</span>
+ashamed to confess the faith of Christ crucified,
+a deserter of the banner under which
+Christians were pledged to continue faithful
+soldiers and servants until their lives’ end.
+A Christ-less England would be an England
+lost!</p>
+
+<p>And how would England stand without
+the witness of the ancient Church in England?
+The Babylonian king set up a god of gold on
+the plain of Dura; but had not a god of gold
+been set up in many an English heart?
+“Born a man, and died a grocer!” Could
+epitaph be more withering in its contempt
+and irony? Yet an honest grocer was better
+than a dishonest Christian. If we were a
+nation of shopkeepers and our only shrine
+was the till, let us at least be honest shopkeepers—not
+a nation of hypocrites as well;
+let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we die!
+Yes, better an honest pagan than a bogus
+Christian.</p>
+
+<p>A thrill went through the vast congregation,
+eagerly listening to the preacher’s words; and,
+as he paused, a pallid man, dressed in the
+fashion of the day, started to his feet, his
+hands outstretched, and cried with a loud
+voice, “What shall we do to be saved?”</p>
+
+<p>The effect was magnetic. At least five
+hundred persons instantly rose in like manner.
+It was manifest that they, too, in the awakened<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</span>
+anguish of their souls, sought an answer to
+that momentous question. The Archbishop,
+looking down on them, was greatly moved.
+For they were as sheep having no shepherd.
+Then he gave the answer, strong and
+vehement:</p>
+
+<p>“If you would be saved, away with shams
+and false pretences! There is only one hope
+for humankind; only one star to follow—the
+Star of Bethlehem. Guided by that blessed
+star, you can reach the port of peace.”</p>
+
+<p>With hands covering their faces, the people,
+sobbing here and there, sank back into their
+seats.</p>
+
+<p>The preacher continued in a ringing
+voice:</p>
+
+<p>“I demand, therefore, dost thou renounce
+the devil and all his works? Dost thou renounce
+the vain pomp and glory of the world,
+with all covetous desires of the same, and the
+carnal desires of the flesh? Dost thou, in
+very truth, renounce these things, or in thine
+heart of hearts dost thou mean to follow and
+be led by them?”</p>
+
+<p>This time at least a thousand voices gave
+the answer: “I renounce them all.”</p>
+
+<p>“Dost thou believe in the remission of
+sins; the resurrection of the flesh; and everlasting
+life after death? What is your
+answer?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</span></p>
+
+<p>The answer came from all the worshippers:
+“All this I steadfastly believe!”</p>
+
+<p>“Remember,” said the preacher, “Christianity
+was a revelation; not a rule of thumb.
+We must begin at the beginning, and remember
+our Creator in the days of our youth.
+Beware of sectarian quarrels, which keep the
+one Book worth all the others in the world
+from the children of the nation. How shall
+they learn without a teacher?</p>
+
+<p>“And you who are no longer children,
+beware of intellectual pride. If in this life
+only you have hope you are of all men most
+miserable. Do you refuse to believe in everything
+you cannot understand? What stupendous
+folly! What mad presumption!
+Readers, scholars, writers, some of you, wise
+in your own conceits, you say you cannot
+credit anything outside the laws of Nature.
+But you and I and all of us as yet are only
+children crying in the night, and with no
+language but a cry. Only one man ever born
+into this world could understand Nature’s
+laws in all their fulness, and that Man was
+divine. Thus far shalt thou come, and no
+farther! What men call supernatural may
+only be natural law on a plane beyond our
+ken. Nature works slowly and in evolutionary
+cycles. Yes; but Nature also works—so
+far as human eyes can see—in a moment, in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</span>
+the twinkling of an eye—in tidal waves, the
+lightning flash, the earthquake; in volcanic
+outbursts, in the overwhelming avalanche.
+Humble yourselves under the mighty hand of
+God, and let no creature dare to limit the
+immeasurable powers of his Creator.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you who disbelieve want your wives and
+children to be unbelievers? You don’t; but
+you leave it to them to worship in our churches.
+And you yourselves, if not unbelieving, at
+least half hearted, are holding feebly to the
+Faith with one hand, and with the other
+greedily grasping the pleasures of the world.
+Men of England, whither are you drifting?
+You cannot serve God and Mammon. Choose!—make
+your calling and election sure.
+Believe, as that man of towering intellect to
+whom this great church is dedicated, believed;
+as your own great countryman, William Ewart
+Gladstone, believed; as the great Lord Salisbury
+believed, and many another brilliant
+thinker who loved our England and her
+Church. Believe, as he believed who said,
+there are more things in heaven and earth
+than are dreamed of in our philosophy.</p>
+
+<p>“Those who walk in pride, He is able to
+abase. Never suppose that in this little
+world, this ante-chamber of life, where our
+own armchairs outlive us, we shall see otherwise
+than darkly through a glass. Not yet<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</span>
+would be revealed the deep and secret things,
+and what is in the darkness. Patiently must
+we work out our national and our individual
+salvation, and with fear and trembling, lest
+what happened to the idolatrous nations of
+old should happen to ourselves. Wherein is
+London greatly better than Nineveh? Our
+idols are silver and gold, the work of men’s
+hands. Fire from heaven fell upon the
+Cities of the Plain. Is London free from
+what is earthly, sensual, devilish? Repent!
+Repent! lest this great Babylon, like that
+other Babylon, pass into nothingness.</p>
+
+<p>“Never forget! The faith and the works
+of Christianity are indissolubly bound up
+with the strength and greatness of England.
+What God hath joined together let no man
+put asunder.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Before the high altar, archbishop, bishops,
+dean, canons, and choristers, with glittering
+cross raised high, the organ pealing, raised
+the great song of praise. The long-drawn
+aisles and fretted vaults echoed the music
+of a nation’s worship. The people knelt
+in humble adoration as they sang: “We
+acknowledge Thee to be the Lord: All the
+earth doth worship Thee: The Father Everlasting.”</p>
+
+<p>It was a landmark in English history, a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</span>
+national acknowledgment that the Most High
+ruled in the Kingdom of Men, appointing over
+it whomsoever He would.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Twelve hours later the Old Year lay a-dying.
+Within the cathedral all was dark
+and silent. The voice of praise was hushed;
+the worshippers were gone. But the incense
+of adoration might be rising still, far above
+the mighty, shadowed dome, far above the
+night-encircled cross.</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“Have you read in the Talmud of old,<br>
+In the Legends the Rabbins have told<br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Of the limitless realms of the air—</span><br>
+Have you read it—the marvellous story<br>
+Of Sandalphon, the Angel of Glory,<br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Of Sandalphon, the Angel of Prayer?”</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Erect—the Rabbins pictured the glorious
+angel, at the outermost gate of the City
+Celestial:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“And he gathers the prayers as he stands,<br>
+And they change into flowers in his hands,<br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Into garlands of purple and red;</span><br>
+And beneath the great arch of the portal,<br>
+Through the streets of the City Immortal<br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Is wafted the fragrance they shed.”</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>And now outside the cathedral another
+multitude had gathered; saints and sinners,
+revellers and vulgarians. All sorts and conditions
+of men; the drunk and the half-drunk;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</span>
+the senseless bawlers of silly jokes;
+the maudlin bellowers of “Auld Lang Syne.”
+But, after all, these noisy people were but the
+tide-tossed scum and flotsam upon the surface
+of a broad, strong stream. The crowd, like the
+nation, had had a lesson—stern, convincing—and
+it was sound at core.</p>
+
+<p>As the solemn hour drew near, a scarcely-broken
+silence fell upon the multitude. From
+the hearts of many rose unspoken prayers.</p>
+
+<p>High in the winter night the London bells
+were chiming, ringing the Old Year out,
+ringing the New Year in.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Hark to the bells!...</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p><span style="margin-left: 1em;">“The year is dying in the night,</span><br>
+Ring out, wild bells!...<br>
+<br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The year is going, let him go;</span><br>
+Ring out the false, ring in the true.”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Hark, they are chiming still!...</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p><span style="margin-left: 1em;">“Ring out the feud of rich and poor</span><br>
+Ring in redress to all mankind.”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Chime on, chime on!...</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“Ring out old shapes of foul disease;<br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ring out the narrowing lust of gold;</span><br>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ring out the thousand wars of old,</span><br>
+Ring in the thousand years of peace.”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Ring out! Ring in!...</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry"><p><span style="margin-left: 1em;">“Ring out the darkness of the land,</span><br>
+Ring in the Christ that is to be.”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</span></p>
+
+<p>The “faithless coldness of the times,”—was
+that, too, dying with the Old? Were “sweeter
+manners, purer laws” to dawn with the first
+daybreak of the New?</p>
+
+<p>No answer came from earth or heaven.
+The deep and secret things were not revealed;
+none knew what was in the darkness
+of the future.</p>
+
+<p>The ringers paused. Hush! the hour is
+striking.</p>
+
+<p>The last vibration quivers on the air. Deep
+silence falls.</p>
+
+<p>Then once again the bells ring out—clear-toned,
+hopeful, strong:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<p>“<em>There’s a new foot on the floor, my friend,<br>
+And a new face at the door, my friend,<br>
+A new face at the door!</em>”</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="center p1 big1">THE END</p>
+
+<br>
+<hr class="tb">
+<br>
+<br>
+<p class="center"><small>PRINTED BY M<sup>c</sup>LAREN AND CO., LTD., EDINBURGH</small></p>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75548 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
diff --git a/75548-h/images/cover.jpg b/75548-h/images/cover.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..76536f4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/75548-h/images/cover.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/75548-h/images/i_086.jpg b/75548-h/images/i_086.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..294256d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/75548-h/images/i_086.jpg
Binary files differ
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..e210b40
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #75548 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/75548)