<p><SPAN name="chap06"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER VI. </h3>
<h3> ON CONSTITUTIONAL GROUNDS. </h3>
<p>The sagacious founders of the Lauranian
Republic had recognised the importance of
preserving and promoting the practice of
social civilities between the public men of the
State, irrespective of party. It had therefore
long been the custom for the President to
give several official entertainments during
the autumn season, to which all the distinguished
characters of either side were invited,
and which it was considered <i>etiquette</i> to
attend. This year feeling ran so high and
relations were so strained that Savrola had
decided not to accept, and had already
formally declined the invitation; he was
therefore not a little surprised when he received a
second card, and still more when he read
Lucile's note which accompanied it.</p>
<p>He saw she had exposed herself to a
rebuff with her eyes open, and wondered why
she had done so. Of course she counted on
her charms. It is hard, if not impossible, to
snub a beautiful woman; they remain
beautiful and the rebuke recoils. He might
indeed have made political capital out of so
pressing an invitation sent at such a critical
time; but he felt she had judged him well,
and knew she was safe at least from that.
This pleased him. He was sorry he could
not go; but he had made up his mind, and
sat down to write and decline. Half way
through the letter, he paused; the thought
occurred to him, that perhaps she might
stand in need of his help. He read the
letter again and fancied, though the words
did not warrant it, that he detected a note
of appeal. And then he began to look for
reasons for changing his mind: the old
established custom; the necessity of showing
his followers that for the present he was in
favour of constitutional agitation only; the
opportunity of displaying his confidence in
the success of his plans; in fact, every
argument, but the true one, was arrayed against
his determination.</p>
<p>Yes, he would go: the party might object,
but he did not care; it was none of their
business, and he was strong enough to face
their displeasure. These reflections were
interrupted by the entrance of Moret, his
face glowing with enthusiasm.</p>
<p>"The Central Division Committee have
nominated you unanimously as their candidate
at the elections. The Dictator's
puppet, Tranta, was howled down. I have
arranged for a public meeting on Thursday
night for you to address. We are on the
crest of the wave!"</p>
<p>"Capital!" said Savrola. "I had expected
to be nominated; our influence in the
capital is supreme. I am glad of an opportunity
of speaking; I have not had a meeting
for some time, and there is a good deal to
talk about just now. What day did you
say you had arranged it for?"</p>
<p>"Thursday in the City-Hall at eight in
the evening," said Moret, who, though
sanguine, was not unbusiness-like.</p>
<p>"Thursday?"</p>
<p>"Yes, you are not engaged anywhere."</p>
<p>"Well," said Savrola speaking slowly and
appearing to weigh his words, "Thursday
is the night of the State Ball."</p>
<p>"I know," said Moret, "that was why I
arranged it so. They will feel they are
dancing on a volcano; only a mile from
the palace will be the people, massed,
agreed, determined. Molara will not enjoy
his evening; Louvet will not go; Sorrento
will be making arrangements to massacre,
if necessary. It will spoil the festivities;
they will all see the writing on the wall."</p>
<p>"Thursday will not do, Moret."</p>
<p>"Not do! Why not?"</p>
<p>"Because I am going to the ball that
night," said Savrola deliberately.</p>
<p>Moret gasped. "What," he cried, "you!"</p>
<p>"Most certainly I shall go. The ancient
customs of the State cannot be set aside
like this. It is my duty to go; we are
fighting for the Constitution, and we are bound
to show our respect for its principles."</p>
<p>"You will accept Molara's hospitality,—enter
his house,—eat his food?"</p>
<p>"No," said Savrola; "I shall eat the food
provided by the State. As you well know,
the expenses of these official functions are
chargeable to the public."</p>
<p>"You will talk to him?"</p>
<p>"Certainly, but he will not enjoy it."</p>
<p>"You will insult him, then?"</p>
<p>"My dear Moret, what should make you
think that? I shall be very civil. That
will frighten him most of all; he will not
know what is impending."</p>
<p>"You cannot go," said Moret decidedly.</p>
<p>"Indeed I am going."</p>
<p>"Think what the Trade-Unions will say."</p>
<p>"I have thought about all these things
and have made up my mind," said Savrola.
"They may say what they like. It will
show them that I do not intend to discard
Constitutional methods for a long time yet.
These people want their enthusiasm cooling
from time to time; they take life too seriously."</p>
<p>"They will accuse you of betraying the cause."</p>
<p>"I have no doubt stupid people will make
characteristic remarks, but I trust none of
my friends will bore me by repeating them
to me."</p>
<p>"What will Strelitz say? It will very likely
make him cross the frontier with his
followers. He thinks we are lukewarm, and has
been growing more impatient every week."</p>
<p>"If he comes before we are ready to help,
the troops will make short work of him and
his rabble. But he has definite orders from
me and will, I hope, obey them."</p>
<p>"You are doing wrong, and you know
it," said Moret harshly and savagely; "to
say nothing of the contemptible humiliation
of cringing to your enemy."</p>
<p>Savrola smiled at his follower's anger.
"Oh," he said, "I shall not cringe. Come,
you have not yet seen me do that," and he
put his hand on his companion's arm. "It
is strange, Louis," he continued, "that we
differ in so many things, and yet, if I were
in difficulty and doubt, there is no one to
whom I would go sooner than to you. We
squabble about trifles, but if it were a great
matter, your judgment should rule me, and
you know it well."</p>
<p>Moret yielded. He always yielded to
Savrola when he talked like that. "Well," he
said, "when will you speak?"</p>
<p>"Whenever you like."</p>
<p>"Friday, then, the sooner the better."</p>
<p>"Very well; do you make the arrangements;
I will find something to say."</p>
<p>"I wish you were not going," said Moret,
reverting to his former objection; "nothing
on earth would induce me to go."</p>
<p>"Moret," said Savrola with strange
earnestness, "we have settled that; there are
other things to talk about. I am troubled
in my mind. There is an undercurrent of
agitation, the force of which I cannot gauge.
I am the acknowledged leader of the party,
but sometimes I realise that there are
agencies at work, which I do not control. That
secret society they call the League is an
unknown factor. I hate that fellow, that
German fellow, Kreutze, Number One as he
styles himself. He is the source of all the
opposition I encounter in the party itself;
the Labour Delegates all seem to be under
his influence. Indeed there are moments
when I think that you and I and Godoy and
all who are striving for the old Constitution,
are but the political waves of a social tide
that is flowing we know not whither.
Perhaps I am wrong, but I keep my eyes open
and their evidence makes me thoughtful.
The future is inscrutable but appalling; you
must stand by me. When I can no longer
restrain and control, I will no longer lead."</p>
<p>"The League is nothing," said Moret,
"but a small anarchist group, who have
thrown in their lot, for the present, with us.
You are the indispensable leader of the party;
you have created the agitation, and it is in
your hands to stimulate or allay it. There
are no unknown forces; you are the motive power."</p>
<p>Savrola walked to the window. "Look
out over the city," he said. "It is a great
mass of buildings; three hundred thousand
people live there. Consider its size; think
of the latent potentialities it contains, and
then look at this small room. Do you think
I am what I am, because I have changed all
those minds, or because I best express their
views? Am I their master or their slave?
Believe me, I have no illusions, nor need you."</p>
<p>His manner impressed his follower. It
almost seemed to him, as he watched the city
and listened to Savrola's earnest words, that
he heard the roar of a multitude, distant,
subdued, but intense as the thunder of the surf
upon a rocky coast when the wind is off the
sea. He did not reply. His highly wrought
temperament exaggerated every mood and
passion; he always lived in the superlative.
He had no counterpoise of healthy cynicism.
Now he was very solemn, and bidding
Savrola good-morning, walked slowly down the
stairs, swayed by the vibrations of a
powerful imagination which had been stimulated
to an extreme.</p>
<p>Savrola lay back in his chair. His first
inclination was to laugh, but he realised that
his mirth would not be entirely at Moret's
expense. He had tried to trick himself as
well, but the parts of that subtle brain were
too intimately connected to have secrets from
one another. Still he would not allow them
to formulate the true reason of his change
of mind. It was not so, he said to himself
several times, and even if it were it was of
no importance and signified nothing. He
took a cigarette from his case, and lighting it,
watched the coiling rings of smoke.</p>
<p>How much of what he had said had he
believed? He thought of Moret's serious
face; that was not entirely produced by his
influence. The young revolutionist had
noticed something too, but had feared, or
failed, to reduce his impressions to words.
There was an undercurrent then; there were
many dangers ahead. Well, he did not care;
he was confident in his own powers. As the
difficulties arose, he would meet them; when
dangers threatened he would overcome them.
Horse, foot, and artillery, he was a man, a
complete entity. Under any circumstances,
in any situation he knew himself a factor to
be reckoned with; whatever the game, he
would play it to his amusement, if not to his
advantage.</p>
<p>The smoke of his cigarette curled round
his head. Life,—how unreal, how barren,
and yet, how fascinating! Fools, calling
themselves philosophers, had tried to bring
home the bitter fact to men. His philosophy
lent itself to a pious fraud—taught him to
minimise the importance of his pains, and to
magnify that of his pleasures; made life
delightful and death incidental. Zeno had
shown him how to face adversity, and
Epicurus how to enjoy pleasure. He basked in
the smiles of fortune, and shrugged his
shoulders at the frowns of fate. His existence,
or series of existences, had been agreeable.
All that he remembered had been
worth living. If there was a future state, if
the game was to begin again elsewhere, he
would take a hand. He hoped for immortality,
but he contemplated annihilation with
composure. Meanwhile the business of
living was an interesting problem. His
speech,—he had made many and knew that nothing
good can be obtained without effort. These
impromptu feats of oratory existed only in
the minds of the listeners; the flowers of
rhetoric were hothouse plants.</p>
<p>What was there to say? Successive
cigarettes had been mechanically consumed.
Amid the smoke he saw a peroration, which
would cut deep into the hearts of a crowd;
a high thought, a fine simile, expressed in
that correct diction which is comprehensible
even to the most illiterate, and appeals
to the most simple; something to lift their
minds from the material cares of life and
to awake sentiment. His ideas began to
take the form of words, to group
themselves into sentences; he murmured to
himself; the rhythm of his own language swayed
him; instinctively he alliterated. Ideas
succeeded one another, as a stream flows swiftly
by and the light changes on its waters. He
seized a piece of paper and began hurriedly
to pencil notes. That was a point; could
not tautology accentuate it? He scribbled
down a rough sentence, scratched it out,
polished it, and wrote it in again. The
sound would please their ears, the sense
improve and stimulate their minds. What
a game it was! His brain contained the
cards he had to play, the world the stakes
he played for.</p>
<p>As he worked, the hours passed away.
The housekeeper entering with his luncheon
found him silent and busy; she had seen
him thus before and did not venture to
interrupt him. The untasted food grew cold
upon the table, as the hands of the clock
moved slowly round marking the measured
tread of time. Presently he rose, and,
completely under the influence of his own
thoughts and language, began to pace the
room with short rapid strides, speaking to
himself in a low voice and with great
emphasis. Suddenly he stopped, and with a
strange violence his hand descended on the
table. It was the end of the speech.</p>
<p>The noise recalled him to the commonplaces
of life. He was hungry and tired,
and with a laugh at his own enthusiasm sat
down at the table and began his neglected
luncheon.</p>
<p>A dozen sheets of note paper, covered
with phrases, facts, and figures, were the
result of the morning's work. They lay
pinned together on the table, harmless
insignificant pieces of paper; and yet Antonio
Molara, President of the Republic of
Laurania, would have feared a bombshell less.
Nor would he have been either a fool or
a coward.</p>
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