<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"></SPAN></p>
<h2> TEN. The Great Election in Missinaba County </h2>
<p>Don't ask me what election it was, whether Dominion or Provincial or
Imperial or Universal, for I scarcely know.</p>
<p>It must, of course, have been going on in other parts of the country as
well, but I saw it all from Missinaba County which, with the town of
Mariposa, was, of course, the storm centre and focus point of the whole
turmoil.</p>
<p>I only know that it was a huge election and that on it turned issues of
the most tremendous importance, such as whether or not Mariposa should
become part of the United States, and whether the flag that had waved over
the school house at Tecumseh Township for ten centuries should be trampled
under the hoof of an alien invader, and whether Britons should be slaves,
and whether Canadians should be Britons, and whether the farming class
would prove themselves Canadians, and tremendous questions of that kind.</p>
<p>And there was such a roar and a tumult to it, and such a waving of flags
and beating of drums and flaring of torchlights that such parts of the
election as may have been going on elsewhere than in Missinaba county must
have been quite unimportant and didn't really matter.</p>
<p>Now that it is all over, we can look back at it without heat or passion.
We can see,—it's plain enough now,—that in the great election
Canada saved the British Empire, and that Missinaba saved Canada and that
the vote of the Third Concession of Tecumseh Township saved Missinaba
County, and that those of us who carried the third concession,—well,
there's no need to push it further. We prefer to be modest about it. If we
still speak of it, it is only quietly and simply and not more than three
or four times a day.</p>
<p>But you can't understand the election at all, and the conventions and the
campaigns and the nominations and the balloting, unless you first
appreciate the peculiar complexion of politics in Mariposa.</p>
<p>Let me begin at the beginning. Everybody in Mariposa is either a Liberal
or a Conservative or else is both. Some of the people are or have been
Liberals or Conservatives all their lives and are called dyed-in-the-wool
Grits or old-time Tories and things of that sort. These people get from
long training such a swift penetrating insight into national issues that
they can decide the most complicated question in four seconds: in fact,
just as soon as they grab the city papers out of the morning mail, they
know the whole solution of any problem you can put to them. There are
other people whose aim it is to be broad-minded and judicious and who vote
Liberal or Conservative according to their judgment of the questions of
the day. If their judgment of these questions tells them that there is
something in it for them in voting Liberal, then they do so. But if not,
they refuse to be the slaves of a party or the henchmen of any political
leader. So that anybody looking for henches has got to keep away from
them.</p>
<p>But the one thing that nobody is allowed to do in Mariposa is to have no
politics. Of course there are always some people whose circumstances
compel them to say that they have no politics. But that is easily
understood. Take the case of Trelawney, the postmaster. Long ago he was a
letter carrier under the old Mackenzie Government, and later he was a
letter sorter under the old Macdonald Government, and after that a letter
stamper under the old Tupper Government, and so on. Trelawney always says
that he has no politics, but the truth is that he has too many.</p>
<p>So, too, with the clergy in Mariposa. They have no politics—absolutely
none. Yet Dean Drone round election time always announces as his text such
a verse as: "Lo! is there not one righteous man in Israel?" or: "What ho!
is it not time for a change?" And that is a signal for all the Liberal
business men to get up and leave their pews.</p>
<p>Similarly over at the Presbyterian Church, the minister says that his
sacred calling will not allow him to take part in politics and that his
sacred calling prevents him from breathing even a word of harshness
against his fellow man, but that when it comes to the elevation of the
ungodly into high places in the commonwealth (this means, of course, the
nomination of the Conservative candidate) then he's not going to allow his
sacred calling to prevent him from saying just what he thinks of it. And
by that time, having pretty well cleared the church of Conservatives, he
proceeds to show from the scriptures that the ancient Hebrews were
Liberals to a man, except those who were drowned in the flood or who
perished, more or less deservedly, in the desert.</p>
<p>There are, I say, some people who are allowed to claim to have no
politics,—the office holders, and the clergy and the school teachers
and the hotel keepers. But beyond them, anybody in Mariposa who says that
he has no politics is looked upon as crooked, and people wonder what it is
that he is "out after."</p>
<p>In fact, the whole town and county is a hive of politics, and people who
have only witnessed gatherings such as the House of Commons at Westminster
and the Senate at Washington and never seen a Conservative Convention at
Tecumseh Corners or a Liberal Rally at the Concession school house, don't
know what politics means.</p>
<p>So you may imagine the excitement in Mariposa when it became known that
King George had dissolved the parliament of Canada and had sent out a writ
or command for Missinaba County to elect for him some other person than
John Henry Bagshaw because he no longer had confidence in him.</p>
<p>The king, of course, is very well known, very favourably known, in
Mariposa. Everybody remembers how he visited the town on his great tour in
Canada, and stopped off at the Mariposa station. Although he was only a
prince at the time, there was quite a big crowd down at the depot and
everybody felt what a shame it was that the prince had no time to see more
of Mariposa, because he would get such a false idea of it, seeing only the
station and the lumber yards. Still, they all came to the station and all
the Liberals and Conservatives mixed together perfectly freely and stood
side by side without any distinction, so that the prince should not
observe any party differences among them. And he didn't,—you could
see that he didn't. They read him an address all about the tranquillity
and loyalty of the Empire, and they purposely left out any reference to
the trouble over the town wharf or the big row there had been about the
location of the new post-office. There was a general decent feeling that
it wouldn't be fair to disturb the prince with these things: later on, as
king, he would, of course, <i>have</i> to know all about them, but
meanwhile it was better to leave him with the idea that his empire was
tranquil.</p>
<p>So they deliberately couched the address in terms that were just as
reassuring as possible and the prince was simply delighted with it. I am
certain that he slept pretty soundly after hearing that address. Why, you
could see it taking effect even on his aides-de-camp and the people round
him, so imagine how the prince must have felt!</p>
<p>I think in Mariposa they understand kings perfectly. Every time that a
king or a prince comes, they try to make him see the bright side of
everything and let him think that they're all united. Judge Pepperleigh
walked up and down arm in arm with Dr. Gallagher, the worst Grit in the
town, just to make the prince feel fine.</p>
<p>So when they got the news that the king had lost confidence in John Henry
Bagshaw, the sitting member, they never questioned it a bit. Lost
confidence? All right, they'd elect him another right away. They'd elect
him half a dozen if he needed them. They don't mind; they'd elect the
whole town man after man rather than have the king worried about it.</p>
<p>In any case, all the Conservatives had been wondering for years how the
king and the governor-general and men like that had tolerated such a man
as Bagshaw so long.</p>
<p>Missinaba County, I say, is a regular hive of politics, and not the
miserable, crooked, money-ridden politics of the cities, but the straight,
real old-fashioned thing that is an honour to the country side. Any man
who would offer to take a bribe or sell his convictions for money, would
be an object of scorn. I don't say they wouldn't take money,—they
would, of course, why not?—but if they did they would take it in a
straight fearless way and say nothing about it. They might,—it's
only human,—accept a job or a contract from the government, but if
they did, rest assured it would be in a broad national spirit and not for
the sake of the work itself. No, sir. Not for a minute.</p>
<p>Any man who wants to get the votes of the Missinaba farmers and the
Mariposa business men has got to persuade them that he's the right man. If
he can do that,—if he can persuade any one of them that he is the
right man and that all the rest know it, then they'll vote for him.</p>
<p>The division, I repeat, between the Liberals and the Conservatives, is
intense. Yet you might live for a long while in the town, between
elections, and never know it. It is only when you get to understand the
people that you begin to see that there is a cross division running
through them that nothing can ever remove. You gradually become aware of
fine subtle distinctions that miss your observation at first. Outwardly,
they are all friendly enough. For instance, Joe Milligan the dentist is a
Conservative, and has been for six years, and yet he shares the same
boat-house with young Dr. Gallagher, who is a Liberal, and they even
bought a motor boat between them. Pete Glover and Alf McNichol were in
partnership in the hardware and paint store, though they belonged on
different sides.</p>
<p>But just as soon as elections drew near, the differences in politics
became perfectly apparent. Liberals and Conservatives drew away from one
another. Joe Milligan used the motor boat one Saturday and Dr. Gallagher
the next, and Pete Glover sold hardware on one side of the store and Alf
McNichol sold paint on the other. You soon realized too that one of the
newspapers was Conservative and the other was Liberal, and that there was
a Liberal drug store and a Conservative drug store, and so on. Similarly
round election time, the Mariposa House was the Liberal Hotel, and the
Continental Conservative, though Mr. Smith's place, where they always put
on a couple of extra bar tenders, was what you might call
Independent-Liberal-Conservative, with a dash of Imperialism thrown in.
Mr. Gingham, the undertaker, was, as a natural effect of his calling, an
advanced Liberal, but at election time he always engaged a special
assistant for embalming Conservative customers.</p>
<p>So now, I think, you understand something of the general political
surroundings of the great election in Missinaba County.</p>
<p>John Henry Bagshaw was the sitting member, the Liberal member, for
Missinaba County.</p>
<p>The Liberals called him the old war horse, and the old battle-axe, and the
old charger and the old champion and all sorts of things of that kind. The
Conservatives called him the old jackass and the old army mule and the old
booze fighter and the old grafter and the old scoundrel.</p>
<p>John Henry Bagshaw was, I suppose, one of the greatest political forces in
the world. He had flowing white hair crowned with a fedora hat, and a
smooth statesmanlike face which it cost the country twenty-five cents a
day to shave.</p>
<p>Altogether the Dominion of Canada had spent over two thousand dollars in
shaving that face during the twenty years that Bagshaw had represented
Missinaba County. But the result had been well worth it.</p>
<p>Bagshaw wore a long political overcoat that it cost the country twenty
cents a day to brush, and boots that cost the Dominion fifteen cents every
morning to shine.</p>
<p>But it was money well spent.</p>
<p>Bagshaw of Mariposa was one of the most representative men of the age, and
it's no wonder that he had been returned for the county for five elections
running, leaving the Conservatives nowhere. Just think how representative
he was. He owned two hundred acres out on the Third Concession and kept
two men working on it all the time to prove that he was a practical
farmer. They sent in fat hogs to the Missinaba County Agricultural
Exposition and the World's Fair every autumn, and Bagshaw himself stood
beside the pig pens with the judges, and wore a pair of corduroy breeches
and chewed a straw all afternoon. After that if any farmer thought that he
was not properly represented in Parliament, it showed that he was an ass.</p>
<p>Bagshaw owned a half share in the harness business and a quarter share in
the tannery and that made him a business man. He paid for a pew in the
Presbyterian Church and that represented religion in Parliament. He
attended college for two sessions thirty years ago, and that represented
education and kept him abreast with modern science, if not ahead of it. He
kept a little account in one bank and a big account in the other, so that
he was a rich man or a poor man at the same time.</p>
<p>Add to that that John Henry Bagshaw was perhaps the finest orator in
Mariposa. That, of course, is saying a great deal. There are speakers
there, lots of them that can talk two or three hours at a stretch, but the
old war horse could beat them all. They say that when John Henry Bagshaw
got well started, say after a couple of hours of talk, he could speak as
Pericles or Demosthenes or Cicero never could have spoken.</p>
<p>You could tell Bagshaw a hundred yards off as a member of the House of
Commons. He wore a pepper-and-salt suit to show that he came from a rural
constituency, and he wore a broad gold watch-chain with dangling seals to
show that he also represents a town. You could see from his quiet low
collar and white tie that his electorate were a Godfearing, religious
people, while the horseshoe pin that he wore showed that his electorate
were not without sporting instincts and knew a horse from a jackass.</p>
<p>Most of the time, John Henry Bagshaw had to be at Ottawa (though he
preferred the quiet of his farm and always left it, as he said, with a
sigh). If he was not in Ottawa, he was in Washington, and of course at any
time they might need him in London, so that it was no wonder that he could
only be in Mariposa about two months of the year.</p>
<p>That is why everybody knew, when Bagshaw got off the afternoon train one
day early in the spring, that there must be something very important
coming and that the rumours about a new election must be perfectly true.</p>
<p>Everything that he did showed this. He gave the baggage man twenty-five
cents to take the check off his trunk, the 'bus driver fifty cents to
drive him up to the Main Street, and he went into Callahan's tobacco store
and bought two ten-cent cigars and took them across the street and gave
them to Mallory Tompkins of the Times-Herald as a present from the Prime
Minister.</p>
<p>All that afternoon, Bagshaw went up and down the Main Street of Mariposa,
and you could see, if you knew the signs of it, that there was politics in
the air. He bought nails and putty and glass in the hardware store, and
harness in the harness shop, and drugs in the drug store and toys in the
toy shop, and all the things like that that are needed for a big campaign.</p>
<p>Then when he had done all this he went over with McGinnis the Liberal
organizer and Mallory Tompkins, the Times-Herald man, and Gingham (the
great Independent-Liberal undertaker) to the back parlour in the Mariposa
House.</p>
<p>You could tell from the way John Henry Bagshaw closed the door before he
sat down that he was in a pretty serious frame of mind.</p>
<p>"Gentlemen," he said, "the election is a certainty. We're going to have a
big fight on our hands and we've got to get ready for it."</p>
<p>"Is it going to be on the tariff?" asked Tompkins.</p>
<p>"Yes, gentlemen, I'm afraid it is. The whole thing is going to turn on the
tariff question. I wish it were otherwise. I think it madness, but they're
bent on it, and we got to fight it on that line. Why they can't fight it
merely on the question of graft," continued the old war horse, rising from
his seat and walking up and down, "Heaven only knows. I warned them. I
appealed to them. I said, fight the thing on graft and we can win easy.
Take this constituency,—why not have fought the thing out on whether
I spent too much money on the town wharf or the post-office? What better
issues could a man want? Let them claim that I am crooked and let me claim
that I'm not. Surely that was good enough without dragging in the tariff.
But now, gentlemen, tell me about things in the constituency. Is there any
talk yet of who is to run?"</p>
<p>Mallory Tompkins lighted up the second of his Prime Minister's cigars and
then answered for the group:</p>
<p>"Everybody says that Edward Drone is going to run."</p>
<p>"Ah!" said the old war horse, and there was joy upon his face, "is he? At
last! That's good, that's good—now what platform will he run on?"</p>
<p>"Independent."</p>
<p>"Excellent," said Mr. Bagshaw. "Independent, that's fine. On a programme
of what?"</p>
<p>"Just simple honesty and public morality."</p>
<p>"Come now," said the member, "that's splendid: that will help enormously.
Honesty and public morality! The very thing! If Drone runs and makes a
good showing, we win for a certainty. Tompkins, you must lose no time over
this. Can't you manage to get some articles in the other papers hinting
that at the last election we bribed all the voters in the county, and that
we gave out enough contracts to simply pervert the whole constituency.
Imply that we poured the public money into this county in bucketsful and
that we are bound to do it again. Let Drone have plenty of material of
this sort and he'll draw off every honest unbiased vote in the
Conservative party.</p>
<p>"My only fear is," continued the old war horse, losing some of his
animation, "that Drone won't run after all. He's said it so often before
and never has. He hasn't got the money. But we must see to that. Gingham,
you know his brother well; you must work it so that we pay Drone's deposit
and his campaign expenses. But how like Drone it is to come out at this
time!"</p>
<p>It was indeed very like Edward Drone to attempt so misguided a thing as to
come out an Independent candidate in Missinaba County on a platform of
public honesty. It was just the sort of thing that anyone in Mariposa
would expect from him.</p>
<p>Edward Drone was the Rural Dean's younger brother,—young Mr. Drone,
they used to call him, years ago, to distinguish him from the rector. He
was a somewhat weaker copy of his elder brother, with a simple,
inefficient face and kind blue eyes. Edward Drone was, and always had
been, a failure. In training he had been, once upon a time, an engineer
and built dams that broke and bridges that fell down and wharves that
floated away in the spring floods. He had been a manufacturer and failed,
had been a contractor and failed, and now lived a meagre life as a sort of
surveyor or land expert on goodness knows what.</p>
<p>In his political ideas Edward Drone was and, as everybody in Mariposa
knew, always had been crazy. He used to come up to the autumn exercises at
the high school and make speeches about the ancient Romans and Titus
Manlius and Quintus Curtius at the same time when John Henry Bagshaw used
to make a speech about the Maple Leaf and ask for an extra half holiday.
Drone used to tell the boys about the lessons to be learned from the lives
of the truly great, and Bagshaw used to talk to them about the lessons
learned from the lives of the extremely rich. Drone used to say that his
heart filled whenever he thought of the splendid patriotism of the ancient
Romans, and Bagshaw said that whenever he looked out over this wide
Dominion his heart overflowed.</p>
<p>Even the youngest boy in the school could tell that Drone was foolish. Not
even the school teachers would have voted for him.</p>
<p>"What about the Conservatives?" asked Bagshaw presently; "is there any
talk yet as to who they'll bring out?" Gingham and Mallory Tompkins looked
at one another. They were almost afraid to speak.</p>
<p>"Hadn't you heard?" said Gingham; "they've got their man already."</p>
<p>"Who is it?" said Bagshaw quickly. "They're going to put up Josh Smith."</p>
<p>"Great Heaven!" said Bagshaw, jumping to his feet; "Smith! the hotel
keeper."</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," said Mr. Gingham, "that's the man."</p>
<p>Do you remember, in history, how Napoleon turned pale when he heard that
the Duke of Wellington was to lead the allies in Belgium? Do you remember
how when Themistocles heard that Aristogiton was to lead the Spartans, he
jumped into the sea? Possibly you don't, but it may help you to form some
idea of what John Henry Bagshaw felt when he heard that the Conservatives
had selected Josh Smith, proprietor of Smith's Hotel.</p>
<p>You remember Smith. You've seen him there on the steps of his hotel,—two
hundred and eighty pounds in his stockinged feet. You've seen him selling
liquor after hours through sheer public spirit, and you recall how he
saved the lives of hundreds of people on the day when the steamer sank,
and how he saved the town from being destroyed the night when the Church
of England Church burnt down. You know that hotel of his, too, half way
down the street, Smith's Northern Health Resort, though already they were
beginning to call it Smith's British Arms.</p>
<p>So you can imagine that Bagshaw came as near to turning pale as a man in
federal politics can.</p>
<p>"I never knew Smith was a Conservative," he said faintly; "he always
subscribed to our fund."</p>
<p>"He is now," said Mr. Gingham ominously; "he says the idea of this
reciprocity business cuts him to the heart."</p>
<p>"The infernal liar!" said Mr. Bagshaw.</p>
<p>There was silence for a few moments. Then Bagshaw spoke again.</p>
<p>"Will Smith have anything else in his platform besides the trade
question?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Mr. Gingham gloomily, "he will."</p>
<p>"What is it?"</p>
<p>"Temperance and total prohibition!"</p>
<p>John Henry Bagshaw sank back in his chair as if struck with a club. There
let me leave him for a chapter.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />