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Doctor Therne
CHAPTER XI - THE COMING OF THE RED-HEADED MAN
H.Rider Haggard
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       CHAPTER XI - THE COMING OF THE RED-HEADED MAN
       Half of the three years of probation had gone by and once more we
       found ourselves at Dunchester in August. Under circumstances still too
       recent to need explanation, the Government of which I was a member had
       decided to appeal to the country, the General Election being fixed for
       the end of September, after the termination of harvest. Dunchester was
       considered to be a safe Radical seat, and, as a matter of
       parliamentary tactics, the poll for this city, together with that of
       eight or ten other boroughs, was fixed for the earliest possible day,
       in the hope that the results might encourage more doubtful places to
       give their support. Constituencies are very like sheep, and if the
       leaders jump through a certain gap in the political hedge the flock,
       or a large proportion of it, will generally follow. All of us like to
       be on the winning side.
       Few people who are old enough to remember it will ever forget the
       August of two years ago, if only because of the phenomenal heat. Up to
       that month the year had been very cold, so cold that even during July
       there were some evenings when a fire was welcome, while on several
       days I saw people driving about the roads wrapped up in heavy ulsters.
       But with the first day of August all this changed, and suddenly the
       climate became torrid, the nights especially being extraordinarily
       hot. From every quarter of the country came complaints of the great
       heat, while each issue of the newspapers contained lists of those who
       had fallen victims to it.
       One evening, feeling oppressed in the tree-enclosed park of Ashfields,
       I strolled out of it into the suburb of which I have spoken. Almost
       opposite the private garden of the park stands a board school, and in
       front of this board school I had laid out an acre of land presented by
       myself, as a playground and open space for the use of the public. In
       the centre of this garden was a fountain that fell into a marble
       basin, and around the fountain, but at some distance from it, stood
       iron seats. To these I made my way and sat down on one of them, which
       was empty, in order to enjoy the cool sound of the splashing water,
       about which a large number of children were playing.
       Presently, as I sat thus, I lifted my eyes and saw the figure of a man
       approaching towards the other side of the fountain. He was quite fifty
       yards away from me, so that his features were invisible, but there was
       something about his general aspect which attracted my attention at
       once. To begin with, he looked small and lonely, all by himself out
       there on the wide expanse of gravel; moreover, the last rays of the
       setting sun, striking full upon him, gave him a fiery and unnatural
       appearance against the dense background of shadows beyond. It is a
       strange and dreadful coincidence, but by some extraordinary action of
       the mind, so subtle that I cannot trace the link, the apparition of
       this man out of the gloom into the fierce light of the sunset reminded
       me of a picture that I had once seen representing the approach to the
       Norwegian harbour of the ship which brought the plague to the shores
       of Scandanavia. In the picture that ship also was clothed with the
       fires of sunset, while behind it lay the blackness of approaching
       night. Like this wanderer that ship also came forward, slowly indeed,
       but without pause, as though alive with a purpose of its own, and I
       remember that awaiting it upon the quay were a number of merry
       children.
       Shaking myself free from this ridiculous but unpleasant thought, I
       continued to observe the man idly. Clearly he was one of the great
       army of tramps, for his coat was wide and ragged and his hat half
       innocent of rim, although there was something about his figure which
       suggested to me that he had seen better days. I could even imagine
       that under certain circumstances I might have come to look very much
       like this poor man, now doubtless turned into a mere animal by drink.
       He drew on with a long slow step, his head stretched forward, his eyes
       fixed upon the water, as he walked now and again lifting a long thin
       hand and scraping impatiently at his face and head.
       "That poor fellow has got a touch of prickly heat and is thirsty," I
       thought, nor was I mistaken, for, on arriving at the edge of the
       fountain, the tramp knelt down and drank copiously, making a moaning
       sound as he gulped the water, which was very peculiar and unpleasant
       to hear. When he had satisfied his thirst, he sat himself upon the
       marble edge of the basin and suddenly plunged his legs, boots and all,
       into the water. Its touch seemed to please him, for with a single
       swift movement he slipped in altogether, sitting himself down on the
       bottom of the basin in such fashion that only his face and fiery red
       beard, from which the hat had fallen, remained above the surface,
       whereon they seemed to float like some monstrous and unnatural growth.
       This unusual proceeding on the part of the tramping stranger at once
       excited the most intense interest in the mind of every child on the
       playground, with the result that in another minute forty or fifty of
       them had gathered round the fountain, laughing and jeering at its
       occupant. Again the sight brought to my mind a strained and
       disagreeable simile, for I bethought me of the dreadful tale of
       Elisha and of the fate which overtook the children who mocked him.
       Decidedly the heat had upset my nerves that night, nor were they
       soothed when suddenly from the red head floating upon the water came a
       flute-like and educated voice, saying--
       "Cease deriding the unfortunate, children, or I will come out of this
       marble bath and tickle you."
       Thereat they laughed all the more, and began to pelt the bather with
       little stones and bits of stick.
       At first I thought of interfering, but as it occurred to me that the
       man would probably be violent or abusive if I spoke to him, and as,
       above all things, I disliked scenes, I made up my mind to fetch a
       policeman, whom I knew I should find round the corner about a hundred
       yards away. I walked to the corner, but did not find the policeman,
       whereon I started across the square to look for him at another point.
       My road led me past the fountain, and, as I approached it, I saw that
       the water-loving wanderer had been as good as his word. He had emerged
       from the fountain, and, rushing to and fro raining moisture from his
       wide coat, despite their shrieks half of fear and half of laughter, he
       grabbed child after child and, drawing it to him, tickled and kissed
       it, laughing dementedly all the while, in a fashion which showed me
       that he was suffering from some form of mania.
       As soon as he saw me the man dropped the last child he had caught--it
       was little Tottie Smith--and began to stride away towards the city at
       the same slow, regular, purposeful gait with which I had seen him
       approach the fountain. As he passed he turned and made a grimace at
       me, and then I saw his dreadful face. No wonder it had looked red at a
       distance, for the /erythema/ almost covered it, except where, on the
       forehead and cheeks, appeared purple spots and patches.
       Of what did it remind me?
       Great Heaven! I remembered. It reminded me of the face of that girl I
       had seen lying in the /plaza/ of San Jose, in Mexico, over whom the
       old woman was pouring water from the fountain, much such a fountain as
       that before me, for half unconsciously, when planning this place, I
       had reproduced its beautiful design. It all came back to me with a
       shock, the horrible scene of which I had scarcely thought for years,
       so vividly indeed that I seemed to hear the old hag's voice crying in
       cracked accents, "/Si, senor, viruela, viruela!/"
       I ought to have sent to warn the police and the health officers of the
       city, for I was sure that the man was suffering from what is commonly
       called confluent smallpox. But I did not. From the beginning there has
       been something about this terrible disease which physically and
       morally has exercised so great an influence over my destiny, that
       seemed to paralyse my mental powers. In my day I was a doctor fearless
       of any other contagion; typhus, scarletina, diphtheria, yellow fever,
       none of them had terrors for me. And yet I was afraid to attend a case
       of smallpox. From the same cause, in my public speeches I made light
       of it, talking of it with contempt as a sickness of small account,
       much as a housemaid talks in the servants' hall of the ghost which is
       supposed to haunt the back stairs.
       And now, coming as it were from that merry and populous chamber of
       life and health, once again I met the Spectre I derided, a red-headed,
       red-visaged Thing that chose me out to stop and grin at. Somehow I was
       not minded to return and announce the fact.
       "Why," they would say, "/you/ were the one who did not believe in
       ghosts. It was /you/ who preached of vile superstitions, and yet
       merely at the sight of a shadow you rush in with trembling hands and
       bristling hair to bid us lay it with bell, book, and candle. Where is
       your faith, O prophet?"
       It was nonsense; the heat and all my incessant political work had
       tried me and I was mistaken. That tramp was a drunken, or perhaps a
       crazy creature, afflicted with some skin disease such as are common
       among his class. Why did I allow the incident to trouble me?
       I went home and washed out my mouth, and sprinkled my clothes with a
       strong solution of permanganate of potash, for, although my own folly
       was evident, it is always as well to be careful, especially in hot
       weather. Still I could not help wondering what might happen if by any
       chance smallpox were to get a hold of a population like that of
       Dunchester, or indeed of a hundred other places in England.
       Since the passing of the famous Conscience Clause many years before,
       as was anticipated would be the case, and as the anti-vaccinators
       intended should be the case, vaccination had become a dead letter
       amongst at least seventy-five per cent. of the people.[*] Our various
       societies and agents were not content to let things take their course
       and to allow parents to vaccinate their children, or to leave them
       unvaccinated as they might think fit. On the contrary, we had
       instituted a house-to-house canvass, and our visitors took with them
       forms of conscientious objection, to be filled in by parents or
       guardians, and legally witnessed.
       [*] Since the above was written the author has read in the press that
       in Yorkshire a single bench of magistrates out of the hundreds in
       England has already granted orders on the ground of "conscientious
       objection," under which some 2000 children are exempted from the
       scope of the Vaccination Acts. So far as he has seen this
       statement has not been contradicted. At Ipswich also about 700
       applications, affecting many children, have been filed. To deal
       with these the Bench is holding special sessions, sitting at seven
       o'clock in the evening.
       At first the magistrates refused to accept these forms, but after a
       while, when they found how impossible it was to dive into a man's
       conscience and to decide what was or what was not "conscientious
       objection," they received them as sufficient evidence, provided only
       that they were sworn before some one entitled to administer oaths.
       Many of the objectors did not even take the trouble to do as much as
       this, for within five years of the passing of the Act, in practice the
       vaccination laws ceased to exist. The burden of prosecution rested
       with Boards of Guardians, popularly elected bodies, and what board was
       likely to go to the trouble of working up a case and to the expense of
       bringing it before the court, when, to produce a complete defence, the
       defendant need only declare that he had a conscientious objection to
       the law under which the information was laid against him? Many idle or
       obstinate or prejudiced people would develop conscientious objections
       to anything which gives trouble or that they happen to dislike. For
       instance, if the same principle were applied to education, I believe
       that within a very few years not twenty-five per cent. of the children
       belonging to the classes that are educated out of the rates would ever
       pass the School Board standards.
       Thus it came about that the harvest was ripe, and over ripe, awaiting
       only the appointed sickle of disease. Once or twice already that
       sickle had been put in, but always before the reaping began it was
       stayed by the application of the terrible rule of isolation known as
       the improved Leicester system.
       Among some of the natives of Africa when smallpox breaks out in a
       kraal, that kraal is surrounded by guards and its inhabitants are left
       to recover or perish, to starve or to feed themselves as chance and
       circumstance may dictate. During the absence of the smallpox laws the
       same plan, more mercifully applied, prevailed in England, and thus the
       evil hour was postponed. But it was only postponed, for like a
       cumulative tax it was heaping up against the country, and at last the
       hour had come for payment to an authority whose books must be balanced
       without remittance or reduction. What is due to nature that nature
       takes in her own way and season, neither less nor more, unless indeed
       the skill and providence of man can find means to force her to write
       off the debt.
       Five days after my encounter with the red-headed vagrant, the
       following paragraph appeared in one of the local papers: "Pocklingham.
       In the casual ward of the Union house for this district a tramp, name
       unknown, died last night. He had been admitted on the previous
       evening, but, for some unexplained reason, it was not noticed until
       the next morning that he suffered from illness, and, therefore, he was
       allowed to mix with the other inmates in the general ward. Drs. Butt
       and Clarkson, who were called in to attend, state that the cause of
       death was the worst form of smallpox. The body will be buried in
       quicklime, but some alarm is felt in the district owing to the
       deceased, who, it is said, arrived here from Dunchester, where he had
       been frequenting various tramps' lodgings, having mixed with a number
       of other vagrants, who left the house before the character of his
       sickness was discovered, and who cannot now be traced. The unfortunate
       man was about forty years of age, of medium height, and red-haired."
       The same paper had an editorial note upon this piece of news, at the
       end of which it remarked, as became a party and an anti-vaccination
       organ: "The terror of this 'filth disease,' which in our fathers' time
       amounted almost to insanity, no longer afflicts us, who know both that
       its effects were exaggerated and how to deal with it by isolation
       without recourse to the so-called vaccine remedies, which are now
       rejected by a large proportion of the population of these islands.
       Still, as we have ascertained by inquiry that this unfortunate man did
       undoubtedly spend several days and nights wandering about our city
       when in an infectious condition, it will be as well that the
       authorities should be on the alert. We do not want that hoary veteran
       --the smallpox scare--to rear its head again in Dunchester, least of
       all just now, when, in view of the imminent election, the accustomed
       use would be made of it by our prejudiced and unscrupulous political
       opponents."
       "No," I said to myself as I put the paper down, "certainly we do not
       want a smallpox scare just now, and still less do we want the
       smallpox." Then I thought of that unfortunate red-headed wretch, crazy
       with the torment of his disease, and of his hideous laughter, as he
       hunted and caught the children who made a mock of him--the poor
       children, scarcely one of whom was vaccinated.
       A week later I opened my political campaign with a large public
       meeting in the Agricultural Hall. Almost up to the nomination day no
       candidate was forthcoming on the other side, and I thought that, for
       the fourth time, I should be returned unopposed. Of a sudden, however,
       a name was announced, and it proved to be none other than that of my
       rival of many years ago--Sir Thomas Colford--now like myself growing
       grey-headed, but still vigorous in mind and body, and as much
       respected as ever by the wealthier and more educated classes of our
       community. His appearance in the field put a new complexion on
       matters; it meant, indeed, that instead of the easy and comfortable
       walk over which I had anticipated, I must fight hard for my political
       existence.
       In the course of my speech, which was very well received, for I was
       still popular in the town even among the more moderate of my
       opponents, I dwelt upon Sir Thomas Colford's address to the electorate
       which had just come into my hands. In this address I was astonished to
       see a paragraph advocating, though in a somewhat guarded fashion, the
       re-enactment of the old laws of compulsory vaccination. In a draft
       which had reached me two days before through some underground channel,
       this paragraph had not appeared, thus showing that it had been added
       by an afterthought and quite suddenly. However, there it was, and I
       made great play with it.
       What, I asked the electors of Dunchester, could they think of a man
       who in these modern and enlightened days sought to reimpose upon a
       free people the barbarous infamies of the Vaccination Acts? Long ago
       we had fought that fight, and long ago we had relegated them to
       /limbo/, where, with such things as instruments of torment, papal
       bulls and writs of attainder, they remained to excite the wonder and
       the horror of our own and future generations.
       Well would it have been for me if I had stopped here, but, led away by
       the subject and by the loud cheers that my treatment of it, purposely
       flamboyant, never failed to evoke, forgetful too for the moment of the
       Red-headed Man, I passed on to deductions. Our opponents had
       prophesied, I said, that within ten years of the passing of the famous
       Conscience Clause smallpox would be rampant. Now what were the facts?
       Although almost twice that time had gone by, here in Dunchester we had
       suffered far less from smallpox than during the compulsory period, for
       at no one time during all these eighteen or twenty years had three
       cases been under simultaneous treatment within the confines of the
       city.
       "Well, there are five now," called out a voice from the back of the
       hall.
       I drew myself up and made ready to wither this untruthful brawler with
       my best election scorn, when, of a sudden, I remembered the Red-headed
       Man, and passed on to the consideration of foreign affairs.
       From that moment all life went out of my speech, and, as it seemed to
       me, the enthusiasm of the meeting died away. As soon as it was over I
       made inquiries, to find that the truth had been hidden from me--there
       were five, if not seven cases of smallpox in different parts of the
       city, and the worst feature of the facts was that three of the
       patients were children attending different schools. One of these
       children, it was ascertained, had been among those who were playing
       round the fountain about a fortnight since, although he was not one
       whom the red-haired tramp had touched, but the other two had not been
       near the fountain. The presumption was, therefore, that they had
       contracted the disease through some other source of infection, perhaps
       at the lodging-house where the man had spent the night after bathing
       in the water. Also it seemed that, drawn thither by the heat, in all
       two or three hundred children had visited the fountain square on this
       particular evening, and that many of them had drunk water out of the
       basin.
       Never do I remember feeling more frightened than when these facts came
       to my knowledge, for, added to the possible terrors of the position,
       was my constitutional fear of the disease which I have already
       described. On my way homewards I met a friend who told me that one of
       the children was dead, the malady, which was of an awful type, having
       done its work very swiftly.
       Like a first flake from a snow-cloud, like a first leaf falling in
       autumn from among the myriads on some great tree, so did this little
       life sink from our number into the silence of the grave. Ah! how many
       were to follow? There is a record, I believe, but I cannot give it. In
       Dunchester alone, with its population of about 50,000, I know that we
       had over 5000 deaths, and Dunchester was a focus from which the
       pestilence spread through the kingdom, destroying and destroying and
       destroying with a fury that has not been equalled since the days of
       the Black Death.
       But all this was still to come, for the plague did not get a grip at
       once. An iron system of isolation was put in force, and every possible
       means was adopted by the town authorities, who, for the most part,
       were anti-vaccinationists, to suppress the facts, a task in which they
       were assisted by the officials of the Local Government Board, who had
       their instructions on the point. As might have been expected, the
       party in power did not wish the political position to be complicated
       by an outcry for the passing of a new smallpox law, so few returns
       were published, and as little information as possible was given to the
       papers.
       For a while there was a lull; the subject of smallpox was /taboo/, and
       nobody heard much about it beyond vague and indefinite rumours.
       Indeed, most of us were busy with the question of the hour--the
       eternal question of beer, its purity and the method of its sale. For
       my part, I made few inquiries; like the ostrich of fable I hid my head
       in the sands of political excitement, hoping that the arrows of
       pestilence would pass us by.
       And yet, although I breathed no word of my fears to a living soul, in
       my heart I was terribly afraid.
       Content of CHAPTER XI - THE COMING OF THE RED-HEADED MAN [H. Rider Haggard's novel: Doctor Therne]
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