<h2><SPAN name="page265"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>HYACINTH</h2>
<p>“The new fashion of introducing the candidate’s
children into an election contest is a pretty one,” said
Mrs. Panstreppon; “it takes away something from the
acerbity of party warfare, and it makes an interesting experience
for children to look back on in after years. Still, if you
will listen to my advice, Matilda, you will not take Hyacinth
with you down to Luffbridge on election day.”</p>
<p>“Not take Hyacinth!” exclaimed his mother;
“but why not? Jutterly is bringing his three
children, and they are going to drive a pair of Nubian donkeys
about the town, to emphasise the fact that their father has been
appointed Colonial Secretary. We are making the demand for
a strong Navy a special feature in <i>our</i> campaign, and it
will be particularly appropriate to have Hyacinth dressed in his
sailor suit. He’ll look heavenly.”</p>
<p>“The question is, not how he’ll look, but how
he’ll behave. He’s a delightful child, of
course, but there is a strain of unbridled pugnacity in him that
breaks out at times in a really alarming fashion. You may
have forgotten the affair of the little Gaffin children; I
haven’t.”</p>
<p>“I was in India at the time, and I’ve only a vague
recollection of what happened; he was very naughty, I
know.”</p>
<p>“He was in his goat-carriage, and met the Gaffins in
their perambulator, and he drove the goat full tilt at them and
sent the perambulator spinning. Little Jacky Gaffin was
pinned down under the wreckage, and while the nurse had her hands
full with the goat Hyacinth was laying into Jacky’s legs
with his belt like a small fury.”</p>
<p>“I’m not defending him,” said Matilda,
“but they must have done something to annoy him.”</p>
<p>“Nothing intentionally, but some one had unfortunately
told him that they were half French—their mother was a
Duboc, you know—and he had been having a history lesson
that morning, and had just heard of the final loss of Calais by
the English, and was furious about it. He said he’d
teach the little toads to go snatching towns from us, but we
didn’t know at the time that he was referring to the
Gaffins. I told him afterwards that all bad feeling between
the two nations had died out long ago, and that anyhow the
Gaffins were only half French, and he said that it was only the
French half of Jacky that he had been hitting; the rest had been
buried under the perambulator. If the loss of Calais
unloosed such fury in him, I tremble to think what the possible
loss of the election might entail.”</p>
<p>“All that happened when he was eight; he’s older
now and knows better.”</p>
<p>“Children with Hyacinth’s temperament don’t
know better as they grow older; they merely know more.”</p>
<p>“Nonsense. He will enjoy the fun of the election,
and in any case he’ll be tired out by the time the poll is
declared, and the new sailor suit that I’ve had made for
him is just in the right shade of blue for our election colours,
and it will exactly match the blue of his eyes. He will be
a perfectly charming note of colour.”</p>
<p>“There is such a thing as letting one’s
æsthetic sense override one’s moral sense,”
said Mrs. Panstreppon. “I believe you would have
condoned the South Sea Bubble and the persecution of the
Albigenses if they had been carried out in effective colour
schemes. However, if anything unfortunate should happen
down at Luffbridge, don’t say it wasn’t foreseen by
one member of the family.”</p>
<p>The election was keenly but decorously contested. The
newly-appointed Colonial Secretary was personally popular, while
the Government to which he adhered was distinctly unpopular, and
there was some expectancy that the majority of four hundred,
obtained at the last election, would be altogether wiped
out. Both sides were hopeful, but neither could feel
confident. The children were a great success; the little
Jutterlys drove their chubby donkeys solemnly up and down the
main streets, displaying posters which advocated the claims of
their father on the broad general grounds that he was their
father, while as for Hyacinth, his conduct might have served as a
model for any seraph-child that had strayed unwittingly on to the
scene of an electoral contest. Of his own accord, and under
the delighted eyes of half a dozen camera operators, he had gone
up to the Jutterly children and presented them with a packet of
butterscotch; “we needn’t be enemies because
we’re wearing the opposite colours,” he said with
engaging friendliness, and the occupants of the donkey-cart
accepted his offering with polite solemnity. The grown-up
members of both political camps were delighted at the
incident—with the exception of Mrs. Panstreppon, who
shuddered.</p>
<p>“Never was Clytemnestra’s kiss sweeter than on the
night she slew me,” she quoted, but made the quotation to
herself.</p>
<p>The last hour of the poll was a period of unremitting labour
for both parties; it was generally estimated that not more than a
dozen votes separated the candidates, and every effort was made
to bring up obstinately wavering electors. It was with a
feeling of relaxation and relief that every one heard the clocks
strike the hour for the close of the poll. Exclamations
broke out from the tired workers, and corks flew out from
bottles.</p>
<p>“Well, if we haven’t won; we’ve done our
level best.” “It has been a clean straight
fight, with no rancour.” “The children were
quite a charming feature, weren’t they?”</p>
<p>The children? It suddenly occurred to everybody that
they had seen nothing of the children for the last hour.
What had become of the three little Jutterlys and their
donkey-cart, and, for the matter of that, what had become of
Hyacinth. Hurried, anxious embassies went backwards and
forwards between the respective party headquarters and the
various committee-rooms, but there was blank ignorance everywhere
as to the whereabouts of the children. Every one had been
too busy in the closing moments of the poll to bestow a thought
on them. Then there came a telephone call at the Unionist
Women’s Committee-rooms, and the voice of Hyacinth was
heard demanding when the poll would be declared.</p>
<p>“Where are you, and where are the Jutterly
children?” asked his mother.</p>
<p>“I’ve just finished having high-tea at a
pastry-cook’s,” came the answer, “and they let
me telephone. I’ve had a poached egg and a sausage
roll and four meringues.”</p>
<p>“You’ll be ill. Are the little Jutterlys
with you?”</p>
<p>“Rather not. They’re in a
pigstye.”</p>
<p>“A pigstye? Why? What pigstye?”</p>
<p>“Near the Crawleigh Road. I met them driving about
a back road, and told them they were to have tea with me, and put
their donkeys in a yard that I knew of. Then I took them to
see an old sow that had got ten little pigs. I got the sow
into the outer stye by giving her bits of bread, while the
Jutterlys went in to look at the litter, then I bolted the door
and left them there.”</p>
<p>“You wicked boy, do you mean to say you’ve left
those poor children there alone in the pigstye?”</p>
<p>“They’re not alone, they’ve got ten little
pigs in with them; they’re jolly well crowded. They
were pretty mad at being shut in, but not half as mad as the old
sow is at being shut out from her young ones. If she gets
in while they’re there she’ll bite them into
mincemeat. I can get them out by letting a short ladder
down through the top window, and that’s what I’m
going to do <i>if we win</i>. If their blighted father gets
in, I’m just going to open the door for the sow, and let
her do what she dashed well likes to them. That’s why
I want to know when the poll will be declared.”</p>
<p>Here the narrator rang off. A wild stampede and a
frantic sending-off of messengers took place at the other end of
the telephone. Nearly all the workers on either side had
disappeared to their various club-rooms and public-house bars to
await the declaration of the poll, but enough local information
could be secured to determine the scene of Hyacinth’s
exploit. Mr. John Ball had a stable yard down near the
Crawleigh Road, up a short lane, and his sow was known to have a
litter of ten young ones. Thither went in headlong haste
both the candidates, Hyacinth’s mother, his aunt (Mrs.
Panstreppon), and two or three hurriedly-summoned friends.
The two Nubian donkeys, contentedly munching at bundles of hay,
met their gaze as they entered the yard. The hoarse savage
grunting of an enraged animal and the shriller note of thirteen
young voices, three of them human, guided them to the stye, in
the outer yard of which a huge Yorkshire sow kept up a ceaseless
raging patrol before a closed door. Reclining on the broad
ledge of an open window, from which point of vantage he could
reach down and shoot the bolt of the door, was Hyacinth, his blue
sailor-suit somewhat the worse of wear, and his angel smile
exchanged for a look of demoniacal determination.</p>
<p>“If any of you come a step nearer,” he shouted,
“the sow will be inside in half a jiffy.”</p>
<p>A storm of threatening, arguing, entreating expostulation
broke from the baffled rescue party, but it made no more
impression on Hyacinth than the squealing tempest that raged
within the stye.</p>
<p>“If Jutterly heads the poll I’m going to let the
sow in. I’ll teach the blighters to win elections
from us.”</p>
<p>“He means it,” said Mrs. Panstreppon; “I
feared the worst when I saw that butterscotch
incident.”</p>
<p>“It’s all right, my little man,” said
Jutterly, with the duplicity to which even a Colonial Secretary
can sometimes stoop, “your father has been elected by a
large majority.”</p>
<p>“Liar!” retorted Hyacinth, with the directness of
speech that is not merely excusable, but almost obligatory, in
the political profession; “the votes aren’t counted
yet. You won’t gammon me as to the result,
either. A boy that I’ve palled with is going to fire
a gun when the poll is declared; two shots if we’ve won,
one shot if we haven’t.”</p>
<p>The situation began to look critical. “Drug the
sow,” whispered Hyacinth’s father.</p>
<p>Some one went off in the motor to the nearest chemist’s
shop and returned presently with two large pieces of bread,
liberally dosed with narcotic. The bread was thrown deftly
and unostentatiously into the stye, but Hyacinth saw through the
manœuvre. He set up a piercing imitation of a small
pig in Purgatory, and the infuriated mother ramped round and
round the stye; the pieces of bread were trampled into slush.</p>
<p>At any moment now the poll might be declared. Jutterly
flew back to the Town Hall, where the votes were being
counted. His agent met him with a smile of hope.</p>
<p>“You’re eleven ahead at present, and only about
eighty more to be counted; you’re just going to squeak
through.”</p>
<p>“I mustn’t squeak through,” exclaimed
Jutterly, hoarsely. “You must object to every
doubtful vote on our side that can possibly be disallowed.
I must <i>not</i> have the majority.”</p>
<p>Then was seen the unprecedented sight of a party agent
challenging the votes on his own side with a captiousness that
his opponents would have hesitated to display. One or two
votes that would have certainly passed muster under ordinary
circumstances were disallowed, but even so Jutterly was six ahead
with only thirty more to be counted.</p>
<p>To the watchers by the stye the moments seemed
intolerable. As a last resort some one had been sent for a
gun with which to shoot the sow, though Hyacinth would probably
draw the bolt the moment such a weapon was brought into the
yard. Nearly all the men were away from their homes,
however, on election night, and the messenger had evidently gone
far afield in his search. It must be a matter of minutes
now to the declaration of the poll.</p>
<p>A sudden roar of shouting and cheering was heard from the
direction of the Town Hall. Hyacinth’s father
clutched a pitchfork and prepared to dash into the stye in the
forlorn hope of being in time.</p>
<p>A shot rang out in the evening air. Hyacinth stooped
down from his perch and put his finger on the bolt. The sow
pressed furiously against the door.</p>
<p>“Bang,” came another shot.</p>
<p>Hyacinth wriggled back, and sent a short ladder down through
the window of the inner stye.</p>
<p>“Now you can come up, you unclean little
blighters,” he sang out; “my daddy’s got in,
not yours. Hurry up, I can’t keep the sow waiting
much longer. And don’t you jolly well come butting
into any election again where I’m on the job.”</p>
<p>In the reaction that set in after the deliverance furious
recrimination were indulged in by the lately opposed candidates,
their women folk, agents, and party helpers. A recount was
demanded, but failed to establish the fact that the Colonial
Secretary had obtained a majority. Altogether the election
left a legacy of soreness behind it, apart from any that was
experienced by Hyacinth in person.</p>
<p>“It is the last time I shall let him go to an
election,” exclaimed his mother.</p>
<p>“There I think you are going to extremes,” said
Mrs. Panstreppon; “if there should be a general election in
Mexico I think you might safely let him go there, but I doubt
whether our English politics are suited to the rough and tumble
of an angel-child.”</p>
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