The serpent had crept into Eden.
The Perkins household for ten years had been little
less than Paradise to its inmates, and then in a single
night the reptile of political ambition had dragged
his slimy length through those happy door-posts and
now sat grinning indecently at the inscription over
the library mantel, a ribbon mosaic bearing the sentiment
“Here Dwells Content” let into the tiles
thereof.
How it ever happened no man knoweth,
but happen it did. Thaddeus Perkins was snatched
from the arms of Peace and plunged headlong into the
jaws of Political Warfare.
“They want me because they think
I’m strong,” he pleaded, in extenuation
of his acceptance of the nomination for Mayor of his
town.
“But you ought to know better,”
returned Mrs. Perkins, failing to realize what possible
misconstruction her lord and master might put upon
the answer. “The idea of your meddling in
politics when you’ve got twice as much work
as you can do already! I think it’s awful!”
“I didn’t seek it,”
he said, after hesitating a moment; “they’ve they’ve
thrust it on me.” Then he tried to be funny.
“With me, public office is a public thrust.”
“Is there any salary?”
asked Mrs. Perkins, treating the jest with the contempt
it merited.
“No,” said Thaddeus. “Not a
cent; but ”
“Not a cent!” cried Mrs.
Perkins. “And you are going to give up all
your career, or at least two years of it, and probably
the best two years of your life, for ”
“Glory,” said Thaddeus.
“Glory! Humph,” said
Mrs. Perkins, “I am not aware that nations are
talking of previous Mayors of Dumfries Corners.
Mr. Jiggers’s name is not a household word outside
of this city, is it?”
Mr. Jiggers was the gentleman,
into whose shoes Thaddeus was seeking to place his
feet the incumbent of the mighty office
to which he aspired.
“Who is the present Lord Mayor
of London?” the lady continued.
“Haven’t the slightest
idea,” murmured the standard-bearer of the Democratic
party, hopelessly.
“Or Berlin, or Peking or even of
Chicago?” she went on.
“What has that got to do with it?” retorted
the worm, turning a trifle.
“You spoke of glory the
glory of being Mayor of Dumfries Corners, a city of
30,000 inhabitants. This is going to send your
name echoing from sea to sea, reverberating through
Europe, and thundering down through the ages to come;
and yet you admit that the glories of the Mayors of
London with 4,000,000 souls, of Berlin, Chicago, and
Peking, with millions more, are so slight that you
can’t remember their names or even
to have heard them, for that matter. Really, Thaddeus,
I am surprised at you. What you expect to get
out of this besides nervous prostration I must confess
I cannot see.”
“Lamps,” said Thaddeus,
clutching like a drowning man at the one emolument
of the coveted office.
Mrs. Perkins gazed at her husband
anxiously. The answer was so unexpected and seemingly
so absurd that she for a moment feared he had lost
his mind. The notion that two years’ service
in so important an office as that of Mayor of Dumfries
Corners received as its sole reward nothing but lamps
was to her mind impossible.
“Is is there anything
the matter with you, dear?” she asked, placing
her hand on his brow. “You don’t seem
feverish.”
“Feverish?” snapped the
leader of his party. “Who said anything
about my being feverish?”
“Nobody, Teddy dear; but what
you said about lamps made me think made
me think your mind was wandering a trifle.”
“Oh that!”
laughed Perkins. “No, indeed it’s
true. They always give the Mayor a pair of lamps.
Some of them are very swell, too. You know those
wrought-iron standards that Mr. Berkeley has in front
of his place?”
“The ones at the driveway entrance, on the bowlders?”
“Yes.”
“They’re beauties. I’ve always
admired those lamps very much.”
“Well they are the
rewards of Mr. Berkeley’s political virtue.
I paid for them, and so did all the rest of the tax-payers.
They are his Mayor’s lamps, and if I’m
elected I’ll have a pair just like them, if I
want them like that.”
“Oh, I do hope you’ll
get in, Teddy,” said the little woman, anxiously,
after a reflective pause. “They’d
look stunning on our gate-posts.”
“I don’t think I shall
have them there,” said Thaddeus. “Jiggers
has the right idea, seems to me he’s
put ’em on the newel-posts of his front porch
steps.”
“I don’t suppose they’d
give us the money and let us buy one handsome cloisonne
lamp from Tiffany’s, would they?” Mrs.
Perkins asked.
“A cloisonne lamp on a gate-post?”
laughed Perkins.
“Of course not,” rejoined
the lady. “You know I didn’t mean
any such thing. I saw a perfectly beautiful lamp
in Tiffany’s last Wednesday, and it would go
so well in the parlor ”
“That wouldn’t be possible,
my dear,” said Thaddeus, still smiling.
“You don’t quite catch the idea of those
lamps. They’re sort of like the red, white,
and blue lights in a drug-store window in intention.
They are put up to show the public that that is where
a political prescription for the body politic may
be compounded. The public is responsible for
the bills, and the public expects to use what little
light can be extracted from them.”
“Then all this generosity on the public’s
part is ”
“Merely that of the Indian who gives and takes
back,” said Thaddeus.
“And they must be out-of-doors?”
asked Mrs. Perkins. “If I set the cloisonne
lamp in the window, it wouldn’t do?”
“No,” said Thaddeus. “They
must be out-of-doors.”
“Well, I hope the nasty old
public will stay there too, and not come traipsing
all over my house,” snapped Mrs. Perkins, indignantly.
And then for a little time the discussion of the Mayor’s
lamps stopped.
The campaign went on, and Thaddeus
night after night was forced to go out to speak here
and there and everywhere. One night he travelled
five miles through mud and rain to address an organization
of tax-payers, and found them assembled before the
long mahogany counter of a beer-saloon, which was
the “Hall” they had secured for the reception
of the idol of their hopes; and among them it is safe
to say there was not one who ever saw a tax-bill,
and not many who knew more about those luxuries of
life than the delicious flunky, immortalized by Mr.
Punch, who says to a brother flunky, “I say,
Tummas, wot is taxes?” And he told them his
principles and promised to do his best for them, and
bade them good-night, and went away leaving them parched
and dry and downcast. And then the other fellow
came, and won their hearts and “set them up
again.” Another night he attended another
meeting and lost a number of friends because he shone
at both ends but not in the middle. If he had
taken a glittering coin or two from his vest-pocket
on behalf of the noble working-men there assembled
in great numbers and spirituous mood, they would have
forgiven him his wit and patent-leather shoes and
so it went. Perkins was nightly hauled hither
and yon by the man he called his “Hagenbeck,”
the manager of the wild animal he felt himself gradually
degenerating into, and his wife and home and children
saw less of him than of the unimportant floating voter
whose mind was open to conviction, but could be reached
only by way of the throat.
“Two o’clock last night;
one o’clock the night before; I suppose it’ll
be three before you are in to-night?” Mrs. Perkins
said, ruefully.
“I do not know, my dear,”
replied Thaddeus. “There are five meetings
on for to-night.”
“Well, I think they ought to
give you the lamps now,” said Mrs. Perkins.
“It seems to me this is when you need them most.”
“True,” said Thaddeus,
sadly, for in his secret soul he was beginning to
be afraid he would be elected; and now that he saw
what kind of people Mayors have to associate with,
the glory of it did not seem to be worth the cost.
“I’m a sort of Night-Mayor just at present,
and those lamps would come in handy in the wee sma’
hours,” he groaned. And then he sighed
and pined for the peaceful days of yore when he was
content to walk his ways with no nation upon his shoulders.
“I never envied Atlas anyhow,”
he confided to himself later, as he tossed about upon
his bed and called himself names. “It always
seemed to me that this revolving globe must rub the
skin off his neck and back; but now, poor devil, with
just one municipality hanging over me, I can appreciate
more than ever the difficulties of his position except
that he doesn’t have to make speeches to ‘tax-payers.’
Humph! Taxpayers! It’s tax-makers.
If I’d promised to go into all sorts of wilderness
improvement for the sole and only purpose of putting
these ‘tax-payers’ on the corporation
at the expense of real laboring-men, I’d win
in a canter.”
“What is the matter, Thaddeus?”
said Mrs. Perkins, coming in from the other room.
“Can’t you sleep?”
“Don’t want to sleep,
my dear,” returned the candidate. “When
I go to sleep I dream I’m addressing mass-meetings.
I can’t enjoy my rest unless I stay awake.
Did your mother come to-day?”
“Yes and, oh, she’s so enthusiastic,
Teddy!”
“At last! About me? You don’t
mean it.”
“No about the lamps.
She says lamps are just what we need to complete the
entrance. She thinks Mr. Berkeley’s scheme
of putting them on the stone posts is the best.
There’s more dignity about it. Putting them
on the piazza steps, she says, looks ostentatious,
and suggests a beer-saloon or a road-house.”
“Well, my dear, that’s
about all politics seems to amount to,” said
the reformer. “If those lamps are to be
a souvenir of the campaign, they ought to suggest
road-houses and beer-saloons.”
“They will not be souvenirs
of a campaign,” replied Mrs. Perkins, proudly.
“They will be the outward and visible sign of
my husband’s merit; the emblem of victory.”
“The red badge of triumph, eh?”
smiled the candidate, wanly. “Well, my
dear, have them where you please, and keep them well
filled with alcohol, even if they do burn gas.
They’ll represent the tax-payers when they get
that.”
“You musn’t get so tired,
Thaddeus dear,” said the little woman, smoothing
his forehead soothingly with her hand. “You
seem unusually tired to-night.”
“I am,” said Thaddeus, shortly. “The
debate wore me out.”
“Did you debate? I thought you said you
wouldn’t.”
“Well, I did. Everybody
said I was afraid to meet Captain Haskins on the platform,
so we had it out to-night over in the Tenth Ward.
I talked for sixty-eight minutes, gave ’em my
views, and then he got up.”
“What did he say. Could he answer you?”
“No but he won the
day. All he said was: ’Well, boys,
I’m not much of a talker, but I’ll say
one thing Perkins, while my adversary, is
still my friend, and I’m proud of him.
Now, if you’ll all join me at the bar, we’ll
drink his health on me.’” Thaddeus
paused, and then he added: “I imagine they’re
cheering yet; at any rate, if I have as much health
as they drink on Haskins I’ll
double discount old Methuselah in the matter of years.”
The next morning at breakfast the
pale and nervous standard-bearer was affectionately
greeted by his mother-in-law.
“I’ve been thinking about
those lamps all night,” she said, after a few
minutes. “The trouble about the gate-posts
is that you have three gate-posts and only two lamps.”
“Maybe they’d let us buy
three lamps instead of two,” suggested Mrs.
Perkins.
“Well, we won’t, even
if they do let us,” observed Perkins, with some
irritation. He had just received a newspaper from
a kind friend in Massachusetts with a comic biography
and dissipated wood-cut of himself in it. “I’m
not starting a concert-hall, and I’m not going
to put a row of lamps along the front of my place.”
“I quite agree with you,”
replied his mother-in-law. “It occurred
to me we might put them, like hanging lanterns, on
each of the chimneys. It would be odd.”
Thaddeus muttered two syllables to
himself, the latter of which sounded like M’dodd,
but exactly what it was he said I can only guess.
Then he added: “They won’t go there.
I can’t get a gas-pipe up through those chimneys.
It’s as much as we can do to get the smoke up,
much less a gas-pipe. Even if we got the gas-pipe
through, it wouldn’t do. A putty-blower
would choke up the flues.”
“Well, I don’t know,”
said the mother-in-law, placidly. “It seems
to me ”
A glance from Mrs. Perkins stopped
the dear old lady. I think Mrs. Perkins’s
sympathetic disposition taught her that her husband
was having a hard time being agreeable, and that further
discussion of the lamp question was likely to prove
disastrous.
Thaddeus was soon called for by his
manager, and started out to meet the leading lights
of the Hungarian and Italian quarters. The Germans
had been made solid the day before, and as for the
Irish, they were supposed to be with Perkins on principle,
because Perkins was not in accord politically with
the existing administration.
“It’s too bad he’s
so nervous,” said his mother-in-law, as he went
out. “They say women are nervous, but I
must say I don’t think much of the endurance
of men. How absurd he was when he spoke of the
gas-pipe through the chimney!”
“Well, I suppose, my dear mother,”
said Mrs. Perkins, sadly “I suppose
he can’t be bothered with little details like
the lamps now. There are other questions to be
considered.”
“What is the exact issue?”
asked the mother-in-law, interestedly.
“Well the tariff,
and ah and taxes, and ah money,
and ah ah I think
the saloon question enters in somehow. I believe
Mr. Haskins wants more of them, and Thaddeus says
there are too many of them as it is. And now
they are both investigating them, I fancy, because
Teddy was in one the other day.”
“We ought to help him a little,”
said the elder woman. “Let’s just
relieve him of the whole lamp question; decide where
to put them, go to New York and pick them out, get
estimates for the laying of the pipes, and surprise
him by having them all ready to put up the day after
election.”
“Wouldn’t it be fun!”
cried Mrs. Perkins, delightedly. “He’ll
be so surprised poor dear boy. I’ll
do it. I’ll send down this morning for
Mr. O’Hara to come up here and see how we can
make the connection and where the trenches for the
pipes can be laid. Mr. O’Hara is the best-known
contractor in town, and I guess he’s the man
we want.”
And immediately O’Hara was telephoned
for to come up to Mr. Perkins’s, and the fair
conspirators were not aware of, and probably will never
realize, the importance politically of that act.
Mr. O’Hara refused to come, but it was hinted
about that Perkins had summoned him, and there was
great joy among the rank and file, and woe among the
better elements, for O’Hara was a boss, and
a boss whose power was one of the things Thaddeus
was trying to break, and the cohorts fancied that the
apostle of purity had realized that without O’Hara
reform was fallen into the pit. Furthermore,
as cities of the third class, like Dumfries Corners,
live conversationally on rumors and gossipings, it
was not an hour before almost all Dumfries Corners,
except Thaddeus Perkins himself and his manager, knew
that the idol had bowed before the boss’s hat,
and that the boss had returned the grand message that
he’d see Perkins in the Hudson River before
he’d go to his damned mugwump temple; and in
two hours they also knew it, for they heard in no uncertain
terms from the secretary of the Municipal Club, a
reform organization, which had been instrumental in
securing Perkins’s nomination, who demanded to
know in an explicit yes or no as to whether any such
message had been sent. The denial was made, and
then the lie was given; and many to this day wonder
exactly where the truth lay. At any rate, votes
were lost and few gained, and many a worthy friend
of good government lost heart and bemoaned the degeneration
of the gentleman into the politician.
Perkins, worn out, irritated by, if
not angry at, what he termed the underhanded lying
of the opposition, drove home for luncheon, and found
his wife and her mother in a state of high dudgeon.
They had been insulted.
“It was frightful the language
that man used, Thaddeus,” said Mrs. Perkins.
“He wouldn’t have dared
do it except by telephone,” put in the mother-in-law,
whose notions were somewhat old-fashioned. “I’ve
always hated that machine. People can lie to
you and you can’t look ’em in the eye
over it, and they can say things to your face with
absolute opportunity.”
The dear old lady meant impunity,
but it must be remembered that she was excited.
“Well, I think he ought to be
chastised,” said Mrs. Perkins.
“Who? What are you talking about?”
demanded Thaddeus.
“That nasty O’Hara man,”
said Mrs. Perkins. “He said ‘he’d
be damned’ over the wire.”
Thaddeus immediately became energetic.
“He didn’t blackguard you, did he?”
he demanded.
“Yes, he did,” said Mrs.
Perkins, the water in her eyes affecting her voice
so that it became mellifluous instead of merely melodious.
“But how?” persisted Perkins.
“Well we we rang
him up it was only as a surprise, you know,
dear we rang him up ”
“You you rang up O’Hara?”
cried Perkins, aghast. “It must have been
a surprise.”
“Yes, Teddy. We were going
to settle the lamp question; we thought you were bothered
enough with well, with affairs of state ”
The candidate drew up proudly, but
immediately became limp again as he realized the situation.
“And,” Mrs. Perkins continued,
“we thought we’d relieve you of the lamp
question; and as Mr. O’Hara is a great contractor the
most noted in all Dumfries Corners isn’t
he?”
“Yes, yes, yes! he is!”
said Perkins, furiously; “but what of that?”
“Well, that’s why we rang
him up,” said Mrs. Perkins, with a sigh of relief
to find that she had selected the right man. “We
wanted Mr. O’Hara to dig the trench for the
pipes, and lay the pipes ”
“He’s a great pipe-layer!” ejaculated
Perkins.
“Exactly,” rejoined Mrs.
Perkins, solemnly. “We’d heard that,
and so we asked him to come up.”
“But, my dear,” cried
Perkins, dismayed, “you didn’t tell him
you wanted him to put up my lamps? I’m
not elected yet.”
The agony of the moment for Perkins
can be better imagined than portrayed.
“He didn’t give us the
chance,” said the mother-in-law. “He
merely swore.”
Perkins drew a sigh of relief.
He understood it all now, and in spite of the position
in which he was placed he was glad. “Jove!”
he said to himself, “it was a narrow escape.
Suppose O’Hara had come! He’d have
enjoyed laying pipes for a Mayor’s lamps for
me two weeks before election.”
And for the first time in weeks Perkins
was faintly mirthful. The narrowness of his escape
had made him hysterical, and he actually indulged
in the luxury of a nervous laugh.
“That accounts for the rumor,”
he said to himself, and then his heart grew heavy
again. “The rumor is true, and Oh,
well, this is what I get for dabbling in politics.
If I ever get out of this alive, I vow by all the
gods politics shall know me no more.”
“It was all right my
asking O’Hara, Thaddeus?” asked Mrs. Perkins.
“Oh yes, certainly, my dear perfectly
right. O’Hara is indeed, as you thought,
the most noted, not to say notorious, contractor in
town, only he’s not laying pipes just now.
He’s pulling wires.”
“For telephones, I presume?” said the
old lady, placidly.
“Well, in a way,” replied
Thaddeus. “There’s a great deal of
vocality about O’Hara’s wires. But,
Bess,” he added, seriously, “just drop
the lamps until we get ’em, and confine your
telephoning to your intimate friends. An Irishman
on a telephone in political times is apt to be a trifle er artless
in his choice of words. If you must talk to one
of ’em, remember to put in the lightning plug
before you begin.”
With which injunction the candidate
departed to address the Mohawks, an independent political
organization in the Second Ward, which was made up
of thinking men who never indorsed a candidate without
knowing why, and rarely before three o’clock
of the afternoon of election day at that, by whom
he was received with cheers and back-slapping and button-holings
which convinced him that he was the most popular man
on earth, though on election day but election
day has yet to be described. It came, and with
it there came to Perkins a feeling very much like that
which the small boy experiences on the day before
Christmas. He has been good for two months, and
he knows that to-morrow the period of probation will
be over and he can be as bad as he pleases again for
a little while anyhow.
“However it turns out, I can
tell ’em all to go to the devil to-morrow,”
chuckled Thaddeus, rubbing his hands gleefully.
“I don’t think you ought
to forget the lamps, Thaddeus,” observed the
mother-in-law at breakfast. “Here it is
election day and you haven’t yet decided where
they shall go. Now I really think ”
“Never mind the lamps,”
returned Thaddeus. “Let’s talk of
ballot-boxes to-day. To-morrow we can place the
lamps.”
“Very well, if you say so,”
said the old lady; “only I marvel at you latter-day
boys. In my young days a small matter like that
would have been settled long ago.”
“Well, I’ll compromise
with you,” said Thaddeus. “We won’t
wait until to-morrow. I’ll decide the question
to-night I’m really too busy now to
think of them.”
“I shall be glad when we don’t
have to think about ’em at all,” sighed
Mrs. Perkins, pouring out the candidate’s coffee.
“They’ve really been a care to me.
I don’t like the idea of putting them on the
porch, or on the gate-posts either. They’ll
have to be kept clean, and goodness knows I can’t
ask the girls to go out in the middle of winter to
clean them if they are on the gate-posts.”
“Mike will clean them,” said Thaddeus.
Mrs. Perkins sniffed when Mike’s
name was mentioned. “I doubt it,”
she said. “He’s been lots of good
for two weeks.”
“Mike has been lots of good
for two weeks,” echoed Thaddeus, enthusiastically.
“He’s kept all the hired men in line, my
dear.”
“I’ve no doubt he’s
been of use politically, but from a domestic point
of view he’s been awful. He’s been
drunk for the last week.”
“Well, my love,” said
the candidate, despairingly, “some member of
the family had to be drunk for the last week, and
I’d rather it was Mike than you or any of the
children. Mike’s geniality has shed a radiance
about me among the hired men of this town that fills
me with pride.”
“I don’t see, to go back
to what I said in the very beginning, why we can’t
have the lamps in-doors,” returned Mrs. Perkins.
“I told you why not, my dear,”
said Perkins. “They are the perquisite of
the Mayor, but for the benefit of the public, because
the public pays for them.”
“And hasn’t the public,
as you call it, taken possession of the inside of
your house?” demanded the mother-in-law.
“I found seven gentlemen sitting in the white
and gold parlor only last night, and they hadn’t
wiped their feet either.”
“You don’t understand,”
faltered the standard-bearer. “That business
isn’t permanent. To-morrow I’ll tell
them to go round to the back door and ask the cook.”
“Humph!” said the mother-in-law.
“I’m surprised at you. For a few paltry
votes you ” Just here the front door
bell rang, and the business of the day beginning stopped
the conversation, which bade fair to become unpleasant.
Night came. The votes were being
counted, and at six o’clock Perkins was informed
that everything was going his way.
“Get your place ready for a
brass band and a serenade,” his manager telephoned.
“I sha’n’t!”
ejaculated the candidate to himself, his old-time
independence asserting itself now that the polls were
closed and he was right. He didn’t
have to. The band did not play in his front yard,
for at eight o’clock the tide that had set in
strong for Perkins turned. At ten, according
to votes that had been counted, things were about even,
and the ladies retired. At twelve Perkins turned
out the gas.
“That settles the lamp question,
anyhow,” he whispered to himself as he went
up-stairs, and then he went into Mrs. Perkins’s
room.
“Well, Bess,” he said,
“it’s all over, and I’ve made up
my mind as to where the lamps are to go.”
“Good!” said the little woman. “On
the gate-posts?”
“No, dear. In the parlor the
cloisonne lamps from Tiffany’s.”
“Why, I thought you said we couldn’t ”
“Well, we can. Our lamps
can go in there whether the public likes it or not.
We are emancipated.”
“But I don’t understand,” began
Mrs. Perkins.
“Oh, it’s simple,”
said Thaddeus, with a sigh of mingled relief and chagrin.
“It’s simple enough. The other lamps
are to be put er on Captain
Haskins’s place.”