Demosthenes Platterbaff, the eminent
Unrest Inducer, stood on his trial for a serious offence,
and the eyes of the political world were focussed
on the jury. The offence, it should be stated,
was serious for the Government rather than for the
prisoner. He had blown up the Albert Hall on
the eve of the great Liberal Federation Tango Tea,
the occasion on which the Chancellor of the Exchequer
was expected to propound his new theory: “Do
partridges spread infectious diseases?” Platterbaff
had chosen his time well; the Tango Tea had been hurriedly
postponed, but there were other political fixtures
which could not be put off under any circumstances.
The day after the trial there was to be a by-election
at Nemesis-on-Hand, and it had been openly announced
in the division that if Platterbaff were languishing
in gaol on polling day the Government candidate would
be “outed” to a certainty. Unfortunately,
there could be no doubt or misconception as to Platterbaff’s
guilt. He had not only pleaded guilty, but had
expressed his intention of repeating his escapade
in other directions as soon as circumstances permitted;
throughout the trial he was busy examining a small
model of the Free Trade Hall in Manchester.
The jury could not possibly find that the prisoner
had not deliberately and intentionally blown up the
Albert Hall; the question was: Could they find
any extenuating circumstances which would permit of
an acquittal? Of course any sentence which the
law might feel compelled to inflict would be followed
by an immediate pardon, but it was highly desirable,
from the Government’s point of view, that the
necessity for such an exercise of clemency should
not arise. A headlong pardon, on the eve of
a bye-election, with threats of a heavy voting defection
if it were withheld or even delayed, would not necessarily
be a surrender, but it would look like one.
Opponents would be only too ready to attribute ungenerous
motives. Hence the anxiety in the crowded Court,
and in the little groups gathered round the tape-machines
in Whitehall and Downing Street and other affected
centres.
The jury returned from considering
their verdict; there was a flutter, an excited murmur,
a deathlike hush. The foreman delivered his message:
“The jury find the prisoner
guilty of blowing up the Albert Hall. The jury
wish to add a rider drawing attention to the fact that
a by-election is pending in the Parliamentary division
of Nemesis-on-Hand.”
“That, of course,” said
the Government Prosecutor, springing to his feet,
“is equivalent to an acquittal?”
“I hardly think so,” said
the Judge, coldly; “I feel obliged to sentence
the prisoner to a week’s imprisonment.”
“And may the Lord have mercy
on the poll,” a Junior Counsel exclaimed irreverently.
It was a scandalous sentence, but
then the Judge was not on the Ministerial side in
politics.
The verdict and sentence were made
known to the public at twenty minutes past five in
the afternoon; at half-past five a dense crowd was
massed outside the Prime Minister’s residence
lustily singing, to the air of “Trelawney”:
“And should our Hero rot in
gaol,
For e’en
a single day,
There’s Fifteen Hundred Voting
Men
Will vote the
other way.”
“Fifteen hundred,” said
the Prime Minister, with a shudder; “it’s
too horrible to think of. Our majority last
time was only a thousand and seven.”
“The poll opens at eight to-morrow
morning,” said the Chief Organiser; “we
must have him out by 7 a.m.”
“Seven-thirty,” amended
the Prime Minister; “we must avoid any appearance
of precipitancy.”
“Not later than seven-thirty,
then,” said the Chief Organiser; “I have
promised the agent down there that he shall be able
to display posters announcing ‘Platterbaff is
Out,’ before the poll opens. He said it
was our only chance of getting a telegram ‘Radprop
is In’ to-night.”
At half-past seven the next morning
the Prime Minister and the Chief Organiser sat at
breakfast, making a perfunctory meal, and awaiting
the return of the Home Secretary, who had gone in
person to superintend the releasing of Platterbaff.
Despite the earliness of the hour a small crowd had
gathered in the street outside, and the horrible menacing
Trelawney refrain of the “Fifteen Hundred Voting
Men” came in a steady, monotonous chant.
“They will cheer presently when
they hear the news,” said the Prime Minister
hopefully; “hark! They are booing some
one now! That must be McKenna.”
The Home Secretary entered the room
a moment later, disaster written on his face.
“He won’t go!” he exclaimed.
“Won’t go? Won’t leave gaol?”
“He won’t go unless he
has a brass band. He says he never has left
prison without a brass band to play him out, and he’s
not going to go without one now.”
“But surely that sort of thing
is provided by his supporters and admirers?”
said the Prime Minister; “we can hardly be supposed
to supply a released prisoner with a brass band.
How on earth could we defend it on the Estimates?”
“His supporters say it is up
to us to provide the music,” said the Home Secretary;
“they say we put him in prison, and it’s
our affair to see that he leaves it in a respectable
manner. Anyway, he won’t go unless he
has a band.”
The telephone squealed shrilly; it
was a trunk call from Nemesis.
“Poll opens in five minutes.
Is Platterbaff out yet? In Heaven’s name,
why ”
The Chief Organiser rang off.
“This is not a moment for standing
on dignity,” he observed bluntly; “musicians
must be supplied at once. Platterbaff must have
his band.”
“Where are you going to find
the musicians?” asked the Home Secretary wearily;
“we can’t employ a military band, in fact,
I don’t think he’d have one if we offered
it, and there ain’t any others. There’s
a musicians’ strike on, I suppose you know.”
“Can’t you get a strike permit?”
asked the Organiser.
“I’ll try,” said the Home Secretary,
and went to the telephone.
Eight o’clock struck.
The crowd outside chanted with an increasing volume
of sound:
“Will vote the other way.”
A telegram was brought in. It
was from the central committee rooms at Nemesis.
“Losing twenty votes per minute,” was
its brief message.
Ten o’clock struck. The
Prime Minister, the Home Secretary, the Chief Organiser,
and several earnest helpful friends were gathered in
the inner gateway of the prison, talking volubly to
Demosthenes Platterbaff, who stood with folded arms
and squarely planted feet, silent in their midst.
Golden-tongued legislators whose eloquence had swayed
the Marconi Inquiry Committee, or at any rate the
greater part of it, expended their arts of oratory
in vain on this stubborn unyielding man. Without
a band he would not go; and they had no band.
A quarter past ten, half-past.
A constant stream of telegraph boys poured in through
the prison gates.
“Yamley’s factory hands
just voted you can guess how,” ran a despairing
message, and the others were all of the same tenour.
Nemesis was going the way of Reading.
“Have you any band instruments
of an easy nature to play?” demanded the Chief
Organiser of the Prison Governor; “drums, cymbals,
those sort of things?”
“The warders have a private
band of their own,” said the Governor, “but
of course I couldn’t allow the men themselves ”
“Lend us the instruments,” said the Chief
Organiser.
One of the earnest helpful friends
was a skilled performer on the cornet, the Cabinet
Ministers were able to clash cymbals more or less in
tune, and the Chief Organiser has some knowledge of
the drum.
“What tune would you prefer?” he asked
Platterbaff.
“The popular song of the moment,”
replied the Agitator after a moment’s reflection.
It was a tune they had all heard hundreds
of times, so there was no difficulty in turning out
a passable imitation of it. To the improvised
strains of “I didn’t want to do it”
the prisoner strode forth to freedom. The word
of the song had reference, it was understood, to the
incarcerating Government and not to the destroyer of
the Albert Hall.
The seat was lost, after all, by a
narrow majority. The local Trade Unionists took
offence at the fact of Cabinet Ministers having personally
acted as strike-breakers, and even the release of Platterbaff
failed to pacify them.
The seat was lost, but Ministers had
scored a moral victory. They had shown that
they knew when and how to yield.