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Doctor Therne
CHAPTER IX - FORTUNE
H.Rider Haggard
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       CHAPTER IX - FORTUNE
       My return to Parliament meant not only the loss of a seat to the
       Government, a matter of no great moment in view of their enormous
       majority, but, probably, through their own fears, was construed by
       them into a solemn warning not to be disregarded. Certain papers and
       opposition speakers talked freely of the writing on the wall, and none
       saw that writing in larger, or more fiery letters, than the members of
       Her Majesty's Government. I believe that to them it took the form not
       of Hebraic characters, but of two large Roman capitals, the letters A
       and V.
       Hitherto the anti-vaccinators had been known as troublesome people who
       had to be reckoned with, but that they should prove strong enough to
       wrest what had been considered one of the safest seats in the kingdom
       out of the hands of the Unionists came upon the party as a revelation
       of the most unpleasant order. For Stephen Strong's dying cry, of which
       the truth was universally acknowledged, "/The A.V.'s have done it.
       Bravo the A.V.'s!/" had echoed through the length and breadth of the
       land.
       When a Government thinks that agitators are weak, naturally and
       properly it treats them with contempt, but, when it finds that they
       are strong enough to win elections, then their arguments become more
       worthy of consideration. And so the great heart of the parliamentary
       Pharaoh began to soften towards the anti-vaccinators, and of this
       softening the first signs were discernible within three or four days
       of my taking my seat as member for Dunchester.
       I think I may say without vanity, and the statement will not be
       contradicted by those who sat with me, that I made a good impression
       upon the House from the first day I entered its doors. Doubtless its
       members had expected to find in me a rabid person liable to burst into
       a foam of violence at the word "vaccination," and were agreeably
       surprised to find that I was much as other men are, only rather
       quieter than most of them. I did not attempt to force myself upon the
       notice of the House, but once or twice during the dinner hour I made a
       few remarks upon subjects connected with public health which were
       received without impatience, and, in the interval, I tried to master
       its forms, and to get in touch with its temper.
       In those far-away and long-forgotten days a Royal Commission had been
       sitting for some years to consider the whole question of compulsory
       vaccination; it was the same before which I had been called to give
       evidence. At length this commission delivered itself of its final
       report, a very sensible one in an enormous blue-book, which if adopted
       would practically have continued the existing Vaccination Acts with
       amendments. These amendments provided that in future the public
       vaccinator should visit the home of the child, and, if the conditions
       of that home and of the child itself were healthy, offer to vaccinate
       it with glycerinated calf lymph. Also they extended the time during
       which the parents and guardians were exempt from prosecution, and in
       various ways mitigated the rigour of the prevailing regulations. The
       subject matter of this report was embodied in a short Bill to amend
       the law and laid before Parliament, which Bill went to a standing
       committee, and ultimately came up for the consideration of the House.
       Then followed the great debate and the great surprise. A member moved
       that it should be read that day six months, and others followed on the
       same side. The President of the Local Government Board of the day, I
       remember, made a strong speech in favour of the Bill, after which
       other members spoke, including myself. But although about ninety out
       of every hundred of the individuals who then constituted the House of
       Commons were strong believers in the merits of vaccination, hardly one
       of them rose in his place to support the Bill. The lesson of
       Dunchester amongst others was before their eyes, and, whatever their
       private faith might be, they were convinced that if they did so it
       would lose them votes at the next election.
       At this ominous silence the Government grew frightened, and towards
       the end of the debate, to the astonishment of the House and of the
       country, the First Lord of the Treasury rose and offered to insert a
       clause by virtue of which any parent or other person who under the
       Bill would be liable to penalties for the non-vaccination of a child,
       should be entirely freed from such penalties if within four months of
       its birth he satisfied two justices of the peace that he
       conscientiously believed that the operation would be prejudicial to
       that child's health. The Bill passed with the clause, which a few days
       later was rejected by the House of Lords. Government pressure was put
       upon the Lords, who thereon reversed their decision, and the Bill
       became an Act of Parliament.
       Thus the whole policy of compulsory vaccination, which for many years
       had been in force in England, was destroyed at a single blow by a
       Government with a great majority, and a House of Commons composed of
       members who, for the most part, were absolute believers in its
       virtues. Never before did agitators meet with so vast and complete a
       success, and seldom perhaps did a Government undertake so great a
       responsibility for the sake of peace, and in order to shelve a
       troublesome and dangerous dispute. It was a very triumph of
       opportunism, for the Government, aided and abetted by their
       supporters, threw over their beliefs to appease a small but persistent
       section of the electors. Convinced that compulsory vaccination was for
       the benefit of the community, they yet stretched the theory of the
       authority of the parent over the child to such an unprecedented extent
       that, in order to satisfy his individual prejudices, that parent was
       henceforth to be allowed to expose his helpless infant to the risk of
       terrible disease and of death.
       It is not for me to judge their motives, which may have been pure and
       excellent; my own are enough for me to deal with. But the fact remains
       that, having power in their hands to impose the conclusions of a
       committee of experts on the nation, and being as a body satisfied as
       to the soundness of those conclusions, they still took the risk of
       disregarding them. Now the result of their action is evident; now we
       have reaped the seed which they sowed, nor did they win a vote or a
       "thank you" by their amiable and philosophic concessions, which earned
       them no gratitude but indignation mingled with something not unlike
       contempt.
       So much for the anti-vaccination agitation, on the crest of whose wave
       I was carried to fortune and success. Thenceforward for many long
       years my career was one of strange and startling prosperity.
       Dunchester became my pocket borough, so much so, indeed, that at the
       three elections which occurred before the last of which I have to tell
       no one even ventured to contest the seat against me. Although I was
       never recognised as a leader of men, chiefly, I believe, because of a
       secret distrust which was entertained as to my character and the
       sincerity of my motives, session by session my parliamentary repute
       increased, till, in the last Radical Government, I was offered, and
       for two years filled, the post of Under-Secretary to the Home Office.
       Indeed, when at last we went to the country over the question of the
       China War, I had in my pocket a discreetly worded undertaking that, if
       our party succeeded at the polls, my claims to the Home Secretaryship
       should be "carefully considered." But it was not fated that I should
       ever again cross the threshold of St. Stephen's.
       So much for my public career, which I have only touched on in
       illustration of my private and moral history.
       The reader may wonder how it came about that I was able to support
       myself and keep up my position during all this space of time, seeing
       that my attendance in Parliament made it impossible for me to continue
       in practise as a doctor. It happened thus.
       When my old and true friend, Stephen Strong, died on the night of my
       election, it was found that he was even richer than had been supposed,
       indeed his personalty was sworn at 191,000 pounds, besides which he
       left real estate in shops, houses and land to the value of about
       23,000 pounds. Almost all of this was devised to his widow absolutely,
       so that she could dispose of it in whatever fashion pleased her.
       Indeed, there was but one other bequest, that of the balance of the
       10,000 pounds which the testator had deposited in the hands of a
       trustee for my benefit. This was now left to me absolutely. I learned
       the fact from Mrs. Strong herself as we returned from the funeral.
       "Dear Stephen has left you nearly 9000 pounds, doctor," she said
       shaking her head.
       Gathering from her manner and this shake of her head that the legacy
       was not pleasing to her, I hastened to explain that doubtless it was
       to carry into effect a business arrangement we had come to before I
       consented to stand for Parliament.
       "Ah, indeed," she said, "that makes it worse, for it is only the
       payment of a debt, not a gift."
       Not knowing what she could mean, I said nothing.
       "Doubtless, doctor, if dear Stephen had been granted time he would
       have treated you more liberally, seeing how much he thought of you,
       and that you had given up your profession entirely to please him and
       serve the party. That is what he meant when he looked at me before he
       died, I guessed it from the first, and now I am sure of it. Well,
       doctor, while I have anything you shall never want. Of course, a
       member of Parliament is a great person, expected to live in a style
       which would take more money than I have, but I think that if I put my
       own expenses at 500 pounds a year, which is as much as I shall want,
       and allow another 1000 pounds for subscriptions to the anti-
       vaccination societies, the society for preventing the muzzling of
       dogs, and the society for the discovery of the lost Tribes of Israel,
       I shall be able to help you to the extent of 1200 pounds a year, if,"
       she added apologetically, "you think you could possibly get along on
       that."
       "But, Mrs. Strong," I said, "I have no claim at all upon you."
       "Please do not talk nonsense, doctor. Dear Stephen wished me to
       provide for you, and I am only carrying out his wishes with his own
       money which God gave him perhaps for this very purpose, that it should
       be used to help a clever man to break down the tyranny of wicked
       governments and false prophets."
       So I took the money, which was paid with the utmost regularity on
       January the first and June the first in each year. On this income I
       lived in comfort, keeping up my house in Dunchester for the benefit of
       my little daughter and her attendants, and hiring for my own use a
       flat quite close to the House of Commons.
       As the years went by, however, a great anxiety took possession of me,
       for by slow degrees Mrs. Strong grew as feeble in mind as already she
       was in body, till at length, she could only recognise people at
       intervals, and became quite incompetent to transact business. For a
       while her bankers went on paying the allowance under her written and
       unrevoked order, but when they understood her true condition, they
       refused to continue the payment.
       Now my position was very serious. I had little or nothing put by, and,
       having ceased to practise for about seventeen years, I could not hope
       to earn an income from my profession. Nor could I remain a member of
       the House, at least not for long. Still, by dint of borrowing and the
       mortgage of some property which I had acquired, I kept my head above
       water for about eighteen months. Very soon, however, my financial
       distress became known, with the result that I was no longer so
       cordially received as I had been either in Dunchester or in London.
       The impecunious cannot expect to remain popular.
       At last things came to a climax, and I was driven to the step of
       resigning my seat. I was in London at the time, and thence I wrote the
       letter to the chairman of the Radical committee in Dunchester giving
       ill-health as the cause of my retirement. When at length it was
       finished to my satisfaction, I went out and posted it, and then walked
       along the embankment as far as Cleopatra's Needle and back again. It
       was a melancholy walk, taken, I remember, upon a melancholy November
       afternoon, on which the dank mist from the river strove for mastery
       with the gloomy shadows of advancing night. Not since that other
       evening, many many years ago, when, after my trial, I found myself
       face to face with ruin or death and was saved by Stephen Strong had my
       fortunes been at so low an ebb. Now, indeed, they appeared absolutely
       hopeless, for I was no longer young and fit to begin the world afresh;
       also, the other party being in power, I could not hope to obtain any
       salaried appointment upon which to support myself and my daughter. If
       Mrs. Strong had kept her reason all would have been well, but she was
       insane, and I had no one to whom I could turn, for I was a man of many
       acquaintances but few friends.
       Wearily I trudged back to my rooms to wait there until it was time to
       dress, for I had a dinner engagement at the Reform Club. On the table
       in the little hall lay a telegram, which I opened listlessly. It was
       from a well-known firm of solicitors in Dunchester, and ran:--
       "Our client, Mrs. Strong, died suddenly at three o'clock. Important
       that we should see you. Will you be in Dunchester to-morrow? If
       not, please say where and at what hour we can wait upon you in
       town."
       "Wait upon you in town," I said to myself as I laid down the telegram.
       A great firm of solicitors would not wish to wait upon me unless they
       had something to tell me to my advantage and their own. Mrs. Strong
       must have left me some money. Possibly even I was her heir. More than
       once before in life my luck had turned in this sudden way, why should
       it not happen again? But she was insane and could not appoint an heir!
       Why had not those fools of lawyers told me the facts instead of
       leaving me to the torment of this suspense?
       I glanced at the clock, then taking a telegraph form I wrote: "Shall
       be at Dunchester Station 8:30. Meet me there or later at the club."
       Taking a cab I drove to St. Pancras, just in time to catch the train.
       In my pocket--so closely was I pressed for money, for my account at
       the bank was actually overdrawn--I had barely enough to pay for a
       third-class ticket to Dunchester. This mattered little, however, for I
       always travelled third-class, not because I liked it but because it
       looked democratic and the right sort of thing for a Radical M.P. to
       do.
       The train was a fast one, but that journey seemed absolutely endless.
       Now at length we had slowed down at the Dunchester signal-box, and now
       we were running into the town. If my friend the lawyer had anything
       really striking to tell me he would send to meet me at the station,
       and, if it was something remarkable, he would probably attend there
       himself. Therefore, if I saw neither the managing clerk nor the junior
       partner, nor the Head of the Firm, I might be certain that the news
       was trivial, probably--dreadful thought which had not occurred to me
       before--that I was appointed executor under the will with a legacy of
       a hundred guineas.
       The train rolled into the station. As it began to glide past the
       pavement of wet asphalt I closed my eyes to postpone the bitterness of
       disappointment, if only for a few seconds. Perforce I opened them
       again as the train was stopping, and there, the very first thing they
       fell upon, looking portly and imposing in a fur coat, was the
       rubicund-faced Head of the Firm himself. "It /is/ good," I thought,
       and supported myself for a moment by the hat-rack, for the revulsion
       of feeling produced a sudden faintness. He saw me, and sprang forward
       with a beaming yet respectful countenance. "It is /very/ good," I
       thought.
       "My dear sir," he began obsequiously, "I do trust that my telegram has
       not incommoded you, but my news was such that I felt it necessary to
       meet you at the earliest possible moment, and therefore wired to you
       at every probable address."
       I gave the porter who took my bag a shilling. Practically it was my
       last, but that lawyer's face and manner seemed to justify the
       expenditure which--so oddly are our minds constituted--I remember
       reflecting I might regret if I had drawn a false inference. The man
       touched his hat profusely, and, I hope, made up his mind to vote for
       me next time. Then I turned to the Head of the Firm and said:--
       "Pray, don't apologise; but, by the way, beyond that of the death of
       my poor friend, /what/ is the news?"
       "Oh, perhaps you know it," he answered, taken aback at my manner,
       "though she always insisted upon its being kept a dead secret, so that
       one day you might have a pleasant surprise."
       "I know nothing," I answered.
       "Then I am glad to be the bearer of such good intelligence to a
       fortunate and distinguished man," he said with a bow. "I have the
       honour to inform you in my capacity of executor to the will of the
       late Mrs. Martha Strong that, with the exception of a few legacies,
       you are left her sole heir."
       Now I wished that the hat-rack was still at hand, but, as it was not,
       I pretended to stumble, and leant for a moment against the porter who
       had received my last shilling.
       "Indeed," I said recovering myself, "and can you tell me the amount of
       the property?"
       "Not exactly," he answered, "but she has led a very saving life, and
       money grows, you know, money grows. I should say it must be between
       three and four hundred thousand, nearer the latter than the former,
       perhaps."
       "Really," I replied, "that is more than I expected; it is a little
       astonishing to be lifted in a moment from the position of one with a
       mere competence into that of a rich man. But our poor friend was--
       well, weak-minded, so how could she be competent to make a binding
       will?"
       "My dear sir, her will was made within a month of her husband's death,
       when she was as sane as you are, as I have plenty of letters to show.
       Only, as I have said, she kept the contents a dead secret, in order
       that one day they might be a pleasant surprise to you."
       "Well," I answered, "all things considered, they have been a pleasant
       surprise; I may say a /very/ pleasant surprise. And now let us go and
       have some dinner at the club. I feel tired and thirsty."
        
       Next morning the letter that I had posted from London to the chairman
       of my committee was, at my request, returned to me unopened.
       Content of CHAPTER IX - FORTUNE [H. Rider Haggard's novel: Doctor Therne]
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