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indeed, but of which, I am sorry to say, I think him quite capableā ā€”knocks their teeth out?ā€

ā€œI have thought of that, your Majesty,ā€ said Mr. Buck, easily, ā€œand I think it can simply be guarded against. Let us send in a strong guard of, say, a hundred menā ā€”a hundred of the North Kensington Halberdiersā€ (he smiled grimly), ā€œof whom your Majesty is so fond. Or say a hundred and fifty. The whole population of Pump Street, I fancy, is only about a hundred.ā€

ā€œStill they might stand together and lick you,ā€ said the King, dubiously.

ā€œThen say two hundred,ā€ said Buck, gaily.

ā€œIt might happen,ā€ said the King, restlessly, ā€œthat one Notting Hiller fought better than two North Kensingtons.ā€

ā€œIt might,ā€ said Buck, coolly; ā€œthen say two hundred and fifty.ā€

The King bit his lip.

ā€œAnd if they are beaten too?ā€ he said viciously.

ā€œYour Majesty,ā€ said Buck, and leaned back easily in his chair, ā€œsuppose they are. If anything be clear, it is clear that all fighting matters are mere matters of arithmetic. Here we have a hundred and fifty, say, of Notting Hill soldiers. Or say two hundred. If one of them can fight two of usā ā€”we can send in, not four hundred, but six hundred, and smash him. That is all. It is out of all immediate probability that one of them could fight four of us. So what I say is this. Run no risks. Finish it at once. Send in eight hundred men and smash himā ā€”smash him almost without seeing him. And go on with the improvements.ā€

And Mr. Buck pulled out a bandanna and blew his nose.

ā€œDo you know, Mr. Buck,ā€ said the King, staring gloomily at the table, ā€œthe admirable clearness of your reason produces in my mind a sentiment which I trust I shall not offend you by describing as an aspiration to punch your head. You irritate me sublimely. What can it be in me? Is it the relic of a moral sense?ā€

ā€œBut your Majesty,ā€ said Barker, eagerly and suavely, ā€œdoes not refuse our proposals?ā€

ā€œMy dear Barker, your proposals are as damnable as your manners. I want to have nothing to do with them. Suppose I stopped them altogether. What would happen?ā€

Barker answered in a very low voiceā ā€”

ā€œRevolution.ā€

The King glanced quickly at the men round the table. They were all looking down silently: their brows were red.

He rose with a startling suddenness, and an unusual pallor.

ā€œGentlemen,ā€ he said, ā€œyou have overruled me. Therefore I can speak plainly. I think Adam Wayne, who is as mad as a hatter, worth more than a million of you. But you have the force, and, I admit, the common sense, and he is lost. Take your eight hundred halberdiers and smash him. It would be more sportsmanlike to take two hundred.ā€

ā€œMore sportsmanlike,ā€ said Buck, grimly, ā€œbut a great deal less humane. We are not artists, and streets purple with gore do not catch our eye in the right way.ā€

ā€œIt is pitiful,ā€ said Auberon. ā€œWith five or six times their number, there will be no fight at all.ā€

ā€œI hope not,ā€ said Buck, rising and adjusting his gloves. ā€œWe desire no fight, your Majesty. We are peaceable business men.ā€

ā€œWell,ā€ said the King, wearily, ā€œthe conference is at an end at last.ā€

And he went out of the room before anyone else could stir.

Forty workmen, a hundred Bayswater Halberdiers, two hundred from South, and three from North Kensington, assembled at the foot of Holland Walk and marched up it, under the general direction of Barker, who looked flushed and happy in full dress. At the end of the procession a small and sulky figure lingered like an urchin. It was the King.

ā€œBarker,ā€ he said at length, appealingly, ā€œyou are an old friend of mineā ā€”you understand my hobbies as I understand yours. Why canā€™t you let it alone? I hoped that such fun might come out of this Wayne business. Why canā€™t you let it alone? It doesnā€™t really so much matter to youā ā€”whatā€™s a road or so? For me itā€™s the one joke that may save me from pessimism. Take fewer men and give me an hourā€™s fun. Really and truly, James, if you collected coins or hummingbirds, and I could buy one with the price of your road, I would buy it. I collect incidentsā ā€”those rare, those precious things. Let me have one. Pay a few pounds for it. Give these Notting Hillers a chance. Let them alone.ā€

ā€œAuberon,ā€ said Barker, kindly, forgetting all royal titles in a rare moment of sincerity, ā€œI do feel what you mean. I have had moments when these hobbies have hit me. I have had moments when I have sympathised with your humours. I have had moments, though you may not easily believe it, when I have sympathised with the madness of Adam Wayne. But the world, Auberon, the real world, is not run on these hobbies. It goes on great brutal wheels of factsā ā€”wheels on which you are the butterfly; and Wayne is the fly on the wheel.ā€

Auberonā€™s eyes looked frankly at the otherā€™s.

ā€œThank you, James; what you say is true. It is only a parenthetical consolation to me to compare the intelligence of flies somewhat favourably with the intelligence of wheels. But it is the nature of flies to die soon, and the nature of wheels to go on forever. Go on with the wheel. Goodbye, old man.ā€

And James Barker went on, laughing, with a high colour, slapping his bamboo on his leg.

The King watched the tail of the retreating regiment with a look of genuine depression, which made him seem more like a baby than ever. Then he swung round and struck his hands together.

ā€œIn a world without humour,ā€ he said, ā€œthe only thing to do is to eat. And how perfect an exception! How can these people strike dignified attitudes, and pretend that things matter, when the total ludicrousness of life is proved by the very method by which it is supported? A man strikes the lyre, and says, ā€˜Life is real, life is earnest,ā€™ and then goes into a

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