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<h3>CHAPTER XXV</h3>
<h3>Mr. Turnbull's Carriage Stops the Way<br/> </h3>
<p>When Phineas got back to London, a day after his time, he found
that there was already a great political commotion in the
metropolis. He had known that on Easter Monday and Tuesday there
was to be a gathering of the people in favour of the ballot, and
that on Wednesday there was to be a procession with a petition
which Mr. Turnbull was to receive from the hands of the people on
Primrose Hill. It had been at first intended that Mr. Turnbull
should receive the petition at the door of Westminster Hall on the
Thursday; but he had been requested by the Home Secretary to put
aside this intention, and he had complied with the request made to
him. Mr. Mildmay was to move the second reading of his Reform Bill
on that day, the preliminary steps having been taken without any
special notice; but the bill of course included no clause in
favour of the ballot; and this petition was the consequence of
that omission. Mr. Turnbull had predicted evil consequences, both
in the House and out of it, and was now doing the best in his
power to bring about the verification of his own prophecies.
Phineas, who reached his lodgings late on the Thursday, found that
the town had been in a state of ferment for three days, that on
the Wednesday forty or fifty thousand persons had been collected
at Primrose Hill, and that the police had been forced to
interfere,—and that worse was expected on the Friday. Though Mr.
Turnbull had yielded to the Government as to receiving the
petition, the crowd was resolved that they would see the petition
carried into the House. It was argued that the Government would
have done better to have refrained from interfering as to the
previously intended arrangement. It would have been easier to deal
with a procession than with a mob of men gathered together without
any semblance of form. Mr. Mildmay had been asked to postpone the
second reading of his bill; but the request had come from his
opponents, and he would not yield to it. He said that it would be
a bad expedient to close Parliament from fear of the people.
Phineas found at the Reform Club on the Thursday evening that
members of the House of Commons were requested to enter on the
Friday by the door usually used by the peers, and to make their
way thence to their own House. He found that his landlord, Mr.
Bunce, had been out with the people during the entire three
days;—and Mrs. Bunce, with a flood of tears, begged Phineas to
interfere as to the Friday. "He's that headstrong that he'll be
took if anybody's took; and they say that all Westminster is to be
lined with soldiers." Phineas on the Friday morning did have some
conversation with his landlord; but his first work on reaching
London was to see Lord Chiltern's friends, and tell them of the
accident.</p>
<p>The potted peas Committee sat on the Thursday, and he ought to
have been there. His absence, however, was unavoidable, as he
could not have left his friend's bed-side so soon after the
accident. On the Wednesday he had written to Lady Laura, and on
the Thursday evening he went first to Portman Square and then to
Grosvenor Place.</p>
<p>"Of course he will kill himself some day," said the Earl,—with a
tear, however, in each eye.</p>
<p>"I hope not, my lord. He is a magnificent horseman; but accidents
of course will happen."</p>
<p>"How many of his bones are there not broken, I wonder?" said the
father. "It is useless to talk, of course. You think he is not in
danger?"</p>
<p>"Certainly not."</p>
<p>"I should fear that he would be so liable to inflammation."</p>
<p>"The doctor says that there is none. He has been taking an
enormous deal of exercise," said Phineas, "and drinking no wine.
All that is in his favour."</p>
<p>"What does he drink, then?" asked the Earl.</p>
<p>"Nothing. I rather think, my lord, you are mistaken a little about
his habits. I don't fancy he ever drinks unless he is provoked to
do it."</p>
<p>"Provoked! Could anything provoke you to make a brute of yourself?
But I am glad that he is in no danger. If you hear of him, let me
know how he goes on."</p>
<p>Lady Laura was of course full of concern. "I wanted to go down to
him," she said, "but Mr. Kennedy thought that there was no
occasion."</p>
<p>"Nor is there any;—I mean in regard to danger. He is very
solitary there."</p>
<p>"You must go to him again. Mr. Kennedy will not let me go unless I
can say that there is danger. He seems to think that because
Oswald has had accidents before, it is nothing. Of course I cannot
leave London without his leave."</p>
<p>"Your brother makes very little of it, you know."</p>
<p>"Ah;—he would make little of anything. But if I were ill he would
be in London by the first train."</p>
<p>"Kennedy would let you go if you asked him."</p>
<p>"But he advises me not to go. He says my duty does not require it,
unless Oswald be in danger. Don't you know, Mr. Finn, how hard it
is for a wife not to take advice when it is so given?" This she
said, within six months of her marriage, to the man who had been
her husband's rival!</p>
<p>Phineas asked her whether Violet had heard the news, and learned
that she was still ignorant of it. "I got your letter only this
morning, and I have not seen her," said Lady Laura. "Indeed, I am
so angry with her that I hardly wish to see her." Thursday was
Lady Baldock's night, and Phineas went from Grosvenor Place to
Berkeley Square. There he saw Violet, and found that she had heard
of the accident.</p>
<p>"I am so glad to see you, Mr. Finn," she said. "Do tell me;—is it
much?"</p>
<p>"Much in inconvenience, certainly; but not much in danger."</p>
<p>"I think Laura was so unkind not to send me word! I only heard it
just now. Did you see it?"</p>
<p>"I was close to him, and helped him up. The horse jumped into a
river with him, and crushed him up against the bank."</p>
<p>"How lucky that you should be there! Had you jumped the river?"</p>
<p>"Yes;—almost unintentionally, for my horse was rushing so that I
could not hold him. Chiltern was riding a brute that no one should
have ridden. No one will again."</p>
<p>"Did he destroy himself?"</p>
<p>"He had to be killed afterwards. He broke his shoulder."</p>
<p>"How very lucky that you should have been near him,—and, again,
how lucky that you should not have been hurt yourself!"</p>
<p>"It was not likely that we should both come to grief at the same
fence."</p>
<p>"But it might have been you. And you think there is no danger?"</p>
<p>"None whatever,—if I may believe the doctor. His hunting is done
for this year, and he will be very desolate. I shall go down again
to him in a few days, and try to bring him up to town."</p>
<p>"Do;—do. If he is laid up in his father's house, his father must
see him." Phineas had not looked at the matter in that light; but
he thought that Miss Effingham might probably be right.</p>
<p>Early on the next morning he saw Mr. Bunce, and used all his
eloquence to keep that respectable member of society at home;—but
in vain. "What good do you expect to do, Mr. Bunce?" he said, with
perhaps some little tone of authority in his voice.</p>
<p>"To carry my point," said Bunce.</p>
<p>"And what is your point?"</p>
<p>"My present point is the ballot, as a part of the Government
measure."</p>
<p>"And you expect to carry that by going out into the streets with
all the roughs of London, and putting yourself in direct
opposition to the authority of the magistrates? Do you really
believe that the ballot will become the law of the land any sooner
because you incur this danger and inconvenience?"</p>
<p>"Look here, Mr. Finn; I don't believe the sea will become any
fuller because the Piddle runs into it out of the Dorsetshire
fields; but I do believe that the waters from all the countries is
what makes the ocean. I shall help; and it's my duty to help."</p>
<p>"It's your duty as a respectable citizen, with a wife and family,
to stay at home."</p>
<p>"If everybody with a wife and family was to say so, there'd be
none there but roughs, and then where should we be? What would the
Government people say to us then? If every man with a wife and
family was to show hisself in the streets to-night, we should have
the ballot before Parliament breaks up, and if none of 'em don't
do it, we shall never have the ballot. Ain't that so?" Phineas,
who intended to be honest, was not prepared to dispute the
assertion on the spur of the moment. "If that's so," said Bunce,
triumphantly, "a man's duty's clear enough. He ought to go, though
he'd two wives and families." And he went.</p>
<p>The petition was to be presented at six o'clock, but the crowd,
who collected to see it carried into Westminster Hall, began to
form itself by noon. It was said afterwards that many of the
houses in the neighbourhood of Palace Yard and the Bridge were
filled with soldiers; but if so, the men did not show themselves.
In the course of the evening three or four companies of the Guards
in St. James's Park did show themselves, and had some rough work
to do, for many of the people took themselves away from
Westminster by that route. The police, who were very numerous in
Palace Yard, had a hard time of it all the afternoon, and it was
said afterwards that it would have been much better to have
allowed the petition to have been brought up by the procession on
Wednesday. A procession, let it be who it will that proceeds, has
in it, of its own nature something of order. But now there was no
order. The petition, which was said to fill fifteen cabs,—though
the absolute sheets of signatures were carried into the House by
four men,—was being dragged about half the day and it certainly
would have been impossible for a member to have made his way into
the House through Westminster Hall between the hours of four and
six. To effect an entrance at all they were obliged to go round at
the back of the Abbey, as all the spaces round St. Margaret's
Church and Canning's monument were filled with the crowd.
Parliament Street was quite impassable at five o clock, and there
was no traffic across the bridge from that hour till after eight.
As the evening went on, the mob extended itself to Downing Street
and the front of the Treasury Chambers, and before the night was
over all the hoardings round the new Government offices had been
pulled down. The windows also of certain obnoxious members of
Parliament were broken, when those obnoxious members lived within
reach. One gentleman who unfortunately held a house in Richmond
Terrace, and who was said to have said that the ballot was the
resort of cowards, fared very badly;—for his windows were not
only broken, but his furniture and mirrors were destroyed by the
stones that were thrown. Mr. Mildmay, I say, was much blamed. But
after all, it may be a doubt whether the procession on Wednesday
might not have ended worse. Mr. Turnbull was heard to say
afterwards that the number of people collected would have been
much greater.</p>
<p>Mr. Mildmay moved the second reading of his bill, and made his
speech. He made his speech with the knowledge that the Houses of
Parliament were surrounded by a mob, and I think that the fact
added to its efficacy. It certainly gave him an appropriate
opportunity for a display which was not difficult. His voice
faltered on two or three occasions, and faltered through real
feeling; but this sort of feeling, though it be real, is at the
command of orators on certain occasions, and does them yeoman's
service. Mr. Mildmay was an old man, nearly worn out in the
service of his country, who was known to have been true and
honest, and to have loved his country well,—though there were of
course they who declared that his hand had been too weak for
power, and that his services had been naught;—and on this evening
his virtues were remembered. Once when his voice failed him the
whole House got up and cheered. The nature of a Whig Prime
Minister's speech on such an occasion will be understood by most
of my readers without further indication. The bill itself had been
read before, and it was understood that no objection would be made
to the extent of the changes provided in it by the liberal side of
the House. The opposition coming from liberal members was to be
confined to the subject of the ballot. And even as yet it was not
known whether Mr. Turnbull and his followers would vote against
the second reading, or whether they would take what was given, and
declare their intention of obtaining the remainder on a separate
motion. The opposition of a large party of Conservatives was a
matter of certainty; but to this party Mr. Mildmay did not
conceive himself bound to offer so large an amount of argument as
he would have given had there been at the moment no crowd in
Palace Yard. And he probably felt that that crowd would assist him
with his old Tory enemies. When, in the last words of his speech,
he declared that under no circumstances would he disfigure the
close of his political career by voting for the ballot,—not
though the people, on whose behalf he had been fighting battles
all his life, should be there in any number to coerce him,—there
came another round of applause from the opposition benches, and
Mr. Daubeny began to fear that some young horses in his team might
get loose from their traces. With great dignity Mr. Daubeny had
kept aloof from Mr. Turnbull and from Mr. Turnbull's tactics; but
he was not the less alive to the fact that Mr. Turnbull, with his
mob and his big petition, might be of considerable assistance to
him in this present duel between himself and Mr. Mildmay. I think
Mr. Daubeny was in the habit of looking at these contests as duels
between himself and the leader on the other side of the House,—in
which assistance from any quarter might be accepted if offered.</p>
<p>Mr. Mildmay's speech did not occupy much over an hour, and at
half-past seven Mr. Turnbull got up to reply. It was presumed that
he would do so, and not a member left his place, though that time
of the day is an interesting time, and though Mr. Turnbull was
accustomed to be long. There soon came to be but little ground for
doubting what would be the nature of Mr. Turnbull's vote on the
second reading. "How may I dare," said he, "to accept so small a
measure of reform as this with such a message from the country as
is now conveyed to me through the presence of fifty thousand of my
countrymen, who are at this moment demanding their measure of
reform just beyond the frail walls of this chamber? The right
honourable gentleman has told us that he will never be intimidated
by a concourse of people. I do not know that there was any need
that he should speak of intimidation. No one has accused the right
honourable gentleman of political cowardice. But, as he has so
said, I will follow in his footsteps. Neither will I be
intimidated by the large majority which this House presented the
other night against the wishes of the people. I will support no
great measure of reform which does not include the ballot among
its clauses." And so Mr. Turnbull threw down the gauntlet.</p>
<p>Mr. Turnbull spoke for two hours, and then the debate was
adjourned till the Monday. The adjournment was moved by an
independent member, who, as was known, would support the
Government, and at once received Mr. Turnbull's assent. There was
no great hurry with the bill, and it was felt that it would be
well to let the ferment subside. Enough had been done for glory
when Mr. Mildmay moved the second reading, and quite enough in the
way of debate,—with such an audience almost within hearing,—when
Mr. Turnbull's speech had been made. Then the House emptied itself
at once. The elderly, cautious members made their exit through the
peers' door. The younger men got out into the crowd through
Westminster Hall, and were pushed about among the roughs for an
hour or so. Phineas, who made his way through the hall with
Laurence Fitzgibbon, found Mr. Turnbull's carriage waiting at the
entrance with a dozen policemen round it.</p>
<p>"I hope he won't get home to dinner before midnight," said
Phineas.</p>
<p>"He understands all about it," said Laurence. "He had a good meal
at three, before he left home, and you'd find sandwiches and
sherry in plenty if you were to search his carriage. He knows how
to remedy the costs of mob popularity."</p>
<p>At that time poor Bunce was being hustled about in the crowd in
the vicinity of Mr. Turnbull's carriage. Phineas and Fitzgibbon
made their way out, and by degrees worked a passage for themselves
into Parliament Street. Mr. Turnbull had been somewhat behind them
in coming down the hall, and had not been without a sense of
enjoyment in the ovation which was being given to him. There can
be no doubt that he was wrong in what he was doing. That affair of
the carriage was altogether wrong, and did Mr. Turnbull much harm
for many a day afterwards. When he got outside the door, where
were the twelve policemen guarding his carriage, a great number of
his admirers endeavoured to shake hands with him. Among them was
the devoted Bunce. But the policemen seemed to think that Mr.
Turnbull was to be guarded, even from the affection of his
friends, and were as careful that he should be ushered into his
carriage untouched, as though he had been the favourite object of
political aversion for the moment. Mr. Turnbull himself, when he
began to perceive that men were crowding close upon the gates, and
to hear the noise, and to feel, as it were, the breath of the mob,
stepped on quickly into his carriage. He said a word or two in a
loud voice. "Thank you, my friends. I trust you may obtain all
your just demands." But he did not pause to speak. Indeed, he
could hardly have done so, as the policemen were manifestly in a
hurry. The carriage was got away at a snail's pace;—but there
remained in the spot where the carriage had stood the makings of a
very pretty street row.</p>
<p>Bunce had striven hard to shake hands with his hero,—Bunce and
some other reformers as ardent and as decent as himself. The
police were very determinate that there should be no such
interruption to their programme for getting Mr. Turnbull off the
scene. Mr. Bunce, who had his own ideas as to his right to shake
hands with any gentleman at Westminster Hall who might choose to
shake hands with him, became uneasy under the impediments that
were placed in his way, and expressed himself warmly as to his
civil rights. Now a London policeman in a political row is, I
believe, the most forbearing of men. So long as he meets with no
special political opposition, ordinary ill-usage does not even put
him out of temper. He is paid for rough work among roughs, and
takes his rubs gallantly. But he feels himself to be an instrument
for the moment of despotic power as opposed to civil rights, and
he won't stand what he calls "jaw." Trip up a policeman in such a
scramble, and he will take it in good spirit; but mention the
words "Habeas Corpus," and he'll lock you up if he can. As a rule,
his instincts are right; for the man who talks about "Habeas
Corpus" in a political crowd will generally do more harm than can
be effected by the tripping up of any constable. But these
instincts may be the means of individual injustice. I think they
were so when Mr. Bunce was arrested and kept a fast prisoner. His
wife had shown her knowledge of his character when she declared
that he'd be "took" if any one was "took."</p>
<p>Bunce was taken into custody with some three or four others like
himself,—decent men, who meant no harm, but who thought that as
men they were bound to show their political opinions, perhaps at
the expense of a little martyrdom,—and was carried into a
temporary stronghold, which had been provided for the necessities
of the police, under the clock-tower.</p>
<p>"Keep me, at your peril!" said Bunce, indignantly.</p>
<p>"We means it," said the sergeant who had him in custody.</p>
<p>"I've done no ha'porth to break the law," said Bunce.</p>
<p>"You was breaking the law when you was upsetting my men, as I saw
you," said the sergeant.</p>
<p>"I've upset nobody," said Bunce.</p>
<p>"Very well," rejoined the sergeant; "you can say it all before the
magistrate, to-morrow."</p>
<p>"And am I to be locked up all night?" said Bunce.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid you will," replied the sergeant.</p>
<p>Bunce, who was not by nature a very talkative man, said no more;
but he swore in his heart that there should be vengeance. Between
eleven and twelve he was taken to the regular police-station, and
from thence he was enabled to send word to his wife.</p>
<p>"Bunce has been taken," said she, with something of the tragic
queen, and something also of the injured wife in the tone of her
voice, as soon as Phineas let himself in with the latchkey between
twelve and one. And then, mingled with, and at last dominant over,
those severer tones, came the voice of the loving woman whose
beloved one was in trouble. "I knew how it'd be, Mr. Finn. Didn't
I? And what must we do? I don't suppose he'd had a bit to eat from
the moment he went out;—and as for a drop of beer, he never
thinks of it, except what I puts down for him at his meals. Them
nasty police always take the best. That's why I was so afeard."</p>
<p>Phineas said all that he could to comfort her, and promised to go
to the police-office early in the morning and look after Bunce. No
serious evil would, he thought, probably come of it; but still
Bunce had been wrong to go.</p>
<p>"But you might have been took yourself," argued Mrs. Bunce, "just
as well as he." Then Phineas explained that he had gone forth in
the execution of a public duty. "You might have been took, all the
same," said Mrs. Bunce, "for I'm sure Bunce didn't do nothing
amiss."</p>
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