When the immortal Don set out to ring
all the bells of merriment, he was followed by one
clown. Charles Courtier on the other hand had
always been accompanied by thousands, who really could
not understand the conduct of this man with no commercial
sense. But though he puzzled his contemporaries,
they did not exactly laugh at him, because it was
reported that he had really killed some men, and loved
some women. They found such a combination irresistible,
when coupled with an appearance both vigorous and
gallant. The son of an Oxfordshire clergyman,
and mounted on a lost cause, he had been riding through
the world ever since he was eighteen, without once
getting out of the saddle. The secret of this
endurance lay perhaps in his unconsciousness that he
was in the saddle at all. It was as much his
natural seat as office stools to other mortals.
He made no capital out of errantry, his temperament
being far too like his red-gold hair, which people
compared to flames, consuming all before them.
His vices were patent; too incurable an optimism; an
admiration for beauty such as must sometimes have caused
him to forget which woman he was most in love with;
too thin a skin; too hot a heart; hatred of humbug,
and habitual neglect of his own interest. Unmarried,
and with many friends, and many enemies, he kept his
body like a sword-blade, and his soul always at white
heat.
That one who admitted to having taken
part in five wars should be mixing in a by-election
in the cause of Peace, was not so inconsistent as might
be supposed; for he had always fought on the losing
side, and there seemed to him at the moment no side
so losing as that of Peace. No great politician,
he was not an orator, nor even a glib talker; yet a
quiet mordancy of tongue, and the white-hot look in
his eyes, never failed to make an impression of some
kind on an audience.
There was, however, hardly a corner
of England where orations on behalf of Peace had a
poorer chance than the Bucklandbury division.
To say that Courtier had made himself unpopular with
its matter-of-fact, independent, stolid, yet quick-tempered
population, would be inadequate. He had outraged
their beliefs, and roused the most profound suspicions.
They could not, for the life of them, make out what
he was at. Though by his adventures and his book,
“Peace-a lost Cause,” he was, in London,
a conspicuous figure, they had naturally never heard
of him; and his adventure to these parts seemed to
them an almost ludicrous example of pure idea poking
its nose into plain facts the idea that
nations ought to, and could live in peace being so
very pure; and the fact that they never had, so very
plain!
At Monkland, which was all Court estate,
there were naturally but few supporters of Miltoun’s
opponent, Mr. Humphrey Chilcox, and the reception
accorded to the champion of Peace soon passed from
curiosity to derision, from derision to menace, till
Courtier’s attitude became so defiant, and his
sentences so heated that he was only saved from a rough
handling by the influential interposition of the vicar.
Yet when he began to address them
he had felt irresistibly attracted. They looked
such capital, independent fellows. Waiting for
his turn to speak, he had marked them down as men
after his own heart. For though Courtier knew
that against an unpopular idea there must always be
a majority, he never thought so ill of any individual
as to suppose him capable of belonging to that ill-omened
body.
Surely these fine, independent fellows
were not to be hoodwinked by the jingoes! It
had been one more disillusion. He had not taken
it lying down; neither had his audience. They
dispersed without forgiving; they came together again
without having forgotten.
The village Inn, a little white building
whose small windows were overgrown with creepers,
had a single guest’s bedroom on the upper floor,
and a little sitting-room where Courtier took his meals.
The rest of the house was but stone-floored bar with
a long wooden bench against the back wall, whence
nightly a stream of talk would issue, all harsh à’s,
and sudden soft u’s; whence too a figure, a little
unsteady, would now and again emerge, to a chorus
of ‘Gude naights,’ stand still under the
ash-trees to light his pipe, then move slowly home.
But on that evening, when the trees,
like cattle, stood knee-deep in the moon-dust, those
who came out from the bar-room did not go away; they
hung about in the shadows, and were joined by other
figures creeping furtively through the bright moonlight,
from behind the Inn. Presently more figures moved
up from the lanes and the churchyard path, till thirty
or more were huddled there, and their stealthy murmur
of talk distilled a rare savour of illicit joy.
Unholy hilarity, indeed, seemed lurking in the deep
tree-shadow, before the wan Inn, whence from a single
lighted window came forth the half-chanting sound of
a man’s voice reading out loud. Laughter
was smothered, talk whispered.
“He’m a-practisin’
his spaches.” “Smoke the cunnin’
old vox out!” “Red pepper’s the
proper stuff.” “See men sneeze!
We’ve a-screed up the door.”
Then, as a face showed at the lighted
window, a burst of harsh laughter broke the hush.
He at the window was seen struggling
violently to wrench away a bar. The laughter
swelled to hooting. The prisoner forced his way
through, dropped to the ground, rose, staggered, and
fell.
A voice said sharply:
“What’s this?”
Out of the sounds of scuffling and
scattering came the whisper: “His lordship!”
And the shade under the ash-trees became deserted,
save by the tall dark figure of a man, and a woman’s
white shape.
“Is that you, Mr. Courtier? Are you hurt?”
A chuckle rose from the recumbent figure.
“Only my knee. The beggars! They precious
nearly choked me, though.”