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Doctor Therne
CHAPTER VIII - BRAVO THE A.V.'S
H.Rider Haggard
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       CHAPTER VIII - BRAVO THE A.V.'S
       In another week the writ had been issued, and we were in the thick of
       the fight. What a fight it was! Memory could not record; tradition did
       not even record another half as fierce in the borough of Dunchester.
       For the most part, that is in many of our constituencies, it is not
       difficult for a candidate standing in the Radical interest, if he is
       able, well-backed, and not too particular as to what he promises, to
       win the seat for his party. But Dunchester was something of an
       exception. In a sense it was corrupt, that is, it had always been
       represented by a rich man, who was expected to pay liberally for the
       honour of its confidence. Pay he did, indeed, in large and numberless
       subscriptions, in the endowment of reading-rooms, in presents of
       public parks, and I know not what besides.
       At least it is a fact that almost every advantage of this nature
       enjoyed to-day by the inhabitants of Dunchester, has been provided for
       them by former Conservative members for the borough.
       Under these circumstances it is not to be wondered at that in choosing
       a candidate the majority of the electors of the city were apt to ask
       two leading questions: first, Is he rich? and secondly, What will he
       do for the town if he gets in?
       Now, Sir Thomas Colford was very rich, and it was whispered that if he
       were elected he would be prepared to show his gratitude in a
       substantial fashion. A new wing to the hospital was wanted; this it
       was said would be erected and endowed; also forty acres of valuable
       land belonging to him ran into the park, and he had been heard to say
       that these forty acres were really much more important to the public
       than to himself, and that he hoped that one day they would belong to
       it.
       It is small wonder, then, that the announcement of his candidature was
       received with passionate enthusiasm. Mine, on the contrary, evoked a
       chorus of disapproval, that is, in the local press. I was denounced as
       an adventurer, as a man who had stood a criminal trial for wicked
       negligence, and escaped the jail only by the skin of my teeth. I was
       held up to public reprobation as a Socialist, who, having nothing
       myself, wished to prey upon the goods of others, and as an anti-
       vaccination quack who, to gain a few votes, was ready to infest the
       whole community with a loathsome disease. Of all the accusations of my
       opponents this was the only one that stung me, because it alone had
       truth in it.
       Sir John Bell, my old enemy, one of the nominators of Sir Thomas
       Colford, appeared upon the platform at his first meeting, and,
       speaking in the character of an old and leading citizen of the town,
       and as one who had doctored most of them, implored his audience not to
       trust their political fortunes to such a person as myself, whose
       doctrines were repudiated by almost every member of the profession,
       which I disgraced. This appeal carried much weight with it.
       From all these circumstances it might have been supposed that my case
       was hopeless, especially as no Radical had even ventured to contest
       the seat in the last two elections. But, in fact, this was not so, for
       in Dunchester there existed a large body of voters, many of them
       employed in shoe-making factories, who were almost socialistic in
       their views. These men, spending their days in some hive of machinery,
       and their nights in squalid tenements built in dreary rows, which in
       cities such people are doomed to inhabit, were very bitter against the
       upper classes, and indeed against all who lived in decent comfort.
       This was not to be marvelled at, for what can be expected of folk
       whose lot, hard as it is, has none of the mitigations that lighten the
       troubles of those who live in the country, and who can at least
       breathe the free air and enjoy the beauties that are common to all?
       Here, at Dunchester, their pleasures consisted for the most part in a
       dog fight or some such refining spectacle, varied by an occasional
       "boose" at the public-house, or, in the case of those who chanced to
       be more intellectually inclined, by attending lectures where Socialism
       and other advanced doctrines were preached. As was but natural, this
       class might be relied upon almost to a man to vote for the party which
       promised to better their lot, rather than for the party which could
       only recommend them to be contented and to improve themselves. To
       secure their support it was only necessary to be extravagant of
       promises and abusive of employers who refused to pay them impossible
       wages.
       Next in importance to these red-hot "forwards" came the phalanx of
       old-fashioned people who voted Liberal because their fathers had voted
       Liberal before them. Then there were the electors who used to be
       Conservative but, being honestly dissatisfied with the Government on
       account of its foreign policy, or for other reasons, had made up their
       minds to transfer their allegiance. Also there were the dissenters,
       who set hatred of the Church above all politics, and made its
       disendowment and humiliation their watchword. In Dunchester these were
       active and numerous, a very tower of strength to me, for Stephen
       Strong was the wealthiest and most important of them.
       During the first day or two of the canvass, however, a careful
       estimate of our electoral strength showed it to be several hundred
       votes short of that of our opponents. Therefore, if we would win, we
       must make converts by appealing to the prejudices of members of the
       electorate who were of Conservative views; in other words, by
       preaching "fads."
       Of these there were many, all useful to the candidate of pliant mind,
       such as the total drink-prohibition fad, the anti-dog-muzzling fad,
       and others, each of which was worth some votes. Even the Peculiar
       People, a society that makes a religion of killing helpless children
       by refusing them medical aid when they are ill, were good for ten or
       twelve. Here, however, I drew the line, for when asking whether I
       would support a bill relieving them from all liability to criminal
       prosecution in the event of the death of their victims, I absolutely
       declined to give any such undertaking.
       But although all these fancies had their followers, it was the anti-
       vaccination craze that really had a hold in Dunchester. The "A.V.'s,"
       as they called themselves, were numbered by hundreds, for the National
       League and other similar associations had been at work here for years,
       with such success that already twenty per cent. of the children born
       in the last decade had never been vaccinated. For a while the Board of
       Guardians had been slow to move, then, on the election of a new
       chairman and the representations of the medical profession of the
       town, they instituted a series of prosecutions against parents who
       refused to comply with the Vaccination Acts. Unluckily for the
       Conservative party, these prosecutions, which aroused the most bitter
       feelings, were still going on when the seat fell vacant; hence from an
       electoral point of view the question became one of first-class
       importance.
       In Dunchester, as elsewhere, the great majority of the anti-
       vaccinators were already Radical, but there remained a residue,
       estimated at from 300 to 400, who voted "blue" or Conservative. If
       these men could be brought over, I should win; if they remained
       faithful to their colour, I must lose. Therefore it will be seen that
       Stephen Strong was right when he said that the election would be won
       or lost upon anti-vaccination.
       At the first public meeting of the Conservatives, after Sir Thomas's
       speech, the spokesman of the anti-vaccination party rose and asked him
       whether he was in favour of the abolition of the Compulsory
       Vaccination laws. Now, at this very meeting Sir John Bell had already
       spoken denouncing me for my views upon this question, thereby to some
       extent tying the candidate's hands. So, after some pause and
       consultation, Sir Thomas replied that he was in favour of freeing
       "Conscientious Objectors" to vaccination from all legal penalties.
       Like most half measures, this decision of course did not gain him a
       single vote, whereas it certainly lost him much support.
       On the same evening a similar question was put to me. My answer may be
       guessed, indeed I took the opportunity to make a speech which was
       cheered to the echo, for, having acted the great lie of espousing the
       anti-vaccination cause, I felt that it was not worth while to hesitate
       in telling other lies in support of it. Moreover, I knew my subject
       thoroughly, and understood what points to dwell upon and what to gloze
       over, how to twist and turn the statistics, and how to marshal my
       facts in such fashion as would make it very difficult to expose their
       fallacy. Then, when I had done with general arguments, I went on to
       particular cases, describing as a doctor can do the most dreadful
       which had ever come under my notice, with such power and pathos that
       women in the audience burst into tears.
       Finally, I ended by an impassioned appeal to all present to follow my
       example and refuse to allow their children to be poisoned. I called on
       them as free men to rise against this monstrous Tyranny, to put a stop
       to this system of organised and judicial Infanticide, and to send me
       to Parliament to raise my voice on their behalf in the cause of
       helpless infants whose tender bodies now, day by day, under the
       command of the law, were made the receptacles of the most filthy
       diseases from which man was doomed to suffer.
       As I sat down the whole of that great audience--it numbered more than
       2000--rose in their places shouting "We will! we will!" after which
       followed a scene of enthusiasm such as I had never seen before,
       emphasised by cries of "We are free Englishmen," "Down with the baby-
       butchers," "We will put you in, sir," and so forth.
       That meeting gave me my cue, and thenceforward, leaving almost every
       other topic on one side, I and my workers devoted ourselves to
       preaching the anti-vaccination doctrines. We flooded the constituency
       with tracts headed "What Vaccination does," "The Law of Useless
       Infanticide," "The Vaccine Tyranny," "Is Vaccination a Fraud?" and so
       forth, and with horrible pictures of calves stretched out by pulleys,
       gagged and blindfolded, with their under parts covered by vaccine
       vesicles. Also we had photographs of children suffering from the
       effects of improper or unclean vaccination, which, by means of magic
       lantern slides, could be thrown life-sized on a screen; indeed, one or
       two such children themselves were taken round to meetings and their
       sores exhibited.
       The effect of all this was wonderful, for I know of nothing capable of
       rousing honest but ignorant people to greater rage and enthusiasm than
       this anti-vaccination cry. They believe it to be true, or, at least,
       seeing one or two cases in which it is true, and having never seen a
       case of smallpox, they suppose that the whole race is being poisoned
       by wicked doctors for their own gain. Hence their fierce energy and
       heartfelt indignation.
       Well, it carried me through. The election was fought not with foils
       but with rapiers. Against me were arrayed the entire wealth, rank, and
       fashion of the city, reinforced by Conservative speakers famous for
       their parliamentary eloquence, who were sent down to support Sir
       Thomas Colford. Nor was this all: when it was recognised that the
       fight would be a close one, an eloquent and leading member of the
       House was sent to intervene in person. He came and addressed a vast
       meeting gathered in the biggest building of the city. Seated among a
       crowd of workmen on a back bench I was one of his audience. His speech
       was excellent, if somewhat too general and academic. To the "A.V."
       agitation, with a curious misapprehension of the state of the case, he
       devoted one paragraph only. It ran something like this:--
       "I am told that our opponents, putting aside the great and general
       issues upon which I have had the honour to address you, attempt to
       gain support by entering upon a crusade--to my mind a most pernicious
       crusade--against the law of compulsory vaccination. I am not concerned
       to defend that law, because practically in the mind of all reasonable
       men it stands beyond attack. It is, I am told, suggested that the Act
       should be amended by freeing from the usual penalties any parent who
       chooses to advance a plea of conscientious objection against the
       vaccination of his children. Such an argument seems to me too puerile,
       I had almost said too wicked, to dwell upon, for in its issue it would
       mean that at the whim of individuals innocent children might be
       exposed to disease, disfigurement, and death, and the whole community
       through them to a very real and imminent danger. Prophecy is
       dangerous, but, speaking for myself as a private member of Parliament,
       I can scarcely believe that responsible ministers of any party, moved
       by the pressure of an ill-informed and erroneous opinion, would ever
       consent under this elastic plea of conscience to establish such a
       precedent of surrender. Vaccination with its proved benefits is
       outside the pale of party. After long and careful study, science and
       the medical profession have given a verdict in its favour, a verdict
       which has now been confirmed by the experience of generations. Here I
       leave the question, and, turning once more before I sit down to those
       great and general issues of which I have already spoken, I would again
       impress upon this vast audience, and through it upon the constituency
       at large," etc., etc., etc.
       Within a year it was my lot to listen to an eminent leader of that
       distinguished member (with the distinguished member's tacit consent)
       pressing upon an astonished House of Commons the need of yielding to
       the clamour of the anti-vaccinationists, and of inserting into the
       Bill, framed upon the report of a Royal Commission, a clause
       forbidding the prosecution of parents or guardians willing to assert
       before a bench of magistrates that they objected to vaccination on
       conscientious grounds.
       The appeal was not in vain; the Bill passed in its amended form; and
       within twenty years I lived to see its fruits.
       At length came the polling day. After this lapse of time I remember
       little of its details. I, as became a Democratic candidate, walked
       from polling-station to polling-station, while my opponent, as became
       a wealthy banker, drove about the city in a carriage and four. At
       eight o'clock the ballot-boxes were sealed up and conveyed to the
       town-hall, where the counting commenced in the presence of the Mayor,
       the candidates, their agents, and the necessary officers and
       assistants. Box after box was opened and the papers counted out into
       separate heaps, those for Colford into one pile, those for Therne into
       another, the spoiled votes being kept by themselves.
       The counting began about half-past nine, and up to a quarter to twelve
       nobody could form an idea as to the ultimate result, although at that
       time the Conservative candidate appeared to be about five and thirty
       votes ahead. Then the last ballot-box was opened; it came from a poor
       quarter of the city, a ward in which I had many supporters.
       Sir Thomas Colford and I, with our little knots of agents and sub-
       agents, placed ourselves one on each side of the table, waiting in
       respectful silence while the clerk dealt out the papers, as a player
       deals out cards. It was an anxious moment, as any one who has gone
       through a closely-contested parliamentary election can testify. For
       ten days or more the strain had been great, but, curiously enough, now
       at its climax it seemed to have lost its grip of me. I watched the
       /denoument/ of the game with keenness and interest indeed, but as
       though I were not immediately and personally concerned. I felt that I
       had done my best to win, and no longer cared whether my efforts ended
       in success or failure. Possibly this was the result of the apathy that
       falls upon overstrained nerves. Possibly I was oppressed by the fear
       of victory and of that Nemesis which almost invariably dogs the steps
       of our accomplished desires, of what the French writer calls /la page
       effrayante . . . des desirs accomplis/. At least just then I cared
       nothing whether I won or lost, only I reflected that in the latter
       event it would be sad to have told so many falsehoods to no good
       purpose.
       "How does it stand?" asked the head Conservative agent of the officer.
       The clerk took the last numbers from the counters and added up the
       figures.
       "Colford, 4303; Therne, 4291, and two more bundles to count."
       Another packet was counted out.
       "How does it stand?" asked the agent.
       "Colford, 4349; Therne, 4327, and one more bundle of fifty to count,"
       answered the clerk.
       The agent gave a sigh of relief and smiled; I saw him press Sir
       Thomas's hand in congratulations, for now he was sure that victory was
       theirs.
       "The game is up," I whispered to Strong, who, as my principal
       supporter, had been admitted with me to the hall.
       He ground his teeth and I noticed in the gaslight that his face was
       ghastly pale and his lips were blue.
       "You had better go out," I said, "you are overtaxing that dilated
       heart of yours. Go home and take a sleeping draught."
       "Damn you, no," he answered fiercely in my ear, "those papers come
       from the Little Martha ward, where I thought there wasn't a wrong 'un
       in the crowd. If they've sold me, I'll be even with them, as sure as
       my name is Strong."
       "Come," I said with a laugh, "a good Radical shouldn't talk like
       that." For me the bitterness was over, and, knowing the worst, I could
       afford to laugh.
       The official opened the last packet and began to count aloud.
       The first vote was for "Therne," but bad, for the elector had written
       his name upon the paper. Then in succession came nine for "Colford."
       Now all interest in the result had died away, and a hum of talk arose
       from those present in the room, a whispered murmur of congratulations
       and condolences. No wonder, seeing that to win I must put to my credit
       thirty-two of the forty remaining papers, which seemed a thing
       impossible.
       The counter went on counting aloud and dealing down the papers as he
       counted. One, two, three, four, and straight on up to ten for Therne,
       when he paused to examine a paper, then "One for Colford." Then, in
       rapid successful, "Five, ten, fifteen for Therne."
       Now the hum of conversation died away, for it was felt that this was
       becoming interesting. Of course it was practically impossible that I
       should win, for there were but fourteen papers left, and to do so I
       must secure eleven of them!
       "Sixteen for Therne," went on the counter, "seventeen, eighteen,
       nineteen, twenty."
       Now the excitement grew intense, for if the run held in two more votes
       I should tie. Every eye was fixed upon the counter's hand.
       To the right and left of him on the table were two little piles of
       voting papers. The pile to the right was the property of Colford, the
       pile to the left was sacred to Therne. The paper was unfolded and
       glanced at, then up went the hand and down floated the fateful sheet
       on to the left-hand pile. "Twenty-one for Therne." Again the process
       was repeated, and again the left-hand pile was increased. "Twenty-two
       for Therne."
       "By heaven! you've tied him," gasped Stephen Strong.
       There were but seven papers left, and the candidate who secured four
       of them would be the winner of the election.
       "Twenty-three for Therne, twenty-four, twenty-five"--a silence in
       which you could hear the breath of other men and the beating of your
       own heart.
       "/Twenty-six for Therne/, twenty-seven, twenty-eight, twenty-nine, all
       for Therne."
       Then, bursting from the lips of Stephen Strong, a shrill hoarse cry,
       more like the cry of a beast than that of a man, and the words, "By
       God! we've won. The A.V.'s have done it. Bravo the A.V.'s!"
       "Silence!" said the Mayor, bringing his fist down upon the table, but
       so far as Stephen Strong was concerned, the order was superfluous, for
       suddenly his face flushed, then turned a dreadful ashen grey, and down
       he sank upon the floor. As I leant over him and began to loosen his
       collar, I heard the Conservative agent say in strident tones:--
       "There is some mistake, there must be some mistake. It is almost
       impossible that Dr. Therne can have polled twenty-nine votes in
       succession. On behalf of Sir Thomas Colford, I demand a recount."
       "Certainly," answered some official, "let it be begun at once."
       In that ceremony I took no part; indeed, I spent the next two hours,
       with the help of another doctor, trying to restore consciousness to
       Stephen Strong in a little room that opened off the town-hall. Within
       half an hour Mrs. Strong arrived.
       "He still breathes," I said in answer to her questioning glance.
       Then the poor little woman sat herself down upon the edge of a chair,
       clasped her hands and said, "If the Lord wills it, dear Stephen will
       live; and if the Lord wills it, he will die."
       This sentence she repeated at intervals until the end came. After two
       hours there was a knocking at the door.
       "Go away," I said, but the knocker would not go away. So I opened. It
       was my agent, who whispered in an excited voice, "The count's quite
       correct, you are in by seven."
       "All right," I answered, "tell them we want some more brandy."
       At that moment Stephen Strong opened his eyes, and at that moment also
       there arose a mighty burst of cheering from the crowd assembled on the
       market-place without, to whom the Mayor had declared the numbers from
       a window of the town-hall.
       The dying man heard the cheering, and looked at me inquiringly, for he
       could not speak. I tried to explain that I was elected on the recount,
       but was unable to make him understand. Then I hit upon an expedient.
       On the floor lay a Conservative rosette of blue ribbon. I took it up
       and took also my own Radical colours from my coat. Holding one of them
       in each hand before Strong's dying eyes, I lifted up the Radical
       orange and let the Conservative blue fall to the floor.
       He saw and understood, for a ghastly smile appeared upon his distorted
       face. Indeed, he did more--almost with his last breath he spoke in a
       hoarse, gurgling whisper, and his words were, "/Bravo the A.V.'s!/"
       Now he shut his eyes, and I thought that the end had come, but,
       opening them presently, he fixed them with great earnestness first
       upon myself and then upon his wife, accompanying the glance with a
       slight movement of the head. I did not know what he could mean, but
       with his wife it was otherwise, for she said, "Don't trouble yourself,
       Stephen, I quite understand."
       Five minutes more and it was over; Stephen Strong's dilated heart had
       contracted for the last time.
       "I see it has pleased the Lord that dear Stephen should die," said
       Mrs. Strong in her quiet voice. "When you have spoken to the people
       out there, doctor, will you take me home? I am very sorry to trouble,
       but I saw that after he was gone Stephen wished me to turn to you."
       Content of CHAPTER VIII - BRAVO THE A.V.'S [H. Rider Haggard's novel: Doctor Therne]
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