Many Dimensions by Charles Williams (namjoon book recommendations txt) 📕
"Will you at least try, sir?" Ali asked.
"Why, no," the Ambassador answered. "No, I do not think I will even try. It is but the word of Hajji Ibrahim here. Had he not known of the treachery of his kinsmen and come to England by the same boat as Giles Tumulty we should have known very little of what had happened, and that vaguely. But as it is, we were warned of what you call the sacrilege, and now you have talked to him, and you are convinced. But what shall I say to the Foreign Minister? No; I do not think I will try."
"You do not believe it," the Hajji said. "You do not believe that this is the Crown of Suleiman or that Allah put a mystery into it when His Permission bestowed it on the King?"
The Ambassador considered. "I have known you a long while," he said thoughtfully, "and I will tell you what I believe. I know that your
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food from their jobs. Now, I’ve not seen this Stone, and I can hardly
believe what’s said, but it’s said—it is said—that it means there’s
some new method of movement. I suppose it’s a kind of scientific
invention.”
“I really don’t know,” Frank said, as Mr. Merridew paused. “I only know
what Miss Burnett told me. O and Mrs. Sheldrake seemed very anxious
about it.”
“Ah, the ladies, the ladies!” the General Secretary smiled. “A little
credulous, perhaps—yes? But I do feel that, if there should be anything
in it, I ought to know what. And as between a lady, a lawyer, and, if I
may say so, a man of the world like yourself, I naturally preferred to
get into touch with you. After all—I don’t know what your political
views may be, but after all someone ought to think of these millions of
hardworking men whose livelihood is in danger.”
“But I don’t see quite what I can do,” Frank said. “Miss Burnett
wouldn’t lend me the Stone.”
“She wouldn’t, you think,” Merridew asked, casually looking down at his
papers, “sell it?”
“Eh? sell it?” Frank exclaimed. “No, I don’t—I’m almost
sure she wouldn’t. Besides Mrs. Sheldrake said something about seventy
thousand pounds.”
“Ah, well, a poor Trades Union could hardly go to thatbut then I’d be
quite willing only to borrow it,” Merridew said. “If for instance you
by any chance had one of them—I’d willingly pay a good sum for the
privilege of borrowing it for a little while. Say-” he estimated Frank
for a moment and ended-“a few hundreds even. It’s of such dire
importance to my people.”
Frank considered, and the more he considered the more certain he became
that to offer Chloe, if she were still in her last night’s mood, a few
hundreds would be the same as offering a few millions or a few pence.
In these silly tempers it would mean nothing to her.
“I can ask her, of course,” he said reluctantly.
“If she should lend it to you for any reason-” Mr. Merridew
thoughtfully said, “If, I mean, you had any need of it and—as she
naturally would—she passed it on to you, perhaps you’d bear me in
mind.”
“I don’t think she’s likely to do that,” Frank said.
“Or even if you could borrow it sometime—I don’t mean exactly without
her knowing, though if she didn’t happen to want it…. I understand
Lord Arglay has one, and I suppose if Miss Burnett works there she
could always use his—if you happened across it some time…. I don’t
know whether Miss Burnett is one of those young ladies who always leave
their umbrellas or their handbags or something behind them-”
“No,” Frank said, “she isn’t.”
“Well, if she did”—Merridew went on—“or, as I say, if you borrowed it
for any purpose of your own—well, if you had it in any way, and would
show it me, I should be very glad to pay a fee. Better spend a few
hundreds first than a few millions on unemployment pay, you know, is
the way I look at it. Prevention is better than cure.”
“I see,” Frank answered.
He was not at all clear what he did see, moving in his mind, what kind
of action half-presented itself and then withdrew, but to borrow the
Stone for his examination, just for the day or two, couldn’t do any
harm. And if this fellow was willing to pay… Chloe should have it,
of course; she’d only about thirty pounds at her back. Or at least they
might split it—she was always very good about paying if things were
rather tight, and she’d probably rather… only then she’d have to
know. And if as a matter of fact she hadn’t known, if there were any
way of borrowing it, if…
“I see,” he said again, and there was a silence. Suddenly he stood up.
“Well, I must be going,” he said. “Yes, I see, Mr. Merridew. Well, if
anything should happen-”
“Any time, day or night,” the General Secretary said. “Carnegie will
give you my address. And of course any expenses—taxis or anything—goodbye.”
He watched Frank out and when Carnegie returned-“I’ wish there was a
quicker way,” he said. “I shall go to the Home Office after lunch, but
I don’t suppose they’ll let one out of their hands. I wouldn’t if I was
them. It’s up to you to keep on top of your friend, Carnegie. If he
wants it himself for this examination of his we may just have tipped
the balance. Though he mayn’t be able to do it even so. Well, we must
see. And now try and make an appointment for me with the Home
Office this afternoon.”
The Home Secretary was a charming politician whose methods
differed from Lord Birlesmere’s in that while the Foreign Secretary
preferred at least to appear to direct the storm, Mr. Garterr Browne
allowed it to blow itself out, after which he pointed out to it exactly
what damage it had done. He got up to shake hands with Mr. Merridew and
directed his attention to another visitor who was standing by the
table.
“May I introduce you to Mr. Clerishaw, the Mayor of Rich-by-the-Mere?”
he said. “Mr. Merridew, the General Secretary of the National Transport
Union. Do sit down, both of you. I fancy this business may be a trifle
long. Don’t be alarmed, Mr. Merridew—I know what you want, at least I
can guess. My difficulty is… but perhaps Mr. Clerishaw had better
explain. A man always puts his own case best.”
There were those who asserted that this phrase, which was a favourite
with Mr. Garterr Browne, had been responsible for more quarrels in his
party and crises in the Cabinet than any other formula for twenty
years. After hearing it, a man was always convinced that he did, and
was consequently more reluctant to abandon his case than before. The
Mayor needed no convincing, but neither was he anxious to waste energy.
“I have already stated my case to you, sir, as a member of the
Government,” he said. “I cannot see that anything is to be gained by
repeating it.”
“I think, Mr. Mayor,” the Home Secretary said, “that you will find it
is more necessary to convince Mr. Merridew than to persuade me.”
“How so?” the Mayor asked.
“Because Mr. Merridew is one of my difficulties, I fancy,” the Minister
answered. “Mr. Secretary, tell me how much publicity do you desire for
the tale of this absurd Stone?”
“What!” Merridew exclaimed-“publicity? I don’t want any publicity at
all—that’s the point. I want to know whether the Government are taking
steps to control all of these precious Stones that are in existence…
I mean, if there’s anything in them. Or to have immediate assurances
that there is nothing.”
“Yes, but Mr. Clerishaw wants a great deal of publicity, Mr. Garterr
Browne smiled. “O a very great deal. He objects to any kind of
secrecy.”
Mr. Merridew settled himself firmly in his chair. “And why?” he asked,
very much as a General Secretary should.
The Mayor turned on him. ‘Great God, sir,” he said almost fiercely, “do
you want to condemn thousands of men and women to suffering?”
“I don’t,” Merridew said, “and because I don’t I want the Stone
withdrawn from… from circulation.”
“Don’t you know,” the Mayor cried out, “that there are those well and
happy to-day who have been in pain and grief for years—all by the
healing powers of this Stone?”
“O you mean the people at Rich?” Merridew exclaimed. He had entirely
forgotten, in his concern with transport, the virtues of the Stone
which had caused so much disturbance in Rich during the week-end. But
his phrase sounded as if he relegated the people at Rich to sickness or
health indifferently, and the Mayor took a step forward.
“I speak for the people at Rich,” he said, “for I am the Mayor of Rich.
By what right do you speak and for whom?”
“I speak,” Merridew answered, sincerely if somewhat
habitually moved, “for the sons of Martha.” He had found Mr. Kipling’s
poem of the greatest use in emotional speeches from the platform; that
and some of Mr. Masefield’s verses were his favourite peroiations. But
the Mayor, not having read much modern verse, was merely astonished.
“For what?” he asked.
‘For the sailor, the stoker of steamers, the man with the clout,’ “
murmured the Home Secretary, who had heard Mr. Merridew before. “For
the workers—some of them anyhow.”
“And what have the workers to lose because of the Stone?” the Mayor
asked. “Are not they also the people?”
“Of course they’re the people,” the General Secretary exclaimed, “they
are the people. And are they to lose their livelihood because of a few
cures?”
“Perhaps,” the Home Secretary put in, “you haven’t realized, Mr. Mayor,
that this very interesting Stone has other qualities, so I am told,
besides the curative. In short….”
He gave a brief explanation of those qualities. The Mayor listened
frowning.
“But I confess,” Mr. Garterr Browne ended, “I didn’t know that these
facts—these apparent facts—would have reached
Mr. Merridew so soon. However, as it is-” He got courteously off the
storm, and signed to it to go ahead.
“That,” Merridew said, “is my case. If it’s some scientific invention,
as I suppose it is, it ought to be State property, and its introduction
into the economic life of the country must be only brought about very,
very gradually.”
“While the poor die in misery,” the Mayor commented.
“Damn it, sir,” Mr. Merridew exclaimed, “I am speaking for the poor.”
“For the sick and dying?” the Mayor asked. “For the blind and the
paralytic and the agonized? Do as you will about economics—but the body
is more than raiment.”
“Not without raiment—not for long,” Mr. Garterr Browne said. “But go on
with the discussion. What were you about to say, Mr. Secretary?”
“I protest against the way my words are twisted,” Merridew cried. “I’ve
no possible objection to the medicinal use of the Stone.”
“Nor I to its economic suppression,” the Mayor answered and they both
looked at Mr. Garterr Browne.
“Beautiful,” the Minister breathed. “When democracy lies down with
democracy…. And how, gentlemen, do you propose to use the Stone all
over the country while at the same time keeping it under close guard?”
“The doctors-” Merridew began.
“Hardly,” the Minister said. “For it must be in the hands and at the
will of those who are to be healed. And I don’t my. self see what is to
prevent the… the healee from going off by its means, once he is
cured. We shan’t be able to keep it quiet. And then there will be
Stones everywhere. I’m not objecting. I’m only saying that we must use
it either fully or not at all.”
“Then in the name of God, use it!” the Mayor cried out.
“And ruin hundreds and thousands of homes!” Merridew followed him.
“Suppress it, I say.”
Mr. Garterr Browne waved both hands at the storm. “You
See?” he asked it courteously, and after a few moments’ silence added,
“If the Government heal the sick they starve the healthy. If, on the
other hand, they protect the healthy they doom the sick.”
.Both his visitors felt a sudden touch of horror. The dilemma came at
them so suddenly, and on so vast a scale, that they mentally recoiled
from it. Neither of them was thinking at the moment of any others than
those on whose behalf he imagined himself speaking. But to each of them
the placid
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