IV
COLOMBAN
Some weeks after the conviction of the seven hundred Pyrotists, a little,
gruff, hairy, short-sighted man left his house one morning with a paste-pot, a
ladder, and a bundle of posters and went about the streets pasting placards to
the walls on which might be read in large letters: Pyrot is innocent, Maubec is
guilty. He was not a bill-poster; his name was Colomban, and as the author of
sixty volumes on Penguin sociology he was numbered among the most laborious and
respected writers in Alca. Having given sufficient thought to the matter and no
longer doubting Pyrot's innocence, he proclaimed it in the manner which he
thought would be most sensational. He met with no hindrance while posting his
bills in the quiet streets, but when he came to the populous quarters, every
time he mounted his ladder, inquisitive people crowded round him and,
dumbfounded with surprise and indignation, threw at him threatening looks which
he received with the calm that comes from courage and short-sightedness. Whilst
caretakers and tradespeople tore down the bills he had posted, he kept on
zealously placarding, carrying his tools and followed by little boys who, with
their baskets under their arms or their satchels on their backs, were in no
hurry to reach school. To the mute indignation against him, protests and murmurs
were now added. But Colomban did not condescend to see or hear anything. As, at
the entrance to the Rue St. Orberosia, he was posting one of his squares of
paper bearing the words: Pyrot is innocent, Maubec is guilty, the riotous crowd
showed signs of the most violent anger. They called after him, "Traitor, thief,
rascal, scoundrel." A woman opened a window and emptied a vase full of filth
over his head, a cabby sent his hat flying from one end of the street to the
other by a blow of his whip amid the cheers of the crowd who now felt themselves
avenged. A butcher's boy knocked Colomban with his paste-pot, his brush, and his
posters, from the top of his ladder into the gutter, and the proud Penguins then
felt the greatness of their country. Colomban stood up, covered with filth,
lame, and with his elbow injured, but tranquil and resolute.
"Low brutes," he muttered, shrugging his shoulders.
Then he went down on all-fours in the gutter to look for his glasses which he
had lost in his fall. It was then seen that his coat was split from the collar
to the tails and that his trousers were in rags. The rancour of the crowd grew
stronger.
On the other side of the street stretched the big St. Orberosian Stores. The
patriots seized whatever they could lay their hands on from the shop front, and
hurled at Colomban oranges, lemons, pots of jam, pieces of chocolate, bottles of
liqueurs, boxes of sardines, pots of foie gras, hams, fowls, flasks of oil, and
bags of haricots. Covered with the debris of the food, bruised, tattered, lame,
and blind, he took to flight, followed by the shop-boys, bakers, loafers,
citizens, and hooligans whose number increased each moment and who kept
shouting: "Duck him! Death to the traitor! Duck him!" This torrent of vulgar
humanity swept along the streets and rushed into the Rue St. Mael. The police
did their duty. From all the adjacent streets constables proceeded and, holding
their scabbards with their left hands, they went at full speed in front of the
pursuers. They were on the point of grabbing Colomban in their huge hands when
he suddenly escaped them by falling through an open man-hole to the bottom of a
sewer.
He spent the night there in the darkness, sitting close by the dirty water
amidst the fat and slimy rats. He thought of his task, and his swelling heart
filled with courage and pity. And when the dawn threw a pale ray of light into
the air-hole he got up and said, speaking to himself:
"I see that the fight will be a stiff one."
Forthwith he composed a memorandum in which he clearly showed that Pyrot
could not have stolen from the Ministry of War the eighty thousand trusses of
hay which it had never received, for the reason that Maubec had never delivered
them, though he had received the money. Colomban caused this statement to be
distributed in the streets of Alca. The people refused to read it and tore it up
in anger. The shop-keepers shook their fists at the distributers, who made off,
chased by angry women armed with brooms. Feelings grew warm and the ferment
lasted the whole day. In the evening bands of wild and ragged men went about the
streets yelling: "Death to Colomban!" The patriots snatched whole bundles of the
memorandum from the newsboys and burned them in the public squares, dancing
wildly round these bon-fires with girls whose petticoats were tied up to their
waists.
Some of the more enthusiastic among them went and broke the windows of the
house in which Colomban had lived in perfect tranquillity during his forty years
of work.
Parliament was roused and asked the Chief of the Government what measures he
proposed to take in order to repel the odious attacks made by Colomban upon the
honour of the National Arm and the safety of Penguinia. Robin Mielleux denounced
Colomban's impious audacity and proclaimed amid the cheers of the legislators
that the man would be summoned before the Courts to answer for his infamous
libel.
The Minister of War was called to the tribune and appeared in it
transfigured. He had no longer the air, as in former days, of one of the sacred
geese of the Penguin citadels. Now, bristling, with outstretched neck and hooked
beak, he seemed the symbolical vulture fastened to the livers of his country's
enemies.
In the august silence of the assembly he pronounced these words only:
"I swear that Pyrot is a rascal."
This speech of Greatauk was reported all over Penguinia and satisfied the
public conscience.
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