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<h2> CHAPTER XXV </h2>
<p>Miss Milburn pressed her contention that the suspicion of his desire would
be bad for her lover’s political prospects till she made him feel his
honest passion almost a form of treachery to his party. She also hinted
that, for the time being, it did not make particularly for her own comfort
in the family circle, Mr Milburn having grown by this time quite bitter.
She herself drew the excitement of intrigue from the situation, which she
hid behind her pretty, pale, decorous features, and never betrayed by the
least of her graceful gestures. She told herself that she had never been
so right about anything as about that affair of the ring—imagine,
for an instant, if she had been wearing it now! She would have banished
Lorne altogether if she could. As he insisted on an occasional meeting,
she clothed it in mystery, appointing it for an evening when her mother
and aunt were out, and answering his ring at the door herself. To her
family she remarked with detachment that you saw hardly anything of Lorne
Murchison now, he was so taken up with his old election; and to Hesketh
she confided her fear that politics did interfere with friendship,
whatever he might say. He said a good deal, he cited lofty examples; but
the only agreement he could get from her was the hope that the
estrangement wouldn’t be permanent.</p>
<p>“But you are going to say something, Lorne,” she insisted, talking of the
Jordanville meeting.</p>
<p>“Not much,” he told her. “It’s the safest district we’ve got, and they
adore old Farquharson. He’ll do most of the talking—they wouldn’t
thank me for taking up the time. Farquharson is going to tell them I’m a
first-class man, and they couldn’t do better, and I’ve practically only to
show my face and tell them I think so too.”</p>
<p>“But Mr Hesketh will speak?”</p>
<p>“Yes; we thought it would be a good chance of testing him. He may interest
them, and he can’t do much harm, anyhow.”</p>
<p>“Lorne, I should simply love to go. It’s your first meeting.”</p>
<p>“I’ll take you.”</p>
<p>“Mr Murchison, HAVE you taken leave of your senses? Really, you are—”</p>
<p>“All right, I’ll send you. Farquharson and I are going out to the Crow
place to supper, but Hesketh is driving straight there. He’ll be delighted
to bring you—who wouldn’t?”</p>
<p>“I shouldn’t be allowed to go with him alone,” said Dora, thoughtfully.</p>
<p>“Well, no. I don’t know that I’d approve of that myself,” laughed the
confident young man. “Hesketh is driving Mrs Farquharson, and the cutter
will easily hold three. Isn’t it lucky there’s sleighing?”</p>
<p>“Mother couldn’t object to that,” said Dora. “Lorne, I always said you
were the dearest fellow! I’ll wear a thick veil, and not a soul will know
me.”</p>
<p>“Not a soul would in any case,” said Lorne. “It’ll be a Jordanville crowd,
you know—nobody from Elgin.”</p>
<p>“We don’t visit much in Jordanville, certainly. Well, Mother mayn’t
object. She has a great idea of Mrs Farquharson, because she has attended
eleven Drawing-Rooms at Ottawa, and one of them was given—held, I
should say—by the Princess Louise.”</p>
<p>“I won’t promise you eleven,” said Lorne, “but there seems to be a pretty
fair chance of one or two.”</p>
<p>At this she had a tale for him which charmed his ears. “I didn’t know
where to look,” she said. “Aunt Emmie, you know, has a very bad trick of
coming into my room without knocking. Well, in she walked last night, and
found me before the glass PRACTISING MY CURTSEY! I could have killed her.
Pretended she thought I was out.”</p>
<p>“Dora, would you like ME to promise something?” he asked, with a
mischievous look.</p>
<p>“Of course, I would. I don’t care how much YOU promise. What?”</p>
<p>But already he repented of his daring, and sat beside her suddenly
conscious and abashed. Nor could any teasing prevail to draw from him what
had been on his audacious lips to say.</p>
<p>Social precedents are easily established in the country. The accident that
sent the first Liberal canvasser for Jordanville votes to the Crow place
for his supper would be hard to discover now; the fact remains that he has
been going there ever since. It made a greater occasion than Mrs Crow
would ever have dreamed of acknowledging. She saw to it that they had a
good meal of victuals, and affected indifference to the rest; they must
say their say, she supposed. If the occasion had one satisfaction which
she came nearer to confessing than another, it was that the two or three
substantial neighbours who usually came to meet the politicians left their
wives at home, and that she herself, to avoid giving any offence on this
score, never sat down with the men. Quite enough to do it was, she would
explain later, for her and the hired girl to wait on them and to clear up
after them. She and Bella had their bite afterward when the men had
hitched up, and when they could exchange comments of proud congratulation
upon the inroads on the johnny-cake or the pies. So there was no ill
feeling, and Mrs Crow, having vindicated her dignity by shaking hands with
the guests of the evening in the parlour, solaced it further by
maintaining the masculine state of the occasion, in spite of protests or
entreaties. To sit down opposite Mr Crow would have made it ordinary
“company”; she passed the plates and turned it into a function.</p>
<p>She was waiting for them on the parlour sofa when Crow brought them in out
of the nipping early dark of December, Elmore staying behind in the yard
with the horses. She sat on the sofa in her best black dress with the bead
trimming on the neck and sleeves, a good deal pushed up and wrinkled
across the bosom, which had done all that would ever be required of it
when it gave Elmore and Abe their start in life. Her wiry hands were
crossed in her lap in the moment of waiting: you could tell by the look of
them that they were not often crossed there. They were strenuous hands;
the whole worn figure was strenuous, and the narrow set mouth, and the
eyes which had looked after so many matters for so long, and even the way
the hair was drawn back into a knot in a fashion that would have given a
phrenologist his opportunity. It was a different Mrs Crow from the one
that sat in the midst of her poultry and garden-stuff in the Elgin market
square; but it was even more the same Mrs Crow, the sum of a certain
measure of opportunity and service, an imperial figure in her bead
trimming, if the truth were known.</p>
<p>The room was heated to express the geniality that was harder to put in
words. The window was shut; there was a smell of varnish and whatever was
inside the “suite” of which Mrs Crow occupied the sofa. Enlarged
photographs—very much enlarged—of Mr and Mrs Crow hung upon
the walls, and one other of a young girl done in that process which tells
you at once that she was an only daughter and that she is dead. There had
been other bereavements; they were written upon the silver coffin-plates
which, framed and glazed, also contributed to the decoration of the room;
but you would have had to look close, and you might feel a delicacy.</p>
<p>Mrs Crow made her greetings with precision, and sat down again upon the
sofa for a few minutes’ conversation.</p>
<p>“I’m telling them,” said her husband, “that the sleighin’s just held out
for them. If it ‘ud been tomorrow they’d have had to come on wheels.
Pretty soft travellin’ as it was, some places, I guess.”</p>
<p>“Snow’s come early this year,” said Mrs Crow. “It was an open fall, too.”</p>
<p>“It has certainly,” Mr Farquharson backed her up. “About as early as I
remember it. I don’t know how much you got out here; we had a good foot in
Elgin.”</p>
<p>“‘Bout the same, ‘bout the same,” Mr Crow deliberated, “but it’s been
layin’ light all along over Clayfield way—ain’t had a pair of
runners out, them folks.”</p>
<p>“Makes a more cheerful winter, Mrs Crow, don’t you think, when it comes
early?” remarked Lorne. “Or would you rather not get it till after
Christmas?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know as it matters much, out here in the country. We don’t get a
great many folks passin’, best of times. An’ it’s more of a job to take
care of the stock.”</p>
<p>“That’s so,” Mr Crow told them. “Chores come heavier when there’s snow on
the ground, a great sight, especially if there’s drifts.”</p>
<p>And for an instant, with his knotted hands hanging between his knees he
pondered this unvarying aspect of his yearly experience. They all pondered
it, sympathetic.</p>
<p>“Well, now, Mr Farquharson,” Mrs Crow turned to him. “An’ how reely BE ye?
We’ve heard better, an’ worse, an’ middlin’—there’s ben such
contradictory reports.”</p>
<p>“Oh, very well, Mrs Crow. Never better. I’m going to give a lot more
trouble yet. I can’t do it in politics, that’s the worst of it. But here’s
the man that’s going to do it for me. Here’s the man!”</p>
<p>The Crows looked at the pretendant, as in duty bound, but not any longer
than they could help.</p>
<p>“Why, I guess you were at school with Elmore?” said Crow, as if the idea
had just struck him.</p>
<p>“He may be right peart, for all that,” said Elmore’s mother, and Elmore,
himself, entering with two leading Liberals of Jordanville, effected a
diversion, under cover of which Mrs Crow escaped, to superintend, with
Bella, the last touches to the supper in the kitchen.</p>
<p>Politics in and about Jordanville were accepted as a purely masculine
interest. If you had asked Mrs Crow to take a hand in them she would have
thanked you with sarcasm, and said she thought she had about enough to do
as it was. The school-house, on the night of such a meeting as this, was
recognized to be no place for ladies. It was a man’s affair, left to the
men, and the appearance there of the other sex would have been greeted
with remark and levity. Elgin, as we know, was more sophisticated in every
way, plenty of ladies attended political meetings in the Drill Shed, where
seats as likely as not would be reserved for them; plenty of handkerchiefs
waved there for the encouragement of the hero of the evening. They did not
kiss him; British phlegm, so far, had stayed that demonstration at the
southern border.</p>
<p>The ladies of Elgin, however, drew the line somewhere, drew it at country
meetings. Mrs Farquharson went with her husband because, since his state
of health had handed him over to her more than ever, she saw it a part of
her wifely duty. His retirement had been decided upon for the spring, but
she would be on hand to retire him at any earlier moment should the
necessity arise. “We’ll be the only female creatures there, my dear,” she
had said to Dora on the way out, and Hesketh had praised them both for
public spirit. He didn’t know, he said, how anybody would get elected in
England without the ladies, especially in the villages, where the people
were obliged to listen respectfully.</p>
<p>“I wonder you can afford to throw away all the influence you get in the
rural districts with soup and blankets,” he said; “but this is an
extravagant country in many ways.” Dora kept silence, not being sure of
the social prestige bound up with the distribution of soup and blankets,
but Mrs Farquharson set him sharply right.</p>
<p>“I guess we’d rather do without our influence if it came to that,” she
said.</p>
<p>Hesketh listened with deference to her account of the rural district which
had as yet produced no Ladies Bountiful, made mental notes of several
points, and placed her privately as a woman of more than ordinary
intelligence. I have always claimed for Hesketh an open mind; he was
filling it now, to its capacity, with care and satisfaction.</p>
<p>The schoolroom was full and waiting when they arrived. Jordanville had
been well billed, and the posters held, in addition to the conspicuous
names of Farquharson and Murchison, that of Mr Alfred Hesketh (of London,
England). There was a “send-off” to give to the retiring member, there was
a critical inspection to make of the new candidate, and there was Mr
Alfred Hesketh, of London, England, and whatever he might signify. They
were big, quiet, expectant fellows, with less sophistication and polemic
than their American counterparts, less stolid aggressiveness than their
parallels in England, if they have parallels there. They stood, indeed,
for the development between the two; they came of the new country but not
of the new light; they were democrats who had never thrown off the monarch—what
harm did he do there overseas? They had the air of being prosperous, but
not prosperous enough for theories and doctrines. The Liberal vote of
South Fox had yet to be split by Socialism or Labour. Life was a decent
rough business that required all their attention; there was time enough
for sleep but not much for speculation. They sat leaning forward with
their hats dropped between their knees, more with the air of big
schoolboys expecting an entertainment than responsible electors come
together to approve their party’s choice. They had the uncomplaining
bucolic look, but they wore it with a difference; the difference, by this
time, was enough to mark them of another nation. Most of them had driven
to the meeting; it was not an adjournment from the public house. Nor did
the air hold any hint of beer. Where it had an alcoholic drift the flavour
was of whisky; but the stimulant of the occasion had been tea or cider,
and the room was full of patient good will.</p>
<p>The preliminaries were gone through with promptness; the Chair had supped
with the speakers, and Mr Crow had given him a friendly hint that the boys
wouldn’t be expecting much in the way of trimmings from HIM. Stamping and
clapping from the back benches greeted Mr Farquharson. It diminished, grew
more subdued, as it reached the front. The young fellows were mostly at
the back, and the power of demonstration had somehow ebbed in the old
ones. The retiring member addressed his constituents for half an hour. He
was standing before them as their representative for the last time, and it
was natural to look back and note the milestones behind, the changes for
the better with which he could fairly claim association. They were matters
of Federal business chiefly, beyond the immediate horizon of Jordanville,
but Farquharson made them a personal interest for that hour at all events,
and there were one or two points of educational policy which he could
illustrate by their own schoolhouse. He approached them, as he had always
done on the level of mutual friendly interest, and in the hope of doing
mutual friendly business. “You know and I know,” he said more than once;
they and he knew a number of things together.</p>
<p>He was afraid, he said, that if the doctors hadn’t chased him out of
politics, he never would have gone. Now, however, that they gave him no
choice, he was glad to think that though times had been pretty good for
the farmers of South Fox all through the eleven years of his appearance in
the political arena, he was leaving it at a moment when they promised to
be better still. Already, he was sure, they were familiar with the main
heads of that attractive prospect and, agreeable as the subject, great as
the policy was to him, he would leave it to be further unfolded by the
gentleman whom they all hoped to enlist in the cause, as his successor for
this constituency, Mr Lorne Murchison, and by his friend from the old
country, Mr Alfred Hesketh. He, Farquharson, would not take the words out
of the mouths of these gentlemen, much as he envied them the opportunity
of uttering them. The French Academy, he told them, that illustrious body
of literary and scientific men, had a custom, on the death of a member and
the selection of his successor, of appointing one of their number to
eulogize the newcomer. The person upon whom the task would most
appropriately fall, did circumstances permit, would be the departing
academician. In this case, he was happy to say, circumstances did permit—his
political funeral was still far enough off to enable him to express his
profound confidence in and his hearty admiration of the young and vigorous
political heir whom the Liberals of South Fox had selected to stand in his
shoes. Mr Farquharson proceeded to give his grounds for this confidence
and admiration, reminding the Jordanville electors that they had met Mr
Murchison as a Liberal standard-bearer in the last general election, when
he, Farquharson, had to acknowledge very valuable services on Mr
Murchison’s part. The retiring member then thanked his audience for the
kind attention and support they had given him for so many years, made a
final cheerful joke about a Pagan divinity known as Anno Domini, and took
his seat.</p>
<p>They applauded him, and it was plain that they regretted him, the tried
friend, the man there was never any doubt about, whose convictions they
had repeated, and whose speeches in Parliament they had read with a kind
of proprietorship for so long. The Chair had to wait, before introducing
Mr Alfred Hesketh, until the backbenchers had got through with a double
rendering of “For He’s a Jolly Good Fellow,” which bolder spirits sent
lustily forth from the anteroom where the little girls kept their hats and
comforters, interspersed with whoops. Hesketh, it had been arranged,
should speak next, and Lorne last.</p>
<p>Mr Hesketh left his wooden chair with smiling ease, the ease which is
intended to level distinctions and put everybody concerned on the best of
terms. He said that though he was no stranger to the work of political
campaigns, this was the first time that he had had the privilege of
addressing a colonial audience. “I consider,” said he handsomely, “that it
is a privilege.” He clasped his hands behind his back and threw out his
chest.</p>
<p>“Opinions have differed in England as to the value of the colonies, and
the consequence of colonials. I say here with pride that I have ever been
among those who insist that the value is very high and the consequence
very great. The fault is common to humanity, but we are, I fear, in
England, too prone to be led away by appearances, and to forget that under
a rough unpolished exterior may beat virtues which are the brightest
ornaments of civilization, that in the virgin fields of the possessions
which the good swords of our ancestors wrung for us from the Algonquins
and the—and the other savages—may be hidden the most glorious
period of the British race.”</p>
<p>Mr Hesketh paused and coughed. His audience neglected the opportunity for
applause, but he had their undivided attention. They were looking at him
and listening to him, these Canadian farmers, with curious interest in his
attitude, his appearance, his inflection, his whole personality as it
offered itself to them—it was a thing new and strange. Far out in
the Northwest, where the emigrant trains had been unloading all the
summer, Hesketh’s would have been a voice from home; but here, in
long-settled Ontario, men had forgotten the sound of it, with many other
things. They listened in silence, weighing with folded arms, appraising
with chin in hand; they were slow, equitable men.</p>
<p>“If we in England,” Hesketh proceeded, “required a lesson—as perhaps
we did—in the importance of the colonies, we had it; need I remind
you? in the course of the late protracted campaign in South Africa. Then
did the mother country indeed prove the loyalty and devotion of her
colonial sons. Then were envious nations compelled to see the spectacle of
Canadians and Australians rallying about the common flag, eager to attest
their affection for it with their life-blood, and to demonstrate that
they, too, were worthy to add deeds to British traditions and victories to
the British cause.”</p>
<p>Still no mark of appreciation. Hesketh began to think them an unhandsome
lot. He stood bravely, however, by the note he had sounded. He dilated on
the pleasure and satisfaction it had been to the people of England to
receive this mark of attachment from far-away dominions and dependencies,
on the cementing of the bonds of brotherhood by the blood of the fallen,
on the impossibility that the mother country should ever forget such
voluntary sacrifices for her sake, when, unexpectedly and irrelevantly,
from the direction of the cloakroom, came the expressive comment “Yah!”</p>
<p>Though brief, nothing could have been more to the purpose, and Hesketh
sacrificed several effective points to hurry to the quotation—</p>
<p>What should they know of England<br/>
Who only England know?<br/></p>
<p>which he could not, perhaps, have been expected to forbear. His audience,
however, were plainly not in the vein for compliment. The same voice from
the anteroom inquired ironically, “That so?” and the speaker felt advised
to turn to more immediate considerations.</p>
<p>He said he had had the great pleasure on his arrival in this country to
find a political party, the party in power, their Canadian Liberal party,
taking initiative in a cause which he was sure they all had at heart—the
strengthening of the bonds between the colonies and the mother country. He
congratulated the Liberal party warmly upon having shown themselves
capable of this great function—a point at which he was again
interrupted; and he recapitulated some of the familiar arguments about the
desirability of closer union from the point of view of the army, of the
Admiralty, and from one which would come home, he knew, to all of them,
the necessity of a dependable food supply for the mother country in time
of war. Here he quoted a noble lord. He said that he believed no definite
proposals had been made, and he did not understand how any definite
proposals could be made; for his part, if the new arrangement was to be in
the nature of a bargain, he would prefer to have nothing to do with it.</p>
<p>“England,” he said, loftily, “has no wish to buy the loyalty of her
colonies, nor, I hope, has any colony the desire to offer her allegiance
at the price of preference in British markets. Even proposals for mutual
commercial benefit may be underpinned, I am glad to say, by loftier
principles than those of the market-place and the counting-house.”</p>
<p>At this one of his hearers, unacquainted with the higher commercial plane,
exclaimed, “How be ye goin’ to get ‘em kept to, then?”</p>
<p>Hesketh took up the question. He said a friend in the audience asked how
they were to ensure that such arrangements would be adhered to. His answer
was in the words of the Duke of Dartmoor, “By the mutual esteem, the
inherent integrity, and the willing compromise of the British race.”</p>
<p>Here someone on the back benches, impatient, doubtless, at his own
incapacity to follow this high doctrine, exclaimed intemperately, “Oh,
shut up!” and the gathering, remembering that this, after all, was not
what it had come for, began to hint that it had had enough in intermittent
stamps and uncompromising shouts for “Murchison!”</p>
<p>Hesketh kept on his legs, however, a few minutes longer. He had a
trenchant sentence to repeat to them which he thought they would take as a
direct message from the distinguished nobleman who had uttered it. The
Marquis of Aldeburgh was the father of the pithy thing, which he had
presented, as it happened, to Hesketh himself. The audience received it
with respect—Hesketh’s own respect was so marked—but with
misapprehension; there had been too many allusions to the nobility for a
community so far removed from its soothing influence. “Had ye no friends
among the commoners?” suddenly spoke up a dry old fellow, stroking a long
white beard; and the roar that greeted this showed the sense of the
meeting. Hesketh closed with assurances of the admiration and confidence
he felt toward the candidate proposed to their suffrages by the Liberal
party that were quite inaudible, and sought his yellow pinewood schoolroom
chair with rather a forced smile. It had been used once before that day to
isolate conspicuous stupidity.</p>
<p>They were at bottom a good-natured and a loyal crowd, and they had not,
after all, come there to make trouble, or Mr Alfred Hesketh might have
carried away a worse opinion of them. As it was, young Murchison, whose
address occupied the rest of the evening, succeeded in making an
impression upon them distinct enough, happily for his personal influence,
to efface that of his friend. He did it by the simple expedient of talking
business, and as high prices for produce and low ones for agricultural
implements would be more interesting there than here, I will not report
him. He and Mr Farquharson waited, after the meeting, for a personal word
with a good many of those present, but it was suggested to Hesketh that
the ladies might be tired, and that he had better get them home without
unnecessary delay. Mrs Farquharson had less comment to offer during the
drive home than Hesketh thought might be expected from a woman of her
intelligence, but Miss Milburn was very enthusiastic. She said he had made
a lovely speech, and she wished her father could have heard it.</p>
<p>A personal impression, during a time of political excitement, travels
unexpectedly far. A week later Mr Hesketh was concernedly accosted in Main
Street by a boy on a bicycle.</p>
<p>“Say, mister, how’s the dook?”</p>
<p>“What duke?” asked Hesketh, puzzled.</p>
<p>“Oh, any dook,” responded the boy, and bicycled cheerfully, away.</p>
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