Although he was scarcely yet out of his teens, the Duke of Scaw was already
marked out as a personality widely differing from others of his caste and
period. Not in externals; therein he conformed correctly to type. His hair was
faintly reminiscent of Houbigant, and at the other end of him his shoes exhaled
the right soupcon of harness-room; his socks compelled one's attention without
losing one's respect; and his attitude in repose had just that suggestion of
Whistler's mother, so becoming in the really young. It was within that the
trouble lay, if trouble it could be accounted, which marked him apart from his
fellows. The Duke was religious. Not in any of the ordinary senses of the word;
he took small heed of High Church or Evangelical standpoints, he stood outside
of all the movements and missions and cults and crusades of the day, uncaring
and uninterested. Yet in a mystical-practical way of his own, which had served
him unscathed and unshaken through the fickle years of boyhood, he was intensely
and intensively religious. His family were naturally, though unobtrusively,
distressed about it. "I am so afraid it may affect his bridge," said his mother.
The Duke sat in a pennyworth of chair in St. James's Park, listening to the
pessimisms of Belturbet, who reviewed the existing political situation from the
gloomiest of standpoints.
"Where I think you political spade-workers are so silly," said the Duke, "is in
the misdirection of your efforts. You spend thousands of pounds of money, and
Heaven knows how much dynamic force of brain power and personal energy, in
trying to elect or displace this or that man, whereas you could gain your ends
so much more simply by making use of the men as you find them. If they don't
suit your purpose as they are, transform them into something more satisfactory."
"Do you refer to hypnotic suggestion?" asked Belturbet, with the air of one who
is being trifled with.
"Nothing of the sort. Do you understand what I mean by the verb to koepenick?
That is to say, to replace an authority by a spurious imitation that would carry
just as much weight for the moment as the displaced original; the advantage, of
course, being that the koepenick replica would do what you wanted, whereas the
original does what seems best in its own eyes."
"I suppose every public man has a double, if not two or three," said Belturbet;
"but it would be a pretty hard task to koepenick a whole bunch of them and keep
the originals out of the way."
"There have been instances in European history of highly successful
koepenickery," said the Duke dreamily.
"Oh, of course, there have been False Dimitris and Perkin Warbecks, who imposed
on the world for a time," assented Belturbet, "but they personated people who
were dead or safely out of the way. That was a comparatively simple matter. It
would be far easier to pass oneself off as dead Hannibal than as living Haldane,
for instance."
"I was thinking," said the Duke, "of the most famous case of all, the angel who
koepenicked King Robert of Sicily with such brilliant results. Just imagine what
an advantage it would be to have angels deputizing, to use a horrible but
convenient word, for Quinston and Lord Hugo Sizzle, for example. How much
smoother the Parliamentary machine would work than at present!"
"Now you're talking nonsense," said Belturbet; "angels don't exist nowadays, at
least, not in that way, so what is the use of dragging them into a serious
discussion? It's merely silly."
"If you talk to me like that I shall just do it," said the Duke.
"Do what?" asked Belturbet. There were times when his young friend's uncanny
remarks rather frightened him.
"I shall summon angelic forces to take over some of the more troublesome
personalities of our public life, and I shall send the ousted originals into
temporary retirement in suitable animal organisms. It's not every one who would
have the knowledge or the power necessary to bring such a thing off--"
"Oh, stop that inane rubbish," said Belturbet angrily; "it's getting wearisome.
Here's Quinston coming," he added, as there approached along the almost deserted
path the well-known figure of a young Cabinet Minister, whose personality evoked
a curious mixture of public interest and unpopularity.
"Hurry along, my dear man," said the young Duke to the Minister, who had given
him a condescending nod; "your time is running short," he continued in a
provocative strain; "the whole inept crowd of you will shortly be swept away
into the world's wastepaper basket."
"You poor little strawberry-leafed nonentity," said the Minister, checking
himself for a moment in his stride and rolling out his words spasmodically; "who
is going to sweep us away, I should like to know? The voting masses are on our
side, and all the ability and administrative talent is on our side too. No power
of earth or Heaven is going to move us from our place till we choose to quit it.
No power of earth or--"
Belturbet saw, with bulging eyes, a sudden void where a moment earlier had been
a Cabinet Minister; a void emphasized rather than relieved by the presence of a
puffed-out bewildered-looking sparrow, which hopped about for a moment in a
dazed fashion and then fell to a violent cheeping and scolding.
"If we could understand sparrow-language," said the Duke serenely, "I fancy we
should hear something infinitely worse than 'strawberry-leafed nonentity.' "
"But good Heavens, Eugene," said Belturbet hoarsely, "what has become of-- Why,
there he is! How on earth did he get there?" And he pointed with a shaking
finger towards a semblance of the vanished Minister, which approached once more
along the unfrequented path.
"It is Quinston to all outward appearance," he said composedly, "but I fancy you
will find, on closer investigation, that it is an angel under-study of the real
article."
The Angel-Quinston greeted them with a friendly smile.
"How beastly happy you two look sitting there!" he said wistfully.
"I don't suppose you'd care to change places with poor little us," replied the
Duke chaffingly.
"How about poor little me?" said the Angel modestly. "I've got to run about
behind the wheels of popularity, like a spotted dog behind a carriage, getting
all the dust and trying to look as if I was an important part of the machine. I
must seem a perfect fool to you onlookers sometimes."
The Angel-that-had-been-Quinston smiled and passed on his way, pursued across
the breadth of the Horse Guards Parade by a tiresome little sparrow that cheeped
incessantly and furiously at him.
"That's only the beginning," said the Duke complacently; "I've made it operative
with all of them, irrespective of parties."
Belturbet made no coherent reply; he was engaged in feeling his pulse. The Duke
fixed his attention with some interest on a black swan that was swimming with
haughty, stiff-necked aloofness amid the crowd of lesser water-fowl that dotted
the ornamental water. For all its pride of bearing, something was evidently
ruffling and enraging it; in its way it seemed as angry and amazed as the
sparrow had been.
At the same moment a human figure came along the pathway. Belturbet looked up
apprehensively.
"An Angel-Kedzon, if I am not mistaken," said the Duke. "Look, he is talking
affably to a human being. That settles it."
A shabbily dressed lounger had accosted the man who had been Viceroy in the
splendid East, and who still reflected in his mien some of the cold dignity of
the Himalayan snow-peaks.
"Could you tell me, sir, if them white birds is storks or halbatrosses? I had an
argyment--"
The cold dignity thawed at once into genial friendliness.
"Those are pelicans, my dear sir. Are you interested in birds? If you would join
me in a bun and a glass of milk at the stall yonder, I could tell you some
interesting things about Indian birds. Right oh! Now the hill-mynah, for
instance--"
The two men disappeared in the direction of the bun stall, chatting volubly as
they went, and shadowed from the other side of the railed enclosure by a black
swan, whose temper seemed to have reached the limit of inarticulate rage.
Belturbet gazed in an open-mouthed wonder after the retreating couple, then
transferred his attention to the infuriated swan, and finally turned with a look
of scared comprehension at his young friend lolling unconcernedly in his chair.
There was no longer any room to doubt what was happening. The "silly talk" had
been translated into terrifying action.
"I think a prairie oyster on the top of a stiffish brandy-and-soda might save my
reason," said Belturbet weakly, as he limped towards his club.
It was late in the day before he could steady his nerves sufficiently to glance
at the evening papers. The Parliamentary report proved significant reading, and
confirmed the fears that he had been trying to shake off. Mr. Ap Dave, the
Chancellor, whose lively controversial style endeared him to his supporters and
embittered him, politically speaking, to his opponents, had risen in his place
to make an unprovoked apology for having alluded in a recent speech to certain
protesting taxpayers as "skulkers." He had realized on reflection that they were
in all probability perfectly honest in their inability to understand certain
legal technicalities of the new finance laws. The House had scarcely recovered
from this sensation when Lord Hugo Sizzle caused a further flutter of
astonishment by going out of his way to indulge in an outspoken appreciation of
the fairness, loyalty, and straightforwardness not only of the Chancellor, but
of all the members of the Cabinet. A wit had gravely suggested moving the
adjournment of the House in view of the unexpected circumstances that had
arisen.
Belturbet anxiously skimmed over a further item of news printed immediately
below the Parliamentary report: "Wild cat found in an exhausted condition in
Palace Yard."
"Now I wonder which of them--" he mused, and then an appalling idea came to him.
"Supposing he's put them both into the same beast!" He hurriedly ordered another
prairie oyster.
Belturbet was known in his club as a strictly moderate drinker; his consumption
of alcoholic stimulants that day gave rise to considerable comment.
The events of the next few days were piquantly bewildering to the world at
large; to Belturbet, who knew dimly what was happening, the situation was
fraught with recurring alarms. The old saying that in politics it's the
unexpected that always happens received a justification that it had hitherto
somewhat lacked, and the epidemic of startling personal changes of front was not
wholly confined to the realm of actual politics. The eminent chocolate magnate,
Sadbury, whose antipathy to the Turf and everything connected with it was a
matter of general knowledge, had evidently been replaced by an Angel-Sadbury,
who proceeded to electrify the public by blossoming forth as an owner of race-
horses, giving as a reason his matured conviction that the sport was, after all,
one which gave healthy open-air recreation to large numbers of people drawn from
all classes of the community, and incidentally stimulated the important industry
of horse-breeding. His colours, chocolate and cream hoops spangled with pink
stars, promised to become as popular as any on the Turf. At the same time, in
order to give effect to his condemnation of the evils resulting from the spread
of the gambling habit among wage-earning classes, who lived for the most part
from hand to mouth, he suppressed all betting news and tipsters' forecasts in
the popular evening paper that was under his control. His action received
instant recognition and support from the Angel-proprietor of the Evening Views,
the principal rival evening halfpenny paper, who forthwith issued an ukase
decreeing a similar ban on betting news, and in a short while the regular
evening Press was purged of all mention of starting prices and probable winners.
A considerable drop in the circulation of all these papers was the immediate
result, accompanied, of course, by a falling-off in advertisement value, while a
crop of special betting broadsheets sprang up to supply the newly created want.
Under their influence the betting habit became if anything rather more widely
diffused than before. The Duke had possibly overlooked the futility of
koepenicking the leaders of the nation with excellently intentioned angel under-
studies, while leaving the mass of the people in its original condition.
Further sensation and dislocation was caused in the Press world by the sudden
and dramatic rapprochement which took place between the Angel-Editor of the
Scrutator and the Angel-Editor of the Anglian Review, who not only ceased to
criticize and disparage the tone and tendencies of each other's publication, but
agreed to exchange editorships for alternating periods. Here again public
support was not on the side of the angels; constant readers of the Scrutator
complained bitterly of the strong meat which was thrust upon them at fitful
intervals in place of the almost vegetarian diet to which they had become
confidently accustomed; even those who were not mentally averse to strong meat
as a separate course were pardonably annoyed at being supplied with it in the
pages of the Scrutator. To be suddenly confronted with a pungent herring salad
when one had attuned oneself to tea and toast, or to discover a richly truffled
segment of pate de foie dissembled in a bowl of bread and milk, would be an
experience that might upset the equanimity of the most placidly disposed mortal.
An equally vehement outcry arose from the regular subscribers of the Anglian
Review, who protested against being served from time to time with literary fare
which no young person of sixteen could possibly want to devour in secret. To
take infinite precautions, they complained, against the juvenile perusal of such
eminently innocuous literature was like reading the Riot Act on an uninhabited
island. Both reviews suffered a serious falling-off in circulation and
influence. Peace hath its devastations as well as war.
The wives of noted public men formed another element of discomfiture which the
young Duke had almost entirely left out of his calculations. It is sufficiently
embarrassing to keep abreast of the possible wobblings and veerings-round of a
human husband, who, from the strength or weakness of his personal character, may
leap over or slip through the barriers which divide the parties; for this reason
a merciful politician usually marries late in life, when he has definitely made
up his mind on which side he wishes his wife to be socially valuable. But these
trials were as nothing compared to the bewilderment caused by the Angel-husbands
who seemed in some cases to have revolutionized their outlook on life in the
interval between breakfast and dinner, without premonition or preparation of any
kind, and apparently without realizing the least need for subsequent
explanation. The temporary peace which brooded over the Parliamentary situation
was by no means reproduced in the home circles of the leading statesmen and
politicians. It had been frequently and extensively remarked of Mrs. Exe that
she would try the patience of an angel; now the tables were reversed, and she
unwittingly had an opportunity for discovering that the capacity for
exasperating behaviour was not all on one side.
And then, with the introduction of the Navy Estimates, Parliamentary peace
suddenly dissolved. It was the old quarrel between Ministers and the Opposition
as to the adequacy or the reverse of the Government's naval programme. The
Angel-Quinston and the Angel-Hugo-Sizzle contrived to keep the debates free from
personalities and pinpricks, but an enormous sensation was created when the
elegant lackadaisical Halfan Halfour threatened to bring up fifty thousand
stalwarts to wreck the House if the Estimates were not forthwith revised on a
Two-Power basis. It was a memorable scene when he rose in his place, in response
to the scandalized shouts of his opponents, and thundered forth, "Gentlemen, I
glory in the name of Apache."
Belturbet, who had made several fruitless attempts to ring up his young friend
since the fateful morning in St. James's Park, ran him to earth one afternoon at
his club, smooth and spruce and unruffled as ever.
"Tell me, what on earth have you turned Cocksley Coxon into?" Belturbet asked
anxiously, mentioning the name of one of the pillars of unorthodoxy in the
Anglican Church. "I don't fancy he believes in angels, and if he finds an angel
preaching orthodox sermons from his pulpit while he's been turned into a fox-
terrier, he'll develop rabies in less than no time."
"I rather think it was a fox-terrier," said the Duke lazily.
"Look here, Eugene," he whispered hoarsely, having first looked well round to
see that no one was within hearing range, "you've got to stop it. Consols are
jumping up and down like bronchos, and that speech of Halfour's in the House
last night has simply startled everybody out of their wits. And then on the top
if it, Thistlebery--"
"What has he been saying?" asked the Duke quickly.
"Nothing. That's just what's so disturbing. Every one thought it was simply
inevitable that he should come out with a great epoch-making speech at this
juncture, and I've just seen on the tape that he has refused to address any
meetings at present, giving as a reason his opinion that something more than
mere speech-making was wanted."
The young Duke said nothing, but his eyes shone with quiet exultation.
"It's so unlike Thistlebery," continued Belturbet; "at least," he said
suspiciously, "it's unlike the real Thistlebery--"
"The real Thistlebery is flying about somewhere as a vocally industrious
lapwing," said the Duke calmly; "I expect great things of the Angel-
Thistlebery," he added.
At this moment there was a magnetic stampede of members towards the lobby, where
the tape-machines were ticking out some news of more than ordinary import.
"Coup d'etat in the North. Thistlebery seizes Edinburgh Castle. Threatens civil
war unless Government expands naval programme."
In the babel which ensued Belturbet lost sight of his young friend. For the best
part of the afternoon he searched one likely haunt after another, spurred on by
the sensational posters which the evening papers were displaying broadcast over
the West End. General Baden-Baden mobilizes Boy-Scouts. Another coup d'etat
feared. Is Windsor Castle safe?" This was one of the earlier posters, and was
followed by one of even more sinister purport: "Will the Test-match have to be
postponed?" It was this disquietening question which brought home the real
seriousness of the situation to the London public, and made people wonder
whether one might not pay too high a price for the advantages of party
government. Belturbet, questing round in the hope of finding the originator of
the trouble, with a vague idea of being able to induce him to restore matters to
their normal human footing, came across an elderly club acquaintance who dabbled
extensively in some of the more sensitive market securities. He was pale with
indignation, and his pallor deepened as a breathless newsboy dashed past with a
poster inscribed: "Premier's constituency harried by moss-troopers. Halfour
sends encouraging telegram to rioters. Letchworth Garden City threatens
reprisals. Foreigners taking refuge in Embassies and National Liberal Club."
At the bottom of St. James's Street a newspaper motor-cart, which had just come
rapidly along Pall Mall, was surrounded by a knot of eagerly talking people, and
for the first time that afternoon Belturbet heard expressions of relief and
congratulation.
It displayed a placard with the welcome announcement: "Crisis ended. Government
gives way. Important expansion of naval programme."
There seemed to be no immediate necessity for pursuing the quest of the errant
Duke, and Belturbet turned to make his way homeward through St. James's Park.
His mind, attuned to the alarums and excursions of the afternoon, became dimly
aware that some excitement of a detached nature was going on around him. In
spite of the political ferment which reigned in the streets, quite a large crowd
had gathered to watch the unfolding of a tragedy that had taken place on the
shore of the ornamental water. A large black swan, which had recently shown
signs of a savage and dangerous disposition, had suddenly attacked a young
gentleman who was walking by the water's edge, dragged him down under the
surface, and drowned him before any one could come to his assistance. At the
moment when Belturbet arrived on the spot several park-keepers were engaged in
lifting the corpse into a punt. Belturbet stooped to pick up a hat that lay near
the scene of the struggle. It was a smart soft felt hat, faintly reminiscent of
Houbigant.
More than a month elapsed before Belturbet had sufficiently recovered from his
attack of nervous prostration to take an interest once more in what was going on
in the world of politics. The Parliamentary Session was still in full swing, and
a General Election was looming in the near future. He called for a batch of
morning papers and skimmed rapidly through the speeches of the Chancellor,
Quinston, and other Ministerial leaders, as well as those of the principal
Opposition champions, and then sank back in his chair with a sigh of relief.
Evidently the spell had ceased to act after the tragedy which had overtaken its
invoker. There was no trace of angel anywhere.