<SPAN name="vol_3_chap_15"></SPAN>
<h3>Volume Three--Chapter Fifteen.</h3>
<h4>The Banquet.</h4>
<p>It was with a conscience uneasy that Edwin shut the front door one night a month later,
and issued out into Trafalgar Road. Since the arrival of Nurse Shaw, Darius had not risen
from his bed, and the household had come to accept him as bed-ridden and the nurse as a
permanency. The sick-room was the centre of the house, and Maggie and Edwin and the
servants lived, as it were, in a camp round about it, their days uncomfortably passing in
suspense, in expectation of developments which tarried. “How is he this
morning?” “Much the same.” “How is he this evening?”
“Much the same.” These phrases had grown familiar and tedious. But for three
days Darius had been noticeably worse, and the demeanour of Nurse Shaw had altered, and
she had taken less sleep and less exercise. Osmond Orgreave had even called in person to
inquire after the invalid, doubtless moved by Janet to accomplish this formality, for he
could not have been without news. Janet was constantly in the house, helping Maggie; and
Alicia also sometimes. Since her engagement, Alicia had been striving to prove that she
appreciated the gravity of existence.</p>
<p>Still, despite the change in the patient’s condition, everybody had insisted that
Edwin should go to the annual dinner of the Society for the Prosecution of Felons, to
which he had been duly elected with flattering dispatch. Why should he not go? Why should
he not enjoy himself? What could he do if he stayed at home? Would not the change be good
for him? At most the absence would be for a few hours, and if he could absent himself
during ten hours for business, surely for healthful distraction he might absent himself
during five hours! Maggie grew elder-sisterly at the last moment of decision, and told him
he must go, and that if he didn’t she should be angry. When he asked her ‘What
about <i>her</i> health? What about <i>her</i> needing a change?’ she said curtly
that that had nothing to do with it.</p>
<p>He went. The persuaders were helped by his own desire. And in spite of his conscience,
when he was fairly in the street he drew a sigh of relief, and deliberately turned his
heart towards gaiety. It seemed inexpressibly pathetic that his father was lying behind
those just-lighted blinds above, and would never again breathe the open air, never again
glide along those pavements with his arms fixed and slightly outwards. But Edwin was
determined to listen to reason and not to be morbid.</p>
<p>The streets were lively with the red and the blue colours of politics. The Liberal
member for the Parliamentary borough of Hanbridge, which included Bursley, had died very
suddenly, and the seat was being disputed by the previously defeated Conservative
candidate and a new Labour candidate officially adopted by the Liberal party. The Tories
had sworn not to be beaten again in the defence of the integrity of the Empire. And though
they had the difficult and delicate task of persuading a large industrial constituency
that an industrial representative would not further industrial interests, and that they
alone were actuated by unselfish love for the people, yet they had made enormous progress
in a very brief period, and publicans were jubilant and bars sloppy.</p>
<p>The aspect of the affair that did not quite please the Society for the Prosecution of
Felons was that the polling had been fixed for the day after its annual dinner instead of
the day before. Powerful efforts had been made ‘in the proper quarter’ to get
the date conveniently arranged, but without success; after all, the seat of authority was
Hanbridge and not Bursley. Hanbridge, sadly failing to appreciate the importance of
Bursley’s Felonry, had suggested that the feast might be moved a couple of days. The
Felonry refused. If its dinner clashed with the supreme night of the campaign, so much the
worse for the campaign! Moreover, the excitement of the campaign would at any rate give
zest to the dinner.</p>
<p>Ere he reached Duck Bank, the vivacity of the town, loosed after the day’s labour
to an evening’s orgy of oratory and horseplay and beer, had communicated itself to
Edwin. He was most distinctly aware of pleasure in the sight of the Tory candidate driving
past, at a pace to overtake steam-cars, in a coach-and-four, with amateur postilions and
an orchestra of horns. The spectacle, and the speed of it, somehow thrilled him, and for
an instant made him want to vote Tory. A procession of illuminated carts, bearing white
potters apparently engaged in the handicraft which the Labour candidate had practised in
humbler days, also pleased him, but pleased him less. As he passed up Duck Bank the Labour
candidate himself was raising loud enthusiastic cheers from a railway lorry in Duck
Square, and Edwin’s spirits went even higher, and he elbowed through the laughing,
joking throng with fraternal good-humour, feeling that an election was in itself a grand
thing, apart from its result, and apart from the profit which it brought to
steam-printers.</p>
<p>In the porch of the Town Hall, a man turned from an eagerly-smiling group of hungry
Felons and, straightening his face, asked with quiet concern, “How’s your
father?” Edwin shook his head. “Pretty bad,” he answered. “Is
he?” murmured the other sadly. And Edwin suddenly saw his father again behind the
blind, irrevocably prone.</p>
<hr>
<h4>Two.</h4>
<p>But by the time the speeches were in progress he was uplifted high once more into the
joy of life. He had been welcomed by acquaintances and by strangers with a deferential
warmth that positively startled him. He realised, as never before, that the town esteemed
him as a successful man. His place was not many removes from the chair. Osmond Orgreave
was on his right, and Albert Benbow on his left. He had introduced an impressed Albert to
his friend Mr Orgreave, recently made a Justice of the Peace.</p>
<p>And down the long littered tables stretched the authority and the wealth of the
town-aldermen, councillors, members of the school board, guardians of the poor,
magistrates, solid tradesmen, and solid manufacturers, together with higher officials of
the borough and some members of the learned professions. Here was the oligarchy which,
behind the appearances of democratic government, effectively managed, directed, and
controlled the town. Here was the handful of people who settled between them whether rates
should go up or down, and to whom it did not seriously matter whether rates went up or
down, provided that the interests of the common people were not too sharply set in
antagonism to their own interests. Here were the privileged, who did what they liked on
the condition of not offending each other. Here the populace was honestly and cynically
and openly regarded as a restless child, to be humoured and to be flattered, but also to
be ruled firmly, to be kept in its place, to be ignored when advisable, and to be made to
pay.</p>
<p>For the feast, the court-room had been transformed into a banqueting hall, and the
magistrates’ bench, where habitual criminals were created and families ruined and
order maintained, was hidden in flowers. Osmond Orgreave was dryly facetious about that
bench. He exchanged comments with other magistrates, and they all agreed, with the same
dry facetiousness, that most of the law was futile and some of it mischievous; and they
all said, ‘But what can you do?’ and by their tone indicated that you could do
nothing. According to Osmond Orgreave’s wit, the only real use of a magistrate was
to sign the necessary papers for persons who had lost pawn-tickets. It appeared that such
persons in distress came to Mr Orgreave every day for the august signature. “I had
an old woman come to me this morning at my office,” he said. “I asked her how
it was they were always losing their pawn-tickets. I told her I never lost mine.”
Osmond Orgreave was encircled with laughter. Edwin laughed heartily. It was a good joke.
And even mediocre jokes would convulse the room.</p>
<p>Jos Curtenty, the renowned card, a jolly old gentleman of sixty, was in the chair, and
therefore jollity was assured in advance. Rising to inaugurate the oratorical section of
the night, he took an enormous red flower from a bouquet behind him, and sticking it with
a studiously absent air in his button-hole, said blandly, “Gentlemen, no politics,
please!” The uproarious effect was one of his very best. He knew his audience. He
could have taught Edwin a thing or two. For Edwin in his simplicity was astonished to find
the audience almost all of one colour, frankly and joyously and optimistically Tory. There
were not ten Liberals in the place, and there was not one who was vocal. The cream of the
town, of its brains, its success, its respectability, was assembled together, and the
Liberal party was practically unrepresented. It seemed as if there was no Liberal party.
It seemed impossible that a Labour candidate could achieve anything but complete disaster
at the polls. It seemed incredible that in the past a Liberal candidate had ever been
returned. Edwin began, even in the privacy of his own heart, to be apologetic for his
Liberalism. All these excellent fellows could not be wrong. The moral force of numbers
intimidated him. He suspected that there was, after all, more to be said for Conservatism
than he had hitherto allowed himself to suppose.</p>
<hr>
<h4>Three.</h4>
<p>And the Felons were so good-humoured and kindly and so free-handed, and, with it all,
so boyish! They burst into praise of one another on the slenderest excuse. They ordered
more champagne as carelessly as though champagne were ginger-beer (Edwin was glad that by
an excess of precaution he had brought two pounds in his pocket—the scale of
expenditure was staggering); and they nonchalantly smoked cigars that would have made
Edwin sick. They knew all about cigars and about drinks, and they implied by their
demeanour, though they never said, that a first-class drink and a first-class smoke were
the ‘good things’ of life, the ultimate rewards; the references to women were
sly... Edwin was like a demure cat among a company of splendid curly dogs.</p>
<p>The toasts, every one of them, called forth enthusiasm. Even in the early part of the
evening much good-nature had bubbled out when, at intervals, a slim young bachelor of
fifty, armed with a violent mallet, had rapped authoritatively on the table and cried:
“Mr President wishes to take wine with Mr Vice,” “Mr President wishes to
take wine with the bachelors on the right,” “Mr President wishes to take wine
with the married Felons on the left,” and so on till every sort and condition and
geographical situation had been thus distinguished. But the toasts proper aroused displays
of the most affectionate loving-kindness. Each reference to a Felon was greeted with warm
cheers, and each reference touched the superlative of laudation. Every stroke of humour
was noisily approved, and every exhibition of tender feeling effusively endorsed. And all
the estates of the realm, and all the institutions of the realm and of the town, and all
the services of war and peace, and all the official castes were handsomely and
unreservedly praised, and their health and prosperity pledged with enthusiastic fervour.
The organism of the Empire was pronounced to be essentially perfect. Nobody of importance,
from the Queen’s Majesty to the ‘ministers of the Established Church and other
denominations,’ was omitted from the certificate of supreme excellence and
efficiency. And even when an alderman, proposing the toast of the ‘town and trade of
Bursley,’ mentioned certain disturbing symptoms in the demeanour of the lower
classes, he immediately added his earnest conviction that the ‘heart of the country
beat true,’ and was comforted with grave applause.</p>
<p>Towards the end of the toast-list one of the humorous vocal quartets which were
designed to relieve the seriousness of the programme, was interrupted by the formidable
sound of the governed proletariat beyond the walls of the Town Hall. And Edwin’s
memory, making him feel very old, leapt suddenly back into another generation of male
glee-singers that did not disport humorously and that would not have permitted themselves
to be interrupted by the shouting of populations; and he recalled ‘Loud
Ocean’s Roar,’ and the figure of Florence Simcox flitted in front of him. The
proletariat was cheering somebody. The cheers died down. And in another moment the
Conservative candidate burst into the room, and was followed by two of his friends (the
latter in evening-dress), whom he presented to the President. The ceremonious costume
impressed the President himself, for at this period of ancient history Felons dined in
frock-coats or cutaways; it proved that the wearers were so accustomed to wearing
evening-dress of a night that they put it on by sheer habit and inadvertence even for
electioneering. The candidate only desired to shake hands with a few supporters and to
assure the President that nothing but hard necessity had kept him away from the dinner.
Amid inspiriting bravos and hurrahs he fled, followed by his friends, and it became known
that one of these was a baronet.</p>
<p>After this the vote of thanks to the President scarcely escaped being an anticlimax.
And several men left, including Albert Benbow, who had once or twice glanced at his watch.
“She won’t let you be out after half-past ten, eh, Benbow?” said
jocularly a neighbour. And Albert, laughing at the joke, nevertheless looked awkward. And
the neighbour perceived that he had been perhaps a trifle clumsy. Edwin, since the
mysterious influence in the background was his own sister, had to share Albert’s
confusion. He too would have departed. But Osmond Orgreave absolutely declined to let him
go, and to prevent him from going used the force which good wine gives.</p>
<hr>
<h4>Four.</h4>
<p>The company divided itself into intimate groups, leaving empty white spaces at the
disordered tables. The attendants now served whisky, and more liqueurs and coffee. Those
guests who knew no qualm lighted fresh cigars; a few produced beloved pipes; the others
were content with cigarettes. Some one ordered a window to be opened, and then, when the
fresh night air began to disturb the curtains and scatter the fumes of the banquet, some
one else crept aside and furtively closed it again.</p>
<p>Edwin found himself with Jos Curtenty and Osmond Orgreave and a few others. He felt gay
and enheartened; he felt that there was a great deal of pleasure to be had on earth with
very little trouble. Politics had been broached, and he made a mild joke about the Tory
candidate. And amid the silence that followed it he mistily perceived that the remainder
of the group, instead of becoming more jolly, had grown grave. For them the political
situation was serious. They did not trouble to argue against the Labour candidate. All
their reasoning was based on the assumption, which nobody denied or questioned, that at
any cost the Labour candidate must be defeated. The success of the Labour candidate was
regarded as a calamity. It would jeopardise the entire social order. It would deliver into
the destroying hands of an ignorant, capricious, and unscrupulous rabble all that was best
in English life. It would even mean misery for the rabble itself. The tones grew more
solemn. And Edwin, astonished, saw that beneath the egotism of their success, beneath
their unconscious arrogance due to the habit of authority, there was a profound and
genuine patriotism and sense of duty. And he was abashed. Nevertheless, he had definitely
taken sides, and out of mere self-respect he had gently to remind them of the fact.
Silence would have been cowardly.</p>
<p>“Then what about ‘trusting to the people’?” he murmured,
smiling.</p>
<p>“If trusting to the people means being under the thumb of the British working
man, my boy,” said Osmond Orgreave, “you can scratch me out, for
one.”</p>
<p>Edwin had never heard him speak so colloquially.</p>
<p>“I’ve always found ’em pretty decent,” said Edwin, but
lamely.</p>
<p>Jos Curtenty fixed him with a grim eye.</p>
<p>“How many hands do you employ, Mr Clayhanger?”</p>
<p>“Fourteen,” said Edwin.</p>
<p>“Do you?” exclaimed another voice, evidently surprised and impressed.</p>
<p>Jos Curtenty pulled at his cigar. “I wish I could make as much money as you make
out of fourteen hands!” said he. “Well, I’ve got two hundred of
’em at my place. And I know ’em! I’ve known ’em for forty years
and more. There’s not ten of ’em as I’d trust to do an honest
day’s work, of their own accord... And after the row in ’80, when they’d
agreed to arbitration—fifteen thousand of ’em—did they accept the award,
or didn’t they? Tell me that, if it isn’t troubling ye too much.”</p>
<p>Only in the last phase did the irrepressible humorous card in him assert itself.</p>
<p>Edwin mumbled inarticulately. His mind was less occupied by politics than by the fact
that in the view of all these men he had already finally and definitely taken the place of
his father. But for the inquiries made at intervals during the evening, he might have
supposed that Darius, lying in helpless obscurity up there at Bleak ridge, had been erased
from the memory of the town.</p>
<p>A crony who had not hitherto spoken began to give sarcastic and apparently damning
details of the early record of the Labour candidate. Among other delinquencies the fellow
had condoned the inexcusable rejection of the arbitrators’ award long ago. And then
some one said:</p>
<p>“Hello! Here’s Benbow back again!”</p>
<p>Albert, in overcoat and cap, beckoned to Edwin, who sprang up, pricked into an
exaggerated activity by his impatient conscience.</p>
<p>“It’s nothing particular,” said Albert at the door. “But the
missus has been round to your father’s to-night, and it seems the nurse has knocked
up. She thought I’d perhaps better come along and tell you, in case you hadn’t
gone.”</p>
<p>“Knocked up, has she?” said Edwin. “Well, it’s not to be
wondered at. Nurse or no nurse, she’s got no more notion of looking after herself
than anybody else has. I was just going. It’s only a little after eleven.”</p>
<p>The last thing he heard on quitting the precincts of the banqueting chamber was the
violent sound of the mallet. Its wielder seemed to have developed a slight affection for
the senseless block of wood.</p>
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