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  • P. G. Wodehouse
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  • Title: The Swoop! or How Clarence Saved England
  • A Tale of the Great Invasion
  • Author: P. G. Wodehouse
  • Posting Date: August 26, 2012 [EBook #7050]
  • Release Date: December, 2004
  • First Posted: March 1, 2003
  • Language: English
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SWOOP! HOW CLARENCE SAVED ENGLAND ***
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  • THE SWOOP!
  • or
  • How Clarence Saved England
  • _A Tale of the Great Invasion_
  • by P. G. Wodehouse
  • 1909
  • PREFACE
  • It may be thought by some that in the pages which follow I have painted
  • in too lurid colours the horrors of a foreign invasion of England.
  • Realism in art, it may be argued, can be carried too far. I prefer to
  • think that the majority of my readers will acquit me of a desire to be
  • unduly sensational. It is necessary that England should be roused to a
  • sense of her peril, and only by setting down without flinching the
  • probable results of an invasion can this be done. This story, I may
  • mention, has been written and published purely from a feeling of
  • patriotism and duty. Mr. Alston Rivers' sensitive soul will be jarred
  • to its foundations if it is a financial success. So will mine. But in a
  • time of national danger we feel that the risk must be taken. After all,
  • at the worst, it is a small sacrifice to make for our country.
  • P. G. WODEHOUSE.
  • _The Bomb-Proof Shelter,_ _London, W._
  • Part One
  • Chapter 1
  • AN ENGLISH BOY'S HOME
  • _August the First, 19--_
  • Clarence Chugwater looked around him with a frown, and gritted his
  • teeth.
  • "England--my England!" he moaned.
  • Clarence was a sturdy lad of some fourteen summers. He was neatly, but
  • not gaudily, dressed in a flat-brimmed hat, a coloured handkerchief, a
  • flannel shirt, a bunch of ribbons, a haversack, football shorts, brown
  • boots, a whistle, and a hockey-stick. He was, in fact, one of General
  • Baden-Powell's Boy Scouts.
  • Scan him closely. Do not dismiss him with a passing glance; for you are
  • looking at the Boy of Destiny, at Clarence MacAndrew Chugwater, who
  • saved England.
  • To-day those features are familiar to all. Everyone has seen the
  • Chugwater Column in Aldwych, the equestrian statue in Chugwater Road
  • (formerly Piccadilly), and the picture-postcards in the stationers'
  • windows. That bulging forehead, distended with useful information; that
  • massive chin; those eyes, gleaming behind their spectacles; that
  • _tout ensemble_; that _je ne sais quoi_.
  • In a word, Clarence!
  • He could do everything that the Boy Scout must learn to do. He could
  • low like a bull. He could gurgle like a wood-pigeon. He could imitate
  • the cry of the turnip in order to deceive rabbits. He could smile and
  • whistle simultaneously in accordance with Rule 8 (and only those who
  • have tried this know how difficult it is). He could spoor, fell trees,
  • tell the character from the boot-sole, and fling the squaler. He did
  • all these things well, but what he was really best at was flinging the
  • squaler.
  • * * * * *
  • Clarence, on this sultry August afternoon, was tensely occupied
  • tracking the family cat across the dining-room carpet by its
  • foot-prints. Glancing up for a moment, he caught sight of the other
  • members of the family.
  • "England, my England!" he moaned.
  • It was indeed a sight to extract tears of blood from any Boy Scout. The
  • table had been moved back against the wall, and in the cleared space
  • Mr. Chugwater, whose duty it was to have set an example to his
  • children, was playing diabolo. Beside him, engrossed in cup-and-ball,
  • was his wife. Reggie Chugwater, the eldest son, the heir, the hope of
  • the house, was reading the cricket news in an early edition of the
  • evening paper. Horace, his brother, was playing pop-in-taw with his
  • sister Grace and Grace's _fiance_, Ralph Peabody. Alice, the other
  • Miss Chugwater, was mending a Badminton racquet.
  • Not a single member of that family was practising with the rifle, or
  • drilling, or learning to make bandages.
  • Clarence groaned.
  • "If you can't play without snorting like that, my boy," said Mr.
  • Chugwater, a little irritably, "you must find some other game. You made
  • me jump just as I was going to beat my record."
  • "Talking of records," said Reggie, "Fry's on his way to his eighth
  • successive century. If he goes on like this, Lancashire will win the
  • championship."
  • "I thought he was playing for Somerset," said Horace.
  • "That was a fortnight ago. You ought to keep up to date in an important
  • subject like cricket."
  • Once more Clarence snorted bitterly.
  • "I'm sure you ought not to be down on the floor, Clarence," said Mr.
  • Chugwater anxiously. "It is so draughty, and you have evidently got a
  • nasty cold. _Must_ you lie on the floor?"
  • "I am spooring," said Clarence with simple dignity.
  • "But I'm sure you can spoor better sitting on a chair with a nice
  • book."
  • "_I_ think the kid's sickening for something," put in Horace
  • critically. "He's deuced roopy. What's up, Clarry?"
  • "I was thinking," said Clarence, "of my country--of England."
  • "What's the matter with England?"
  • "_She's_ all right," murmured Ralph Peabody.
  • "My fallen country!" sighed Clarence, a not unmanly tear bedewing the
  • glasses of his spectacles. "My fallen, stricken country!"
  • "That kid," said Reggie, laying down his paper, "is talking right
  • through his hat. My dear old son, are you aware that England has never
  • been so strong all round as she is now? Do you _ever_ read the
  • papers? Don't you know that we've got the Ashes and the Golf
  • Championship, and the Wibbley-wob Championship, and the Spiropole,
  • Spillikins, Puff-Feather, and Animal Grab Championships? Has it come to
  • your notice that our croquet pair beat America last Thursday by eight
  • hoops? Did you happen to hear that we won the Hop-skip-and-jump at the
  • last Olympic Games? You've been out in the woods, old sport."
  • Clarence's heart was too full for words. He rose in silence, and
  • quitted the room.
  • "Got the pip or something!" said Reggie. "Rum kid! I say, Hirst's
  • bowling well! Five for twenty-three so far!"
  • Clarence wandered moodily out of the house. The Chugwaters lived in a
  • desirable villa residence, which Mr. Chugwater had built in Essex. It
  • was a typical Englishman's Home. Its name was Nasturtium Villa.
  • As Clarence walked down the road, the excited voice of a newspaper-boy
  • came to him. Presently the boy turned the corner, shouting, "Ker-lapse
  • of Surrey! Sensational bowling at the Oval!"
  • He stopped on seeing Clarence.
  • "Paper, General?"
  • Clarence shook his head. Then he uttered a startled exclamation, for
  • his eye had fallen on the poster.
  • It ran as follows:--
  • SURREY
  • DOING
  • BADLY
  • GERMAN ARMY LANDS IN ENGLAND
  • Chapter 2
  • THE INVADERS
  • Clarence flung the boy a halfpenny, tore a paper from his grasp, and
  • scanned it eagerly. There was nothing to interest him in the body of
  • the journal, but he found what he was looking for in the stop-press
  • space. "Stop press news," said the paper. "Fry not out, 104. Surrey 147
  • for 8. A German army landed in Essex this afternoon. Loamshire
  • Handicap: Spring Chicken, 1; Salome, 2; Yip-i-addy, 3. Seven ran."
  • Essex! Then at any moment the foe might be at their doors; more, inside
  • their doors. With a passionate cry, Clarence tore back to the house.
  • He entered the dining-room with the speed of a highly-trained Marathon
  • winner, just in time once more to prevent Mr. Chugwater lowering his
  • record.
  • "The Germans!" shouted Clarence. "We are invaded!"
  • This time Mr. Chugwater was really annoyed.
  • "If I have told you once about your detestable habit of shouting in the
  • house, Clarence, I have told you a hundred times. If you cannot be a
  • Boy Scout quietly, you must stop being one altogether. I had got up to
  • six that time."
  • "But, father----"
  • "Silence! You will go to bed this minute; and I shall consider the
  • question whether you are to have any supper. It will depend largely on
  • your behaviour between now and then. Go!"
  • "But, father----"
  • Clarence dropped the paper, shaken with emotion. Mr. Chugwater's
  • sternness deepened visibly.
  • "Clarence! Must I speak again?"
  • He stooped and removed his right slipper.
  • Clarence withdrew.
  • Reggie picked up the paper.
  • "That kid," he announced judicially, "is off his nut! Hullo! I told you
  • so! Fry not out, 104. Good old Charles!"
  • "I say," exclaimed Horace, who sat nearest the window, "there are two
  • rummy-looking chaps coming to the front door, wearing a sort of fancy
  • dress!"
  • "It must be the Germans," said Reggie. "The paper says they landed here
  • this afternoon. I expect----"
  • A thunderous knock rang through the house. The family looked at one
  • another. Voices were heard in the hall, and next moment the door opened
  • and the servant announced "Mr. Prinsotto and Mr. Aydycong."
  • "Or, rather," said the first of the two newcomers, a tall, bearded,
  • soldierly man, in perfect English, "Prince Otto of Saxe-Pfennig and
  • Captain the Graf von Poppenheim, his aide-de-camp."
  • "Just so--just so!" said Mr. Chugwater, affably. "Sit down, won't you?"
  • The visitors seated themselves. There was an awkward silence.
  • "Warm day!" said Mr. Chugwater.
  • "Very!" said the Prince, a little constrainedly.
  • "Perhaps a cup of tea? Have you come far?"
  • "Well--er--pretty far. That is to say, a certain distance. In fact,
  • from Germany."
  • "I spent my summer holiday last year at Dresden. Capital place!"
  • "Just so. The fact is, Mr.--er--"
  • "Chugwater. By the way--my wife, Mrs. Chugwater."
  • The prince bowed. So did his aide-de-camp.
  • "The fact is, Mr. Jugwater," resumed the prince, "we are not here on a
  • holiday."
  • "Quite so, quite so. Business before pleasure."
  • The prince pulled at his moustache. So did his aide-de-camp, who seemed
  • to be a man of but little initiative and conversational resource.
  • "We are invaders."
  • "Not at all, not at all," protested Mr. Chugwater.
  • "I must warn you that you will resist at your peril. You wear no
  • uniform--"
  • "Wouldn't dream of such a thing. Except at the lodge, of course."
  • "You will be sorely tempted, no doubt. Do not think that I do not
  • appreciate your feelings. This is an Englishman's Home."
  • Mr. Chugwater tapped him confidentially on the knee.
  • "And an uncommonly snug little place, too," he said. "Now, if you will
  • forgive me for talking business, you, I gather, propose making some
  • stay in this country."
  • The prince laughed shortly. So did his aide-de-camp. "Exactly,"
  • continued Mr. Chugwater, "exactly. Then you will want some
  • _pied-a-terre_, if you follow me. I shall be delighted to let you
  • this house on remarkably easy terms for as long as you please. Just
  • come along into my study for a moment. We can talk it over quietly
  • there. You see, dealing direct with me, you would escape the
  • middleman's charges, and--"
  • Gently but firmly he edged the prince out of the room and down the
  • passage.
  • The aide-de-camp continued to sit staring woodenly at the carpet.
  • Reggie closed quietly in on him.
  • "Excuse me," he said; "talking shop and all that. But I'm an agent for
  • the Come One Come All Accident and Life Assurance Office. You have
  • heard of it probably? We can offer you really exceptional terms. You
  • must not miss a chance of this sort. Now here's a prospectus--"
  • Horace sidled forward.
  • "I don't know if you happen to be a cyclist, Captain--er--Graf; but if
  • you'd like a practically new motorbike, only been used since last
  • November, I can let you--"
  • There was a swish of skirts as Grace and Alice advanced on the visitor.
  • "I'm sure," said Grace winningly, "that you're fond of the theatre,
  • Captain Poppenheim. We are getting up a performance of 'Ici on parle
  • Francais,' in aid of the fund for Supplying Square Meals to Old-Age
  • Pensioners. Such a deserving object, you know. Now, how many tickets
  • will you take?"
  • "You can sell them to your friends, you know," added Mrs. Chugwater.
  • The aide-de-camp gulped convulsively.
  • * * * * *
  • Ten minutes later two penniless men groped their way, dazed, to the
  • garden gate.
  • "At last," said Prince Otto brokenly, for it was he, "at last I begin
  • to realise the horrors of an invasion--for the invaders."
  • And together the two men staggered on.
  • Chapter 3
  • ENGLAND'S PERIL
  • When the papers arrived next morning, it was seen that the situation
  • was even worse than had at first been suspected. Not only had the
  • Germans effected a landing in Essex, but, in addition, no fewer than
  • eight other hostile armies had, by some remarkable coincidence, hit on
  • that identical moment for launching their long-prepared blow.
  • England was not merely beneath the heel of the invader. It was beneath
  • the heels of nine invaders.
  • There was barely standing-room.
  • Full details were given in the Press. It seemed that while Germany was
  • landing in Essex, a strong force of Russians, under the Grand Duke
  • Vodkakoff, had occupied Yarmouth. Simultaneously the Mad Mullah had
  • captured Portsmouth; while the Swiss navy had bombarded Lyme Regis, and
  • landed troops immediately to westward of the bathing-machines. At
  • precisely the same moment China, at last awakened, had swooped down
  • upon that picturesque little Welsh watering-place, Lllgxtplll, and,
  • despite desperate resistance on the part of an excursion of Evanses and
  • Joneses from Cardiff, had obtained a secure foothold. While these
  • things were happening in Wales, the army of Monaco had descended on
  • Auchtermuchty, on the Firth of Clyde. Within two minutes of this
  • disaster, by Greenwich time, a boisterous band of Young Turks had
  • seized Scarborough. And, at Brighton and Margate respectively, small
  • but determined armies, the one of Moroccan brigands, under Raisuli, the
  • other of dark-skinned warriors from the distant isle of Bollygolla, had
  • made good their footing.
  • This was a very serious state of things.
  • Correspondents of the _Daily Mail_ at the various points of attack
  • had wired such particulars as they were able. The preliminary parley at
  • Lllgxtplll between Prince Ping Pong Pang, the Chinese general, and
  • Llewellyn Evans, the leader of the Cardiff excursionists, seems to have
  • been impressive to a degree. The former had spoken throughout in pure
  • Chinese, the latter replying in rich Welsh, and the general effect,
  • wired the correspondent, was almost painfully exhilarating.
  • So sudden had been the attacks that in very few instances was there any
  • real resistance. The nearest approach to it appears to have been seen
  • at Margate.
  • At the time of the arrival of the black warriors which, like the other
  • onslaughts, took place between one and two o'clock on the afternoon of
  • August Bank Holiday, the sands were covered with happy revellers. When
  • the war canoes approached the beach, the excursionists seem to have
  • mistaken their occupants at first for a troupe of nigger minstrels on
  • an unusually magnificent scale; and it was freely noised abroad in the
  • crowd that they were being presented by Charles Frohmann, who was
  • endeavouring to revive the ancient glories of the Christy Minstrels.
  • Too soon, however, it was perceived that these were no harmless Moore
  • and Burgesses. Suspicion was aroused by the absence of banjoes and
  • tambourines; and when the foremost of the negroes dexterously scalped a
  • small boy, suspicion became certainty.
  • In this crisis the trippers of Margate behaved well. The Mounted
  • Infantry, on donkeys, headed by Uncle Bones, did much execution. The
  • Ladies' Tormentor Brigade harassed the enemy's flank, and a
  • hastily-formed band of sharp-shooters, armed with three-shies-a-penny
  • balls and milky cocos, undoubtedly troubled the advance guard
  • considerably. But superior force told. After half an hour's fighting
  • the excursionists fled, leaving the beach to the foe.
  • At Auchtermuchty and Portsmouth no obstacle, apparently, was offered to
  • the invaders. At Brighton the enemy were permitted to land unharmed.
  • Scarborough, taken utterly aback by the boyish vigour of the Young
  • Turks, was an easy prey; and at Yarmouth, though the Grand Duke
  • received a nasty slap in the face from a dexterously-thrown bloater,
  • the resistance appears to have been equally futile.
  • By tea-time on August the First, nine strongly-equipped forces were
  • firmly established on British soil.
  • Chapter 4
  • WHAT ENGLAND THOUGHT OF IT
  • Such a state of affairs, disturbing enough in itself, was rendered
  • still more disquieting by the fact that, except for the Boy Scouts,
  • England's military strength at this time was practically nil.
  • The abolition of the regular army had been the first step. Several
  • causes had contributed to this. In the first place, the Socialists had
  • condemned the army system as unsocial. Privates, they pointed out, were
  • forbidden to hob-nob with colonels, though the difference in their
  • positions was due to a mere accident of birth. They demanded that every
  • man in the army should be a general. Comrade Quelch, in an eloquent
  • speech at Newington Butts, had pointed, amidst enthusiasm, to the
  • republics of South America, where the system worked admirably.
  • Scotland, too, disapproved of the army, because it was professional.
  • Mr. Smith wrote several trenchant letters to Mr. C. J. B. Marriott on
  • the subject.
  • So the army was abolished, and the land defence of the country
  • entrusted entirely to the Territorials, the Legion of Frontiersmen, and
  • the Boy Scouts.
  • But first the Territorials dropped out. The strain of being referred to
  • on the music-hall stage as Teddy-boys was too much for them.
  • Then the Frontiersmen were disbanded. They had promised well at the
  • start, but they had never been themselves since La Milo had been
  • attacked by the Manchester Watch Committee. It had taken all the heart
  • out of them.
  • So that in the end England's defenders were narrowed down to the
  • Boy Scouts, of whom Clarence Chugwater was the pride, and a large
  • civilian population, prepared, at any moment, to turn out for their
  • country's sake and wave flags. A certain section of these, too, could
  • sing patriotic songs.
  • * * * * *
  • It was inevitable, in the height of the Silly Season, that such a topic
  • as the simultaneous invasion of Great Britain by nine foreign powers
  • should be seized upon by the press. Countless letters poured into the
  • offices of the London daily papers every morning. Space forbids more
  • than the gist of a few of these.
  • Miss Charlesworth wrote:--"In this crisis I see no alternative. I shall
  • disappear."
  • Mr. Horatio Bottomley, in _John Bull_, said that there was some
  • very dirty and underhand work going on, and that the secret history of
  • the invasion would be published shortly. He himself, however, preferred
  • any invader, even the King of Bollygolla, to some K.C.'s he could name,
  • though he was fond of dear old Muir. He wanted to know why Inspector
  • Drew had retired.
  • The _Daily Express_, in a thoughtful leader, said that Free Trade
  • evidently meant invaders for all.
  • Mr. Herbert Gladstone, writing to the _Times_, pointed out that he
  • had let so many undesirable aliens into the country that he did not see
  • that a few more made much difference.
  • Mr. George R. Sims made eighteen puns on the names of the invading
  • generals in the course of one number of "Mustard and Cress."
  • Mr. H. G. Pelissier urged the public to look on the bright side. There
  • was a sun still shining in the sky. Besides, who knew that some foreign
  • marksman might not pot the censor?
  • Mr. Robert FitzSimmons offered to take on any of the invading generals,
  • or all of them, and if he didn't beat them it would only be because the
  • referee had a wife and seven small children and had asked him as a
  • personal favour to let himself be knocked out. He had lost several
  • fights that way.
  • The directors of the Crystal Palace wrote a circular letter to the
  • shareholders, pointing out that there was a good time coming. With this
  • addition to the public, the Palace stood a sporting chance of once more
  • finding itself full.
  • Judge Willis asked: "What is an invasion?"
  • Signor Scotti cabled anxiously from America (prepaid): "Stands Scotland
  • where it did?"
  • Mr. Lewis Waller wrote heroically: "How many of them are there? I am
  • usually good for about half a dozen. Are they assassins? I can tackle
  • any number of assassins."
  • Mr. Seymour Hicks said he hoped they would not hurt George Edwardes.
  • Mr. George Edwardes said that if they injured Seymour Hicks in any way
  • he would never smile again.
  • A writer in _Answers_ pointed out that, if all the invaders in the
  • country were piled in a heap, they would reach some of the way to the
  • moon.
  • Far-seeing men took a gloomy view of the situation. They laid stress on
  • the fact that this counter-attraction was bound to hit first-class
  • cricket hard. For some years gates had shown a tendency to fall off,
  • owing to the growing popularity of golf, tennis, and other games. The
  • desire to see the invaders as they marched through the country must
  • draw away thousands who otherwise would have paid their sixpences at
  • the turnstiles. It was suggested that representations should be made to
  • the invading generals with a view to inducing them to make a small
  • charge to sightseers.
  • In sporting circles the chief interest centered on the race to London.
  • The papers showed the positions of the various armies each morning in
  • their Runners and Betting columns; six to four on the Germans was
  • freely offered, but found no takers.
  • Considerable interest was displayed in the probable behaviour of the
  • nine armies when they met. The situation was a curious outcome of the
  • modern custom of striking a deadly blow before actually declaring war.
  • Until the moment when the enemy were at her doors, England had imagined
  • that she was on terms of the most satisfactory friendship with her
  • neighbours. The foe had taken full advantage of this, and also of the
  • fact that, owing to a fit of absent-mindedness on the part of the
  • Government, England had no ships afloat which were not entirely
  • obsolete. Interviewed on the subject by representatives of the daily
  • papers, the Government handsomely admitted that it was perhaps in
  • some ways a silly thing to have done; but, they urged, you could not
  • think of everything. Besides, they were on the point of laying down a
  • _Dreadnought_, which would be ready in a very few years. Meanwhile,
  • the best thing the public could do was to sleep quietly in their beds.
  • It was Fisher's tip; and Fisher was a smart man.
  • And all the while the Invaders' Marathon continued.
  • Who would be the first to reach London?
  • Chapter 5
  • THE GERMANS REACH LONDON
  • The Germans had got off smartly from the mark and were fully justifying
  • the long odds laid upon them. That master-strategist, Prince Otto of
  • Saxe-Pfennig, realising that if he wished to reach the Metropolis
  • quickly he must not go by train, had resolved almost at once to walk.
  • Though hampered considerably by crowds of rustics who gathered, gaping,
  • at every point in the line of march, he had made good progress. The
  • German troops had strict orders to reply to no questions, with the
  • result that little time was lost in idle chatter, and in a couple of
  • days it was seen that the army of the Fatherland was bound, barring
  • accidents, to win comfortably.
  • The progress of the other forces was slower. The Chinese especially
  • had undergone great privations, having lost their way near
  • Llanfairpwlgwnngogogoch, and having been unable to understand the
  • voluble directions given to them by the various shepherds they
  • encountered. It was not for nearly a week that they contrived to reach
  • Chester, where, catching a cheap excursion, they arrived in the
  • metropolis, hungry and footsore, four days after the last of their
  • rivals had taken up their station.
  • The German advance halted on the wooded heights of Tottenham. Here a
  • camp was pitched and trenches dug.
  • The march had shown how terrible invasion must of necessity be. With no
  • wish to be ruthless, the troops of Prince Otto had done grievous
  • damage. Cricket-pitches had been trampled down, and in many cases even
  • golf-greens dented by the iron heel of the invader, who rarely, if
  • ever, replaced the divot. Everywhere they had left ruin and misery in
  • their train.
  • With the other armies it was the same story. Through
  • carefully-preserved woods they had marched, frightening the birds and
  • driving keepers into fits of nervous prostration. Fishing, owing to
  • their tramping carelessly through the streams, was at a standstill.
  • Croquet had been given up in despair.
  • Near Epping the Russians shot a fox....
  • * * * * *
  • The situation which faced Prince Otto was a delicate one. All his early
  • training and education had implanted in him the fixed idea that, if he
  • ever invaded England, he would do it either alone or with the
  • sympathetic co-operation of allies. He had never faced the problem of
  • what he should do if there were rivals in the field. Competition is
  • wholesome, but only within bounds. He could not very well ask the other
  • nations to withdraw. Nor did he feel inclined to withdraw himself.
  • "It all comes of this dashed Swoop of the Vulture business," he
  • grumbled, as he paced before his tent, ever and anon pausing to sweep
  • the city below him with his glasses. "I should like to find the fellow
  • who started the idea! Making me look a fool! Still, it's just as bad
  • for the others, thank goodness! Well, Poppenheim?"
  • Captain von Poppenheim approached and saluted.
  • "Please, sir, the men say, 'May they bombard London?'"
  • "Bombard London!"
  • "Yes, sir; it's always done."
  • Prince Otto pulled thoughtfully at his moustache.
  • "Bombard London! It seems--and yet--ah, well, they have few pleasures."
  • He stood awhile in meditation. So did Captain von Poppenheim. He kicked
  • a pebble. So did Captain von Poppenheim--only a smaller pebble.
  • Discipline is very strict in the German army.
  • "Poppenheim."
  • "Sir?"
  • "Any signs of our--er--competitors?"
  • "Yes, sir; the Russians are coming up on the left flank, sir. They'll
  • be here in a few hours. Raisuli has been arrested at Purley for
  • stealing chickens. The army of Bollygolla is about ten miles out. No
  • news of the field yet, sir."
  • The Prince brooded. Then he spoke, unbosoming himself more freely than
  • was his wont in conversation with his staff.
  • "Between you and me, Pop," he cried impulsively, "I'm dashed sorry we
  • ever started this dashed silly invading business. We thought ourselves
  • dashed smart, working in the dark, and giving no sign till the great
  • pounce, and all that sort of dashed nonsense. Seems to me we've simply
  • dashed well landed ourselves in the dashed soup."
  • Captain von Poppenheim saluted in sympathetic silence. He and the
  • prince had been old chums at college. A life-long friendship existed
  • between them. He would have liked to have expressed adhesion verbally
  • to his superior officer's remarks. The words "I don't think" trembled
  • on his tongue. But the iron discipline of the German Army gagged him.
  • He saluted again and clicked his heels.
  • The Prince recovered himself with a strong effort.
  • "You say the Russians will be here shortly?" he said.
  • "In a few hours, sir."
  • "And the men really wish to bombard London?"
  • "It would be a treat to them, sir."
  • "Well, well, I suppose if we don't do it, somebody else will. And we
  • got here first."
  • "Yes, sir."
  • "Then--"
  • An orderly hurried up and saluted.
  • "Telegram, sir."
  • Absently the Prince opened it. Then his eyes lit up.
  • "Gotterdammerung!" he said. "I never thought of that. 'Smash up London
  • and provide work for unemployed mending it.--GRAYSON,'" he read.
  • "Poppenheim."
  • "Sir?"
  • "Let the bombardment commence."
  • "Yes, sir."
  • "And let it continue till the Russians arrive. Then it must stop, or
  • there will be complications."
  • Captain von Poppenheim saluted, and withdrew.
  • Chapter 6
  • THE BOMBARDMENT OF LONDON
  • Thus was London bombarded. Fortunately it was August, and there was
  • nobody in town.
  • Otherwise there might have been loss of life.
  • Chapter 7
  • A CONFERENCE OF THE POWERS
  • The Russians, led by General Vodkakoff, arrived at Hampstead half an
  • hour after the bombardment had ceased, and the rest of the invaders,
  • including Raisuli, who had got off on an _alibi_, dropped in at
  • intervals during the week. By the evening of Saturday, the sixth of
  • August, even the Chinese had limped to the metropolis. And the question
  • now was, What was going to happen? England displayed a polite
  • indifference to the problem. We are essentially a nation of
  • sight-seers. To us the excitement of staring at the invaders was
  • enough. Into the complex international problems to which the situation
  • gave rise it did not occur to us to examine. When you consider that a
  • crowd of five hundred Londoners will assemble in the space of two
  • minutes, abandoning entirely all its other business, to watch a
  • cab-horse that has fallen in the street, it is not surprising that the
  • spectacle of nine separate and distinct armies in the metropolis left
  • no room in the British mind for other reflections.
  • The attraction was beginning to draw people back to London now. They
  • found that the German shells had had one excellent result, they had
  • demolished nearly all the London statues. And what might have
  • conceivably seemed a draw-back, the fact that they had blown great
  • holes in the wood-paving, passed unnoticed amidst the more extensive
  • operations of the London County Council.
  • Taking it for all in all, the German gunners had simply been
  • beautifying London. The Albert Hall, struck by a merciful shell, had
  • come down with a run, and was now a heap of picturesque ruins;
  • Whitefield's Tabernacle was a charred mass; and the burning of the
  • Royal Academy proved a great comfort to all. At a mass meeting in
  • Trafalgar Square a hearty vote of thanks was passed, with acclamation,
  • to Prince Otto.
  • But if Londoners rejoiced, the invaders were very far from doing so.
  • The complicated state of foreign politics made it imperative that there
  • should be no friction between the Powers. Yet here a great number of
  • them were in perhaps as embarrassing a position as ever diplomatists
  • were called upon to unravel. When nine dogs are assembled round one
  • bone, it is rarely on the bone alone that teeth-marks are found at the
  • close of the proceedings.
  • Prince Otto of Saxe-Pfennig set himself resolutely to grapple with the
  • problem. His chance of grappling successfully with it was not improved
  • by the stream of telegrams which arrived daily from his Imperial
  • Master, demanding to know whether he had yet subjugated the country,
  • and if not, why not. He had replied guardedly, stating the difficulties
  • which lay in his way, and had received the following: "At once mailed
  • fist display. On Get or out Get.--WILHELM."
  • It was then that the distracted prince saw that steps must be taken at
  • once.
  • Carefully-worded letters were despatched by District Messenger boys to
  • the other generals. Towards nightfall the replies began to come in,
  • and, having read them, the Prince saw that this business could never be
  • settled without a personal interview. Many of the replies were
  • absolutely incoherent.
  • Raisuli, apologising for delay on the ground that he had been away in
  • the Isle of Dogs cracking a crib, wrote suggesting that the Germans and
  • Moroccans should combine with a view to playing the Confidence Trick on
  • the Swiss general, who seemed a simple sort of chap. "Reminds me of
  • dear old Maclean," wrote Raisuli. "There is money in this. Will you
  • come in? Wire in the morning."
  • The general of the Monaco forces thought the best way would be to
  • settle the thing by means of a game of chance of the odd-man-out class.
  • He knew a splendid game called Slippery Sam. He could teach them the
  • rules in half a minute.
  • The reply of Prince Ping Pong Pang of China was probably brilliant and
  • scholarly, but it was expressed in Chinese characters of the Ming
  • period, which Prince Otto did not understand; and even if he had it
  • would have done him no good, for he tried to read it from the top
  • downwards instead of from the bottom up.
  • The Young Turks, as might have been expected, wrote in their customary
  • flippant, cheeky style. They were full of mischief, as usual. The body
  • of the letter, scrawled in a round, schoolboy hand, dealt principally
  • with the details of the booby-trap which the general had successfully
  • laid for his head of staff. "He was frightfully shirty," concluded the
  • note jubilantly.
  • From the Bollygolla camp the messenger-boy returned without a scalp,
  • and with a verbal message to the effect that the King could neither
  • read nor write.
  • Grand Duke Vodkakoff, from the Russian lines, replied in his smooth,
  • cynical, Russian way:--"You appear anxious, my dear prince, to scratch
  • the other entrants. May I beg you to remember what happens when you
  • scratch a Russian?"
  • As for the Mad Mullah's reply, it was simply pure delirium. The journey
  • from Somaliland, and his meeting with his friend Mr. Dillon, appeared
  • to have had the worse effects on his sanity. He opened with the
  • statement that he was a tea-pot: and that was the only really coherent
  • remark he made.
  • Prince Otto placed a hand wearily on his throbbing brow.
  • "We must have a conference," he said. "It is the only way."
  • Next day eight invitations to dinner went out from the German camp.
  • * * * * *
  • It would be idle to say that the dinner, as a dinner, was a complete
  • success. Half-way through the Swiss general missed his diamond
  • solitaire, and cold glances were cast at Raisuli, who sat on his
  • immediate left. Then the King of Bollygolla's table-manners were
  • frankly inelegant. When he wanted a thing, he grabbed for it. And he
  • seemed to want nearly everything. Nor was the behaviour of the leader
  • of the Young Turks all that could be desired. There had been some talk
  • of only allowing him to come down to dessert; but he had squashed in,
  • as he briefly put it, and it would be paltering with the truth to say
  • that he had not had far more champagne than was good for him. Also, the
  • general of Monaco had brought a pack of cards with him, and was
  • spoiling the harmony by trying to induce Prince Ping Pong Pang to find
  • the lady. And the brainless laugh of the Mad Mullah was very trying.
  • Altogether Prince Otto was glad when the cloth was removed, and the
  • waiters left the company to smoke and talk business.
  • Anyone who has had anything to do with the higher diplomacy is aware
  • that diplomatic language stands in a class by itself. It is a language
  • specially designed to deceive the chance listener.
  • Thus when Prince Otto, turning to Grand Duke Vodkakoff, said quietly,
  • "I hear the crops are coming on nicely down Kent way," the habitual
  • frequenter of diplomatic circles would have understood, as did the
  • Grand Duke, that what he really meant was, "Now about this business.
  • What do you propose to do?"
  • The company, with the exception of the representative of the Young
  • Turks, who was drinking _creme de menthe_ out of a tumbler, the
  • Mullah and the King of Bollygolla bent forward, deeply interested, to
  • catch the Russian's reply. Much would depend on this.
  • Vodkakoff carelessly flicked the ash off his cigarette.
  • "So I hear," he said slowly. "But in Shropshire, they tell me, they are
  • having trouble with the mangel-wurzels."
  • The prince frowned at this typical piece of shifty Russian diplomacy.
  • "How is your Highness getting on with your Highness's roller-skating?"
  • he enquired guardedly.
  • The Russian smiled a subtle smile.
  • "Poorly," he said, "poorly. The last time I tried the outside edge I
  • thought somebody had thrown the building at me."
  • Prince Otto flushed. He was a plain, blunt man, and he hated this
  • beating about the bush.
  • "Why does a chicken cross the road?" he demanded, almost angrily.
  • The Russian raised his eyebrows, and smiled, but made no reply. The
  • prince, resolved to give him no chance of wriggling away from the
  • point, pressed him hotly.
  • "Think of a number," he cried. "Double it. Add ten. Take away the
  • number you first thought of. Divide it by three, and what is the
  • result?"
  • There was an awed silence. Surely the Russian, expert at evasion as he
  • was, could not parry so direct a challenge as this.
  • He threw away his cigarette and lit a cigar.
  • "I understand," he said, with a tinkle of defiance in his voice, "that
  • the Suffragettes, as a last resource, propose to capture Mr. Asquith
  • and sing the Suffragette Anthem to him."
  • A startled gasp ran round the table.
  • "Because the higher he flies, the fewer?" asked Prince Otto, with
  • sinister calm.
  • "Because the higher he flies, the fewer," said the Russian smoothly,
  • but with the smoothness of a treacherous sea.
  • There was another gasp. The situation was becoming alarmingly tense.
  • "You are plain-spoken, your Highness," said Prince Otto slowly.
  • At this moment the tension was relieved by the Young Turk falling off
  • his chair with a crash on to the floor. Everyone jumped up startled.
  • Raisuli took advantage of the confusion to pocket a silver ash-tray.
  • The interruption had a good effect. Frowns relaxed. The wranglers began
  • to see that they had allowed their feelings to run away with them. It
  • was with a conciliatory smile that Prince Otto, filling the Grand
  • Duke's glass, observed:
  • "Trumper is perhaps the prettier bat, but I confess I admire Fry's
  • robust driving."
  • The Russian was won over. He extended his hand.
  • "Two down and three to play, and the red near the top corner pocket,"
  • he said with that half-Oriental charm which he knew so well how to
  • exhibit on occasion.
  • The two shook hands warmly.
  • And so it was settled, the Russian having, as we have seen, waived his
  • claim to bombard London in his turn, there was no obstacle to a
  • peaceful settlement. It was obvious that the superior forces of the
  • Germans and Russians gave them, if they did but combine, the key to the
  • situation. The decision they arrived at was, as set forth above, as
  • follows. After the fashion of the moment, the Russian and German
  • generals decided to draw the Colour Line. That meant that the troops of
  • China, Somaliland, Bollygolla, as well as Raisuli and the Young Turks,
  • were ruled out. They would be given a week in which to leave the
  • country. Resistance would be useless. The combined forces of the
  • Germans, Russians, Swiss, and Monacoans were overwhelming, especially
  • as the Chinese had not recovered from their wanderings in Wales and
  • were far too footsore still to think of serious fighting.
  • When they had left, the remaining four Powers would continue the
  • invasion jointly.
  • * * * * *
  • Prince Otto of Saxe-Pfennig went to bed that night, comfortably
  • conscious of a good work well done. He saw his way now clear before
  • him.
  • But he had made one miscalculation. He had not reckoned with Clarence
  • Chugwater.
  • Part Two
  • Chapter 1
  • IN THE BOY SCOUTS' CAMP
  • Night!
  • Night in Aldwych!
  • In the centre of that vast tract of unreclaimed prairie known to
  • Londoners as the Aldwych Site there shone feebly, seeming almost to
  • emphasise the darkness and desolation of the scene, a single light.
  • It was the camp-fire of the Boy Scouts.
  • The night was raw and windy. A fine rain had been falling for some
  • hours. The date of September the First. For just a month England had
  • been in the grip of the invaders. The coloured section of the hostile
  • force had either reached its home by now, or was well on its way. The
  • public had seen it go with a certain regret. Not since the visit of the
  • Shah had such an attractive topic of conversation been afforded them.
  • Several comic journalists had built up a reputation and a large price
  • per thousand words on the King of Bollygolla alone. Theatres had
  • benefited by the index of a large, new, unsophisticated public. A piece
  • at the Waldorf Theatre had run for a whole fortnight, and "The Merry
  • Widow" had taken on a new lease of life. Selfridge's, abandoning its
  • policy of caution, had advertised to the extent of a quarter of a
  • column in two weekly papers.
  • Now the Young Turks were back at school in Constantinople, shuffling
  • their feet and throwing ink pellets at one another; Raisuli, home again
  • in the old mountains, was working up the kidnapping business, which had
  • fallen off sadly in his absence under the charge of an incompetent
  • _locum tenens_; and the Chinese, the Bollygollans, and the troops
  • of the Mad Mullah were enduring the miseries of sea-sickness out in
  • mid-ocean.
  • The Swiss army had also gone home, in order to be in time for the
  • winter hotel season. There only remained the Germans, the Russians, and
  • the troops of Monaco.
  • * * * * *
  • In the camp of the Boy Scouts a vast activity prevailed.
  • Few of London's millions realise how tremendous and far-reaching an
  • association the Boy Scouts are. It will be news to the Man in the
  • Street to learn that, with the possible exception of the Black Hand,
  • the Scouts are perhaps the most carefully-organised secret society in
  • the world.
  • Their ramifications extend through the length and breadth of England.
  • The boys you see parading the streets with hockey-sticks are but a
  • small section, the aristocrats of the Society. Every boy in England,
  • and many a man, is in the pay of the association. Their funds are
  • practically unlimited. By the oath of initiation which he takes on
  • joining, every boy is compelled to pay into the common coffers a
  • percentage of his pocket-money or his salary. When you drop his weekly
  • three and sixpence into the hand of your office-boy on Saturday,
  • possibly you fancy he takes it home to mother. He doesn't. He spend
  • two-and-six on Woodbines. The other shilling goes into the treasury of
  • the Boy Scouts. When you visit your nephew at Eton, and tip him five
  • pounds or whatever it is, does he spend it at the sock-shop?
  • Apparently, yes. In reality, a quarter reaches the common fund.
  • Take another case, to show the Boy Scouts' power. You are a City
  • merchant, and, arriving at the office one morning in a bad temper, you
  • proceed to cure yourself by taking it out of the office-boy. He says
  • nothing, apparently does nothing. But that evening, as you are going
  • home in the Tube, a burly working-man treads heavily on your gouty
  • foot. In Ladbroke Grove a passing hansom splashes you with mud.
  • Reaching home, you find that the cat has been at the cold chicken and
  • the butler has given notice. You do not connect these things, but they
  • are all alike the results of your unjust behaviour to your office-boy
  • in the morning. Or, meeting a ragged little matchseller, you pat his
  • head and give him six-pence. Next day an anonymous present of champagne
  • arrives at your address.
  • Terrible in their wrath, the Boy Scouts never forget kindness.
  • * * * * *
  • The whistle of a Striped Iguanodon sounded softly in the darkness. The
  • sentry, who was pacing to and fro before the camp-fire, halted, and
  • peered into the night. As he peered, he uttered the plaintive note of a
  • zebra calling to its mate.
  • A voice from the darkness said, "Een gonyama-gonyama."
  • "Invooboo," replied the sentry argumentatively "Yah bo! Yah bo!
  • Invooboo."
  • An indistinct figure moved forward.
  • "Who goes there?"
  • "A friend."
  • "Advance, friend, and give the countersign."
  • "Remember Mafeking, and death to Injuns."
  • "Pass friend! All's well."
  • The figure walked on into the firelight. The sentry started; then
  • saluted and stood to attention. On his face was a worshipping look of
  • admiration and awe, such as some young soldier of the Grande Armee
  • might have worn on seeing Napoleon; for the newcomer was Clarence
  • Chugwater.
  • "Your name?" said Clarence, eyeing the sturdy young warrior.
  • "Private William Buggins, sir."
  • "You watch well, Private Buggins. England has need of such as you."
  • He pinched the young Scout's ear tolerantly. The sentry flushed with
  • pleasure.
  • "My orders have been carried out?" said Clarence.
  • "Yes, sir. The patrols are all here."
  • "Enumerate them."
  • "The Chinchilla Kittens, the Bongos, the Zebras, the Iguanodons, the
  • Welsh Rabbits, the Snapping Turtles, and a half-patrol of the 33rd
  • London Gazekas, sir."
  • Clarence nodded.
  • "'Tis well," he said. "What are they doing?"
  • "Some of them are acting a Scout's play, sir; some are doing Cone
  • Exercises; one or two are practising deep breathing; and the rest are
  • dancing an Old English Morris Dance."
  • Clarence nodded.
  • "They could not be better employed. Inform them that I have arrived and
  • would address them."
  • The sentry saluted.
  • Standing in an attitude of deep thought, with his feet apart, his hands
  • clasped behind him, and his chin sunk upon his breast, Clarence made a
  • singularly impressive picture. He had left his Essex home three weeks
  • before, on the expiration of his ten days' holiday, to return to his
  • post of junior sub-reporter on the staff of a leading London evening
  • paper. It was really only at night now that he got any time to himself.
  • During the day his time was his paper's, and he was compelled to spend
  • the weary hours reading off results of races and other sporting items
  • on the tape-machine. It was only at 6 p.m. that he could begin to
  • devote himself to the service of his country.
  • The Scouts had assembled now, and were standing, keen and alert, ready
  • to do Clarence's bidding.
  • Clarence returned their salute moodily.
  • "Scout-master Wagstaff," he said.
  • The Scout-master, the leader of the troop formed by the various
  • patrols, stepped forward.
  • "Let the war-dance commence."
  • Clarence watched the evolutions absently. His heart was ill-attuned to
  • dances. But the thing had to be done, so it was as well to get it over.
  • When the last movement had been completed, he raised his hand.
  • "Men," he said, in his clear, penetrating alto, "although you have not
  • the same facilities as myself for hearing the latest news, you are all,
  • by this time, doubtless aware that this England of ours lies 'neath the
  • proud foot of a conqueror. It is for us to save her. (Cheers, and a
  • voice "Invooboo!") I would call on you here and now to seize your
  • hockey-sticks and rush upon the invader, were it not, alas! that such
  • an action would merely result in your destruction. At present the
  • invader is too strong. We must wait; and something tells me that we
  • shall not have to wait long. (Applause.) Jealousy is beginning to
  • spring up between the Russians and the Germans. It will be our task to
  • aggravate this feeling. With our perfect organisation this should be
  • easy. Sooner or later this smouldering jealousy is going to burst into
  • flame. Any day now," he proceeded, warming as he spoke, "there may be
  • the dickens of a dust-up between these Johnnies, and then we've got 'em
  • where the hair's short. See what I mean, you chaps? It's like this. Any
  • moment they may start scrapping and chaw each other up, and then we'll
  • simply sail in and knock what's left endways."
  • A shout of applause went up from the assembled scouts.
  • "What I am anxious to impress upon you men," concluded Clarence, in
  • more measured tones, "is that our hour approaches. England looks to us,
  • and it is for us to see that she does not look in vain. Sedulously
  • feeding the growing flame of animosity between the component parts of
  • the invading horde, we may contrive to bring about that actual
  • disruption. Till that day, see to it that you prepare yourselves for
  • war. Men, I have finished."
  • "What the Chief Scout means," said Scout-master Wagstaff, "is no
  • rotting about and all that sort of rot. Jolly well keep yourselves fit,
  • and then, when the time comes, we'll give these Russian and German
  • blighters about the biggest hiding they've ever heard of. Follow the
  • idea? Very well, then. Mind you don't go mucking the show up."
  • "Een gonyama-gonyama!" shouted the new thoroughly roused troops.
  • "Invooboo! Yah bo! Yah bo! Invooboo!"
  • The voice of Young England--of Young England alert and at its post!
  • Chapter 2
  • AN IMPORTANT ENGAGEMENT
  • Historians, when they come to deal with the opening years of the
  • twentieth century, will probably call this the Music-Hall Age. At the
  • time of the great invasion the music-halls dominated England. Every
  • town and every suburb had its Hall, most of them more than one. The
  • public appetite for sight-seeing had to be satisfied somehow, and the
  • music-hall provided the easiest way of doing it. The Halls formed a
  • common place on which the celebrity and the ordinary man could meet. If
  • an impulsive gentleman slew his grandmother with a coal-hammer, only a
  • small portion of the public could gaze upon his pleasing features at
  • the Old Bailey. To enable the rest to enjoy the intellectual treat, it
  • was necessary to engage him, at enormous expense, to appear at a
  • music-hall. There, if he happened to be acquitted, he would come on the
  • stage, preceded by an asthmatic introducer, and beam affably at the
  • public for ten minutes, speaking at intervals in a totally inaudible
  • voice, and then retire; to be followed by some enterprising lady who
  • had endeavoured, unsuccessfully, to solve the problem of living at the
  • rate of ten thousand a year on an income of nothing, or who had
  • performed some other similarly brainy feat.
  • It was not till the middle of September that anyone conceived what one
  • would have thought the obvious idea of offering music-hall engagements
  • to the invading generals.
  • The first man to think of it was Solly Quhayne, the rising young agent.
  • Solly was the son of Abraham Cohen, an eminent agent of the Victorian
  • era. His brothers, Abe Kern, Benjamin Colquhoun, Jack Coyne, and Barney
  • Cowan had gravitated to the City; but Solly had carried on the old
  • business, and was making a big name for himself. It was Solly who had
  • met Blinky Bill Mullins, the prominent sand-bagger, as he emerged from
  • his twenty years' retirement at Dartmoor, and booked him solid for a
  • thirty-six months' lecturing tour on the McGinnis circuit. It was to
  • him, too, that Joe Brown, who could eat eight pounds of raw meat in
  • seven and a quarter minutes, owed his first chance of displaying his
  • gifts to the wider public of the vaudeville stage.
  • The idea of securing the services of the invading generals came to him
  • in a flash.
  • "S'elp me!" he cried. "I believe they'd go big; put 'em on where you
  • like."
  • Solly was a man of action. Within a minute he was talking to the
  • managing director of the Mammoth Syndicate Halls on the telephone. In
  • five minutes the managing director had agreed to pay Prince Otto of
  • Saxe-Pfennig five hundred pounds a week, if he could be prevailed upon
  • to appear. In ten minutes the Grand Duke Vodkakoff had been engaged,
  • subject to his approval, at a weekly four hundred and fifty by the
  • Stone-Rafferty circuit. And in a quarter of an hour Solly Quhayne,
  • having pushed his way through a mixed crowd of Tricky Serios and
  • Versatile Comedians and Patterers who had been waiting to see him for
  • the last hour and a half, was bowling off in a taximeter-cab to the
  • Russian lines at Hampstead.
  • General Vodkakoff received his visitor civilly, but at first without
  • enthusiasm. There were, it seemed, objections to his becoming an
  • artiste. Would he have to wear a properly bald head and sing songs
  • about wanting people to see his girl? He didn't think he could. He had
  • only sung once in his life, and that was twenty years ago at a
  • bump-supper at Moscow University. And even then, he confided to Mr.
  • Quhayne, it had taken a decanter and a-half of neat vodka to bring him
  • up to the scratch.
  • The agent ridiculed the idea.
  • "Why, your Grand Grace," he cried, "there won't be anything of that
  • sort. You ain't going to be starred as a _comic_. You're a Refined
  • Lecturer and Society Monologue Artist. 'How I Invaded England,' with
  • lights down and the cinematograph going. We can easily fake the
  • pictures."
  • The Grand Duke made another objection.
  • "I understand," he said, "it is etiquette for music-hall artists in
  • their spare time to eat--er--fried fish with their fingers. Must I do
  • that? I doubt if I could manage it."
  • Mr Quhayne once more became the human semaphore.
  • "S'elp me! Of course you needn't! All the leading pros, eat it with a
  • spoon. Bless you, you can be the refined gentleman on the Halls same as
  • anywhere else. Come now, your Grand Grace, is it a deal? Four hundred
  • and fifty chinking o'Goblins a week for one hall a night, and
  • press-agented at eight hundred and seventy-five. S'elp me! Lauder
  • doesn't get it, not in England."
  • The Grand Duke reflected. The invasion has proved more expensive than
  • he had foreseen. The English are proverbially a nation of shopkeepers,
  • and they had put up their prices in all the shops for his special
  • benefit. And he was expected to do such a lot of tipping. Four hundred
  • and fifty a week would come in uncommonly useful.
  • "Where do I sign?" he asked, extending his hand for the agreement.
  • * * * * *
  • Five minutes later Mr. Quhayne was urging his taxidriver to exceed the
  • speed-limit in the direction of Tottenham.
  • Chapter 3
  • A BIRD'S-EYE VIEW OF THE SITUATION
  • Clarence read the news of the two engagements on the tape at the office
  • of his paper, but the first intimation the general public had of it was
  • through the medium of headlines:--
  • MUSIC-HALL SENSATION
  • INVADING GENERALS' GIGANTIC SALARIES
  • RUMOURED RESENTMENT OF V.A.F.
  • WHAT WILL WATER-RATS DO?
  • INTERVIEW WITH MR. HARRY LAUDER
  • Clarence chuckled grimly as the tape clicked out the news. The end had
  • begun. To sow jealousy between the rival generals would have been easy.
  • To sow it between two rival music-hall artistes would be among the
  • world's softest jobs.
  • Among the general public, of course, the announcement created a
  • profound sensation. Nothing else was talked about in train and omnibus.
  • The papers had leaders on the subject. At first the popular impression
  • was that the generals were going to do a comedy duo act of the
  • Who-Was-It-I-Seen-You-Coming-Down-the-Street-With? type, and there was
  • disappointment when it was found that the engagements were for
  • different halls. Rumours sprang up. It was said that the Grand Duke had
  • for years been an enthusiastic amateur sword-swallower, and had,
  • indeed, come to England mainly for the purpose of getting bookings;
  • that the Prince had a secure reputation in Potsdam as a singer of songs
  • in the George Robey style; that both were expert trick-cyclists.
  • Then the truth came out. Neither had any specialities; they would
  • simply appear and deliver lectures.
  • The feeling in the music-hall world was strong. The Variety Artists'
  • Federation debated the advisability of another strike. The Water Rats,
  • meeting in mystic secrecy in a Maiden Lane public-house, passed fifteen
  • resolutions in an hour and a quarter. Sir Harry Lauder, interviewed by
  • the _Era_, gave it as his opinion that both the Grand Duke and the
  • Prince were gowks, who would do well to haud their blether. He himself
  • proposed to go straight to America, where genuine artists were cheered
  • in the streets and entertained at haggis dinners, and not forced to
  • compete with amateur sumphs and gonuphs from other countries.
  • Clarence, brooding over the situation like a Providence, was glad to
  • see that already the new move had weakened the invaders' power. The day
  • after the announcement in the press of the approaching _debut_ of
  • the other generals, the leader of the army of Monaco had hurried to the
  • agents to secure an engagement for himself. He held out the special
  • inducement of card-tricks, at which he was highly skilled. The agents
  • had received him coldly. Brown and Day had asked him to call again.
  • Foster had sent out a message regretting that he was too busy to see
  • him. At de Freece's he had been kept waiting in the ante-room for two
  • hours in the midst of a bevy of Sparkling Comediennes of pronounced
  • peroxidity and blue-chinned men in dusty bowler-hats, who told each
  • other how they had gone with a bang at Oakham and John o'Groats, and
  • had then gone away in despair.
  • On the following day, deeply offended, he had withdrawn his troops from
  • the country.
  • The strength of the invaders was melting away little by little.
  • "How long?" murmured Clarence Chugwater, as he worked at the
  • tape-machine. "How long?"
  • Chapter 4
  • CLARENCE HEARS IMPORTANT NEWS
  • It was Clarence's custom to leave the office of his newspaper at one
  • o'clock each day, and lunch at a neighbouring Aerated Bread shop. He
  • did this on the day following the first appearance of the two generals
  • at their respective halls. He had brought an early edition of the paper
  • with him, and in the intervals of dealing with his glass of milk and
  • scone and butter, he read the report of the performances.
  • Both, it seemed, had met with flattering receptions, though they had
  • appeared nervous. The Russian general especially, whose style, said the
  • critic, was somewhat reminiscent of Mr. T. E. Dunville, had made
  • himself a great favourite with the gallery. The report concluded by
  • calling attention once more to the fact that the salaries paid to the
  • two--eight hundred and seventy-five pounds a week each--established a
  • record in music-hall history on this side of the Atlantic.
  • Clarence had just finished this when there came to his ear the faint
  • note of a tarantula singing to its young.
  • He looked up. Opposite him, at the next table, was seated a youth of
  • fifteen, of a slightly grubby aspect. He was eyeing Clarence closely.
  • Clarence took off his spectacles, polished them, and replaced them on
  • his nose. As he did so, the thin gruffle of the tarantula sounded once
  • more. Without changing his expression, Clarence cautiously uttered the
  • deep snarl of a sand-eel surprised while bathing.
  • It was sufficient. The other rose to his feet, holding his right hand
  • on a line with his shoulder, palm to the front, thumb resting on the
  • nail of the little finger, and the other three fingers upright.
  • Clarence seized his hat by the brim at the back, and moved it swiftly
  • twice up and down.
  • The other, hesitating no longer, came over to his table.
  • "Pip-pip!" he said, in an undertone.
  • "Toodleoo and God save the King!" whispered Clarence.
  • The mystic ceremony which always takes place when two Boy Scouts meet
  • in public was complete.
  • "Private Biggs of the Eighteenth Tarantulas, sir," said the boy
  • respectfully, for he had recognised Clarence.
  • Clarence inclined his head.
  • "You may sit, Private Biggs," he said graciously. "You have news to
  • impart?"
  • "News, sir, that may be of vital importance."
  • "Say on."
  • Private Biggs, who had brought his sparkling limado and a bath-bun with
  • him from the other table, took a sip of the former, and embarked upon
  • his narrative.
  • "I am employed, sir," he said, "as a sort of junior clerk and
  • office-boy by Mr. Solly Quhayne, the music-hall agent."
  • Clarence tapped his brow thoughtfully; then his face cleared.
  • "I remember. It was he who secured the engagements of the generals."
  • "The same, sir."
  • "Proceed."
  • The other resumed his story.
  • "It is my duty to sit in a sort of rabbit-hutch in the outer office,
  • take the callers' names, and especially to see that they don't get
  • through to Mr. Quhayne till he wishes to receive them. That is the most
  • exacting part of my day's work. You wouldn't believe how full of the
  • purest swank some of these pros. are. Tell you they've got an
  • appointment as soon as look at you. Artful beggars!"
  • Clarence nodded sympathetically.
  • "This morning an Acrobat and Society Contortionist made such a fuss
  • that in the end I had to take his card in to the private office. Mr.
  • Quhayne was there talking to a gentleman whom I recognised as his
  • brother, Mr. Colquhoun. They were engrossed in their conversation, and
  • did not notice me for a moment. With no wish to play the eavesdropper,
  • I could not help but overhear. They were talking about the generals.
  • 'Yes, I know they're press-agented at eight seventy-five, dear boy,' I
  • heard Mr. Quhayne say, 'but between you and me and the door-knob that
  • isn't what they're getting. The German feller's drawing five hundred of
  • the best, but I could only get four-fifty for the Russian. Can't say
  • why. I should have thought, if anything, he'd be the bigger draw. Bit
  • of a comic in his way!' And then he saw me. There was some slight
  • unpleasantness. In fact, I've got the sack. After it was over I came
  • away to try and find you. It seemed to me that the information might be
  • of importance."
  • Clarence's eyes gleamed.
  • "You have done splendidly, Private--no, _Corporal_ Biggs. Do not
  • regret your lost position. The society shall find you work. This news
  • you have brought is of the utmost--the most vital importance. Dash it!"
  • he cried, unbending in his enthusiasm, "we've got 'em on the hop. If
  • they aren't biting pieces out of each other in the next day or two, I'm
  • jolly well mistaken."
  • He rose; then sat down again.
  • "Corporal--no, dash it, Sergeant Biggs--you must have something with
  • me. This is an occasion. The news you have brought me may mean the
  • salvation of England. What would you like?"
  • The other saluted joyfully.
  • "I think I'll have another sparkling limado, thanks, awfully," he said.
  • The beverage arrived. They raised their glasses.
  • "To England," said Clarence simply.
  • "To England," echoed his subordinate.
  • * * * * *
  • Clarence left the shop with swift strides, and hurried, deep in
  • thought, to the offices of the _Encore_ in Wellington Street.
  • "Yus?" said the office-boy interrogatively.
  • Clarence gave the Scout's Siquand, the pass-word. The boy's demeanour
  • changed instantly. He saluted with the utmost respect.
  • "I wish to see the Editor," said Clarence.
  • A short speech, but one that meant salvation for the motherland.
  • Chapter 5
  • SEEDS OF DISCORD
  • The days following Clarence's visit to the offices of the _Encore_
  • were marked by a growing feeling of unrest, alike among invaded and
  • invaders. The first novelty and excitement of the foreign occupation of
  • the country was beginning to wear off, and in its place the sturdy
  • independence so typical of the British character was reasserting
  • itself. Deep down in his heart the genuine Englishman has a rugged
  • distaste for seeing his country invaded by a foreign army. People were
  • asking themselves by what right these aliens had overrun British soil.
  • An ever-growing feeling of annoyance had begun to lay hold of the
  • nation.
  • It is probable that the departure of Sir Harry Lauder first brought
  • home to England what this invasion might mean. The great comedian, in
  • his manifesto in the _Times_, had not minced his words. Plainly
  • and crisply he had stated that he was leaving the country because the
  • music-hall stage was given over to alien gowks. He was sorry for
  • England. He liked England. But now, all he could say was, "God bless
  • you." England shuddered, remembering that last time he had said, "God
  • bless you till I come back."
  • Ominous mutterings began to make themselves heard.
  • Other causes contributed to swell the discontent. A regiment of
  • Russians, out route-marching, had walked across the bowling-screen at
  • Kennington Oval during the Surrey _v._ Lancashire match, causing
  • Hayward to be bowled for a duck's-egg. A band of German sappers had dug
  • a trench right across the turf at Queen's Club.
  • The mutterings increased.
  • Nor were the invaders satisfied and happy. The late English summer had
  • set in with all its usual severity, and the Cossacks, reared in the
  • kindlier climate of Siberia, were feeling it terribly. Colds were the
  • rule rather than the exception in the Russian lines. The coughing of
  • the Germans at Tottenham could be heard in Oxford Street.
  • The attitude of the British public, too, was getting on their nerves.
  • They had been prepared for fierce resistance. They had pictured the
  • invasion as a series of brisk battles--painful perhaps, but exciting.
  • They had anticipated that when they had conquered the country they
  • might meet with the Glare of Hatred as they patrolled the streets. The
  • Supercilious Stare unnerved them. There is nothing so terrible to the
  • highly-strung foreigner as the cold, contemptuous, patronising gaze of
  • the Englishman. It gave the invaders a perpetual feeling of doing the
  • wrong thing. They felt like men who had been found travelling in a
  • first-class carriage with a third-class ticket. They became conscious
  • of the size of their hands and feet. As they marched through the
  • Metropolis they felt their ears growing hot and red. Beneath the chilly
  • stare of the populace they experienced all the sensations of a man who
  • has come to a strange dinner-party in a tweed suit when everybody else
  • has dressed. They felt warm and prickly.
  • It was dull for them, too. London is never at its best in early
  • September, even for the _habitue_. There was nothing to do. Most
  • of the theatres were shut. The streets were damp and dirty. It was all
  • very well for the generals, appearing every night in the glare and
  • glitter of the footlights; but for the rank and file the occupation of
  • London spelt pure boredom.
  • London was, in fact, a human powder-magazine. And it was Clarence
  • Chugwater who with a firm hand applied the match that was to set it in
  • a blaze.
  • Chapter 6
  • THE BOMB-SHELL
  • Clarence had called at the offices of the _Encore_ on a Friday.
  • The paper's publishing day is Thursday. The _Encore_ is the Times
  • of the music-hall world. It casts its curses here, bestows its
  • benedictions (sparely) there. The _Encore_ criticising the latest
  • action of the Variety Artists' Federation is the nearest modern
  • approach to Jove hurling the thunderbolt. Its motto is, "Cry havoc, and
  • let loose the performing dogs of war."
  • It so happened that on the Thursday following his momentous visit to
  • Wellington Street, there was need of someone on the staff of Clarence's
  • evening paper to go and obtain an interview from the Russian general.
  • Mr. Hubert Wales had just published a novel so fruity in theme and
  • treatment that it had been publicly denounced from the pulpit by no
  • less a person than the Rev. Canon Edgar Sheppard, D.D., Sub-Dean
  • of His Majesty's Chapels Royal, Deputy Clerk of the Closet and
  • Sub-Almoner to the King. A morning paper had started the question,
  • "Should there be a Censor of Fiction?" and, in accordance with custom,
  • editors were collecting the views of celebrities, preferably of those
  • whose opinion on the subject was absolutely valueless.
  • All the other reporters being away on their duties, the editor was at a
  • loss.
  • "Isn't there anybody else?" he demanded.
  • The chief sub-editor pondered.
  • "There is young blooming Chugwater," he said.
  • (It was thus that England's deliverer was habitually spoken of in the
  • office.)
  • "Then send him," said the editor.
  • * * * * *
  • Grand Duke Vodkakoff's turn at the Magnum Palace of Varieties started
  • every evening at ten sharp. He topped the bill. Clarence, having been
  • detained by a review of the Scouts, did not reach the hall till five
  • minutes to the hour. He got to the dressing-room as the general was
  • going on to the stage.
  • The Grand Duke dressed in the large room with the other male turns.
  • There were no private dressing-rooms at the Magnum. Clarence sat down
  • on a basket-trunk belonging to the Premier Troupe of Bounding Zouaves
  • of the Desert, and waited. The four athletic young gentlemen who
  • composed the troupe were dressing after their turn. They took no notice
  • of Clarence.
  • Presently one Zouave spoke.
  • "Bit off to-night, Bill. Cold house."
  • "Not 'arf," replied his colleague. "Gave me the shivers."
  • "Wonder how his nibs'll go."
  • Evidently he referred to the Grand Duke.
  • "Oh, _'e's_ all right. They eat his sort of swank. Seems to me the
  • profession's going to the dogs, what with these bloomin' amytoors an'
  • all. Got the 'airbrush, 'Arry?"
  • Harry, a tall, silent Zouave, handed over the hairbrush.
  • Bill continued.
  • "I'd like to see him go on of a Monday night at the old Mogul. They'd
  • soon show him. It gives me the fair 'ump, it does, these toffs coming
  • in and taking the bread out of our mouths. Why can't he give us chaps a
  • chance? Fair makes me rasp, him and his bloomin' eight hundred and
  • seventy-five o' goblins a week."
  • "Not so much of your eight hundred and seventy-five, young feller me
  • lad," said the Zouave who had spoken first. "Ain't you seen the rag
  • this week?"
  • "Naow. What's in it? How does our advert, look?"
  • "Ow, that's all right, never mind that. You look at 'What the
  • _Encore_ Would Like to Know.' That's what'll touch his nibs up."
  • He produced a copy of the paper from the pocket of his great-coat which
  • hung from the door, and passed it to his bounding brother.
  • "Read it out, old sort," he said.
  • The other took it to the light and began to read slowly and cautiously,
  • as one who is no expert at the art.
  • "'What the _Encore_ would like to know:--Whether Prince Otto of
  • Saxe-Pfennig didn't go particularly big at the Lobelia last week? And
  • Whether his success hasn't compelled Agent Quhayne to purchase a
  • larger-sized hat? And Whether it isn't a fact that, though they are
  • press-agented at the same figure, Prince Otto is getting fifty a week
  • more than Grand Duke Vodkakoff? And If it is not so, why a little bird
  • has assured us that the Prince is being paid five hundred a week and
  • the Grand Duke only four hundred and fifty? And, In any case, whether
  • the Prince isn't worth fifty a week more than his Russian friend?'
  • Lumme!"
  • An awed silence fell upon the group. To Clarence, who had dictated the
  • matter (though the style was the editor's), the paragraph did not come
  • as a surprise. His only feeling was one of relief that the editor had
  • served up his material so well. He felt that he had been justified in
  • leaving the more delicate literary work to that master-hand.
  • "That'll be one in the eye," said the Zouave Harry. "'Ere, I'll stick
  • it up opposite of him when he comes back to dress. Got a pin and a
  • pencil, some of you?"
  • He marked the quarter column heavily, and pinned it up beside the
  • looking-glass. Then he turned to his companions.
  • "'Ow about not waiting, chaps?" he suggested. "I shouldn't 'arf wonder,
  • from the look of him, if he wasn't the 'aughty kind of a feller who'd
  • cleave you to the bazooka for tuppence with his bloomin' falchion. I'm
  • goin' to 'urry through with my dressing and wait till to-morrow night
  • to see how he looks. No risks for Willie!"
  • The suggestion seemed thoughtful and good. The Bounding Zouaves, with
  • one accord, bounded into their clothes and disappeared through the door
  • just as a long-drawn chord from the invisible orchestra announced the
  • conclusion of the Grand Duke's turn.
  • General Vodkakoff strutted into the room, listening complacently to the
  • applause which was still going on. He had gone well. He felt pleased
  • with himself.
  • It was not for a moment that he noticed Clarence.
  • "Ah," he said, "the interviewer, eh? You wish to--"
  • Clarence began to explain his mission. While he was doing so the Grand
  • Duke strolled to the basin and began to remove his make-up. He
  • favoured, when on the stage, a touch of the Raven Gipsy No. 3
  • grease-paint. It added a picturesque swarthiness to his appearance, and
  • made him look more like what he felt to be the popular ideal of a
  • Russian general.
  • The looking-glass hung just over the basin.
  • Clarence, watching him in the glass, saw him start as he read the first
  • paragraph. A dark flush, almost rivalling the Raven Gipsy No. 3, spread
  • over his face. He trembled with rage.
  • "Who put that paper there?" he roared, turning.
  • "With reference, then, to Mr. Hubert Wales's novel," said Clarence.
  • The Grand Duke cursed Mr. Hubert Wales, his novel, and Clarence in one
  • sentence.
  • "You may possibly," continued Clarence, sticking to his point like a
  • good interviewer, "have read the trenchant, but some say justifiable
  • remarks of the Rev. Canon Edgar Sheppard, D.D., Sub-Dean of His
  • Majesty's Chapels Royal, Deputy Clerk of the Closet, and Sub-Almoner to
  • the King."
  • The Grand Duke swiftly added that eminent cleric to the list.
  • "Did you put that paper on this looking-glass?" he shouted.
  • "I did not put that paper on that looking-glass," replied Clarence
  • precisely.
  • "Ah," said the Grand Duke, "if you had, I'd have come and wrung your
  • neck like a chicken, and scattered you to the four corners of this
  • dressing-room."
  • "I'm glad I didn't," said Clarence.
  • "Have you read this paper on the looking-glass?"
  • "I have not read that paper on the looking-glass," replied Clarence,
  • whose chief fault as a conversationalist was that he was perhaps a
  • shade too Ollendorfian. "But I know its contents."
  • "It's a lie!" roared the Grand Duke. "An infamous lie! I've a good mind
  • to have him up for libel. I know very well he got them to put those
  • paragraphs in, if he didn't write them himself."
  • "Professional jealousy," said Clarence, with a sigh, "is a very sad
  • thing."
  • "I'll professional jealousy him!"
  • "I hear," said Clarence casually, "that he _has_ been going very
  • well at the Lobelia. A friend of mine who was there last night told me
  • he took eleven calls."
  • For a moment the Russian General's face swelled apoplectically. Then he
  • recovered himself with a tremendous effort.
  • "Wait!" he said, with awful calm. "Wait till to-morrow night! I'll show
  • him! Went very well, did he? Ha! Took eleven calls, did he? Oh, ha, ha!
  • And he'll take them to-morrow night, too! Only"--and here his voice
  • took on a note of fiendish purpose so terrible that, hardened scout as
  • he was, Clarence felt his flesh creep--"only this time they'll be
  • catcalls!"
  • And, with a shout of almost maniac laughter, the jealous artiste flung
  • himself into a chair, and began to pull off his boots.
  • Clarence silently withdrew. The hour was very near.
  • Chapter 7
  • THE BIRD
  • The Grand Duke Vodkakoff was not the man to let the grass grow under
  • his feet. He was no lobster, no flat-fish. He did it now--swift,
  • secret, deadly--a typical Muscovite. By midnight his staff had their
  • orders.
  • Those orders were for the stalls at the Lobelia.
  • Price of entrance to the gallery and pit was served out at daybreak to
  • the Eighth and Fifteenth Cossacks of the Don, those fierce,
  • semi-civilised fighting-machines who know no fear.
  • Grand Duke Vodkakoff's preparations were ready.
  • * * * * *
  • Few more fortunate events have occurred in the history of English
  • literature than the quite accidental visit of Mr. Bart Kennedy to the
  • Lobelia on that historic night. He happened to turn in there casually
  • after dinner, and was thus enabled to see the whole thing from start to
  • finish. At a quarter to eleven a wild-eyed man charged in at the main
  • entrance of Carmelite House, and, too impatient to use the lift, dashed
  • up the stairs, shouting for pens, ink and paper.
  • Next morning the _Daily Mail_ was one riot of headlines. The whole
  • of page five was given up to the topic. The headlines were not elusive.
  • They flung the facts at the reader:--
  • SCENE AT THE LOBELIA
  • PRINCE OTTO OF SAXE-PFENNIG
  • GIVEN THE BIRD BY
  • RUSSIAN SOLDIERS
  • WHAT WILL BE THE OUTCOME?
  • There were about seventeen more, and then came Mr. Bart Kennedy's
  • special report.
  • He wrote as follows:--
  • "A night to remember. A marvellous night. A night such as few will see
  • again. A night of fear and wonder. The night of September the eleventh.
  • Last night.
  • "Nine-thirty. I had dined. I had eaten my dinner. My dinner! So
  • inextricably are the prose and romance of life blended. My dinner! I
  • had eaten my dinner on this night. This wonderful night. This night of
  • September the eleventh. Last night!
  • "I had dined at the club. A chop. A boiled potato. Mushrooms on toast.
  • A touch of Stilton. Half-a-bottle of Beaune. I lay back in my chair. I
  • debated within myself. A Hall? A theatre? A book in the library? That
  • night, the night of September the eleventh, I as near as a toucher
  • spent in the library of my club with a book. That night! The night of
  • September the eleventh. Last night!
  • "Fate took me to the Lobelia. Fate! We are its toys. Its footballs. We
  • are the footballs of Fate. Fate might have sent me to the Gaiety. Fate
  • took me to the Lobelia. This Fate which rules us.
  • "I sent in my card to the manager. He let me through. Ever courteous.
  • He let me through on my face. This manager. This genial and courteous
  • manager.
  • "I was in the Lobelia. A dead-head. I was in the Lobelia as a
  • dead-head!"
  • Here, in the original draft of the article, there are reflections, at
  • some length, on the interior decorations of the Hall, and an excursus
  • on music-hall performances in general. It is not till he comes to
  • examine the audience that Mr. Kennedy returns to the main issue.
  • "And what manner of audience was it that had gathered together to view
  • the entertainment provided by the genial and courteous manager of the
  • Lobelia? The audience. Beyond whom there is no appeal. The Caesars of
  • the music-hall. The audience."
  • At this point the author has a few extremely interesting and thoughtful
  • remarks on the subject of audiences. These may be omitted. "In the
  • stalls I noted a solid body of Russian officers. These soldiers from
  • the Steppes. These bearded men. These Russians. They sat silent and
  • watchful. They applauded little. The programme left them cold. The
  • Trick Cyclist. The Dashing Soubrette and Idol of Belgravia. The
  • Argumentative College Chums. The Swell Comedian. The Man with the
  • Performing Canaries. None of these could rouse them. They were waiting.
  • Waiting. Waiting tensely. Every muscle taut. Husbanding their strength.
  • Waiting. For what?
  • "A man at my side told a friend that a fellow had told him that he had
  • been told by a commissionaire that the pit and gallery were full of
  • Russians. Russians. Russians everywhere. Why? Were they genuine patrons
  • of the Halls? Or were they there from some ulterior motive? There was
  • an air of suspense. We were all waiting. Waiting. For what?
  • "The atmosphere is summed up in a word. One word. Sinister. The
  • atmosphere was sinister.
  • "AA! A stir in the crowded house. The ruffling of the face of the sea
  • before a storm. The Sisters Sigsbee, Coon Delineators and Unrivalled
  • Burlesque Artists, have finished their dance, smiled, blown kisses,
  • skipped off, skipped on again, smiled, blown more kisses, and
  • disappeared. A long chord from the orchestra. A chord that is almost a
  • wail. A wail of regret for that which is past. Two liveried menials
  • appear. They carry sheets of cardboard. These menials carry sheets of
  • cardboard. But not blank sheets. On each sheet is a number.
  • "The number 15.
  • "Who is number 15?
  • "Prince Otto of Saxe-Pfennig. Prince Otto, General of the German Army.
  • Prince Otto is Number 15.
  • "A burst of applause from the house. But not from the Russians. They
  • are silent. They are waiting. For what?
  • "The orchestra plays a lively air. The massive curtains part. A tall,
  • handsome military figure strides on to the stage. He bows. This tall,
  • handsome, military man bows. He is Prince Otto of Saxe-Pfennig, General
  • of the Army of Germany. One of our conquerors.
  • "He begins to speak. 'Ladies and gentlemen.' This man, this general,
  • says, 'Ladies and gentlemen.'
  • "But no more. No more. No more. Nothing more. No more. He says, 'Ladies
  • and Gentlemen,' but no more.
  • "And why does he say no more? Has he finished his turn? Is that all he
  • does? Are his eight hundred and seventy-five pounds a week paid him for
  • saying, 'Ladies and Gentlemen'?
  • "No!
  • "He would say more. He has more to say. This is only the beginning.
  • This tall, handsome man has all his music still within him.
  • "Why, then, does he say no more? Why does he say 'Ladies and
  • Gentlemen,' but no more? No more. Only that. No more. Nothing more. No
  • more.
  • "Because from the stalls a solid, vast, crushing 'Boo!' is hurled at
  • him. From the Russians in the stalls comes this vast, crushing 'Boo!'
  • It is for this that they have been waiting. It is for this that they
  • have been waiting so tensely. For this. They have been waiting for this
  • colossal 'Boo!'
  • "The General retreats a step. He is amazed. Startled. Perhaps
  • frightened. He waves his hands.
  • "From gallery and pit comes a hideous whistling and howling. The noise
  • of wild beasts. The noise of exploding boilers. The noise of a
  • music-hall audience giving a performer the bird.
  • "Everyone is standing on his feet. Some on mine. Everyone is shouting.
  • This vast audience is shouting.
  • "Words begin to emerge from the babel.
  • "'Get offski! Rotten turnovitch!' These bearded Russians, these stern
  • critics, shout, 'Rotten turnovitch!'
  • "Fire shoots from the eyes of the German. This strong man's eyes.
  • "'Get offski! Swankietoff! Rotten turnovitch!'
  • "The fury of this audience is terrible. This audience. This last court
  • of appeal. This audience in its fury is terrible.
  • "What will happen? The German stands his ground. This man of blood and
  • iron stands his ground. He means to go on. This strong man. He means to
  • go on if it snows.
  • "The audience is pulling up the benches. A tomato shatters itself on
  • the Prince's right eye. An over-ripe tomato.
  • "'Get offski!' Three eggs and a cat sail through the air. Falling
  • short, they drop on to the orchestra. These eggs! This cat! They fall
  • on the conductor and the second trombone. They fall like the gentle dew
  • from Heaven upon the place beneath. That cat! Those eggs!
  • "AA! At last the stage-manager--keen, alert, resourceful--saves the
  • situation. This man. This stage-manager. This man with the big brain.
  • Slowly, inevitably, the fireproof curtain falls. It is half-way down.
  • It is down. Before it, the audience. The audience. Behind it, the
  • Prince. The Prince. That general. That man of iron. That performer who
  • has just got the bird.
  • "The Russian National Anthem rings through the hall. Thunderous!
  • Triumphant! The Russian National Anthem. A paean of joy.
  • "The menials reappear. Those calm, passionless menials. They remove the
  • number fifteen. They insert the number sixteen. They are like
  • Destiny--Pitiless, Unmoved, Purposeful, Silent. Those menials.
  • "A crash from the orchestra. Turn number sixteen has begun...."
  • Chapter 8
  • THE MEETING AT THE SCOTCH STORES
  • Prince Otto of Saxe-Pfennig stood in the wings, shaking in every limb.
  • German oaths of indescribable vigour poured from his lips. In a group
  • some feet away stood six muscular, short-sleeved stage-hands. It was
  • they who had flung themselves on the general at the fall of the iron
  • curtain and prevented him dashing round to attack the stalls with his
  • sabre. At a sign from the stage-manager they were ready to do it again.
  • The stage-manager was endeavouring to administer balm.
  • "Bless you, your Highness," he was saying, "it's nothing. It's what
  • happens to everyone some time. Ask any of the top-notch pros. Ask 'em
  • whether they never got the bird when they were starting. Why, even now
  • some of the biggest stars can't go to some towns because they always
  • cop it there. Bless you, it----"
  • A stage-hand came up with a piece of paper in his hand.
  • "Young feller in spectacles and a rum sort o' suit give me this for
  • your 'Ighness."
  • The Prince snatched it from his hand.
  • The note was written in a round, boyish hand. It was signed, "A
  • Friend." It ran:--"The men who booed you to-night were sent for that
  • purpose by General Vodkakoff, who is jealous of you because of the
  • paragraphs in the _Encore_ this week."
  • Prince Otto became suddenly calm.
  • "Excuse me, your Highness," said the stage-manager anxiously, as he
  • moved, "you can't go round to the front. Stand by, Bill."
  • "Right, sir!" said the stage-hands.
  • Prince Otto smiled pleasantly.
  • "There is no danger. I do not intend to go to the front. I am going to
  • look in at the Scotch Stores for a moment."
  • "Oh, in that case, your Highness, good-night, your Highness! Better
  • luck to-morrow, your Highness!"
  • * * * * *
  • It had been the custom of the two generals, since they had joined the
  • music-hall profession, to go, after their turn, to the Scotch Stores,
  • where they stood talking and blocking the gangway, as etiquette demands
  • that a successful artiste shall.
  • The Prince had little doubt but that he would find Vodkakoff there
  • to-night.
  • He was right. The Russian general was there, chatting affably across
  • the counter about the weather.
  • He nodded at the Prince with a well-assumed carelessness.
  • "Go well to-night?" he inquired casually.
  • Prince Otto clenched his fists; but he had had a rigorously diplomatic
  • up-bringing, and knew how to keep a hold on himself. When he spoke it
  • was in the familiar language of diplomacy.
  • "The rain has stopped," he said, "but the pavements are still wet
  • underfoot. Has your grace taken the precaution to come out in a good
  • stout pair of boots?"
  • The shaft plainly went home, but the Grand Duke's manner, as he
  • replied, was unruffled.
  • "Rain," he said, sipping his vermouth, "is always wet; but sometimes it
  • is cold as well."
  • "But it never falls upwards," said the Prince, pointedly.
  • "Rarely, I understand. Your powers of observation are keen, my dear
  • Prince."
  • There was a silence; then the Prince, momentarily baffled, returned to
  • the attack.
  • "The quickest way to get from Charing Cross to Hammersmith Broadway,"
  • he said, "is to go by Underground."
  • "Men have died in Hammersmith Broadway," replied the Grand Duke
  • suavely.
  • The Prince gritted his teeth. He was no match for his slippery
  • adversary in a diplomatic dialogue, and he knew it.
  • "The sun rises in the East," he cried, half-choking, "but it sets--it
  • sets!"
  • "So does a hen," was the cynical reply.
  • The last remnants of the Prince's self-control were slipping away. This
  • elusive, diplomatic conversation is a terrible strain if one is not in
  • the mood for it. Its proper setting is the gay, glittering ball-room at
  • some frivolous court. To a man who has just got the bird at a
  • music-hall, and who is trying to induce another man to confess that the
  • thing was his doing, it is little short of maddening.
  • "Hen!" he echoed, clenching and unclenching his fists. "Have you
  • studied the habits of hens?"
  • The truth seemed very near to him now, but the master-diplomat before
  • him was used to extracting himself from awkward corners.
  • "Pullets with a southern exposure," he drawled, "have yellow legs and
  • ripen quickest."
  • The Prince was nonplussed. He had no answer.
  • The girl behind the bar spoke.
  • "You do talk silly, you two!" she said.
  • It was enough. Trivial as the remark was, it was the last straw. The
  • Prince brought his fist down with a crash on the counter.
  • "Yes," he shouted, "you are right. We do talk silly; but we shall do so
  • no longer. I am tired of this verbal fencing. A plain answer to a plain
  • question. Did you or did you not send your troops to give me the bird
  • to-night?"
  • "My dear Prince!"
  • The Grand Duke raised his eyebrows.
  • "Did you or did you not?"
  • "The wise man," said the Russian, still determined on evasion, "never
  • takes sides, unless they are sides of bacon."
  • The Prince smashed a glass.
  • "You did!" he roared. "I know you did! Listen to me! I'll give you one
  • chance. I'll give you and your precious soldiers twenty-four hours from
  • midnight to-night to leave this country. If you are still here
  • then----"
  • He paused dramatically.
  • The Grand Duke slowly drained his vermouth.
  • "Have you seen my professional advertisement in the _Era_, my dear
  • Prince?" he asked.
  • "I have. What of it?"
  • "You noticed nothing about it?"
  • "I did not."
  • "Ah. If you had looked more closely, you would have seen the words,
  • 'Permanent address, Hampstead.'"
  • "You mean----"
  • "I mean that I see no occasion to alter that advertisement in any way."
  • There was another tense silence. The two men looked hard at each other.
  • "That is your final decision?" said the German.
  • The Russian bowed.
  • "So be it," said the Prince, turning to the door. "I have the honour to
  • wish you a very good night."
  • "The same to you," said the Grand Duke. "Mind the step."
  • Chapter 9
  • THE GREAT BATTLE
  • The news that an open rupture had occurred between the Generals of the
  • two invading armies was not slow in circulating. The early editions of
  • the evening papers were full of it. A symposium of the opinions of Dr.
  • Emil Reich, Dr. Saleeby, Sandow, Mr. Chiozza Money, and Lady Grove was
  • hastily collected. Young men with knobbly and bulging foreheads were
  • turned on by their editors to write character-sketches of the two
  • generals. All was stir and activity.
  • Meanwhile, those who look after London's public amusements were busy
  • with telephone and telegraph. The quarrel had taken place on Friday
  • night. It was probable that, unless steps were taken, the battle would
  • begin early on Saturday. Which, it did not require a man of unusual
  • intelligence to see, would mean a heavy financial loss to those who
  • supplied London with its Saturday afternoon amusements. The matinees
  • would suffer. The battle might not affect the stalls and dress-circle,
  • perhaps, but there could be no possible doubt that the pit and gallery
  • receipts would fall off terribly. To the public which supports the pit
  • and gallery of a theatre there is an irresistible attraction about a
  • fight on anything like a large scale. When one considers that a quite
  • ordinary street-fight will attract hundreds of spectators, it will be
  • plainly seen that no theatrical entertainment could hope to compete
  • against so strong a counter-attraction as a battle between the German
  • and Russian armies.
  • The various football-grounds would be heavily hit, too. And there was
  • to be a monster roller-skating carnival at Olympia. That also would be
  • spoiled.
  • A deputation of amusement-caterers hurried to the two camps within an
  • hour of the appearance of the first evening paper. They put their case
  • plainly and well. The Generals were obviously impressed. Messages
  • passed and repassed between the two armies, and in the end it was
  • decided to put off the outbreak of hostilities till Monday morning.
  • * * * * *
  • Satisfactory as this undoubtedly was for the theatre-managers and
  • directors of football clubs, it was in some ways a pity. From the
  • standpoint of the historian it spoiled the whole affair. But for the
  • postponement, readers of this history might--nay, would--have been able
  • to absorb a vivid and masterly account of the great struggle, with a
  • careful description of the tactics by which victory was achieved. They
  • would have been told the disposition of the various regiments, the
  • stratagems, the dashing advances, the skilful retreats, and the Lessons
  • of the War.
  • As it is, owing to the mistaken good-nature of the rival generals, the
  • date of the fixture was changed, and practically all that a historian
  • can do is to record the result.
  • A slight mist had risen as early as four o'clock on Saturday. By
  • night-fall the atmosphere was a little dense, but the lamp-posts were
  • still clearly visible at a distance of some feet, and nobody,
  • accustomed to living in London, would have noticed anything much out of
  • the common. It was not till Sunday morning that the fog proper really
  • began.
  • London awoke on Sunday to find the world blanketed in the densest,
  • yellowest London particular that had been experienced for years. It was
  • the sort of day when the City clerk has the exhilarating certainty that
  • at last he has an excuse for lateness which cannot possibly be received
  • with harsh disbelief. People spent the day indoors and hoped it would
  • clear up by tomorrow.
  • "They can't possibly fight if it's like this," they told each other.
  • But on the Monday morning the fog was, if possible, denser. It wrapped
  • London about as with a garment. People shook their heads.
  • "They'll have to put it off," they were saying, when of a
  • sudden--_Boom!_ And, again, _Boom!_
  • It was the sound of heavy guns.
  • The battle had begun!
  • * * * * *
  • One does not wish to grumble or make a fuss, but still it does seem a
  • little hard that a battle of such importance, a battle so outstanding
  • in the history of the world, should have been fought under such
  • conditions. London at that moment was richer than ever before in
  • descriptive reporters. It was the age of descriptive reporters, of
  • vivid pen-pictures. In every newspaper office there were men who could
  • have hauled up their slacks about that battle in a way that would have
  • made a Y.M.C.A. lecturer want to get at somebody with a bayonet; men
  • who could have handed out the adjectives and exclamation-marks till you
  • almost heard the roar of the guns. And there they were--idle,
  • supine--like careened battleships. They were helpless. Bart Kennedy did
  • start an article which began, "Fog. Black fog. And the roar of guns.
  • Two nations fighting in the fog," but it never came to anything. It was
  • promising for a while, but it died of inanition in the middle of the
  • second stick.
  • It was hard.
  • The lot of the actual war-correspondents was still worse. It was
  • useless for them to explain that the fog was too thick to give them a
  • chance. "If it's light enough for them to fight," said their editors
  • remorselessly, "it's light enough for you to watch them." And out they
  • had to go.
  • They had a perfectly miserable time. Edgar Wallace seems to have lost
  • his way almost at once. He was found two days later in an almost
  • starving condition at Steeple Bumpstead. How he got there nobody knows.
  • He said he had set out to walk to where the noise of the guns seemed to
  • be, and had gone on walking. Bennett Burleigh, that crafty old
  • campaigner, had the sagacity to go by Tube. This brought him to
  • Hampstead, the scene, it turned out later, of the fiercest operations,
  • and with any luck he might have had a story to tell. But the lift stuck
  • half-way up, owing to a German shell bursting in its neighbourhood, and
  • it was not till the following evening that a search-party heard and
  • rescued him.
  • The rest--A. G. Hales, Frederick Villiers, Charles Hands, and the
  • others--met, on a smaller scale, the same fate as Edgar Wallace. Hales,
  • starting for Tottenham, arrived in Croydon, very tired, with a nail in
  • his boot. Villiers, equally unlucky, fetched up at Richmond. The most
  • curious fate of all was reserved for Charles Hands. As far as can be
  • gathered, he got on all right till he reached Leicester Square. There
  • he lost his bearings, and seems to have walked round and round
  • Shakespeare's statue, under the impression that he was going straight
  • to Tottenham. After a day and a-half of this he sat down to rest, and
  • was there found, when the fog had cleared, by a passing policeman.
  • And all the while the unseen guns boomed and thundered, and strange,
  • thin shoutings came faintly through the darkness.
  • Chapter 10
  • THE TRIUMPH OF ENGLAND
  • It was the afternoon of Wednesday, September the Sixteenth. The battle
  • had been over for twenty-four hours. The fog had thinned to a light
  • lemon colour. It was raining.
  • By now the country was in possession of the main facts. Full details
  • were not to be expected, though it is to the credit of the newspapers
  • that, with keen enterprise, they had at once set to work to invent
  • them, and on the whole had not done badly.
  • Broadly, the facts were that the Russian army, outmanoeuvered, had been
  • practically annihilated. Of the vast force which had entered England
  • with the other invaders there remained but a handful. These, the Grand
  • Duke Vodkakoff among them, were prisoners in the German lines at
  • Tottenham.
  • The victory had not been gained bloodlessly. Not a fifth of the German
  • army remained. It is estimated that quite two-thirds of each army must
  • have perished in that last charge of the Germans up the Hampstead
  • heights, which ended in the storming of Jack Straw's Castle and the
  • capture of the Russian general.
  • * * * * *
  • Prince Otto of Saxe-Pfennig lay sleeping in his tent at Tottenham. He
  • was worn out. In addition to the strain of the battle, there had been
  • the heavy work of seeing the interviewers, signing autograph-books,
  • sitting to photographers, writing testimonials for patent medicines,
  • and the thousand and one other tasks, burdensome but unavoidable, of
  • the man who is in the public eye. Also he had caught a bad cold during
  • the battle. A bottle of ammoniated quinine lay on the table beside him
  • now as he slept.
  • * * * * *
  • As he lay there the flap of the tent was pulled softly aside. Two
  • figures entered. Each was dressed in a flat-brimmed hat, a coloured
  • handkerchief, a flannel shirt, football shorts, stockings, brown boots,
  • and a whistle. Each carried a hockey-stick. One, however, wore
  • spectacles and a look of quiet command which showed that he was the
  • leader.
  • They stood looking at the prostrate general for some moments. Then the
  • spectacled leader spoke.
  • "Scout-Master Wagstaff."
  • The other saluted.
  • "Wake him!"
  • Scout-Master Wagstaff walked to the side of the bed, and shook the
  • sleeper's shoulder. The Prince grunted, and rolled over on to his other
  • side. The Scout-Master shook him again. He sat up, blinking.
  • As his eyes fell on the quiet, stern, spectacled figure, he leaped from
  • the bed.
  • "What--what--what," he stammered. "What's the beadig of this?"
  • He sneezed as he spoke, and, turning to the table, poured out and
  • drained a bumper of ammoniated quinine.
  • "I told the sedtry pardicularly not to let adybody id. Who are you?"
  • The intruder smiled quietly.
  • "My name is Clarence Chugwater," he said simply.
  • "Jugwater? Dod't doe you frob Adab. What do you want? If you're forb
  • sub paper, I cad't see you now. Cub to-borrow bordig."
  • "I am from no paper."
  • "Thed you're wud of these photographers. I tell you, I cad't see you."
  • "I am no photographer."
  • "Thed what are you?"
  • The other drew himself up.
  • "I am England," he said with a sublime gesture.
  • "Igglud! How do you bead you're Igglud? Talk seds."
  • Clarence silenced him with a frown.
  • "I say I am England. I am the Chief Scout, and the Scouts are England.
  • Prince Otto, you thought this England of ours lay prone and helpless.
  • You were wrong. The Boy Scouts were watching and waiting. And now their
  • time has come. Scout-Master Wagstaff, do your duty."
  • The Scout-Master moved forward. The Prince, bounding to the bed, thrust
  • his hand under the pillow. Clarence's voice rang out like a trumpet.
  • "Cover that man!"
  • The Prince looked up. Two feet away Scout-Master Wagstaff was standing,
  • catapult in hand, ready to shoot.
  • "He is never known to miss," said Clarence warningly.
  • The Prince wavered.
  • "He has broken more windows than any other boy of his age in South
  • London."
  • The Prince sullenly withdrew his hand--empty.
  • "Well, whad do you wad?" he snarled.
  • "Resistance is useless," said Clarence. "The moment I have plotted and
  • planned for has come. Your troops, worn out with fighting, mere shadows
  • of themselves, have fallen an easy prey. An hour ago your camp was
  • silently surrounded by patrols of Boy Scouts, armed with catapults and
  • hockey-sticks. One rush and the battle was over. Your entire army, like
  • yourself, are prisoners."
  • "The diggids they are!" said the Prince blankly.
  • "England, my England!" cried Clarence, his face shining with a holy
  • patriotism. "England, thou art free! Thou hast risen from the ashes of
  • the dead self. Let the nations learn from this that it is when
  • apparently crushed that the Briton is to more than ever be feared."
  • "Thad's bad grabbar," said the Prince critically.
  • "It isn't," said Clarence with warmth.
  • "It _is_, I tell you. Id's a splid idfididive."
  • Clarence's eyes flashed fire.
  • "I don't want any of your beastly cheek," he said. "Scout-Master
  • Wagstaff, remove your prisoner."
  • "All the sabe," said the Prince, "id _is_ a splid idfididive."
  • Clarence pointed silently to the door.
  • "And you doe id is," persisted the Prince. "And id's spoiled your big
  • sbeech. Id--"
  • "Come on, can't you," interrupted Scout-Master Wagstaff.
  • "I _ab_ cubbing, aren't I? I was odly saying--"
  • "I'll give you such a whack over the shin with this hockey-stick in a
  • minute!" said the Scout-Master warningly. "Come _on_!"
  • The Prince went.
  • Chapter 11
  • CLARENCE--THE LAST PHASE
  • The brilliantly-lighted auditorium of the Palace Theatre.
  • Everywhere a murmur and stir. The orchestra is playing a selection. In
  • the stalls fair women and brave men converse in excited whispers. One
  • catches sentences here and there.
  • "Quite a boy, I believe!"
  • "How perfectly sweet!"
  • "'Pon honour, Lady Gussie, I couldn't say. Bertie Bertison, of the
  • Bachelors', says a feller told him it was a clear thousand."
  • "Do you hear that? Mr. Bertison says that this boy is getting a
  • thousand a week."
  • "Why, that's more than either of those horrid generals got."
  • "It's a lot of money, isn't it?"
  • "Of course, he did save the country, didn't he?"
  • "You may depend they wouldn't give it him if he wasn't worth it."
  • "Met him last night at the Duchess's hop. Seems a decent little chap.
  • No side and that, if you know what I mean. Hullo, there's his number!"
  • The orchestra stops. The number 7 is displayed. A burst of applause,
  • swelling into a roar as the curtain rises.
  • A stout man in crinkled evening-dress walks on to the stage.
  • "Ladies and gentlemen," he says, "I 'ave the 'onour to-night to
  • introduce to you one whose name is, as the saying goes, a nouse'old
  • word. It is thanks to 'im, to this 'ero whom I 'ave the 'onour to
  • introduce to you to-night, that our beloved England no longer writhes
  • beneath the ruthless 'eel of the alien oppressor. It was this 'ero's
  • genius--and, I may say--er--I may say genius--that, unaided, 'it upon
  • the only way for removing the cruel conqueror from our beloved 'earths
  • and 'omes. It was this 'ero who, 'aving first allowed the invaders to
  • claw each other to 'ash (if I may be permitted the expression) after
  • the well-known precedent of the Kilkenny cats, thereupon firmly and
  • without flinching, stepped bravely in with his fellow-'eros--need I say
  • I allude to our gallant Boy Scouts?--and dexterously gave what-for in
  • no uncertain manner to the few survivors who remained."
  • Here the orator bowed, and took advantage of the applause to replenish
  • his stock of breath. When his face had begun to lose the purple tinge,
  • he raised his hand.
  • "I 'ave only to add," he resumed, "that this 'ero is engaged
  • exclusively by the management of the Palace Theatre of Varieties, at a
  • figure previously undreamed of in the annals of the music-hall stage.
  • He is in receipt of the magnificent weekly salary of no less than one
  • thousand one 'undred and fifty pounds a week."
  • Thunderous applause.
  • "I 'ave little more to add. This 'ero will first perform a few of those
  • physical exercises which have made our Boy Scouts what they are, such
  • as deep breathing, twisting the right leg firmly round the neck, and
  • hopping on one foot across the stage. He will then give an exhibition
  • of the various calls and cries of the Boy Scouts--all, as you doubtless
  • know, skilful imitations of real living animals. In this connection I
  • 'ave to assure you that he 'as nothing whatsoever in 'is mouth, as it
  • 'as been sometimes suggested. In conclusion he will deliver a short
  • address on the subject of 'is great exploits. Ladies and gentlemen, I
  • have finished, and it only now remains for me to retire, 'aving duly
  • announced to you England's Darling Son, the Country's 'Ero, the
  • Nation's Proudest Possession--Clarence Chugwater."
  • A moment's breathless suspense, a crash from the orchestra, and the
  • audience are standing on their seats, cheering, shouting, stamping.
  • A small sturdy, spectacled figure is on the stage.
  • It is Clarence, the Boy of Destiny.
  • End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Swoop! or How Clarence Saved
  • England, by P. G. Wodehouse
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