<SPAN name="chap11"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER XI </h3>
<h3> IT'S A LONG WORM THAT HAS NO TURNING </h3>
<p>Bishop Chuff sat sourly in his office and sighed for more worlds to
canker. Round the room stood the tall filing cases containing card
indexes of prohibited offences, and he looked gloomily over the crowded
drawers in the vain hope of finding something that had been overlooked.
He pulled out a drawer at random—Schedule K-36, Minor Social
Offenses—and ran his embittered eye over a card. It was marked
Conversational Felonies, and began thus:</p>
<P CLASS="noindent">
Arguing<br/>
Blandishing<br/>
Buffoonery<br/>
Contradicting<br/>
Demurring<br/>
Ejaculating<br/>
Exaggerating<br/>
Facetiousness<br/>
Giggling<br/>
Hemming and Hawing<br/>
Implying<br/>
Insisting<br/>
Jesting<br/></p>
<p>Each item also referred to another card on which the penalty was noted
and legal test cases summarized.</p>
<p>"No," he brooded, "there is nothing left."</p>
<p>Even the most loyal of the Bishop's Staff admitted that he was far from
well, and it was decided that he ought to take a vacation. He himself
concurred in this, and as the home resorts were no longer places of
mirth and glee, he determined to go to Europe. This would have the
added advantage of enabling him to spend some time conferring with
prohibition leaders abroad as to ways and means of converting Europe to
his schemes of reform. Everyone in the office showed genuine
unselfishness in making plans for the Bishop's vacation, and he was
urged to stay away as long as he felt he could be spared. Europe, too,
was much excited over the prospect of his coming, and the British prime
minister was questioned on the subject in the House of Commons. For his
entertainment on the voyage a set of twelve beautiful folio volumes,
bound in black morocco, were prepared. They contained a digest of
prohibition legislation which Chuff had been instrumental in having put
on the statutes. For the first time in years the Bishop was cheered as
he passed about the streets, and he realized that he had never known
how popular he was until it was announced that he was going away.</p>
<p>But still he was not content. One morning, not long before the date set
for his sailing, he sat gloomily at his desk. He was engaged in making
his will, and had found to his secret bitterness that after bequeathing
a few personal trinkets to the office staff there was really no one to
whom he could leave the bulk of his misfortune. Theodolinda, of course,
he had quite cut off from his estate. He only knew that she was living
somewhere with the degraded Quimbleton, carrying on a little psychic
tavern which no laws could reach, in a state of criminal happiness.</p>
<p>From the street, far beneath his open window, he heard the clamor of a
police patrol and leaned eagerly over the sill in the hope of seeing
something that would cheer his black mood. But it was only a man being
arrested for leaning against a lamp-post—a rather common offence at
that time, for most of the normal occupations of the citizens had been
prohibited, and they mooned about the highways in a state of listless
discontent. But then, farther down the channel of the street, he saw
something that caught his eye. A group of people were marching with
flags and signs toward the railway station. SATURDAY SCHOOL PICNIC TO
SOUSE TEMPLE, he read on a banner. He noticed that in spite of all the
laws against smiling in public, these people bore a look of suppressed
merriment. They were obviously out for a good time. A sudden thought
struck him.</p>
<p>That afternoon, in impenetrable disguise, the Bishop paid his first
visit to the Temple of Dunraven Bleak.</p>
<p>The next morning, when his subordinates came to see him about the final
plans for his departure, they were horrified to find him sitting at his
desk wearing in the recesses of his beard what would have been called
(on any other man) a smile.</p>
<p>"I have changed my mind," he said. "I am not going away."</p>
<p>They cried out in amazement, and pointed out to him how sorely in need
of relaxation he was.</p>
<p>"I am planning relaxation," he said, and that was all they could get
out of him.</p>
<p>Later in the day a confidential messenger was dispatched to the private
printing press of the Chuff Organization, bearing the text of a poster
which was found broadcast over the whole country a few days later. It
ran thus:</p>
<H4 STYLE="margin-left: 10%">
AT THE NEXT ELECTION<br/>
For Perpetual Souse<br/>
<br/>
VOTE FOR CHUFF<br/>
The People's Friend<br/>
</h4>
<br/><br/><br/>
<P CLASS="finis">
THE END</p>
<br/><br/><br/><br/>
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